eighth harry potter book

Re: eighth harry potter book

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1. 15. the Muggle Spy
**[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Martin J. Prescott was a Reporter. He always thought of the word as if it was capitalized. For Martin, being a Reporter was more than a job. It was his identity. He wasn’t just another face reading from a teleprompter, or another name next to a dateline. He was what the producers in the age of the twenty-four hour news cycle called "a personality". He accented the news. He framed it. He colored it. Not in any negative way, or so he firmly believed. He simply added that subtle dash of flair that made news into News, in other words, something people might want to watch or read. For one thing, Martin J. Prescott had the look. He wore white button-down shirts with jeans, and he usually had his shirt sleeves rolled up a bit. If he wore a tie, it was invariably of an impeccable style, but loosened just a tad; enough to say yes, I’ve been working extremely hard, but I respect my viewers enough to maintain a degree of professionalism. Martin was thin, youngish, with sharp, handsome features and very dark hair that always looked windblown and fabulous. But, as Martin was proud of saying to the attendees at the occasional Press Club breakfast, his appearance wasn’t what made him a Reporter. It was his sense of people, and of news. He knew how to plug the one into the other in a way that produced the biggest emotional jolt. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]1
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]But the last thing that made Martin J. Prescott a Reporter was that he loved the story. Where the other high-paid and high-profile news faces had long since assembled a team of lackeys to tramp far and wide, collecting footage and filming interviews while they themselves huddled in their dressing rooms reading about their ratings, Martin prided himself in doing all his own travel and research. The truth of it was that Martin enjoyed the reporting, but what he absolutely loved was the chase. Being a member of the press was like being a hunter, except that the former aimed with a camera rather than a gun. Martin liked to stalk his prey himself. He delighted in the pursuit, in the blurry jostle of hand-held camera footage, the shouted, perfectly-timed question, the long stakeout of a courtroom back door or a suspicious hotel room. Martin did it all himself, often alone, often filming himself in the act, providing his viewers breathless moments of high tension and confrontation. No one else did it like him, and this had made him famous.
Martin had, as they say of the very best Reporters, a nose for news. His nose told him that the story he was chasing right now, if it panned out, if he could simply provide the real, unadulterated footage, was quite possibly the story of a lifetime. Even now, crouched among the brush and weeds, dirty and salty with two days’ worth of sweat, his fabulous hair matted and soiled with twigs and leaves, even after all the setbacks and failures, he still felt this was the story that would cement his career. In fact, the harder he’d had to work for it, the more doggedly he’d pursued it. Even after the ghost. Even after being kicked out of a third story window by a homicidal kid. Even after his harrowing brush with the gigantic spider. Martin viewed setbacks as proof of value. The harder it was, the more it was worth pursuing. He took a grim satisfaction in knowing that, had he merely hired a team of investigators to check this out, they’d have turned back months ago, when they’d first met the strange, magical resistance of the place, without a solitary blip of a story. This was the kind of story that could only be told by him. This, he told himself with satisfaction, was anchorman material. No more field reports. No more special interest segments. If this panned out, Martin J. Prescott would be able to pave his own way in any major newsroom in the country. But why stop there? With this under his belt, he could anchor anywhere in the world, couldn’t he?
But no, he told himself. One mustn’t think of such things now. He had a job to do. A difficult and outrageously demanding job, but Martin took pleasure in the sense that the hardest part was behind him. After months of plotting and arranging, planning and observing, the time had finally come for the big payoff, for all the bets to be called in. Granted, if this last phase of the hunt didn’t work out exactly as planned, he’d walk away with nothing. He’d been unable to get any usable, convincing footage on his own, except for the hand-held camera video of that incredible flying contest a few months back. That might have been enough, but even that had been lost, sacrificed – reluctantly! – to the gigantic spider during his escape through the woods. It didn’t do to dwell on failures, though. No, this would work. It would go exactly as planned. It had to. He was Martin J. Prescott.
Still crouched at the perimeter of the forest, Martin checked the connections of his cell phone. Most of his field gear had gone completely buggy ever since he made it through the forest. His Palmtop barely worked at all, and when it did, it exhibited some very strange behaviour. The night before last, he’d been trying to use it to access his office computer when the screen suddenly went entirely pink and began to display the lyrics to a rather rude song about hedgehogs. Fortunately, his camera and cell phone had worked [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]2
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]relatively well until the incident with the spider. His phone was nearly all he had left now, and despite the fact that the display screen showed a strange mixture of numbers, exclamation marks and hieroglyphics, it did seem to be maintaining a connection. Satisfied, Martin spoke.
"I’m huddled outside the castle at this moment, hidden in the arms of the forest that has been my occasional home during these last grueling months. Up until now, I have simply watched, careful not to disturb what might only be a simple country school or a boarding facility, despite the reports of my sources. Still, I am confident that the time has finally come for me to approach. If my sources are wrong, I will merely be met with puzzlement and that rare brand of careful good humor that is the purview of the Scottish countryside. If, however, my sources prove correct, as I suspect, based on my inexplicable experiences so far, then I may well be walking into the clutches of my own doom. I am now standing. It is mid morning, about nine o’clock, but I see no sign of anyone. I am leaving the safety of my hiding place. I am entering the grounds."
Martin crept carefully around the edge of the ramshackle cabin near the forest. The enormous, shaggy man he’d often spied in and around the cabin was not anywhere in sight. Martin straightened, determining to be bold about his initial approach. He began to cross the neatly cropped field between the cabin and the castle. In truth, he did not believe he was in grave peril. He had an innate sense that the greatest dangers were behind him, in that creepy and mysterious forest. He had indeed camped on the fringes of that forest, far on the side opposite the castle, where the trees seemed rather more normal and there were fewer unsettling noises in the night. Still, his travels back and forth through the densest parts of that forest had been strange, to say the least. Apart from the spider, which he had only escaped by sheer good luck, he hadn’t actually seen anything. In a sense, he thought it might have been better if he had. A known monstrosity, like the spider, is far easier to deal with than the unknown phantoms conjured by Martin’s imagination in response to the strange noises he’d heard on those long woodland walks. He’d been shadowed, he knew. Large things, heavy things, had followed him, always off to the left or right, hidden just behind the density of the trees. He knew they were watching him, and he also sensed that, unlike the spider, they were intelligent. They might have been hostile, but they were certainly curious. Martin had almost dared to call out to them, to demand they reveal themselves. Finally, remembering the spider, he’d decided that, after all, maybe an unseen monster that is merely curious is better than a seen monster that feels provoked.
"The castle, as I have mentioned, is positively huge," Martin said into the small microphone clipped to his lapel. The microphone was connected to the phone on his belt. "I’ve travelled much of this continent and seen quite a variety of castles, but I’ve never seen anything so simultaneously ancient and yet immaculately maintained. The windows, apart from the one I was forced through those months ago, are beautifully sturdy and colorful. The stonework here doesn’t show so much as a crack…" This wasn’t entirely true, but it was true enough. "It is a beautiful spring day, fortunately. Clear and relatively warm. I am not hiding myself at all as I cross to the enormous gates, which are open. There… there seems to be a gathering over to my right, on a sort of field. I… I can’t quite tell, but it looks as if they are playing football. I can’t say that I expected that. They don’t seem to be paying me any attention. I am continuing to the gates." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]3
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]As Martin entered the gates, he finally began to be noticed. He slowed, still maintaining a steady course onward. His goal was simply to get as far into the castle as possible. He had purposely left his still camera behind. Cameras, in nearly every circumstance, incite resistance. People with cameras get thrown out of places. Someone simply walking into a place, walking confidently and purposely, may be met with curiosity, but they are not usually stopped. At least, not until it is too late. The courtyard was dotted with young people moving here and there in knots. They wore black robes over white shirts and ties. Many carried backpacks or books. The ones nearest Martin turned to watch him past, mostly out of curiosity.
"There are … there are what appear for all the world to be… school pupils," Martin said quietly into his microphone, sidling past students as he worked across the courtyard. "Young people in robes, all school age. They seem surprised at my presence, but not hostile. In fact, as I am now approaching the entryway into the castle proper, it appears that I have elicited the attention of virtually everyone. Excuse me,"
This last was said to Ted Lupin, who had just appeared in the doorway with Noah Metzker and Sabrina Hildegard. All three of them stopped talking instantly as the strange man in the white shirt and loosened tie slipped between them. The quill in Sabrina’s hair wobbled as she turned to watch him.
"Who’s he talking to?" Ted said.
"And who the ruddy hell is he?" Sabrina added. The trio turned in the open doorway, watching the man work his way carefully into the entry hall. Students parted for him, recognizing immediately that this man was rather out of place. Still, no one seemed particularly alarmed. There were even a few puzzled grins.
Martin went on speaking into his microphone. "More and more of what I must, for the time being, call students. There are dozens of them around me at the moment. I am moving through a sort of main hall. There are… chandeliers, great doorways. Statues. Paintings. The paintings… the paintings… the paintings…" For the first time, Martin seemed at a loss for words. He forgot the students gathering around him, watching him, as he took two steps toward one of the larger paintings lining the entry hall. In the painting, a group of ancient wizards were clustered around a large crystal ball, their white beards illuminated in its glow. One of the wizards noticed the staring man in the white shirt and tie. He straightened and scowled. "You’re out of uniform, young man," the wizard exclaimed sternly. "You look a fright. I daresay you have a leaf in your hair."
"The paintings… the paintings are…" Martin said, his voice an octave higher than normal. He coughed and gathered himself. "The paintings are moving. They are … for lack of a better term, like painted movies, but alive. They are… addressing me."
"I address equals, young man," the wizard said. "I command the likes of you. Begone, ruffian."
There was a smattering of laughter from the crowding students, but there was also a growing sense of nervousness. Nobody was ever amazed at the moving paintings. This man was either a nutter of a wizard, or he was… well, it was unthinkable. A Muggle could not get into Hogwarts. The students formed a large circle around him, as if he was a mildly dangerous animal. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]4
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"The students have hemmed me in," Martin said, turning around, his eyes rather wild. "I’m going to attempt to break through, however. I must move further in."
As Martin proceeded, the perimeter of students broke apart easily, following him. There was a murmuring now. Nervous chatter followed the man, and he began to raise his voice.
"I’m entering a large chamber. Quite high. I’ve been here before, but late at night, in the dark. Yes, this is the hall of moving staircases. Very treacherous. Remarkable mechanics at work here, and yet no sound of machinery at all."
"What’s he saying about machinery?" someone in the crowding students called. "Who is this bloke anyway? What’s he doing here?" There was a chorus of confused responses.
Martin pushed on, turning past the staircases, almost shouting now. "My presence is beginning to cause some resistance. I may be stopped at any moment. I… I am bypassing the stairs."
Martin turned a corner and found himself in the midst of a group of students playing winkles and augers in a bright alcove. He stopped suddenly and recoiled as the auger, an old quaffle, stopped three inches from his face, floating and turning slowly.
"Oi, what’re you thinking just walking right into the middle of the sodding match, you?" one of the players called, yanking his wand up and retrieving the quaffle. "Dangerous, that is. You need to watch yourself."
"Flying… things!" Martin squeaked, straightening himself and smoothing his shirt frantically. "I… wands. Actual magical wands and levitating objects! This is perfectly remarkable! I’ve never seen…!"
"Hey now," another of the winkles and augers players said sharply. "Who is this? What’s he going on about?"
Someone else yelled, "Who let him in? He’s a Muggle! Got to be!"
"It’s the man from the Quidditch pitch! The intruder!"
The crowd began to yell and jostle. Martin ducked past the winkles and augers players, losing some of the pursuing crowd. "I’m pressing in further still. Corridors leading everywhere. Here is… er, as far as I can tell, it is a hall of classrooms. I’m entering the first one…"
He burst into the first classroom on his right, followed by a stream of confused, yelling students. The room was long and recessed. The students attending the class turned in their seats, seeking the source of the interruption.
"Relatively normal, it seems, on the surface, at least," Martin yelled over the growing din, scanning the room. "Students, textbooks, a teacher of some kind, who… who, who, whooo…" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]5
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Again, Martin’s voice rose and he seemed to be losing control of it. His eyes boggled and he ran out of breath. His mouth continued to work, making hoarse raspy sounds. At the front of the class, the ghostly Professor Binns, whose grasp on the temporal realm was tentative at best, had not yet noticed the interruption. He droned on, his voice high and chiming, like wind in a bottle. The professor finally noticed the gasping form of Martin J. Prescott and stopped, frowning. "Who is this individual, might I ask?" Binns said, peering over his ghostly spectacles.
Martin finally dragged a great gulp of air. "A ghooooossst!" he declared tremulously, pointing at Binns. He began to totter. Just as the students near the doorway were shoved roughly aside by the advancing figures of Professor Longbottom and Headmistress McGonagall, flanked by Ted and Sabrina, Martin fell over in a dead faint. He landed hard across two desks at the rear of the room. The students occupying the desks threw their hands up, lunging to get out of the way. A bottle of ink fell to the floor and shattered.
Headmistress McGonagall approached the man swiftly and stopped a few feet away. "Can anyone please inform me who this man is," she said in a strident voice, "and what he is doing fainting dead away in my school?"
James Potter shouldered his way to the front of the crowd. He looked at the man collapsed across the desks. He sighed deeply and said, "I think I can, ma’am."
Fifteen minutes later, James, McGonagall, Neville Longbottom and Benjamin Franklyn bustled into the headmistress’ office, with Martin Prescott stumbling between them. Martin had regained consciousness [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]6
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]halfway to the office, and had instantly shrieked in horror at the realization that he was being levitated along the corridor by Neville. Neville, in turn, had been so startled by Martin’s shriek that he’d nearly dropped him, but had recovered in time to lower the man fairly gently to the floor. Apart from James’ explanation that the intruder was the very same man he’d accidentally knocked through the stained glass window and later seen on the Quidditch pitch, the trip to the headmistress office had progressed with very little conversation. Once the door to her office had closed behind them, McGonagall spoke up.
"I only want to know who you are, why you are here, and most importantly, how you managed to gain entry," she said furiously, stalking behind her desk but remaining upright. "Once we have resolved that, you will be removed forthwith, and with nary a glimmer of any memory of what you have seen, I can promise you that. Now speak."
Martin swallowed and glanced around at the assembly. He saw James and grimaced, remembering the shattering glass and the sickly fall afterward. He took a deep breath. "First of all, my name is Martin J. Prescott. I work for a news program called Inside View. And second of all," he said, returning his gaze to the headmistress, "I have been injured upon these grounds. I don’t wish to make a legal matter of it, but you must be aware that it is entirely within my rights to pursue compensation for those injuries. And somehow I don’t get the impression that this domicile is insured, exactly."
"How dare you?" McGonagall exclaimed, leaning over her desk and meeting Martin’s eyes. "You break into this castle, trespass where you have neither the right nor the understanding to carry yourself…" She shook her head, and then went on in a lower voice. "I will not be baited by threats. You are obviously of Muggle origin, so I will practice a modicum of patience with you. Answer my questions willingly, or I will be more than happy to resort to more straightforward means of interrogation."
"Ah," Martin said, trying to sound confident despite the fact that he was trembling visibly. "You must mean something along the lines of this," He reached into his shirt pocket and produced a small vial. James recognized it as the one he had seen in this man’s hand when he’d encountered him in the Potions closet. "Yes. I see by your faces that you know what this is. Took me a time to figure it out. Veritaserum, indeed. I put two drops into a coworker’s tea and I couldn’t get him to shut up for an hour. I learned things about him I hope I live to forget, I’ll tell you."
"You tested an unknown potion on an unsuspecting person?" Franklyn interrupted.
"Well, I had to know what it did, didn’t I? I figured two drops wouldn’t hurt anyone." He shrugged and lifted the bottle again, looking at the light through it. "Truth serum. If it was dangerous, you’d hardly have kept it right there on the shelf where just anyone could get to it."
McGonagall’s face was white with fury. "In these halls, we rely on discipline and respect rather than cages and keys. Your friend is fortunate indeed that you didn’t happen upon a vial of narglespike or tharff sap." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]7
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Don’t try to intimidate me," Martin said, obviously quite intimidated in spite of himself. "I just wanted to show you that I know your tricks. I’ve been watching and studying you for quite some time. You won’t be getting me to drink any of your potions, or performing any brainwashing tricks on me. I’ll answer your questions, but only because I expect you to answer some of mine, as well."
Neville fingered his wand. "And why, pray tell, do you believe we won’t just bring in an obliviator, have your mind wiped of all memory of this place, and drop you off at the nearest turnpike?"
Martin tapped the tiny microphone clipped to his lapel. "This is why. My voice, and everything all of you are saying, is being sent through my phone to a computer at my office. Everything is being recorded. In a small town not three kilometers from here is a film crew and a group of experts in a variety of fields whom I have asked to assist me in my investigation-"
"Investigation!" the headmistress repeated incredulously. "Absolutely and unequivocally out of the question!"
Martin overrode her. "One of those individuals is an agent of the British special police."
James felt a palpable silence descend over the room at the mention of the Muggle police. He knew from conversations he’d heard between his dad and other Ministry officials that it was one thing to obliviate a single person, or even a contained group, but things could get extremely complicated if any official Muggle investigative bureaus became involved.
"It pays to be owed favors in high places," Martin went on. "It took quite a lot to get a ranking agent out here, but I am confident that this is the sort of story one calls in large favors for. There is no official charge yet, of course. Merely curiosity, since there is no record of any establishment of this size in the area. The point is this: if they do not receive a phone call from me in the next two hours with directions for how to get their gear onto the grounds, they are to return immediately to the office, retrieve the recording of this conversation and everything that has occurred to me here so far, and broadcast it however they see fit. It may seem preposterous to most people, I grant. A school in a castle in the dead of nowhere teaching kids how to work real magic, wands and all. But your secret will be out, nevertheless. Your students may attend here, in this secret location, but they do sometimes go home, do they not? And I am willing to bet those homes are nowhere near as protected as this. There will be investigations. You will be revealed. One way or another."
Headmistress McGonagall’s face was as hard and white as a tombstone. She merely stared at the skinny man in the white shirt. Franklyn broke the silence.
"My good sir, you cannot comprehend what you are asking." He took off his glasses and stepped in front of Martin. "Your plan would undeniably result in the closing down of this school and possibly many others like it. All those present, and many, many more, would lose their livelihoods and educations. More importantly, what you are insisting upon is the re-introduction of the entire magical world into the world of Muggles, whether either are prepared for that or not. And to what end? Not for the betterment of mankind, I expect. No, I suspect that your aspirations are far more… myopic. Please, do think before you continue. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]8
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]There are forces at work here that you do not comprehend, although you may well be acting on behalf of some of them. I sense that you are not a bad man, or at least not yet a very bad man. Think, my friend, before you make a choice that will condemn you in the eyes of generations."
Martin listened to Franklyn’s words, and seemed to actually consider them. Then, as if snapping out of a daze, he said, "You’re Benjamin Franklin, aren’t you?" He grinned and waggled a finger at Franklyn. "I knew you looked familiar! That’s amazing. Look, I know you’re not in a position to discuss this right now, but I have two words for you: exclusive… interview. Think about it, right?"
"Mr. Prescott," the headmistress said, her voice stony. "You cannot expect us to make a decision regarding this in a matter of minutes. We simply must discuss this."
"Indeed," Neville added. "Even if we do agree to your conditions, you must conduct yourself upon our terms. How that can be of any benefit to us considering the sheer magnitude of what you are undertaking I do not yet know. But regardless, we must have some time."
"As I said," Martin replied, seeming far more comfortable now that he believed he had the upper hand, "you have two hours. Well, ninety-four minutes, actually."
"Answer me this, Mr. Prescott," Franklyn said, sighing. "How did you get onto the school grounds? Before we go any further with this charade, we must know that."
Martin sighed lightly. "Got a chair? It’s rather a story."
Neville pointedly produced his wand. Never taking his eyes off Martin, he pointed the wand at a wooden chair in the corner and levitated it rather brusquely. The chair shot forward, nearly scooping Martin off his feet. The man plopped gracelessly onto the seat and the chair thunked to the floor.
"Do continue." Neville said, half sitting on a corner of the headmistress’ desk. McGonagall settled into her chair but remained ramrod straight. Franklyn and James continued to stand.
"Well, I first got the letter telling me about this place in September of last year," Martin said, leaning forward and rubbing his backside while staring angrily at Neville. "The View offers a hundred thousand euro reward for proof of paranormal activity, and the gentleman that wrote the letter seemed to think that this Hogwarts place would offer such proof in spades. Honestly, we get thousands of letters a year from people hoping to collect the reward. They include everything from blurry pictures of tossed pie plates to actual slices of toast with the faces of saints burned onto them. The View never actually had any plans to reward the money. They like a nice dash of the inexplicable in the news from time to time, but when it comes to belief, most of them are the most cynical bunch of hardheads imaginable.
"Me, on the other hand, I’m the sort of guy who wants to believe. It wasn’t the tone of the letter that got my attention, though. It was the little item the sender had included in the envelope. A little box containing something called a chocolate frog. I expected it might have some novelty spring-snakes in it, at best, so being a sport, I went ahead and opened it. Sure enough, there was a perfect little chocolate frog [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]9
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]inside. I was just about to grab it and take a bite when the thing lifted its head and looked right at me. I just about dropped the box. Next thing I know, the frog leaps straight out of the box and onto my desk. It was a hot day, and the thing had just come in with the post. Good thing, too, cause the little bugger had gotten a little melty. Left little chocolatey frog footprints all over that night’s copy. Three good hops, then the frog just putters out. I was afraid to touch it, but five minutes later it still hadn’t moved. I had time to determine that it had just been a normal frog covered in chocolate. Some joke. Thing probably had suffocated from the stuff, and from the heat of being in the box. So I went ahead and scooped it back up and sure enough, the thing was just chocolate. Good chocolate, too, I might add.
"I still might’ve forgotten all about it, to tell you the truth. No matter how open-minded a person might think they are, being confronted with something truly inexplicable still tends to shut down the old belief circuits. If it weren’t for those little chocolatey frog footprints on my papers, I might never have mustered the resolve to be here. I kept them in the bottom of my desk, and every time I looked at them I remembered that little bugger hopping across my desk. I couldn’t get it out of my mind. So I emailed the guy who’d sent it. Nice trick, I told him. Got any more?
"He emails me back next day and says if I really want to see tricks, I just need to follow the signal he’d send me. Sure enough, the day after that there’s another package from him. A little one. Contained everything I needed to lock onto the signal here. There was no way those faithless turds in management would equip me with a crew to investigate the origin of a jumping chocolate frog, even if I showed them the froggie footprints. Fortunately, I had some vacation time coming, so I decided to give it a go on my own. A little camping out would do me good. So I packed my own cameras and caught a train.
"Getting into the general vicinity was easy enough, of course. I spent the first night on the other side of the forest, knowing by the signal that I was within a few kilometers of the source. Next day, I was on foot by dawn. I followed the direction I knew I was supposed to go, but sure enough, every time, I’d find myself heading right back out the way I’d come. It never seemed like I’d turned around, or even veered off my course. It was as if I had succeeded in getting to the opposite side of the forest, but somehow the planet had turned around right underneath me. I tried using a compass, and it’d tell me I was dead-on as well, until all of a sudden I’d be stepping right back out into my camp and the needle would spin away as if it’d forgotten what it was for.
"This went on for three solid days. I was getting frustrated, I’ll tell you that. But I was also getting determined, because I knew something was trying to keep me out. I wanted to know what. So the next day, I got out my little package and located the coordinates. This time, though, I kept it in front of me the whole time, watching that little flashing dot. Soon enough, the ground seemed to force me away. I’d run into an old creek bed with sides too steep to climb. I’d angle away only to run into a deadfall of trees or a low cliff. Everything seemed to be working to turn me off my course. I pushed on, though. I climbed and scurried. I pushed through thorns and the thickest undergrowth I’ve ever seen. Then, even gravity seemed to be working against me. I kept feeling as if the earth was tilting up beneath me, trying to throw me backwards off it. No [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]10
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]such thing was happening, of course, but it was a dreadful sensation nonetheless. I became nauseous and unaccountably dizzy. But I followed my direction, crawling at the last.
"And then, suddenly, the sensations were gone. The forest seemed to snap back to normal, or at least what passes for normal in this neck of the woods. I had made it through. Ten minutes later, I came out for the first time on the edge of the clearing overlooking this very castle. I was stunned, needless to say. But what amazed me far more than the castle was the scene that I very nearly walked into the midst of.
"There, not twenty feet before me, was the largest man I had ever seen. He looked almost like a grizzly bear that’d been taught to walk upright. But then, standing next to him…" For the first time in his story, Martin paused. He swallowed, obviously shaken by the very memory. "There was something so monstrously huge that I at first thought it must be a kind of dinosaur. It had four legs, each the size of a pillar. I raised my eyes and saw that it was, in fact, two creatures standing near each other, and they were both human-shaped. The tallest one’s head was above the treetops. I couldn’t even see its face. I scrambled back into a hiding place, certain they’d heard me, but it seemed not to be so. The smallest one, the one that looked like a walking bear, talked to the other two, and they answered, sort of. Their voices vibrated the ground. Then, to my horror, they turned and headed towards me, into the forest. The largest one’s foot came down right next to me, shaking the earth like a bomb and leaving a footprint three inches deep. Then they were gone."
Martin drew a huge sigh, obviously content with his telling of the tale. "And that was when I knew I had found it. The greatest story of my life. Possibly the greatest story of this century." He looked around as if he expected applause.
"There is one small detail you have failed to explain to my satisfaction," Headmistress McGonagall said coldly. "This device you mentioned. It was somehow able to point you to this school. I must know what it is and how it works."
Martin raised his eyebrows, and then chuckled and sat up. "Oh, yes. That. It’s been acting pretty wonky ever since I got here, but at least it maintained the signal. A simple GPS device. Er, please forgive me. You are probably unfamiliar with the term. A global positioning system device. It allows me to locate any point on earth within a meter or so. Very helpful bit of, er, Muggle magic, if you will."
James spoke for the first time since entering the room. "But how did you pinpoint the school? How would that device know where to find it? It’s unplottable. Not on any map."
Martin turned to look at him, his brow furrowed, apparently uncertain whether he should even deign to answer James. Finally, seeing that everyone else in the room expected him to respond, Martin stood up. "Like I said, I was sent the coordinates. They were provided by someone on the inside. Really, very simple."
Martin reached into the pocket of his jeans and pulled something out. James knew what it was even before he saw it. He had known it somehow even before he’d asked the question. His heart sank as if through the very floor. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]11
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Martin flourished a Gamedeck. It was a different color than Ralph’s, but of exactly the same make. He plunked it unceremoniously onto the headmistress’ desk. "Wireless uplink for online competition, including chat capability. Pretty standard stuff. So. Anybody here go by the screen name ‘Austramaddux’?"
"You can’t do this to me!" Martin exclaimed as Neville led him unceremoniously into the Room of Requirement, which had arranged itself into a rather quaint turret-top prison cell, complete with a barred window, a cot, a bowl of water and a crust of bread on a plate. "This is unlawful imprisonment! It’s an outrage!"
"Think of it as field research," Neville instructed politely. "We have much to discuss, and after your ordeals in the forest, we thought you might like a bit of a breather. Take a load off, friend."
James, who was standing in the hall behind Neville, couldn’t help smiling a little. Martin saw him, scowled angrily, and made to shove past Neville. Neville whipped out his wand so fast that James barely saw his robes twitch. "I said," Neville repeated with low emphasis, not quite pointing his wand at Martin, "take a load off. Friend."
James’ smile faltered. He’d never seen Neville Longbottom so intense. Of course, James knew the stories of how Neville had cut off the head of Voldemort’s snake, Nagini, but that was before James had been born. In all his memory of the man, Neville had been a kindly figure, soft-spoken and a bit clumsy. Now, Neville’s wand hand was so immobile and purposeful that it might have been carved out of marble. Martin blinked at Neville, saw something in the man’s posture and the set of his face that he didn’t like, and backed up. The back of his knees struck the cot and he sat down hard. Neville pocketed his wand and stepped back into the hall, pulling the door of the Room of Requirement shut behind him. Martin, seeing the wand put away, immediately jumped up and started to yell again, but his voice was cut off as the door slammed shut.
"You know, we do have dungeons, Madam Headmistress," Neville said in his normal voice. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]12
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Seeing the door closed, Headmistress McGonagall turned on her heel and walked briskly down the corridor as the others followed. "We have some rather antique torture devices as well, Professor Longbottom, but I believe this will suffice for the moment. We only need to hold him until we receive word from the Ministry of Magic about whatever recourse we may or may not have against the dilemma Mr. Prescott has foisted upon us. In the meantime, Mr. Potter, I must ask you: Do you know anything about the game device that has apparently led this… person into our midst?"
James swallowed as he struggled to keep up the headmistress’ pace. He opened his mouth to answer, but nothing came. "Er, well…"
Neville touched James on the shoulder as they walked. "We all saw your face turn as pale as the moon when Prescott produced the GameDeck device. You looked almost like you expected it. Is there something you know that might help us, James?"
James decided there was no point in trying to protect Ralph. It wasn’t his fault, anyway. "My friend has one. He’s a first year like me, but he’s Muggle born. He didn’t know it might be dangerous to have here. None of us did, really. I was surprised it even worked here."
"He used it to communicate with someone in the Muggle community?" Neville asked quickly.
"No! As far as I know, he never used it at all! As soon as he got here, his House mates saw it and gave him a load of trouble about it. They’re Slytherins, so they were all ragging on him about counterfeit magical devices, about how it was an insult to the purebloods and all that."
The headmistress turned a corner, heading back toward her office. "I assume you are speaking of Mr. Deedle? Yes. I am confident enough that he is not at the head of this particular conspiracy, although this device of his might be. Does it perhaps broadcast some sort of signal?"
James shrugged. "You’d be better off asking Ralph about that, or even my other friend, Zane. He seems to know a lot about how these things work. But I don’t think it sends out information on its own. Ralph says somebody else took his GameDeck and used it. Another Slytherin, we think. Zane was able to tell that somebody had spent some time on it, and that they’d used the name Austramaddux. They hadn’t played the game at all, though. They must have just been using it to send information. Probably the coordinates that that guy said he used to locate the school using his GPS thing."
"You’re quite sure about this, are you, James?" Neville said, following the headmistress back into her office. "Have you considered that Mr. Deedle might have used this device on school grounds and unwittingly shared information that he shouldn’t have? It is possible that this tale of the stolen GameDeck is a ruse."
James shook his head firmly. "No way. Not Ralph. It never even occurred to him, or any of us, that the thing might be used to lead people here. He just knew it made his Slytherin mates angry." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]13
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"We’re all forgetting one important thing," McGonagall said, lowering herself tiredly into her chair. "Even if Mr. Deedle or this unknown borrower of the device did attempt to share information about this school with a Muggle, the vow of secrecy would prevent them."
Professor Franklyn, who had remained in the headmistress’ office to fiddle with the GameDeck, replaced the device on the desk and stared at it, apparently unable to make anything of it. "How does this vow work, precisely, Madam Headmistress?"
"It’s quite straightforward, Professor. Every student must sign the vow proclaiming they will not knowingly reveal any information regarding the existence of Hogwarts to any Muggle individual or agency. If they do, the magical properties of the vow will engage, preventing any such communication. This might mean the Langlock curse, or any other curse that would disable the individual’s ability to share information. In this case, we might assume that the user of the device might experience a fusing of the fingers, or paralysis of the hand, anything that would prevent them from entering any dangerous information into this device."
Franklyn was thoughtful. "We use a similar means at Alma Aleron. The wording of the vow must be very specific, of course. No loopholes. Still, it does seem apparent that someone was indeed able to use such a device to communicate very specific information about this school. My guess is that each of these gaming devices is equipped with a tracker that corresponds to the global positioning mechanism Mr. Prescott spoke of. Whoever used Mr. Deedle’s device was apparently able to send the geographical coordinates of one GameDeck to another. Mr. Prescott merely needed to enter that information into his GPS device and follow it very carefully. Despite Mr. Prescott’s obvious Muggle nature, this made him a sort of haphazard secret keeper. He can, if he so wishes, share the secret of this school’s location with anyone else he wishes. Whether they are able to get past the school’s unplottability zone is another question, though. Not everyone is quite as persistent as he is. This might explain why he needs our help to bring in his entourage."
"We cannot allow such a thing to happen, of course." Neville said, looking to the headmistress.
"I’m not entirely certain we can prevent it," she said heavily. "Our Mr. Prescott is indeed an extremely tenacious individual. He knows enough already to do us great harm. Even if we were to discover the whereabouts of his crew, obliviate them all and send them back, they would discover the recording that has been made of all Mr. Prescott has seen so far. He would inevitably return, and perhaps next time it will occur to him to bring live cameras rather than just a telephone. I see no recourse but to allow him to go on with this investigation of his, and hope to talk him out of broadcasting it."
Neville shook his head. "I have more confidence that we could talk the merpeople out of living in the lake than that we could convince this sodding twit not to broadcast his prize story."
Franklyn adjusted his tiny glasses and looked at the ceiling. "Of course, there are more, er, wholesale methods of dealing with this kind of thing, Madam Headmistress. We could simply place the imperious curse upon Mr. Prescott. That way we could arrange for him to send his crew away and even accompany him back to his offices to help him destroy any record of this visit. Once that was accomplished, we could feel free to obliviate Mr. Prescott with no fear of a repeat performance." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]14
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]McGonagall sighed. "This is not the sort of decision we are exactly authorized to make, and frankly I am glad of that. The Ministry of Magic has been notified of the situation and I am assured they will instruct us on the proper course within the hour. I expect to hear from your father directly, Mr. Potter, and at any moment."
As if on cue, a woman’s voice spoke up from the fireplace. "Greetings and salutations. This is an official communication of the Ministry of Magic. Can we be assured that this is a secure assembly?"
McGonagall stood and moved around her desk to face the fireplace. "It is. These with me are the only persons on the grounds at present fully aware of what is happening, although by this point the whole of the school must know that we have a Muggle individual among us. His entry was hardly subtle."
The face in the banked coals of the Headmistress’ fireplace looked around at Neville, James and Professor Franklyn. "I am the undersecretary of Miss Brenda Sacarhina, co-chair of the Council of Ambassadorial Relations. Please stand by to be connected." The face vanished.
James saw McGonagall’s face tighten just the tiniest bit when the undersecretary mentioned Miss Sacarhina. Only a few seconds passed before the face of the prim woman appeared in the fireplace. "Madam McGonagall, Professors Franklyn and Longbottom, greetings. And young Mr. Potter, of course." An ingratiating smile appeared on Sacarhina’s lips when she spoke to James. The smile disappeared almost as suddenly as it had appeared, as if it was something she could turn on and off like a light. "We have conferred about the situation that has thrust itself upon you and have reached a conclusion. As you may guess, we have prepared contingencies for just such an occurrence. Please tell Mr. Prescott that he may contact his associates. We find that there is no recourse but to allow his investigation to proceed, however no one other than Mr. Prescott is to be allowed onto Hogwarts grounds until a delegation from the Ministry arrives to oversee them. We will arrive no later than tomorrow evening, at which time we will assume all negotiations with Mr. Prescott and his crew."
"Miss Sacarhina," McGonagall said, "are you suggesting that the Ministry may well allow this man to perform his investigation and broadcast it to the Muggle world?"
"I’m sorry, Madam McGonagall," Sacarhina said sweetly, "I didn’t mean to imply that, or anything else. You may rest assured that we are prepared to deal with this situation, regardless of the method we choose. I’d hate to burden you with any more detail than you’ve already been forced to deal with."
The headmistress’ face became rather pink. "Burden away, Miss Sacarhina, for I can promise you that the future of this school and its students is hardly the sort of detail I’m likely to dismiss."
Sacarhina laughed lightly. "My dear Minerva, I suspect that the future of Hogwarts, the students and yourself is as secure as ever. As I mentioned, we have contingencies for such events. The Ministry is prepared." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]15
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Forgive me, Miss Sacarhina," Franklyn interjected, taking half a step forward, "but you’d have us believe that the Ministry of Magic has prepared contingencies for a Muggle investigative reporter penetrating the school of Hogwarts on foot with a camera crew at the ready and intentions to broadcast the secrets of the magical world to Muggles worldwide?"
Sacarhina’s indulgent smile tightened. "I’d have you believe, Mr. Franklyn, that the Ministry has prepared emergency response techniques for dealing with a wide variety of confrontations. The specifics do not matter."
"I beg to disagree, Miss. The specifics of this instance have revealed a rather large security breach that could, at this point, be utilized by virtually anyone. This school can no longer be considered secure until this breach has been addressed."
"One thing at a time, Professor. We appreciate your concern, but I assure you that we are fully equipped to deal with the matter in its entirety. If, however, you feel that the safety of yourself and your staff are at risk, we could possibly arrange for your early departure. This would cause us great disappointment and be quite a disruption to the school…"
"My concern, Miss Sacarhina," Franklyn said coolly, removing his glasses, "is for the security of everyone within these walls, and for the security of the magical and Muggle worlds in general."
"Again with the hyperbole," Sacarhina smiled. "Please, all of you, put your minds at ease. I, along with Mr. Recreant, will arrive tomorrow evening. We will meet with this Mr. Prescott and I am quite confident—positive, even—that we will reach a mutually amicable arrangement. You needn’t bother yourselves with it any further."
"What about my dad?" James asked.
Sacarhina blinked, apparently mystified. "Your father, James? Whatever do you mean?"
"Well, don’t you think he ought to be here along with you and Mr. Recreant?"
Sacarhina smiled her ingratiating smile again. "Why, your father is head of the Department of Aurors, James. There is no dark magic involved in this unfortunate set of circumstances, so far as we can tell. There’d be no reason to bother him with it."
"But he’s dealt with this man before," Neville said. "He and James witnessed him on the Quidditch pitch last year and led the search to try to capture him."
"And a fine job he did," Sacarhina said, her smile snapping shut. "That was his duty at the time. This, however, as you cannot fail to realize, is an ambassadorial issue. Harry Potter’s skills may be varied, but ambassadorship is not one of them. Besides, Mr. Potter is currently on assignment and not to be interrupted. We do have, however, specialists in exactly this sort of negotiation. Along with myself and Mr. Recreant, we are arranging for another ambassador to join us. He is an expert in Muggle-magical relations. We expect him [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]16
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]to spearhead our dealings with Mr. Prescott and his crew, and we have full confidence that he will serve all parties quite well."
McGonagall waved her hand dismissively. "What shall we do with Mr. Prescott until your arrival, Miss Sacarhina?"
"Make him comfortable. Allow him to make his telephone call. Other than that, as little as possible."
"Surely you do not mean for us to allow him free access to the school," the headmistress said, as if it were a statement rather than a question.
Sacarhina seemed to shrug in the fireplace. "Whatever harm he might be able to do by observing is surely less than the harm he could do if he brought Muggle legal charges against us. We must, for the moment, treat him as a guest. Besides, it sounds as if he’s seen quite a lot already."
McGonagall’s face was unreadable. "Very well, then. Good afternoon, Miss Sacarhina. We will look forward to your arrival tomorrow evening."
Sacarhina smiled again. "Indeed. Until then."
The face vanished from the fire. The headmistress reached for her poker and poked studiously at the embers for several seconds, strewing them so that no hint of the face remained. She replaced the poker, turned her back to the fire and said, "Insufferable bureaucratic poppycock."
"I’ll be happy to lodge Mr. Prescott in the Alma Aleron quarters." Franklyn said, putting his glasses back on. "I’d prefer to keep a close eye on him, anyway. I suspect we can keep him busy enough to prevent him causing any more trouble."
"I don’t like this at all," Neville said, still looking at the fireplace. "Harry should be here. Prescott himself isn’t a dark wizard, of course, but there is something extremely dodgy about how he got here at all. Somebody led him here, and that person somehow circumvented the vow of secrecy. I don’t care what Sacarhina says, I’d feel a lot better with a decent auror looking into it."
The headmistress opened her door. "At this point, it is out of our hands. Professor Franklyn, your idea is as good as any. Let us escort Mr. Prescott to the Alma Aleron quarters. And despite what Miss Sacarhina might believe, I’d prefer for us to arrange for Mr. Prescott to be quite busy for the next twenty-four hours. The less time he has to explore the school, the better. Mr. Potter, please feel free to return to your classes, and although I suspect I cannot ask you not to speak of this to Mr. Walker and Mr. Deedle, I’d be quite happy if you managed not to talk of it to anyone else. Especially Ted Lupin or Noah Metzker."
As James followed the adults out of the office, a quiet voice spoke to him from the wall. "Going to be quite a busy day tomorrow, Potter." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]17
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James stopped and glanced at the portrait of Severus Snape, not entirely sure what he meant. "I guess so. At least for the headmistress and everybody."
Snape’s black eyes bored into him. "Answer me truthfully, Potter: are you still laboring under the delusion that Tabitha Corsica is in possession of the Merlin staff?"
"Oh," James said, "look, say what you want, but it makes sense. We’re going to get it from her, too, one way or another."
Snape spoke quickly. "Don’t be a fool, Potter. Turn over what you have. Give it to the Headmistress. Surely you see how dangerous it is to keep the robe, especially now."
James blinked. "Why? What happens now? Does it have something to do with this Prescott fellow?"
Snape stared hopelessly at James. "You don’t see it, then," he sighed. "There is a very good reason why your father, dull as he is, is being kept from accompanying tomorrow’s delegation. There are members of the Progressive Element even within the Ministry, although they do not call themselves by that name. Sacarhina is one of them. Recreant may be as well, although he is not really in charge. Either she is taking full advantage of a very suspicious coincidence, or this is all her plan from the beginning."
"What? What’s her plan?" James asked, lowering his voice and stepping closer to the portrait.
"The details are unimportant. All that matters is that unless you secure the Merlin robe by tomorrow night, all will very likely be lost."
"But it is secure," James replied. "We captured it already. You know that. We have to get the Merlin staff now."
"Forget the staff!" Snape hissed angrily. "You are allowing yourself to be manipulated! If I had even the slightest hope that you’d be any better at it than your father was, I’d have taught you occlumency by now. When I tell you to secure the Merlin robe, I mean you must turn it over to those who know how to bind it, not just hide it. The enemy has the other two relics. The robe wishes to be reunited with them. You will not be able to prevent that, Potter. Don’t be the arrogant fool your father was!"
James scowled. "My father was never the arrogant fool you think he was, and I’m not either. I don’t have to listen to you. Besides, tomorrow isn’t the alignment of the planets. It’s the next night. Zane told me himself."
Snape grinned maliciously. "So trusting are you both. Where, pray tell, does Mr. Walker get his information?"
"He’s in Constellations Club," James replied angrily. "Madame Delacroix’s been using everybody in the club to help her pinpoint the exact timing of the alignment." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]18
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"And did it never occur to you that she might have deliberately altered the information just enough to mislead those too ignorant to notice? She has known the day of the alignment for the past year. She only needed help to ascertain the hour. Even you have realized that she is involved in the Merlin plot. Do you expect that she would desire dozens of stargazing students to be swarming the grounds on the very night she plans to skulk off to facilitate the return of the most dangerous wizard of all time?"
James felt sheepish. Of course she wouldn’t. He just hadn’t thought of it. He opened his mouth to speak, but could think of nothing to say. Snape went on. "She has misled all of you by exactly one day. The Hall of Elders’ Crossing will not occur Thursday night, but Wednesday. Tomorrow, Potter. You have been duped, and you are being duped still. There is no time for any more delusions of grandeur. You must turn over the robe. If you do not, you will fail and our enemies will succeed in their plan."
"James?" It was Neville. He poked his head into the Headmistress’ doorway. "We lost you, it seems. Did you forget something?"
James mind was running at full speed. He stared blankly at Neville for a few seconds, and finally gathered himself. "Er, no. No, sorry, I was just… thinking out loud."
Neville glanced at the portrait of Snape. Snape sighed and crossed his arms. "Go on, Longbottom, and take the boy with you. I’ve no use for him."
Neville nodded. "Come along, James. You still have time to make your afternoon classes if you hurry. I’ll walk with you and explain your tardiness."
James followed Neville out of the room, thinking only of what Snape had told him. They had only one day; one day to get the Merlin staff from Tabitha. One day before the Hall of Elders’ Crossing, and it just happened to be the very same day that Sacarhina was coming to deal with Prescott. As he rode down the moving spiral stairs and came out into the corridor below, it occurred to James that Snape was right about one thing: tomorrow was indeed going to be a very busy day. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]19

Re: eighth harry potter book

chapter 16 below this post

Re: eighth harry potter book

**
1. 16. Disaster of the Merlin Staff
**[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The next morning, James, Ralph and Zane entered the Great Hall for breakfast and headed purposefully toward the far end of the Gryffindor table.
"Are you sure about this?" Ralph asked as they crossed the Hall. "We can’t go back after this, you know."
James pressed his lips together but didn’t answer. They crowded in with Noah, Ted and the rest of the Gremlins, all of whom were seated conspicuously in a tight knot.
"Ah, the very man," Ted announced as James squeezed between him and Sabrina. "We were just taking bets on why you asked all of us to meet you for breakfast. Noah thinks you want to officially join the ranks of the Gremlins, in which case we’ve prepared a series of grueling challenges for you to complete. My favorite is the one where you don Sabrina’s old Yule gown and run through the school singing the Hogwarts tribute as loud as you can. There’s plenty more, although Damien’s challenges tend to involve too many slugs and mustard for my taste." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]1
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James grimaced. "To tell you the truth, the reason I asked to talk to all of you is that Ralph, Zane and I have something we need to ask of you." To their credit, none of the Gremlins seemed surprised. They simply leaned in a little as they continued to eat. James didn’t exactly know where to begin. He had awoken that morning with the simple realization that, on their own, he, Ralph and Zane would not succeed in capturing the Merlin staff in one day. They had no plan. The portrait of Snape had been some help, but Snape didn’t even believe that Tabitha Corsica had the staff. So who could they turn to? He acted on his first impulse. He could ask the one group of people in all the school who were experts in the subtle arts of chaos and tomfoolery. It might take too long to explain everything to Ted and his fellow Gremlins, and even if he could, they still might not agree to help, but it was his best, last hope. James sighed hugely and stared at his glass of pumpkin juice. "We need your help to… to borrow something."
"Borrow something?" Noah repeated, his mouth full of toast. "What? Money? A cup of sugar? A decent haircut? Doesn’t sound like you need us, exactly."
"Quiet, Metzker," Ted said mildly. "What is it you want to ‘borrow’, James?"
James took a deep breath and then simply said it. "Tabitha Corsica’s broom."
Damien coughed into his juice. All the other Gremlins glanced at James with widened eyes. All except Ted. "Whatever for?" Sabrina asked in a low voice. "Tonight’s the tournament match between Ravenclaw and Slytherin. Is that it? Are you trying to ruin Slytherin’s chances? I admit that there’s something highly suspect about that broom of hers, but cheating doesn’t exactly seem like your style, James."
"No! It doesn’t have anything to do with the match," James said, and then faltered. "It’s a lot to explain. And I’m not even allowed to talk about some of it. McGonagall asked me not to."
"Tell us as much as you can, then," Petra said.
"All right. Zane, Ralph, help me out. Fill in any bits I miss. It’s going to sound pretty mad, but here goes." Between the three of them, they explained the entire story of the Merlin Conspiracy, from the first glimpse of the shade of Madame Delacroix on the lake to the adventure at the Grotto Keep to Ralph and Zane’s mysterious confrontation with the creepy dryad demanding the Merlin robe. They had to back up, then, and explain how they’d come to capture the robe from Professor Jackson. James was worried that the story had become so fragmented that the Gremlins wouldn’t be able to follow it. Ted listened intently the entire time, simply eating and watching whoever was speaking. The rest of the Gremlins asked clarifying questions and responded with a mixture of skepticism, awe and excitement.
"You’ve been working this whole plot out all year and you’re only now telling us about it?" Damien asked, narrowing his eyes.
"Like I said, McGonagall warned us not to tell anybody about the Grotto Keep," James said sincerely. "And we were worried that you wouldn’t believe the rest of it, anyway. We had a hard time believing a lot of it ourselves. For a while, at least. So, what do you think?" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]2
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I’m confused," Sabrina said, frowning. "The whole thing seems pretty patched together. It’s one thing to shoot off Weasley fireworks during the debate, but it’s something else entirely to go and steal the broom of one of the most prominent, and frankly scary witches in the school. That’s thievery, that is."
"It’s only thievery if what we’re saying isn’t true," Zane reasoned. "If Tabitha’s broom is the Merlin staff, then it isn’t hers, really. I don’t know whose it is, but no matter what, she had to have stolen it somehow herself."
Damien didn’t seem convinced. "Even if she did, we’d be the only ones who knew that. If she hauls us all into the Headmistress’ office claiming we stole her broom, what would we say? It’s all right because she stole the broom herself from somebody, we don’t know who, and besides, the broom is really the magic staff of the most powerful wizard ever, so we were really just doing the world a favor taking it out of Corsica’s hands? That’ll fly like a dead owl."
"Well, why wouldn’t it?" Ralph interjected. "If it’s true, it’s true."
"And that came from the mouth of a Slytherin," Noah said, grinning crookedly.
"What’s that supposed to mean?" Ralph said, firming his jaw.
James shook his head. "It’s all right, Ralph. He’s ragging you. The point is, yes, even if it is true, we might not be able to prove it. I won’t tell you we might not get in trouble over this. I can only tell you that if it is true, then being hauled to McGonagall’s office and called a thief is the least of our worries. I can’t ask any of you to get involved if you don’t want to. It’s risky. We could all get in loads of trouble. We could even fail despite our best efforts."
"Now wait a minute," Noah said, "this is the Gremlins you’re talking about."
Petra sat up straight and looked around at the group. "The thing is, if James, Zane and Ralph are wrong, we’ll know by tomorrow. If we did ‘borrow’ Corsica’s broom, we could return it, somehow. Probably anonymously. No harm, no penalty. Everybody will just think it was a Quidditch prank, right? But, if this story is true, and the broom really is the Merlin staff, then nobody will be dragging anybody to the headmistress’ office."
"Why not?" Sabrina asked, interested.
"Because Tabitha will have bigger fish to fry," Noah answered thoughtfully. "If she’s part of some big Merlin conspiracy and she fails to come through with the staff, she’ll be in some serious outs with her cronies. People like that don’t tend to be very forgiving, you know. Why, we might never even see her again."
"One can only hope," Petra muttered. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]3
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Ted stirred. "Look here, all of you. This is all well and good, but as far as I’m concerned, there’s only one thing to decide. Can we trust James? I don’t know Zane and Ralph here all that well, but I grew up with James. He may have sometimes been an obnoxious little squitter, but he’s always been honest. And besides, he’s the son of my Godfather. You remember that guy, don’t you? I’m willing to take a little risk for him. Not just because he’s family, but because he’s a Potter. If he says there’s a battle worth fighting, I’m inclined to believe him."
"Well said, mate," Noah said gravely, slapping Ted on the back. "And besides, let’s not forget that this does have the fringe benefit of pulling one over on Tabitha Corsica."
"And perhaps balancing out tonight’s Quidditch match," Sabrina admitted.
"And maybe we could somehow snatch her broom when she’s nice and high in the air!" Damien grinned nastily.
"That’s what I said!" Zane exclaimed.
"You’re both mad," Petra said reproachfully. "You’re as bad as she is."
"We don’t want to kill her," Zane replied in a wounded voice. "We just want to see her drop a few hundred feet in terror. Ridcully would levitate her at the last moment, just like the Ralphinator did for James. Honestly, you must think we’re monsters."
"So are we all agreed, then?" Ted asked the group. Everyone nodded and murmured assent.
"That’s wonderful and all," Ralph said, "but how are we going to do it?"
Ted leaned back and stared up at the enchanted ceiling of the Great Hall, stroking his chin. Slowly, he smiled. "Does anyone know what the weather is supposed to be like tonight?"
There was very little that the group needed to do to prepare. After lunch, Sabrina and Noah headed off to the basements to talk to the house elves. James and Ted, both of whom had an afternoon free period, spent some time in the library studying a collection of gigantic books about atmospheric spells and weather charms. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]4
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"This is Petra’s thing, really," Ted lamented. "If she wasn’t busy all afternoon with divination and runes, we’d be a lot better off."
James looked over their notes. "Looks like we’ve got what we need, though, doesn’t it?"
"I guess," Ted replied airily, flipping a few huge pages noisily. A minute later, he looked up at James. "It was really tough for you to ask for help, wasn’t it?"
James glanced at Ted and met his eyes, then looked out a nearby window. "A little, yeah. I didn’t know if I’d be able to explain it. I wasn’t sure any of you would believe it."
Ted furrowed his brow. "Is that all?" he prodded.
"Well…" James began, then stopped. He fiddled with his quill. "No, I guess not. It just seemed like… like something I was supposed to do on my own. I mean, with Zane and Ralph’s help, sure. They were along with the whole thing from the start. But still. I kind of figured that, between the three of us, we’d be able to manage. We’d work it out. It felt a little like…" He stopped, realizing what he was about to say, surprised by it.
"Like what?" Ted asked.
James sighed. "Like a failure. Like if the three of us couldn’t do it on our own, we’d failed, somehow."
"The three of you. Like your dad and Ron and Hermione, you mean."
James glanced at Ted sharply. "What? No… no," he said, but suddenly he wasn’t sure.
"I’m just saying," Ted replied. "It makes sense. That’s how your dad did it. He was a big one for taking on all the responsibilities of the world and not sharing the load with anyone else. He and Ron and Hermione. There were always loads of people around who were ready and willing to help, and sometimes they did, but not until they’d pretty much forced themselves into the action." Ted shrugged.
"You sound like Snape," James said, keeping his voice level. He felt uncomfortably vulnerable all of a sudden.
"Well, maybe Snape’s right, sometimes," Ted said mildly, "even if he was an oily old humbug most of the time."
"Yeah, well, blast him," James said, surprised to feel a prickle of tears. He blinked them away. "He was a load of help, wasn’t he? Sneaking around, working both sides, never making it clear to anybody where his loyalties really lay until it was too late. Can’t really blame my dad for not trusting him, can you? So I don’t trust him either. Maybe my dad did do most stuff with just aunt Hermione and uncle Ron. That was all he needed, wasn’t it? They won. He’d found two people he could trust with everything. Well, I found [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]5
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]them, too. I’ve got Ralph and Zane. So maybe I thought I could be as good as Dad. I’m not, though. I needed some help." There was more James meant to say, but he stopped, uncertain if he should continue.
Ted looked at James for a long, thoughtful moment, and then leaned forward, resting his elbows on the table. "Tough thing living in the shadow of your dad, isn’t it?" he said. James didn’t reply. A moment later, Ted went on. "I never knew my dad. He died right here, on the school grounds. He and Mum both. They were in the Battle of Hogwarts, you know. You’d think that it would be hard to feel resentful of people you never knew, but you can. I resent them for dying. Sometimes I resent them for being here at all. I mean, what were they thinking? Both of them rushing off into some big battle, leaving their kid at home. You call that responsible? I sure don’t." Ted looked out the window, as James had done a minute earlier. Then he sighed. "Ah well, most of the time, though, I’m proud of them. Somebody once said, if you don’t have something worth dying for, you aren’t really living. Mum and Dad had something worth dying for, and they did. I lost them, but I got a legacy out of it. A legacy is worth something, isn’t it?" He looked across the table at James again, searching his face. James nodded, unsure what to say. Finally Ted shrugged a little. "The reason I bring it up, though, is my dad, he left me something else."
Ted was quiet for almost a minute, thinking, apparently debating with himself. Finally he spoke again. "Dad was a werewolf. I guess it’s as simple as that. You didn’t know that, did you?"
James tried to keep his face from showing it, but he was quite shocked. He knew there had been something secret about Remus Lupin, something that had never been explained to him, or even mentioned outright. All James knew for sure was that Lupin had been close friends with Sirius Black, James Potter the first, and a man named Peter Pettigrew that had eventually betrayed them all. James knew that Lupin had come to teach at Hogwarts when his dad was in school, and that Lupin had taught his dad how to summon his Patronus. Whatever the secret of Remus Lupin’s past, it couldn’t have been anything terribly serious, James had reasoned. He had thought perhaps Ted’s Father had been in Azkaban for a while, or that he had once flirted with the dark arts when he was young. It had never crossed James’ mind that Remus Lupin might have been a werewolf.
Despite James’ attempt to mask his shock, Ted saw it on his face and nodded. "Yeah, quite a secret, that was. Your dad told me the whole story himself a few years back, when I was old enough to understand it. Grandmum never talks about it at all, even now. I think she’s afraid. Not so much of what was, but… well, what could be."
James was a little afraid to ask. "What could be, Ted?"
Ted shrugged. "You know how it is with werewolves. There’re only two ways to become one. You can get bitten by one, or you can be born of one. Of course, nobody really knows exactly what happens when only your mum or dad is a werewolf. Your dad said that my dad was pretty upset when he found out Mum was going to have a baby. He was scared, see? He didn’t want the kid to be like him, to grow up an outcast, cursed and hated. He thought he never should’ve even married my mum, because she wanted babies, but he was afraid to pass on the curse to them. Well, when I was born, I guess everybody breathed a big sigh of [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]6
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]relief. I was normal. I got my mum’s metamorphmagus thing, even. They tell me I was always changing my hair color as a baby. Got no end of laughs about that, Grandmum says. I can still do it today, and a few other things, too. I usually don’t, though. Once you get known for stuff like that it’s hard to be known for much else, if you know what I mean. So I guess Dad died feeling a bit better about having me, then. He died knowing I was normal, more or less. I’m glad of that." Ted was staring out the window again. He took a deep breath, and then looked back at James. "Harry told me how your Grandfather James, Sirius Black and Pettigrew used to run with my dad when he changed, how they’d change into animal forms and accompany him around the countryside under the full moon, protecting him from the world and the world from him. I even started thinking it was all sort of adventurous and romantic, like those dopey Muggles who read those werewolf stories where the werewolves are all handsome and seductive and mysterious. I started almost wishing I had got the werewolf thing after all. And then…" Ted stopped and seemed to wrestle with himself for a moment. He lowered his voice and went on. "Well, the thing is, nobody really knows how all this werewolf stuff works, do they? I never gave it a second thought. But then last year… last year I started having insomnia. No big deal, right? Except it wasn’t any normal insomnia. I couldn’t sleep, but not because I wasn’t tired, exactly. I was… I was…" He stopped again and leaned back in his chair, staring hard at the wall by the window.
"Hey," James said, feeling nervous and embarrassed, although he didn’t quite know why. "You don’t have to tell me. Forget it. No problem."
"No," Ted said, returning his gaze to James. "I do need to tell you. As much for me as for you. Because I haven’t told anybody else yet, not even Grandmum. I think if I don’t tell somebody, I’ll go nutters. See, I couldn’t sleep because I was so hungry. I was starved! I lay there in bed the first time it happened telling myself that this was just crazy. I’d had a nice big dinner and everything, just like normal. But no matter what I told myself, my stomach just kept telling me it wanted food. And not just anything. It wanted meat. Raw meat. Fresh-off-the-bone, meat. You see what I’m getting at?"
James understood. "It was…" he began, and then had to clear his throat. "It was a full moon?"
Ted nodded grimly, slowly. "Eventually, I got to sleep. But since then, it’s gotten worse. By the end of last school year, I finally started sneaking down to the kitchens below the Great Hall, where all the elves work. They have a big meat locker down there. I started to… well, you know. I ate. It tends to be a bit of a mess." Ted shuddered, and then seemed to shrug it off. "Anyway, the point is, obviously I didn’t completely skip the whole werewolf thing. My dad gave me his own shadow to live in, didn’t he? I don’t blame him for it. For all I know, this is the worst it’ll ever get. And this isn’t all that bad. Helps me bulk up for Quidditch season, at least. But… it’s scary, a little. I don’t know how to manage it yet. And I’m afraid to tell anyone about it. People…" Ted swallowed and looked hard at James. "People don’t respond well to werewolves."
James didn’t know whether to agree with that or not. Not because it was untrue, but because he wasn’t sure Ted needed any more affirmation of it. "My dad could help you, I bet," James said. "And me, too. I’m not afraid of you, Ted, even if you are a werewolf. I’ve known you my whole life. Maybe we could, [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]7
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]you know, work it out like your dad and his mates did. He had his James Potter to help him, and you have yours."
Ted smiled, and it was a huge, genuine smile. "You’re a brick, James. I’d hate to have to eat you. Learn how to turn yourself into a giant dog, like Sirius did, and maybe being a werewolf wouldn’t be so bad after all, with you trotting along next to me. But I almost forgot why I brought this up at all." Ted leaned forward again, his eyes serious. "You have the shadow of your dad to grow up in, just like me. But I can’t choose whether I’m like my dad or not. You can. It’s not a curse, James. Your dad’s a great man. Pick the bits of who he is that are worth being like, and be like them, if you want. The other parts, well, that’s your choice, isn’t it? Take it or leave it. Those are the places where you can choose to be even better. Your dad didn’t much ask for help, did he? But that’s not because he didn’t need it. The fact that you asked for help doesn’t tell me you’re worse than him. It tells me you learned something he never learned. That’s you being you, not just a copy of your dad. I think that’s pretty cool, if you ask me. And not just because it means I get to help pull a fast one on Tabitha Corsica."
James was speechless. He simply stared at Ted, unsure what to feel or think, unsure if what Ted was saying was true or not. He knew only that it surprised him and humbled him, in a good way, to hear Ted say what he had. Ted closed the gigantic book in front of him with a loud clunk.
"Come on," he said, standing and gathering the books together. "Help me get these to the common room so Petra can look them over before the match. She’s going to have to help me get this right or we’re doomed for sure. Dinner is in an hour, and after that we’re going to be pretty preoccupied for the rest of the night, if you know what I mean."
The afternoon of the last Quidditch match of the season was cool and misty, covered with a veil of restless, grey clouds. Silent and unusually somber, the Gremlins trooped through the tunnel behind the statue of St. Lokimagus the Perpetually Productive. When they reached the steps that led up to the interior of the equipment shed, Ted slowed and tiptoed. By now, Ridcully had probably already retrieved the Quidditch [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]8
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]trunk from the shed, but it didn’t hurt to be careful. Ted peered around the cramped space, saw only some dusty shelves and a few broken brooms, and then beckoned the rest to follow him up.
"It’s all clear. We should be safe in here, now that Ridcully’s been and gone. He’s the only one that uses the shed."
Ralph climbed the steps and looked cautiously around. James remembered that Ralph hadn’t been along the night he and the Gremlins had used this secret tunnel to go raise the Wocket. "It’s a magic tunnel. It only works one way," he whispered to Ralph, "we can get back through it because it’s the way we came, but anybody else would just find the inside of the equipment shed."
"Cool," Ralph breathed meaningfully. "That’s good to know."
James, Ralph and Sabrina pressed against the rear of the shed to peer through the single, grimy window. The Quidditch pitch lay behind the shed, and they could clearly see three of the grandstands, already mostly filled with banner-waving students and teachers, all bundled against the unseasonable chill. The Ravenclaw and Slytherin teams were gathering along opposite sides of the pitch to observe their captains’ shaking hands and listen to Ridcully’s traditional recital of the basic rules of play.
"I forgot all about this," Sabrina said quietly. "The whole hand-shaking thing. That Zane is a pretty sharp fellow."
James nodded. It had been Zane’s idea to stage the broom caper during the opening moments of the match, in those few minutes when both teams came out of their holding pens beneath the grandstands to watch the opening ritual. It was a genius idea, because it was the only time when the teams’ brooms were separated from their owners, left behind in the holding pens until the teams collected them for their big flying introductions.
"It’s time," Ted said, tapping James once on the shoulder. "There’s Corsica already."
James swallowed past a lump in his throat that felt like a marble. His heart was already pounding. He pulled the invisibility cloak out of his backpack, shook it open and threw it over his and Ralph’s heads. As they neared the door of the shed, Petra whispered harshly, "I can see your feet. Ralph, duck down some more." Ralph hunkered and James saw the edge of the cloak meet the ground around his feet.
"Stay low and move fast," Ted instructed. He turned and peered between the planks of the door. The equipment shed was positioned at a corner of the pitch, just inside the magical boundary erected by the match official. The door faced away from the pitch, visible only to the Slytherin grandstands right next to it.
"Looks clear enough," Ted said, his face pressed to the cracks in the door. "Let’s just hope everybody’s looking at the pitch and not this shed." With that, he pushed the door open and stepped aside. James and Ralph shuffled through and James heard the door clunk shut behind them. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]9
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The wind was shifty and unpredictable. It barreled across the pitch and swatted restlessly at the invisibility cloak, flapping it about the boys’ legs.
"Somebody’s going to see my feet," Ralph moaned.
"We’re almost there already," James said under the noise of the crowd. "Just stay close and keep down."
Through the transparent fabric of the invisibility cloak, James could see the dark mouth of the doorway into the Slytherin holding pen. The great doors were swung wide open, latched to the walls of the grandstand to keep them from blowing shut. The Slytherin players were lined up along the pitch on the other side of the doorway, close enough that a careless word or a flicker of their shoes might be noticed. James held his breath and resisted the urge to run. Slowly, the two boys sidled past the nearest Slytherin player, Tom Squallus, and slipped into the shadow of the doorway. Inside, the wind fell away and the cloak hung still. James let his breath out in a careful hiss.
"Come on," he whispered almost soundlessly, "we don’t have much time."
James knew what the Gremlins were planning, even though he wasn’t going to see any of it. Zane, who was watching along with his teammates on the Ravenclaw side of the pitch, told him all about it later. As Tabitha and Gennifer Tellus, the Ravenclaw Captain, walked to meet Ridcully at the centerline of the pitch, a strange sound began to build in the air overhead. All day, the sky had been low and sluggish, packed with grey clouds, but now, as the spectators and players glanced up, the clouds had begun to circle ponderously. There was a bulge in the clouds directly over the pitch, spiraling in on itself and lowering even as the crowd watched. The general noise of the assembly quieted, and the sound of the clouds in that silence was a deep, vibrating groan, long and menacing. With only his eyes, Zane glanced toward the equipment shed at the far corner of the pitch. He could just see the shapes of Ted and Petra, ducked low in the corners of the tiny window, their wands raised, teasing the cloud shapes. He smiled, and then, when the timing was perfect and the entire pitch had fallen silent, he called out across the pitch, "Quidditch is never called on account of weather, right Gennifer?"
There was a nervous ripple of laughter across the nearer grandstands. Gennifer glanced at Zane for a moment, then looked back up at the funnel lowering over her. As a Gremlin, Ted had told her of their plan, but Zane could tell that her nervousness wasn’t hard to fake. Neither Ridcully nor Tabitha Corsica seemed prepared to move. Corsica merely looked up at the clouds, her hair whipping wildly around her face, her wand visible in her hand. Ridcully’s expression seemed to be one of grim determination.
"Ladies and gentlemen," Damien’s voice echoed throughout the grandstands from his place in the announcer’s booth, "We seem to be experiencing some sort of highly localized weather phenomenon. Please stay in your seats. You are probably safe there. Those on the field, please remain where you are. Cyclones cannot see you if you don’t move."
In the crowd, someone shouted out, "That’s dinosaurs, you crazy fruitbat!" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]10
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Same concept," Damien answered in his amplified voice.
Sabrina and Noah darted out of the equipment shed, ducking against the swirling winds. They scurried toward the tiny concessions area built into the base of the Hufflepuff grandstand. The counter was manned by Hufflepuff students, but the food itself was prepared by elves in a kitchen near the back. Noah and Sabrina headed along the side of the grandstand and stopped at an open doorway.
"Hey, you fellows see what’s going on out here?" Sabrina yelled over the growing noise of the cyclone. "Weather’s getting pretty foul, isn’t it?"
A grumpy looking elf in the back of the kitchen lowered his pipe. "And what do you want we’s to do about it, eh? You wants we should shoot a blast of storm-calming pixie-dust out our ears, maybe?"
"I was just thinking about section fifty-five, paragraph nine of the Elves of Hogwarts Coalition Agreement," Noah yelled, hunkering in the doorway. "Says elves are responsible for securing the grounds during inclement weather. Getting pretty inclement out here, I’d say. Maybe you’d like Sabrina and me to go shut and lock the holding pen doors for you until this blows over? Come on Sabrina."
The elf stuffed his pipe into the knot of his napkin loincloth and jumped forward. "Never you mind that, now!" He turned and called into the depths of the kitchen. "Oi! Peckle! Krung! Seedie! We got a job, we does. Let’s get a move on."
The four elves bustled past Sabrina and Noah. The grumpy elf called back over his shoulder as they went, "Much obliged, master and mistress. Enjoy the match, now."
As the elves scurried through the wind toward the holding pen doors, the cyclone finally touched the pitch. It licked across the centerline, twenty feet to Tabitha Corsica’s right, and for several moments she watched it, fascinated. Many people commented later that, impressive as it was, it was certainly the smallest cyclone they had ever seen. The grass where it touched down tossed wildly, but the power of the tornado dropped off significantly after a hundred feet or so, so that those in the grandstands were relatively unaffected. Gennifer Tellus turned and ran to the sidelines to join her team. Ridcully didn’t seem to notice. Still standing in the center of the pitch next to him, Tabitha Corsica fingered her wand and glanced around, now ignoring the writhing cyclone. She seemed to be looking for something.
In the holding pen deep beneath the Slytherin grandstands, James and Ralph heard the noise of the cyclone and the creaking of the grandstand as the wind pressed against it.
"Which one is it?" Ralph asked as James whipped the cloak off them. "There’re so many of them!"
James pointed past the row of broomsticks leaning against the lockers. There, in the corner farthest from the door, a broom hung in the air as if awaiting its rider.
"That’s got to be it," he said, darting toward it. They stopped, one on either side of it. Close up, the broom seemed to be vibrating or humming very slightly. A low, unsettling noise came from it, audible even [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]11
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]over the moan of the wind and the creak of the grandstands. "Grab it, then, James. Come on, let’s get out of here."
James reached out and grabbed the broomstick, but the broom didn’t budge. He pulled it, then wrapped both hands around it and yanked. The broom was as immobile as if it had been buried in stone.
"What’s the problem?" Ralph moaned, glancing back toward the door. "If we’re still in here when they come back…"
"We have the invisibility cloak, Ralph. We can hide," James said, but he knew Ralph was right. The holding pen was small and there were no obvious places to get out of the way, even if they couldn’t be seen. "The broom’s stuck, somehow. I can’t move it."
"Well," Ralph replied, gesturing vaguely, "it’s a broomstick. Maybe you’re supposed to ride it."
James felt a sinking in his stomach. "I can’t ride this thing, even if I could get it to move."
"Why not?"
"It’s not mine! I wasn’t all that great on the broom until I got my Thunderstreak, if you recall. We want to capture this thing, not pulverize it into a wall with me on it."
"You’ve gotten better at it since then!" Ralph insisted. "Even before you got your Thunderstreak you were getting loads better. Almost as good as Zane. Go on! I’ll… I’ll hop on the back and throw the cloak over both of us!"
James dropped his hands and rolled his eyes. "Ralph, that’s completely crazy."
Suddenly, a resounding boom echoed down the corridor leading to the pitch. It rattled the rafters, showering dust all around. Ralph and James both startled. Ralph’s voice was squeaky with fear. "What was that?"
"I don’t know," James replied quickly, "but I think we just ran all out of options. Ralph, get ready to hop on."
James swung his leg over the floating, gently humming broomstick and gripped the handle tightly with both hands. Slowly, he settled his weight onto the broomstick, letting it collect him.
A minute earlier, outside, Tabitha Corsica had spied something. Zane saw her gaze stop on the equipment shed. Somehow, she’d known the cyclone was suspicious and had identified the one place someone might hide and cast spells into the magical boundaries of the Quidditch pitch. Zane was prepared to bolt onto the pitch to head her off if she approached the shed. He was already concocting a haphazard plan to pretend to drag her to safety. She didn’t approach the shed, though. Zane saw her take one step in [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]12
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]that direction, and then glance aside at the elves closing and barring the doorways into the team holding pens. Tabitha turned on her heel and stalked purposely toward the door in the base of the Slytherin grandstands. Even if Zane ran full out, he’d barely beat her there. He simply had to hope that the elves would stick by their duties, regardless of what Tabitha said.
Noah and Sabrina had followed the elves to the Slytherin holding pen doors, watching from a distance as they swung them shut and threw the locking beam into place. Sabrina saw Tabitha striding across the pitch, her face grim and her wand out.
"Open those doors," Tabitha yelled, her voice firm but calm. She raised her wand hand, pointing it at the closed doorway.
"Very sorry, Miss," the grumpy elf answered, bowing slightly. "Coalition requirements. These doors must remain secure until such time as they can be opened without fear of danger or damage."
"Open them now or stand aside," Tabitha called. She was only thirty feet away from the doorway now, and Sabrina saw the look of murder on Tabitha’s face. She’d blast those doors open with her wand and probably crush the poor duty-bound elves to paste between them and the wall. Obviously, Tabitha had guessed what was happening and knew that her broom was in jeopardy.
"Hey Corsica!" Sabrina shouted, launching herself forward, trying to get between Tabitha and the doors. "You summon this cyclone because you were too proud to forfeit to the Ravenclaws?"
Tabitha’s eyes darted toward Sabrina, but her pace didn’t change. Her wand hand swung swiftly and locked onto Sabrina, who stopped in her tracks. Noah jumped forward to pull Sabrina back but he was too late. Neither heard the curse Tabitha spoke, but they both saw the bolt of green light leap from her wand. It struck Sabrina square in the face, throwing her backwards into Noah. Both fell to the ground, their shouts drowned by the roar of the wind and the now yelling, confused crowd.
"Ladies and gentlemen," Damien’s voice echoed over the noise, "please let’s give a big cheer for Mr. Cabe Ridcully, our beloved Quidditch official, who is currently trying to calm the cyclone with some sort of… well, ritualistic dance, as far as I can tell." Sure enough, Ridcully seemed to be dancing around the tornado as it curled over the pitch, throwing up a thick cloud of grit and dust. He pointed his wand at the funnel, but whenever he seemed to get a good aim at it, the funnel would shift, lunging towards him and forcing him to dance away. The crowd did indeed begin to cheer him, so that very few people noticed what was happening at the base of the Slytherin grandstands.
"Last chance," Tabitha called to the elves guarding the doorway. They both glanced at Sabrina, who was still collapsed atop Noah, her hands covering her face.
"Now listen here, Mistress," the grumpy elf began, but he was cut off by the bolt of green light that struck the closed doors. Both elves were thrown aside as the great wooden beam that barred the door exploded with a deafening boom and a shower of splinters. Tabitha hadn’t slowed in her approach to the [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]13
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]door. She aimed her wand once more, ready to cast the spell that would throw the doors wide open. Then, suddenly, she stopped. She cocked her head, as if listening. Noah, struggling to get out from beneath the dazed Sabrina, heard it as well. Beneath the sound of the cyclone and the roaring grandstands, there was a sound like a single person yelling, and it was growing louder very quickly.
The doors to the Slytherin holding pen burst open, ripping completely off their hinges, as something rocketed through them from inside. Noah had the briefest glimpse of somebody bent low over a broom hurtling past Tabitha Corsica so fast that she was thrown off her feet. She landed in a graceless heap ten feet away. The voice of the screaming rider thinned into distance as the broomstick streaked over the pitch, through the cyclone, and out the other side.
James clung to Tabitha’s broomstick as tightly as he could. He’d left Ralph behind, having launched into an instant wild acceleration the moment he’d settled onto the broom. He felt the thundering shock as the broom rocketed through the cyclone, then he opened his eyes and pulled, trying to gain some control over the wildly careening broomstick. The Quidditch pitch wheeled sickeningly beneath him as the broom responded, fighting him but unable to resist the force of his lean. The Ravenclaw grandstand loomed ahead and James struggled to pull up. He roared over the crowd, which ducked in his wake, hats and banners flying up behind him. Damien was yelling something from the announcer’s booth, but James couldn’t hear it over the roar of the wind in his ears. He risked a glance behind him, fearing he might have hurt someone. There were no obvious injuries as far as he could see. When he turned forward, he was heading directly toward the Slytherin grandstands again, back the way he’d come. He leaned the opposite direction and pulled as hard as he could, driving the broom into a wild, banking turn. The Slytherin grandstands spun away. With a sense of wild triumph, James realized he was getting some control over the broomstick. He looked ahead to see where his turn was taking him and gasped. He barely had time to duck his head before socking through the open door of the equipment shed.
The broom seemed to move as if it had a mind of its own. It roared through the tunnel beyond the shed and the air of the confined space pressed hard against James’ eardrums. When it reached the opening behind the pedestal of St. Lokimagus, it turned so hard, threading into the corridor, that it nearly threw James off.
The sense of speed was staggering as the broomstick careened through the halls. Fortunately, the majority of the school’s population was out at the Quidditch pitch for the tournament match, leaving the corridors mostly empty. The broomstick banked and dipped into the chasm of the stairwells. It swooped under and over the staircases as they swung and pivoted, barely missing them, forcing James to duck and hug the broomstick as closely as he could. Peeves was near the bottom of the staircases, apparently drawing mustaches on some of the statuary. James saw him out of the corner of his eye, then, amazingly, Peeves was sitting on the broomstick in front of James, facing him.
"Naughty trickery this is, Potter boy!" Peeves shouted gleefully as the broom shot into a narrow hall of classrooms. "Is we trying to create some friendly competition with dear ol’ Peeves? Hee hee!" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]14
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Peeves grabbed a passing chandelier and swung around it, leaving James and the broom to plunge on after him. James tried to steer, but it was no use. The broomstick was following its own definite, if maniacal course. It banked and dove down a flight of stone stairs into the elf kitchens. Unlike the rest of the school, the kitchens were crowded and bustling, filled with elves cleaning up after the evening meal. The broom darted between gigantic pots, forcing the elves to scramble like tenpins. There was a cacophony of crashing dishes and silverware, the noise of which fell away with horrible speed. The washrooms were next, stifling hot and noisy. The broom rocketed wildly through the machinery of the washers, diving through gigantic cogwheels and under the arms of enormous, chugging pistons. James was horrified to see that the broom, apparently having reached a dead end, was barreling straight toward the stone wall at the end of the room. He was about to throw himself off the broom, hoping to land in one of the copper vats of suds and water, when the broom ticked slightly to the left and angled up. There was a door set into the well, and James recognized that it was a laundry chute. He gritted his teeth and hugged the broomstick again. The broom shot into the chute, angling upwards so hard that James could barely keep his legs tucked in, and then there was only rushing darkness and pressure.
A pile of laundry met him halfway up the chute and James spluttered as the mass of cloth smothered him. He struggled to shake the clothes free, but couldn’t risk letting go of the broomstick. The broom ducked again, and James could tell by the change in pressure and the coolness of the air that it had somehow taken him back outside again. All he could see through the mass of cloth was a faint pattern of flickering light as the broomstick banked and dove. James risked letting go with one hand. He flailed at the clothing wrapped around him, finally grabbing a handful and yanking it as hard as he could. The cloth came free, stunning him with a blurring tableau of light and wind. He had time only to recognize that somehow, incredibly, the broom was taking him back to the Quidditch pitch. The grandstands loomed ahead of him. At the base of the nearest one was a throng of people, many turning toward him, pointing and yelling. Then, with instant finality, the broomstick simply stopped moving. James shot off the end of the broom, and for what seemed like far too long a time he simply hurtled through the air unsupported. Finally, the ground claimed him with a long, rolling thud. Something in James’ left arm popped unpleasantly and when he finally came to a stop, he found himself staring up into a dozen random faces.
"Looks like he’ll be all right," one of them said, looking from him to someone standing nearby.
"More than he deserves," another person said angrily, frowning down at him. "Trying to ruin the match by stealing the Team Captain’s broomstick. I never would have thought it."
"It’s quite all right, really," another voice said from further off. James moaned and pushed himself up on his left elbow. His right arm was throbbing horribly. Tabitha Corsica stood twenty feet away, surrounded by a crowd of awed spectators. Her broom hung motionless next to her, exactly where it had stopped. She had one hand on it, gripping it easily. "We can surely forgive this kind of first year enthusiasm, although I myself am rather amazed at the lengths some will go to in the name of Quidditch. Really, James. It’s just a game." She smiled at him, showing him all her teeth. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]15
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James flopped back into the grass, clutching his right arm next to him. The crowd began to break apart as Ridcully appeared, pushing his way through. The Headmistress and Professors Franklyn and Jackson were right behind him. James heard Tabitha Corsica talking loudly to her teammates as she headed back toward the pitch. "People think that because it’s Muggle made it must be a lesser broom, you see. But the magic of this is stronger than anything you’d find in a standard Thunderstreak, even one with the Extra-Gestural Enhancement option. This broom knows who its mistress is. All I had to do was summon it. Mr. Potter could hardly have known that, though. In a way, I feel sorry for him. He was just doing what he knew to do."
McGonagall squatted down next to James, her face grave and full of consternation. "Really, Potter. I just don’t know quite what to say."
"Broken ulna, Madam," Franklyn said, peering at James arm through a strange device comprised of different sized lenses and brass rings. He folded it neatly and slipped it into his inner robe pocket. "I’d suggest the hospital wing for now and questions later. We have much more to attend to at the moment."
"Quite right," the Headmistress agreed, not taking her gaze from James. "Especially since I expect that Miss Sacarhina and Mr. Recreant will be here within the next few hours. I must say, Potter, I am extremely surprised at you. To attempt something so puerile at such a time." She stood, brushing herself off. "Very well, then. Mr. Jackson, would you escort Mr. Potter to the hospital wing, please. And if you would be so kind as to instruct Madam Curio that Mr. Potter is to be kept there overnight." She fixed James with a steely stare as Jackson pulled him to his feet. "I want to know exactly where to find him when I wish to question him. And no visitors."
"Rest assured, Madam Headmistress," Jackson answered, leading James back toward the castle.
They walked the first five minutes in silence, then, when they entered the courtyard and the noise of the pitch died away, Jackson said, "I haven’t quite pegged you yet, Potter."
The pain in James’ arm had receded to a dull throb, though it was still rather distracting. "Excuse me, sir?"
"I mean that I haven’t figured you out, yet." Jackson said in a conversational voice. "You obviously know far more than a boy your age should, and somehow I don’t think that is merely because you are the son of the Ministry’s head auror. First you attempt to steal my case, and then tonight, you orchestrate this preposterous charade to steal Miss Corsica’s broom. And despite what everyone else might think, Potter," he glanced aside at James as they entered the main hall, his dark brows lowering, "I know that you did not steal it in order to give the Ravenclaws a better chance in the tournament."
James cleared his throat. "I don’t know what you’re talking about."
Jackson wasn’t paying him any attention. "It doesn’t matter, Potter. Whatever you think you know, whatever it is you are up to, after tonight, it won’t matter one iota." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]16
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James’ heart skipped a beat, and then began to pound hard in his chest. "Why?" he asked, his lips strangely numb. "What’s tonight?"
Jackson ignored him. He opened one of the leaded glass doors into the hospital wing and held it for James. The room was long and high, lined with crisply made beds. Madam Curio, who for rather obvious reasons was not a Quidditch fan, was seated at her desk in the rear corner listening to classical music on her wireless.
"Madam Curio, you probably know Mr. Potter, here," Jackson said, pressing James toward her. "He has somehow managed to break his arm at the Quidditch match despite the fact that he, himself, is not actually on either of the teams."
Madame Curio stood and approached James, shaking her head. "Hooligans. I’ll never understand what it is about that sport that turns otherwise proper individuals into Neanderthals. What do we have here, then?" She lifted James’ arm gingerly, feeling for the break. He hissed through his teeth when she found it. She clucked her tongue. "Nasty fracture, sure enough. Could have been worse, though, I’m sure. We’ll have you fixed up in no time."
"Also," Jackson said, "I’ve been instructed by the headmistress to ask you to keep Mr. Potter here for the evening, Madam."
Curio didn’t look up from her inspection of James’ arm. "The Skelegrow will take at least until tomorrow morning to complete its work, anyway. Still, this is minor enough. I might have sent him to his rooms with a splint."
"The headmistress wishes to question Mr. Potter, Madam. She desires that he be kept under supervision until then. It seems, I am afraid, that Mr. Potter is suspected to be involved in a very serious plot that could put this school at risk. I shouldn’t say more, but if you chose to post some sentries at the doors to keep visitors out and Mr. Potter in, at least until tomorrow morning, I wouldn’t think that was overdoing it."
"She didn’t say any such thing!" James exclaimed, but he knew that his protest wouldn’t help. In fact, the louder he protested, the worse it would probably look.
Curio gasped and straightened up. "Does this have anything to do with the intrusion of that horrible man on the premises yesterday? I’ve heard that he’s some sort of Muggle newsperson, and that he’s still here! It does, doesn’t it?" She covered her mouth with her hand and looked from Jackson to James.
"Again, I really shouldn’t say any more, Madam." Jackson replied. "Besides, Mr. Potter may end up being entirely exonerated. We shall see in time. At any rate," Jackson looked down at James and there was the faintest suggestion of a smile on one corner of his lips. "Until tomorrow morning, then, James."
He turned and stalked out of the room, closing the door carefully behind him. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]17

Re: eighth harry potter book

there are 21 chapters so the end of this book will be on december 20

Re: eighth harry potter book

r u like seriously gona each n every chapter:hayaa:

Re: eighth harry potter book

sorry i just the thread u had created.....:(
sorry could not post in it....
khair.......once all the chapters r done...i shall print it....& then read....:)
thnks duckie.....:)

Re: eighth harry potter book

chapter 17 below this post

Re: eighth harry potter book

  1. **
    1. Night of the Returning** [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]To her credit, Madam Curio didn’t let Professor Jackson’s accusations influence her treatment of James. She examined the fracture for several minutes, poking and pinching, and then carefully splinted it. She fell into a harsh but pedantic diatribe about the woes of Quidditch injuries, but it sounded to James like something she’d said a hundred times before. Her mind was elsewhere, and James didn’t need to guess what was preoccupying her. The invasion of Martin Prescott into the school had caused a wave of speculation and anxiety. His identity as a Muggle news reporter, and the fact that he was being kept in the Alma Aleron’s quarters had fed a load of rumors. There was a cloud of unease over the entire school, not alleviated by the headmistress’ announcement that Ministry officials were arriving to deal with Mr. Prescott. As Madam Curio measured the Skelegro dosage, James caught her glancing at him suspiciously, looking him up and down. Somebody had to have let the interloper in, after all. Why not this first-year son of the Head Auror? James knew that some people-those who believed the lies of the Progressive Element-would expect him to pull just such a stunt. Earlier that day, he’d heard a voice from a cluster of students saying, "It makes sense, doesn’t it? The whole auror line is that the law of secrecy is our only protection from the supposed Muggle witch-hunters. So what do they do? They allow this guy to sneak in and scare us all into thinking Muggles are [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]1 [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]hiding out in the forest, behind every bush with a torch and a pyre, ready to burn us all at the stake. It’s preposterous. I say let him do his story. That’ll show those Ministry power-mongers what for." [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"There," Madam Curio said, straightening. "All finished. You’ll feel some tingling and itching overnight as the bone knits. That’s perfectly normal. Don’t fiddle with the splint. The last thing you’ll want is for the bones to knit crookedly. The only fix for that would be for me to re-break the bone and start all over, and we certainly wouldn’t want that. Now," She gestured towards the row of beds. "Pick whichever you like. I’ll see that breakfast is brought to you here in the morning. You may as well make yourself comfortable." [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James slung his backpack onto one of the bedside tables and climbed up onto the unusually high bed. It was a very comfortable bed, and for good reason, since all the mattresses in the hospital wing had been infused with relaxation hexes. The hexes, however, had no effect on James’ thoughts, which were dark with frustration and anxiety. Professor Jackson had admitted that tonight was a night of ultimate importance. It wasn’t simply speculation anymore. And now here James was, stuck for the night in the hospital wing, neatly trapped by Professor Jackson’s crafty interpretation of Headmistress McGonagall’s instructions. Alone for the first time since the attempted broomstick caper, James felt the full impact of what had happened out on the Quidditch pitch. It had seemed like a crazy plan from the beginning, but no more so than the plan to capture Professor Jackson’s briefcase, and that had worked, hadn’t it? Everything had been a success so far, until now. It was as if an invisible brick wall had suddenly blocked them, halting their progress at the last, ultimate moment. Arguably, the Merlin staff was the most powerful element of the three relics. Even now, Corsica, Jackson and Delacroix were probably preparing to bring the relics together, unaware that they were missing the robe, but with the two most important relics in their possession. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]In spite of his anxieties, James had begun to drift sleepily under the influence of the hexed mattress. Now, he sat up, his heart beating hard in his chest. What would happen when Jackson opened his case and found Ralph’s dress robes instead of the relic robe of Merlin? The visum-ineptio charm would break then, wouldn’t it? Jackson would see the case for what it was. He’d recognize it, and remember that day in Technomancy class, when James, Ralph and Zane had used the fake case to trick him. He had thought they’d failed, had even referred to it while taking James to the hospital wing. He would surely realize then that they hadn’t failed. Jackson was smart. He’d know which of the boys had the real robe. Not Zane or Ralph, but James. The boy he hadn’t "pegged" yet. Would Jackson come to the hospital wing to demand the robe? No, even as James thought it, he knew Jackson wouldn’t. He’d go straight to James’ trunk in the Gryffindor boy’s quarters. He’d probably claim to be searching for clues about James’ involvement in the unnamed dangerous plot against Hogwarts. Jackson would surely get James’ trunk open, and then he’d retrieve the robe. Everything James, Ralph and Zane, and even the Gremlins had risked would be in vain. It would indeed be over, and there was nothing James could do about it. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James struck the bedside table with his fist in frustration. Madam Curio, seated at her desk in the corner, gasped and put a hand over her chest. She looked at James but didn’t say anything. James pretended not to see her. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]2 [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]His backpack had slipped sideways when he’d slammed his fist onto the table. Resolutely, he grabbed it and opened it. He took out his parchments and his ink and quill. He knew that, under normal conditions, Madame Curio would never allow a patient to have an open ink bottle on her clean white sheets, but as far as she was concerned, she was harboring a potentially dangerous individual. Best not to provoke him. James bent over the parchment and wrote quickly, awkwardly, with his splinted arm, not even noticing the way his hand smeared the inky wet letters. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Dear Dad, * *[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]I’m sorry I took the M. Map and the I. Cloak. I know I shouldn’t have, but I needed them, and I thought it was what you would have done, so I hope you aren’t too mad. I know I don’t stand a chance with Mum, but put in a good word, will you? * *[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The reason I took them is because I’ve discovered something really sneaky and scary going on here at school. Some of the American teachers are in on it, though not Franklyn. He’s cool. Also, the P.E. here is in on it. I don’t want to tell you about it in a letter, but even if I am in big trouble with you and Mum, I need you to come. Can you be here tomorrow? Miss Sacarhina says you are on an important job and not to be interrupted, so maybe you can’t, but try, OK? It’s really important and I need your help. * *[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Love, * *[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James * *[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James folded the parchment and tied it with a bit of twine. He didn’t know how he’d send it, but he felt better just having written it. He remembered now that he’d intended to write his dad about the Merlin plot way back when they’d captured the robe, and he berated himself for not doing it then. He’d thought, at the time, that his reasons for not telling his dad were good ones, but now, trapped in the hospital wing on the ultimate night of the Merlin plot, and knowing that, despite everything, Jackson might very possibly capture the relic robe back from him, it seemed foolish and arrogant that he hadn’t written his dad about it earlier. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]An idea struck James and he dug in his backpack again. A moment later, he held his Weasley brand rubber duck in his hands. It still had Zane’s handwriting on the bottom: Laundry Room! James dipped his quill and drew a line through that, then, underneath it, he wrote: hospital wing: send Nobby to the east window. When he was finished, he gave the duck a sharp squeeze. "Manky barmpot!" it quacked. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]In the corner, Madam Curio once again startled and looked accusingly at James. Potential criminal or not, she clearly thought his behaviour unaccountably rude. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]3 [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Sorry, Madam," James said, holding up the rubber duck. "It wasn’t me. It was my duck." [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I see," she said with obvious disapproval. "Perhaps now would be a good time for me to retire for the evening. You won’t be, er, needing anything, will you?" [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James shook his head. "No, Madam. Thanks. My arm feels loads better, anyway." [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Don’t fiddle with it, like I said, and you’ll be fine by morning, I expect." She stood and hurried past James toward the leaded-glass doors. Two figures could be seen through the milky glass, and James knew that they were Philia Goyle and Kevin Murdock, both kindly sent by Professor Jackson to watch the doors. Madam Curio unlocked the doors and went out, offering her good-evenings to the sentries. The door clicked shut behind her and James heard the bolt clack into place. He sighed in frustration, and then jumped as his rubber duck quacked a loud insult next to him. He raised it and looked at the bottom. Below his handwriting was a new line of black letters: open the window: ten minutes. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James felt a little better. He hadn’t been sure that either Ralph or Zane would be in any position to hear or respond to their ducks. In fact, he’d had no word whatsoever about what had happened to the rest of the Gremlins. He felt cautiously confident that none had been caught, although Ralph’s predicament, left in the middle of the Slytherin holding pens, was probably worse than anyone else’s. Despite that, he figured that even Ralph had gotten out all right. Once everyone had seen James explode out of the holding pen riding Tabitha’s broom, attention had probably focused on his wild ride, and then Tabitha’s summoning of her broomstick, bringing both it and James back to the pitch. Most likely, Ralph had slipped out at that point and returned to the shed, along with the Gremlins. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James watched the clock over Madam Curio’s desk as the minutes ticked away. He struggled with the impulse to go and open the window before the ten minutes had passed. If Madam Curio came back and saw him standing by an open window, she’d suspect treachery even though the window was at least thirty feet above the ground. Finally, as the minute hand ticked into place, announcing eight-fifteen, James jumped off the bed. He grabbed the letter from the bedside table and ran lightly toward the far right window. The latch turned easily and James opened the window onto cool, misty night. The sky had finally cleared, revealing a dusting of silvery stars, but there was no sign of Nobby. James leaned over the sill, looking along the ledge, and a monstrous silent shape loomed out of the darkness toward him, blotting out the stars. It fell over him heavily, surrounded him, and yanked him bodily out the window before he had time to shout for help. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The figure squeezed him so that James’ breath whooshed out of him. Far below, a voice called in a loud stage whisper, "Not so hard! You’ll grind his bones, already!" James was amazed to recognize Zane’s voice. The gigantic hand loosened a bit and James saw yards of female giant going past as he was lowered toward the ground. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Nicely done, Prechka!" Zane called, patting the giant on her shin. She grunted happily and opened her hand, unrolling James onto the ground between her massive feet. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I thought you were just bringing Nobby!" James gasped, clambering up. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]4 [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"It was Ted’s idea," Ralph said, moving out of the shadow of a nearby shrubbery. "He knew you’d want to get out and see to this whole Merlin affair, especially now. He went off to find Grawp the moment you were taken off by Jackson. Grawp found Prechka, who’s tall enough to reach the hospital wing, and we were just trying to figure out how to get you to the window when you ducked at us. Worked out pretty neatly, we thought." [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I’ll say," James said, rubbing his ribs with the heel of his left palm. "Good thing she’s left-handed or I’d probably need a whole new dose of Skelegro for my arm. She’s got a grip! So where is Ted, anyway?" [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"House arrest, along with the rest of the Gremlins," Zane said, shrugging. "McGonagall knew they were involved in the broomstick thieving plot, even if she can’t prove it yet. She probably would have let it slide—she has bigger frogs to dissect with Recreant and Sacarhina here – but Jackson’s idea was to have all the Gremlins out of the way until tomorrow, when the whole thing with this Prescott dude was taken care of. Ted was sent off to the Gryffindor common room the moment he got back from the forest with Grawp. Everybody’s there except Sabrina, who took a pretty ugly gigantism curse from Corsica. Her nose is the size of a soccerball. Nothing for it but to sleep it off, apparently. I think we’d have been under guard, too, except that Jackson thinks Ralph’s too dim to be involved in the broomstick plot and I had the perfect alibi, being right there on the field the whole time. So, here we are. What’s the plan, James?" [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James glanced from Zane, to Ralph, to Prechka, and then took a deep breath. "Same as before. We need to get out to the Grotto Keep to stop Jackson, Delacroix and whoever else is involved. We still need to capture the Merlin staff, if we can, and most importantly, we need to escape so we can testify about whoever is involved." [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Hear, hear," Ralph agreed. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"But first," James said, holding up the letter he’d written to his dad. "I need to send this. I should’ve sent it weeks ago, but better late than never. Ted was right. We need help. If we hadn’t asked the Gremlins to help us, I’d still be stuck up there in the hospital wing." [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"If we hadn’t asked the Gremlins to help us, you might not have gotten thrown in there in the first place," Ralph muttered, but without much feeling. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Zane," James said, turning toward him and stuffing the letter into his pocket. "What time is the alignment supposed to happen?" [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Nine fifty-five," Zane answered. "We’ve only got an hour and a half." [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James nodded. "Meet me at the edge of the forest near the lake in fifteen minutes. Bring Prechka if she’ll come." [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Zane looked up the dark bulk of the giantess. "I don’t think we could get rid of her if we wanted to. She seems to like helping." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]5 [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Excellent. Ralph, you have your wand?" [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Ralph produced his ridiculously large wand from his back pocket. The lime-green painted tip glowed eerily in the darkness. "Don’t leave home without it," he said. [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"All right, keep it handy. You’re on guard duty. Try to remember everything we learned in
  2. D.A.D.A. and be ready to put it to use. This is it, then. Let’s go."
    James darted through the shadows of the corridors, trying to move both quickly and inconspicuously, which was rather a challenge. He arrived at the portrait hole just as Steven Metzker was coming out.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"James!" Steven said, blinking in surprise. "What are you doing here? Aren’t you supposed to be…" he stopped, and then glanced around the darkened corridors. "Get inside before anyone sees you."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Thanks, Steven," James said, ducking into the portrait hole.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Don’t mention it," Steven replied. "And I really mean that. I never saw you, and you never saw me. Don’t make me regret this."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Regret what? Nothing happened."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Steven stepped into the hall as the portrait of the fat lady swung shut on James.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The Gremlins, except for Sabrina, were gathered by the fireplace looking sulky and agitated. Noah saw James and sat up. "I see Prechka found her man." The others turned and grinned wickedly.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"What are you doing here?" Ted said, growing serious. "Ralph and Zane just left to get you. It took us half the night to get your stuff sorted out after that disaster at the Quidditch pitch, so its getting pretty late. You should be heading out to the Island. You want us to come along?"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"No, you’re all in enough trouble. I just came to mail this," He held up the letter. Ted nodded in approval, sensing who it was for. "I’m meeting Ralph and Zane by the forest in ten minutes."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I want to come," Noah said, standing up. "Corsica cursed Sabrina. I want to return the favor on her behalf."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James shook his head. "You three have a different job tonight, and it may well involve a curse or two. If Ralph, Zane and I fail, Jackson or somebody will probably show up here looking for the Merlin robe. You three need to guard it. If anyone comes looking for it, you have to stop them, no matter what. I hate to ask you to do that, but… will you?"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Petra nodded and looked at Noah and Ted. "Not a problem. But as much as we’d all like a chance to plug one of those guys, do try not to fail, won’t you?" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]6
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James nodded, and then turned and ran up the stairs to the boys’ sleeping quarters. The room was empty and dark but for one candle near the door to the tiny bathroom. Nobby, who hadn’t gotten the principal of the Owlery and continued to show up at James’ window, was sleeping in his cage.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Nobby," James whispered urgently, "got a message for you to deliver to Dad. I know it’s late, but it’s really important." The great bird raised his head from beneath his wing and clicked his beak sleepily. James opened the cage door, letting Nobby hop out onto the ledge of the table. When the note was tied to Nobby’s outstretched leg, James opened the window.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"And this time, when you come back, go to the Owlery. Nice as it is to have you around, you’re going to get me in even more trouble. All right?"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The owl peered at James with his enormous, inscrutable eyes, then hopped onto the window ledge. With a gust of flapping wings, Nobby launched out into the darkness.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James was about to plunge back down the stairs again when his eye was caught by the dark bulk of his trunk. Was it slightly out of its normal position? He felt a sudden, icy dread. Maybe Jackson had already been for the robe. Perhaps he’d checked his briefcase before heading out to the Grotto Keep, just to be sure, and discovered the trickery. Surely the Gremlins below would have seen Jackson coming and going, but then again, maybe not. As James had realized earlier, Jackson was smart. Maybe he’d disguised himself, or maybe he’d asked Madame Delacroix to use her remote physio-apparation skills to simply appear in the boys’ sleeping quarters to collect the robe directly. Then again, Ted had mentioned that Zane and Ralph had been there, sorting things out after the Quidditch disaster. James had to know. He hunkered down next to his trunk and produced his wand. The case unlocked at his command and he riffled through the contents until he found the case buried at the bottom. It was still there, but it was slightly open. James gasped in fear, then felt inside. His fingers found the smooth folds of cloth. He could even smell that haunting smell of leaves and earth and living, breathing winds. He heaved a gigantic sigh of relief.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]With the trunk open, James wondered if there was anything he might need for his adventure at the Island. He glanced around at the unruly pile of clothes and supplies on the end of his bed. After a moment’s consideration, he grabbed the Marauder’s Map and the invisibility cloak. He clapped the trunk shut, used his wand to lock it, and then, having left his backpack on the table in the hospital wing, he stuffed the map and the cloak into a leather book bag his mum had given him at the beginning of the year. He turned and clumped down the stairs quickly, stopping only to remind Noah, Petra and Ted about Delacroix’s powers.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Don’t worry," Noah said, jumping up and heading for the stairs. "We’ll take turns keeping an eye on your trunk. One-hour shifts, right Ted?"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Ted nodded. Satisfied, James ducked through the portrait hole to go meet Ralph and Zane.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Five minutes later, as he came out of the courtyard and onto the grounds, James’ eyes were too dazzled from the interior lights to be able to see clearly in the darkness. He felt his way down the slope toward the lake until he heard Zane whistling, apparently trying to sound like a bird. The sound came from [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]7
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]his left, and as James turned toward it, he was finally able to make out the bulk of the giantess standing at the edge of the woods. Zane and Ralph were huddled nearby.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"That was pretty good, wasn’t it?" Zane said, grinning. "I saw that in a James Bond movie. I thought you’d appreciate it."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Nice," James nodded. The cool of the night air settled over him and James felt a wild sense of excitement and fear. This was it. There was no turning back. Even now, his absence from the hospital wing was probably being discovered. There might be trouble tomorrow, but if they failed now, there’d be even worse trouble to come. James glanced up at Prechka. "Will she let us ride on her shoulders? It’s the only way we’ll get there in time."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Prechka heard him. In answer, she bent down, making the earth shudder as her knees struck the hillside. "Prechka help," she said, trying to keep the boom out of her voice. "Prechka carry small ones." She grinned at James and her head, now at his level, was nearly as tall as he was. Zane, Ralph and James took turns scrambling up her arm and onto the giantess’ great, sloping shoulders. James needed Ralph and Zane to help him up, as his splinted right arm was almost no use to him. When she stood, it was like riding a freight elevator into the treetops. Without a word, she began to lumber into the forest. The upper branches of the trees swept past, occasionally groaning as Prechka pushed them aside like reeds.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"How does she know where she’s going?" James asked in a hushed voice.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Ralph shrugged. "Grawp told her. I don’t know how, but apparently it’s a giant thing. They just remember where they’ve been and how to get there again. It’s probably how they find each other’s hovels in the mountains. I didn’t understand the language at all, but she seems pretty sure of herself."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Riding Prechka was an altogether different experience than riding Grawp. Where the he-giant had been careful and delicate, the giantess swayed and thumped, her footsteps shuddering up her body and shaking the boys. James thought it was rather like riding on a gigantic walking metronome. The forest swam past, eerie from this strange, high perspective, as if it were clawing at the sky. After a while, James tugged on the giantess’ burlap tunic. "Stop here, Prechka. We’re close and I don’t want them to hear us coming, if we can avoid it."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Prechka put out a hand, halting herself against a huge, gnarled oak tree. Carefully, she lowered herself and the boys climbed off her shoulders, sliding down her arm to the ground.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Wait here, Prechka," James said into the giantess’ enormous, lumpy face. She nodded slowly, seriously, and then stood again. He could only hope that her understanding of their wishes was better than Grawp’s, who had wandered off in search of food after only a few minutes when he’d brought them out here last year.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"This way," Zane said, pointing. James could see the glitter of moonlight on water through the trees. As quietly as possible, the boys threaded through the tree trunks and underbrush. Within a few minutes, they [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]8
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]emerged at the perimeter of the lake. The island of the Grotto Keep could be seen further along the edge of the water. It loomed monstrously, grown to gothic, cathedral proportions for its ultimate night. The dragon’s head bridge was clearly visible, open wide, both welcoming and threatening at the same time. James heard Ralph gulp. Silently, they made their way toward it.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]As they reached the opening onto the bridge, the moon slipped from behind a raft of wispy clouds. The island of the Grotto Keep unveiled fully in that silvery glow. There was virtually no hint of the wild, wooded nature of the island now. The dragon’s head bridge was a carefully sculpted horror, yawning open before them. At its throat, the vine encrusted gate was as solid-looking and ornate as wrought iron. James could clearly read the poem inscribed on the doors.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"It’s closed," Zane whispered, rather hopefully. "Does that mean anything?"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James shook his head. "I don’t know. Come on, let’s see if we can get in."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Single file, the three boys tiptoed across the bridge. James, in the lead, saw the bridge’s upper jaw open further as they approached the gate. It didn’t creak this time. The motion was silent and oily, almost unnoticeable. The gates, however, remained firmly closed. James made to reach for his wand, and then stopped, hissing in pain. He’d forgotten about the splint on his fractured right arm.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Ralph, you’ll have to do it," James said, sidling to the right to let Ralph in front of him. "My wand hand’s no use. Besides, you’re the spells genius."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Wh-what am I supposed to do?" Ralph stammered, pulling out his wand.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Just use the unlocking spell."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Whoa, wait!" Zane said, throwing up a hand. "Last time we tried that we were almost tree food, remember?"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"That was then," James said reasonably. "The island wasn’t ready. Tonight’s the night it exists for, I think. It’ll let us in this time. Besides, this is Ralph. If anybody can do it, he can."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Zane grimaced, but couldn’t offer any argument. He took a step backwards, giving Ralph room. Ralph pointed his wand at the gates nervously, his wand hand shaking. He cleared his throat.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"What is it? I always forget!"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Alohomora," James whispered encouragingly. "Emphasis on the second and fourth syllables. You’ve done it loads of time. Don’t worry."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Ralph stiffened, trying to halt the shivering of his arm. He took a deep breath and, in a tremulous voice, spoke the command. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]9
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Immediately the vines twining the gates began to loosen. The letters of the poem dissolved into curls and tendrils, contracting from the wooden shapes of the doors. After a few seconds, the doors swung silently open.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Ralph glanced back at James and Zane, his eyes wide and worried. "Well, it worked, I guess."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I’d say so, Ralph," Zane said, moving forward. The three of them stepped carefully into the darkness beyond the gates.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The inside of the Grotto Keep was circular and mostly empty, surrounded by trees that had grown into the shapes of pillars, supporting a thick, domed ceiling of branches and spring leaves. The floor of the Grotto was terraced with stone, forming steps that descended toward the middle. There, in the very center, a round bowl of earth was lit in a beam of bright moonlight that pierced a hole in the center of the domed canopy. The Merlin throne stood in that beam of moonlight, and in front of it, silhouetted against the moonlight, her back to them, was Madame Delacroix.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James felt weak with fear. He froze in place, and only distantly felt Ralph’s hand groping at him, tugging him backwards into the shadow of one of the tree-trunk pillars. He stumbled a little, and then dropped down behind the bulk of the tree, next to Ralph and Zane. Carefully, slowly, James peered around the tree-pillar, his eyes wide and his heart thundering.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Delacroix hadn’t moved. Her back was still to them, and she was still staring motionlessly at the throne. The Merlin throne was tall, straight-backed and narrow. It was made of polished wood, but was somehow more delicate than James had expected. The mass of it was formed of carvings of vines and leaves, curling and tangled. The only solid parts were the seat and the center of the backrest. The throne looked as if it had been grown rather than carved, much like the Grotto Keep itself. No one else was visible. Apparently, Delacroix had arrived early. James was wondering how long she’d been standing there, motionless, watching the throne, when there was the sound of someone else’s footsteps behind them, on the dragon’s head bridge. James held his breath, and sensed Ralph and Zane hunkering down as low as they could next to him, hiding among the low underbrush lining the Keep.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]A man’s voice spoke a low command in some strange language James didn’t recognize. It sounded both beautiful and frightening. There was the sound of the gate’s vines unfurling again, and then footsteps clacked hollowly on the stone steps of the terraced floor. Professor Jackson moved into view, walking resolutely down into the center of the Grotto Keep behind Madame Delacroix.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Professor Jackson," Madame Delacroix said, her heavily accented voice ringing in the stone bowl of the Grotto. "You never fail to meet my expectations." She still hadn’t turned around.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Nor you mine, Madame. You are early." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]10
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I was savoring de moment, Theodore. It’s been a long time coming. I’d be tempted to say ‘too long’, if I was a believer in chance. I am not, of course. This is how it was meant to be. I have done what I was meant to do. Even you have performed the role you were pre-ordained to perform."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Do you really believe so, Madame?" Jackson asked, stopping several feet behind Delacroix. James noticed that Jackson had his hickory wand in his hand. "I wonder. I, as you know, am neither a believer in chance nor destiny. I am a believer in choices."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"It matters not what you believe, Theodore, as long as your choices lead to the right ends."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I have the robe," Jackson said flatly, abandoning the pretense of polite conversation. "I have always had it. You will not get it from me. I am here to see to that. I am here to stop you, Madame, despite your best efforts to keep me away."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James almost gasped. He covered his mouth with his hand, stifling it. Jackson was here to stop her! But how? James felt a cold dread dawning on him. Next to him, Ralph whispered almost silently, "Did he say…?"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Shh!" Zane hissed urgently. "Listen!"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Delacroix was making a strange, rhythmic sound. Her shoulders shook slightly with it, and James realized she was laughing. "My dear, dear Theodore, I have never attempted to thwart you. Why, if I had not allowed a token resistance to your presence on dis trip, you’d have never chosen to come at all. Your stubbornness and suspicious nature are my best tools. And I needed you, Professor. I needed what you had, what you believed so ardently dat you were protecting."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Jackson stiffened. "Do you believe I was foolish enough to bring the robe with me tonight? Then you are more arrogant than I thought. No, the robe is safe. It is secured with the best hexes and counteraccio charms ever created. I know that, for they were created by me. You shall not find it, of that I am certain."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]But Delacroix was laughing harder. She still hadn’t turned around. The beam of light illuminating the chair seemed to be growing brighter, and James realized it was the accumulated light of the planets. They were moving into place. The time of the Hall of Elders’ Crossing was nearly upon them.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Oh, Professor, your confidence cheers me. With enemies such as yourself, my success is all the more delicious. Do you think I haven’t known all along dat you guarded the robe of Merlinus in your case at all times? Do you think I was not preparing for de robe to be delivered to me from the moment I first arrived here? I haven’t had to lift so much as a finger, and yet de robe comes to me of its own accord dis very night."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James had a horrible thought. He remembered that day in Defense Against the Dark Arts, when Jackson had followed Professor Franklyn into the classroom, speaking in low tones. Madame Delacroix had come to the door to tell Jackson his class was waiting. James had glanced down at that moment, and the case had mysteriously come open. Was it possible that Madame Delacroix had caused that to happen, just so that [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]11
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James would see inside? Had she tried to use him somehow? He remembered Zane and Ralph saying that the capture of the robe had been easy. Somehow too easy. He shuddered.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"James," Ralph whispered urgently. "You didn’t bring the robe with you tonight, did you?"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Of course not!" James replied. "I’m not crazy!"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Zane leaned in to keep his voice as quiet as possible. "Then what’s in the book bag?"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James felt terror and anger mingling inside him. "The Marauder’s Map and the invisibility cloak!"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Ralph reached up and clutched James’ shoulder, turning him so that they were face to face. Ralph’s expression was horrible. "James, you don’t have the invisibility cloak!" he rasped, his voice cracking. "I do! You left it with me in the Slytherin holding pen, remember? I used it to escape! It’s in my trunk, back in the Slytherin boy’s quarters!"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James simply stared at Ralph, petrified. Below them, in the center of the Grotto Keep, Madame Delacroix continued to cackle.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Mr. James Potter," she called through her laughter. "Please feel free to join us. Bring your friends if you so desire."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James felt rooted to the spot. He wouldn’t go down there, of course. He would run. He knew now that he had the robe of Merlinus in his book bag, that he had been tricked into bringing it along, tricked into thinking it was the invisibility cloak. Now was the moment to flee. And yet he didn’t. Ralph pushed him, urging him to go, but Zane, on James’ other side, slowly stood up and pulled out his wand.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"The voodoo queen thinks she’s pretty smart," he said out loud, stepping around the pillar and pointing his wand at her. "You’re as ugly as you are evil. Crucio!"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James gasped as the bolt of red light shot from Zane’s wand. They’d never even seen the unforgiveable curses in action, but Zane was giving it his best attempt. The curse struck Madame Delacroix directly in the back and James watched for her to double over in pain. She didn’t move, however, and James was dismayed to see that the bolt of red light had passed straight through her. It struck the ground near the throne and vanished harmlessly. Delacroix was still laughing as she turned to face Zane.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Ugly, am I?" Her laughter dried up as her gaze met Zane’s. She was no longer blind, or old. It was, in fact, her wraith, the projected version of herself. "Evil? Perhaps, but only as a hobby." The wraith of Madame Delacroix raised a hand and Zane was lifted from his feet roughly. His wand flew from his hand and he thumped against the tree-pillar, his shoes three feet from the ground. He seemed to be stuck there, as if on a hook. "If I was truly evil, I would kill you now, wouldn’t I?" She grinned at him, and then pivoted, pointing her arm at the place where James hid. "Mr. Potter, please, it is silly of you to fight me. You are, after all, almost my apprentice in dis endeavor. Bring Mr. Deedle with you. Let’s all enjoy the spectacle, shall we?" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]12
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Jackson had turned when Zane came forward, watching with a noticeable lack of surprise, his wand still out, but pointed at the floor. Now he looked on as James and Ralph stood jerkily, as if against their will, and began to march down the steps toward the center of the Grotto. His eyes met James’, his bushy dark brows low and furious. "Stop, Potter," he said quietly, raising his wand halfway, pointing it at the floor in front of James and Ralph. Their feet stopped moving, as if they’d suddenly landed in glue.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Oh, Theodore, must you prolong dis?" Delacroix sighed. She swung her arm toward him and performed a complicated gesture with her fingers. Jackson’s wand flicked out of his hand as if on a string. He grabbed for it, but it darted up and away. Delacroix made another gesture with her hand, and the wand snapped in mid-air, as if broken over a knee. Jackson’s face didn’t change, but he slowly lowered his hand, staring hard at the two pieces of his hickory wand. Then, he turned back to Delacroix, his face white with fury, and began to pace toward her. Delacroix’s hand moved like lightning, darting into the folds of her clothing and coming out with her horrible graperoot wand between her fingers.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Dis may only be a representation of de real thing," she said playfully, "conjured from the dirt of dis place, just like dis version of myself, but I assure you, Theodore, it is exactly as powerful as I think it is. Don’t make me destroy you."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Jackson stopped in his tracks, but his face didn’t change. "I can’t let you go through with this, Delacroix. You know that."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Oh, but you already have!" she cackled gleefully. She pointed the wand at Jackson and flicked it. A bolt of ugly orange light shot from it, sending Jackson flying violently backwards. He landed hard on the upper stone steps, grunting in pain. He struggled to get up, and Delacroix rolled her eyes. "Heroes," she said disdainfully, and flicked her wand again. Jackson flew off the ground and rammed against another of the tree-pillars lining the Grotto. He hung there, apparently knocked unconscious.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"And now," she said, lazily pointing her wand in the direction of James and Ralph. "Please, join me."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The two boys were lifted from the ground and transported down the rest of the steps. They dropped clumsily to their feet in the grassy space at the bottom of the Grotto, directly in front of the wraith of Madame Delacroix. Her eyes were emerald green and piercing. "Give me de robe. And please, don’t make me harm either of you. I only ask de one time."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The book bag slipped off James’ shoulder and struck the ground at his feet. He looked down at it, feeling dazed and completely hopeless. "Please," Delacroix said, and flicked her wand. James fell to his knees as if something extraordinarily heavy had landed on his shoulders. His hand plunged into the bag, clutched the robe, and pulled it out. Ralph struggled to grab it, but he seemed locked in place, unable to move more than a few inches in any direction. "Don’t, James!"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I’m not," he said hopelessly. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]13
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Delacroix’s eyes sparkled greedily. She reached out a hand and delicately took the robe from James. "Free will is highly over-rated," she said airily.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"You won’t win." James said angrily. "You don’t have all the relics."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Delacroix looked up from the robe, meeting James’ eyes with an expression of polite surprise. "Don’t I, Mr. Potter?"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"No!" James said, gritting his teeth. "We didn’t get the broomstick. Tabitha still has it. I’m not even sure if she knows what it is, but I don’t see her bringing it to you now, either way." He hoped he was right as he said it. He didn’t see the broomstick anywhere in sight, and Tabitha certainly didn’t seem to be present, unless she was hiding, like they had been.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Delacroix laughed lightly, as if James had just made a very witty remark at a party. "Dat was de perfect hiding place, wasn’t it, Mr. Potter? And Miss Corsica is such the perfect individual to harbor it for me. Why it’s so perfect, in fact, that you never stood a chance of learning that it was, in fact, a clever lie. Interesting as it may be, Miss Corsica’s broomstick is nothing more than a convenient ruse. No, like de robe, de Merlin staff has also found its way to me tonight, regardless of what you might think. It has been cared for very well, in fact."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The rather beautiful wraith of Madame Delacroix turned to Ralph and held out her hand. "Your wand, please, Mr. Deedle."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"N-no," Ralph protested, his voice almost a moan. He tried to back away.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Don’t make me insist, please, Ralph," Delacroix said, raising her own wand toward him.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Ralph’s hand jerked up and went to his back pocket. Trembling, he produced his ridiculously huge wand. For the first time, James saw it for what it was. It wasn’t just unusually thick, whittled to a point at one end. It was part of something that was, at one time, much larger, worn down with age, but still, as had been repeatedly shown, extremely and inexplicably powerful. Delacroix reached out and, almost daintily, plucked the Merlin staff from Ralph’s hand.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Dere was no point in my risking my own capture by smuggling such a thing onto the grounds. Surely, someone would have detected it, had it been in my possession. Thus, I arranged for it to be sold to you and your charming father, Mr. Deedle. I was your salesman, in fact, though in a different guise. I do hope you enjoyed the use of the staff. Quite powerful, wasn’t it? Oh, but now I see," she added, turning almost apologetic, "you thought that it was you who was de powerful one, didn’t you? I’m so sorry, Mr. Deedle. Did you really think you’d have been allowed to enter the Keep if you hadn’t had de staff of Merlin with you? Surely, even you can see de humor in dat, can’t you? You, a Muggle-born. Please, forgive me." She laughed again, lightly, maliciously. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]14
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]She turned then, and very carefully began to arrange the relics on the throne. James and Ralph looked at each other miserably, and then James tried to look back at Zane, who was still stuck to the tree-pillar behind them, but the darkness was too thick.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Madame Delacroix stepped back from the throne, breathing in a great long breath of anticipation. She positioned herself between Ralph and James, as if they were compatriots. "Dere we go. Oh, I am so pleased. I do hate so say it, but everything has worked out exactly as I had planned. Enjoy the spectacle, my young friends. I cannot guarantee dat Merlinus will not destroy you with his arrival, but surely you do not think dat too high a price to pay to observe such a thing."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"It’ll be worth it if it destroys you, too," James said through gritted teeth.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Such venom," Delacroix replied, smiling. "No wonder you made such a good apprentice."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The robe of Merlin had been draped across the back of the throne, as if Merlin would simply shrug into it when he appeared. The last bit of Merlin’s staff leaned against the front of the throne. The beam of combined moon and starlight had become very bright, drawing a dim line through the darkness from the hole in the domed ceiling to the center of the grassy area below. The three relics glowed in the shimmering, silvery light. The time of the Hall of Elders’ Crossing had come.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James heard something. He knew Madame Delacroix and Ralph had heard it, too. All three turned their heads, trying to locate the source of the noise. It was low and whispering, coming from all directions at once. It was tremulous and distant, almost like a low note on a hundred far off flutes, but it was growing louder. Madame Delacroix glanced about, her face a mask of glee, and yet James was sure that, wraith or not, there was a hint of fear on her face as well. She suddenly gripped both boys’ arms in her steely hands. "Look!" she breathed.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Tendrils of mist were pouring in between the pillars of the Grotto, bringing the sound with them. James glanced around. The tendrils were seeping in between the branches of the domed ceiling as well. They were as insubstantial as smoke, but moved intelligently, with growing speed. They snaked toward the throne, and there they began to collect. As the tendrils combined, they writhed and collapsed, forming only hazy shapes at first, and then hardening, coming into focus. A line of slightly curved, horizontal bars coalesced in the center of the throne. With an involuntary shudder, James saw that they were the ribs of a skeleton. A spine grew from them, both up and down, connecting to two more shapes, the skull and the pelvis. This, James realized, was an apparation happening in extreme slow motion. The atoms of Merlin were streaming back together, fighting the collected inertia of the centuries. The sound that accompanied the apparation was growing both in volume and pitch, rising through the octaves and becoming almost human.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Hey, voodoo queen," a voice immediately behind James suddenly said, making all three of them jump. "Dodge this,"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]A length of log slammed down onto Delacroix’s head, disintegrating it into a hundred clods of wet dirt. Instantly, the binding curse on both James and Ralph fell away. James spun and saw Zane holding the [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]15
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]end of the log, pulling it back out of the mess of Delacroix’s wraith, which was struggling to rebuild itself. From the shoulders up, Delacroix seemed to be made entirely of broken dirt, writhing roots and worms. The wraith’s hands scrabbled at the ruined neck, trying to push the clods back into shape.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"She forgot about me when Merlin started forming!" Zane shouted, yanking the log free and hoisting it back over his shoulder. "I fell off the pillar and just grabbed the closest heavy thing I could find. Get the robe and the staff!" Zane swung the log like a baseball bat, taking off one of Delacroix’s arms at the shoulder. It hit the ground and shattered into a mess of dirt and worms.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]James jumped forward and snatched a handful of Merlin’s robe, reaching his left hand through the forming shape of the wizard. He pulled, but the robe fought back, struggling to maintain its position. Digging his heels into the soft earth, James yanked as hard as he could. The robe wrung from the back of the throne, coming through the skeletal shape seated on it. The shape gripped the arms of the throne and seemed to scream, bringing the pitch of the haunting drone up another octave. Ralph lunged and grabbed at the staff, which was growing in length even as the figure on the throne gained solidity. He jumped back with it, holding it high over his head.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The wraith of Madame Delacroix seemed caught between trying to reform itself and trying to get the robe and the staff back into place. It waved its remaining arm wildly at Ralph, then clawed at the robe in James’ hands. Zane danced behind the wraith, the log held high, then brought it down again, burying it almost waist deep in the disintegrating figure. James glanced toward the Merlin throne and saw that the figure there, which had formed to a full skeleton with ghostly musculature clinging to it like moss, was writhing horribly, beginning to melt again into mist. The sound of Merlin’s apparation had become a keening shriek.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]And then, as if out of nowhere, another figure was among them. It resolved from the darkness beyond the Grotto Keep, moving with terrible speed. It was the dryad with the horribly long, blue fingernails, but only just barely. There was something else moving within the shape, as if the dryad was merely a costume. A new voice joined the keening wail of the half-formed Merlin.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Master! No! I will not fail you! Your time has come at last! *
    *[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The figure split somehow, completely abandoning the form of the dryad. It became simply two enormous, black talons. They lunged simultaneously at James and Ralph, snatching the robe and the staff back and sending the two boys sprawling to the stone steps. The talons spun, placing the relics back into their positions, and then retracted, falling into dust, as if exhausted.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The figure on the throne shuddered violently, drawing itself back together, and the tendrils of mist roared toward it, solidifying now with terrible speed. The bones grew muscles, layer upon layer. Organs bloomed inside the chest and abdomen, forming from the veins out. The body filled the robe, and the robe took shape over it. Skin collected on the body like dew, first as a filmy membrane, but thickening, growing ruddy and tan. The fingers clutched the staff, which had grown to a length of six feet, tapered gently at the bottom and with a heavy, knobbed end. Runes ran up and down the staff, pulsing with a faint green light. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]16
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The noise of Merlin’s return resolved into a long scream, and the wizard finally ran out of breath, his head thrown back, the chords of his neck drawn taut as wire. After a long moment, he drew his first breath in a thousand years, filling his huge chest, and lowered his head.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Master! a ghostly voice cried out. James looked from the figure on the throne to the shape that had resolved out of the awful talons. It was a small man, almost invisible. He panted, his bald head glistening in the faint moonlight. You have returned! My work is complete! I am released! *
    *[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I have returned," the voice of Merlin agreed. The face was stony, the eyes locked onto the ghost. "But what time is this you have returned me to, Austramaddux?"
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Th-the world is made ready for you, Master! the ghost stammered, its voice high and frightened. I… I waited until the perfect time for your coming! The balance of the magicked and the magickless is ripe for your hand, Master! The time… the time is come! *
    *[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Merlin stared at the ghost, utterly unmoving.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Please, Master! Austramaddux screamed, falling to his ghostly knees. I have watched for centuries! My duty… my duty was more than I could bear! I waited as long as I could. I only helped a little! I found a woman, Master! Her heart was open to me! She shared our goals, so I… I encouraged her! I helped, but only a little! A little!" *
    *[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Merlin’s gaze moved from Austramaddux to the wraith of Madame Delacroix, which had mostly reconstituted itself. It flung itself to its knees, and when it spoke, the voice sounded as if it came through a mouthful of dirt. "I am your servant, Merlinus. I have summoned you to fulfill your destiny, to lead us against de Muggle worms. We are prepared for you. The world is ripe for you."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"This puppet of filth is to be my muse?" Merlin said, his voice low but nearly thundering with intensity. "Let us see her as she is, then, not as she wishes to be seen."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Delacroix straightened herself and began to speak, but nothing came out. Her jaw worked, almost mechanically, and then, chillingly, deep choking sounds began to emerge from her throat. The wraith’s hands floated upwards, rising to clutch at the neck, then to scrabble at it, digging in with long fingernails so that strips of muddy flesh began to peel away. The throat bulged, almost like that of a bullfrog, and the wraith suddenly bent at the waist, as if it was going to be sick. Merlin’s eyes blazed at the wraith and his staff glowed softly, the runes rippling with their inner light. Finally, violently, Madame Delacroix’s wraith heaved and the jaw split wide open, far past its logical limits. Something ripped forth from the yawning, horrible mouth. It poured out onto the ground before it. The wraith’s body shrunk as the mess poured from its mouth. It was almost as if the wraith turned inside out, emptying itself out of its own mouth, until all that was left was the thing lying prone on the ground, writhing and awful. It was Madame Delacroix as she really was, somehow transported from her remote place of safety and vomited from her puppeted form. She wracked against the floor as if in great pain, her shape emaciated and bony, her eyes blank gray orbs, staring blindly at the ceiling. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]17
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Austramaddux, you have brought me to a dead time," Merlin said, his low voice filling the Grotto like the roar of a thousand deeps. He turned away from the pathetic shape of Madame Delacroix, returning his gaze to the cowering ghost. "The trees have awakened for me, but their voice is nearly mute. Even the earth sleeps the sleep of centuries. You have returned me to suit yourself and yourself alone. You were a faulty servant when I agreed to apprentice you, and I have returned only to realize the depth of that mistake. I discharge you from my service. Begone."
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Merlin raised his free hand and held it, palm out, toward the ghost of Austramaddux. The ghost paled even further and shrank away, raising its hands as if to deflect a blow. No! No, I was faithful! Please! Do not discharge me! I fulfilled my duty! I was faithful! Nooo!
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]The last word elongated and rose in pitch, climbing the scale as the ghost seemed to shrink. For a moment, it assumed the form of the blue dryad, cringing and desperate, then it began to lose its shape entirely. It dwindled, and James saw that it contracted in the same proportion as Merlin’s closing hand, as if the wizard were squeezing Austramaddux in his outstretched fist. The ghost’s last word bled into a wail of horror, diminishing even as the ghost collapsed into a bright, flickering point of light. Merlin squeezed his fist, and then opened his hand with a roll of the fingers. The ghost popped, vanished, leaving only the echo of its final scream.
    [FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Finally, as if noticing them for the first time, Merlin turned his attention to James, Ralph and Zane. James moved forward, not sure what he would do, but knowing in his heart he had to do something. Merlin raised his hand again, this time towards James. James felt the world soften around him, darkening. He fought it, tried to shout out against the descending oblivion, but it was no use. He could fight the power of Merlin as much as a gnat might fight a gale. The world streamed away, funneling down to a point, and at the center of the point was the upraised hand of Merlin, pulling him in. There was an eye in the center of the hand, blue like ice. The eye closed, and Merlin’s voice said one word, a word that seemed to fill the blackness where the world had once been, and that word was "Sleep." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]18
    [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]

Re: eighth harry potter book

Has anyone been reading these? Are they any good? Comparable to JK Rawling's writing?

Re: eighth harry potter book

[QUOTE]

Has anyone been reading these? Are they any good? Comparable to JK Rawling's writing?

[/QUOTE]

i will read it after all the chapters hv been posted...cause i wana print them all togetehr...bind it properly...& read it like a book...:)
uskey baad i will tell u:)

Re: eighth harry potter book

chapter 18 below this post

Re: eighth harry potter book

1
18. the Tower Assembly
Dawn was a faint pink line on the rim of the horizon when James opened his eyes. He was lying uncomfortably on the grass at the bottom of the Grotto Keep, and he was cold to the bone. Moaning, he rolled to a sitting position and took stock of his surroundings. The first thing he noticed was that the Merlin throne was gone. There wasn’t as much as a depression in the grass where it had stood. The second thing James noticed as he raised his head and looked around was that the Grotto Keep was no longer a magical place. In the absence of the Merlin throne, the island was quickly returning to its wild, random nature. The sense of haunting, gothic architecture was slipping away. Birds sang in the thatch of tree branches overhead.
“Oh-hh,” a voice nearby groaned. “Where am I? Somehow, I have the terrible feeling that a cup of coffee and a fireplace is not about to appear before my eyes.”
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“Zane,” James said, getting shakily to his feet. “Are you all right? Where’s Ralph?”
“I’m here,” Ralph muttered. “I’m just taking inventory of all my bones and major bodily functions. So far, nothing alarming, except that I need a bathroom even more than St. Lokimagus.”
James climbed the steps into the gloom of the upper terraces of the grotto. The early morning light was faint and grey, barely making it through the brush and trees of the island. Zane and Ralph were climbing unsteadily to their feet.
“Merlin’s gone,” James said, looking around. “And I don’t see Jackson or Delacroix, either.” He stepped over the broken bits of Jackson’s wand and shuddered.
“Guess we were wrong about him, weren’t we?” Ralph said.
“We were wrong about loads of stuff,” James agreed softly.
Zane rubbed his lower back and groaned. “Hey, we didn’t do too bad, considering everything. We almost stopped Merlin’s return, thanks to a handy length of log and my catlike reflexes.” His voice sounded hollow in the flat echo of the grotto, and he fell silent. The three boys found the opening that led out to the dragon’s head bridge, hacked through some weeds that had grown up to choke the space, and stumbled out into the dawn. The bridge had partially collapsed, and bore almost no resemblance to the frightening dragon’s head anymore. The bank bordering the forest was muddy and wet, covered in morning dew.
“Hey, look,” Ralph said, pointing. There were tracks in the fresh, slippery mud.
“Looks like two people went that way. Away from the school,” Zane said, bending over to study the sloppy markings. “You think one of them was Merlin?”
James shook his head. “No. Merlin wasn’t wearing shoes. That looks like Delacroix and Jackson to me. She probably left first, and then he set out after her when he came to. Besides, something about Merlin tells me he doesn’t leave tracks unless he makes a point of it.”
“I hope Jackson breaks her in half when he catches her,” Zane said, but without much passion.
“I hope she doesn’t break him,” Ralph replied morosely. “You saw what she did to his wand.”
“Don’t remind me,” James muttered. “I don’t want to think about it.” He began to walk forward, heading generally into the woods where they’d left Prechka, but with no real destination in mind. He had a terrible suspicion about where Merlin had gone, and he, James, was responsible for that. Twice, Delacroix had called him her apprentice. She had influenced him, somehow, and he’d allowed it. He had played right into her plan, bringing the robe to her. She was right. She hadn’t had to lift so much as a finger. True, things hadn’t seemed to work out very well for her in the end, but that didn’t mean much. A lone, rogue Merlin might be even more dangerous than a Merlin in league with people like the Progressive Element. At least they tried to operate under a guise of respectability. Merlin was from a different time; a more direct and
3
deadly time. A nearly crushing weight of guilt and hopelessness pressed down on James as he plodded forward. Zane and Ralph followed quietly.
Prechka was gone. James wasn’t surprised, really. Her footprints were pressed into the dewy earth like dinosaur tracks. Without a word, the boys followed them, shivering and wet with dew. Mist filled the woods, reducing the world to a handful of black trees and dripping bushes. As they walked, the mist grew bright, absorbing the sun, and finally began to burn away. The forest awoke with bird song, and the scampering of unseen creatures in the brush. And then, surprisingly, there were distant voices, calling for them.
“Hey!” Zane said, stopping and listening. “That’s Ted!”
“And Sabrina!” Ralph added. “What are they doing out here? Hey! Over here!”
The three boys stopped and called to the two Gremlins, who responded with hoots and hollers. A gigantic shape loomed out of the mist, moving almost delicately through the trees.
“Grawp!” Zane laughed, running to meet the giant.
“Boy, you three look like inferi leftovers,” Ted called down from Grawp’s shoulders. “You spent the whole night out here?”
“It’s a long story, but yes,” Zane called up. “Short version: Merlin’s back, the voodoo queen’s on the run, and Jackson was a good guy after all. He’s after her as we speak, results unknown.”
“Is there room up there for three more, Grawp?” Ralph said, shivering. “Only, I think if I have to take one more step, I’ll drop dead.”
Grawp knelt and the three boys clambered onto his back, crowding in with Sabrina and Ted. Before climbing up, James flexed the fingers and wrist of his right hand. There was no pain, and the bones of his arm seemed sturdy and straight. He stripped off the splint and jammed it carelessly into his pocket.
“How’d you two get out?” James asked Ted when he was crammed in next to him, holding handfuls of Grawp’s straw-like hair for support. “I thought all of you were under house arrest?”
“That was last night,” Ted said simply. “Things have gone pretty crazy at the school since then. Merlin showed up in the middle of the night, and let me tell you; that bloke knows how to make an entrance.”
“He rode Prechka right into the courtyard and had her kick the front doors in,” Sabrina explained. “He obviously speaks Giant, and he had her really wild. Then, he climbs off and just puts her to sleep. She’s still there, snoring next to the main entrance like the world’s largest pile of laundry.”
“We all woke up when we heard the noise of the doors being smashed in,” Ted went on. “After that, it was pandemonium. Students running all over the place in their night clothes, trying to figure out what’s
4
going on. People were already pretty uptight, what with that Prescott guy still on the grounds and nobody knowing what he’s up to. And then, here’s this bloke who’s built like a boulder and dressed like a cross between a druid and Father Christmas, stalking through the school, putting people to sleep with barely a look, clacking this enormous staff on the floor as he goes, loud enough to echo around the whole place. Then he sees Peeves and the weirdest thing happens!”
“What?” Zane asked hopefully. “Did Peeves’ blow a raspberry at him and get turned into a floor lamp or something?”
“No,” Sabrina said, “Peeves joined him! He didn’t seem to want to, but he did anyway. Merlin stopped when he saw Peeves, and then he spoke to him. None of us knew what he was saying. It was in some really weird, flowery language. We were worried that Peeves would do something stupid and get us all zapped with that creepy staff, but then Peeves just grins, and it isn’t like any of his normal grins. It’s the kind of grin you see on a house elf when the master is just as prone to wallop the elf with a frying pan as look at it. A whole lot of teeth and not much humour, you know? And then Peeves swoops down next to the guy. They talk for few seconds in low voices, and then Peeves moves off, slow enough for Merlin to follow. Merlin had a place in mind he wanted to go, I guess, and Peeves took him there.”
“Peeves?” Ralph said incredulously.
“I know,” Ted replied. “It isn’t natural. That’s when we knew we were dealing with somebody really scary. Most of us Gremlins had already guessed he was Merlin, but that proved it.”
“So where’d they go?” James asked in a quiet voice.
“Sylvven Tower,” Sabrina answered. “At least that’s what it used to be called. Nobody uses it for much anymore. Word came down that he was awaiting a ‘parley with the Pendragon’, whatever that means.”
“I don’t like the sound of that one bit,” Zane said.
“Nobody does,” Ted agreed. “Apparently he thinks that this ‘Pendragon’ is the king or leader. It’s some kind of medieval challenge or something. Anyway, McGonagall gathered the faculty to go and deal with him, and that’s when she realized that both Professor Jackson and Delacroix were gone. Then, word comes that you’ve gone missing from the hospital wing, James. Next thing we know, McGonagall is sending us off to find the three of you. She was too busy to come herself, but she knew if anybody could sniff you out, we could. She seems to suspect you three might know something about this ‘infernal mess’, as she put it. Suspicious old girl, isn’t she?”
As Ted finished speaking, Grawp finally carried them out of the edge of the forest. The castle shone in the brilliant morning sunlight, its windows sparkling gaily, despite the turmoil within. The Garage of the Alma Alerons was quiet, its door flaps closed and tied shut. James remembered the time difference between the Hogwarts’ and the Philadelphia side of the Garage, and knew that those on that side would still be fast asleep. When Grawp turned the corner into the courtyard, Ted called for him to lower them to the ground.
5
“Great job, Grawp!” Sabrina said warmly, patting the giant on his enormous shoulder. “Go take a rest with Prechka, why don’t you?” Grawp grunted agreeably and lumbered over to the she-giant, who was indeed snoring loudly next to the steps into the castle. The massive wooden doors were hanging from one hinge each, smashed inward and gaping. The entrance hall was eerily empty and silent. As they entered, Ralph gasped and grabbed James’ arm, pointing. There, lying awkwardly on the floor near the door, were Mr. Recreant and Ms. Sacarhina. Both had their eyes open and were grinning unnaturally at the ceiling. Sacarhina’s arm was outstretched, sticking up and looking pasty white in the morning light.
“Are they… d-dead?” Ralph stammered.
Ted lightly kicked Recreant’s foot. “Not likely. They’re still warm and they’re breathing. Just really, really slowly. They were apparently down here in the hall when Merlin arrived. Looks like they tried to greet him and he just zapped them, somehow. He put loads of students to sleep, but these two got some special freezing treatment. Anyway, we pulled them out of the way so people wouldn’t trip over them.” He shrugged and led them past the two prone figures, into the halls beyond the staircases.
“Where’s Sylvven Tower?” James asked as they hurried through the corridors.
“It’s the tallest tower in the old part of the castle. Narrowest, too,” Ted answered, his voice uncharacteristically somber. “Not used for much anymore except stargazing sometimes. It’s too tall and treacherous to climb. Petra says that it was an important part of the castle a long, long time ago. Every castle had one, and it was considered neutral ground, sort of like a universal embassy or something. Meetings between warring nations and kingdoms were held there, with one king on one side and the enemy king on the other. Four advisors were allowed to accompany them, but the rest had to wait below. Occasionally, wars would be decided and ended right there, sometimes with one leader killing the other and throwing the body from the top of the tower for all to see.”
James felt his heart sink even lower. “So who’s up there with him, then?”
Ted shrugged. “Dunno. We got sent off to find you three while McGonagall was still getting everybody together. I assume she meant to meet him herself. She was looking pretty peaked about it, if you ask me.”
The five students walked through a wide, low arch, entering the oldest and least used section of the castle. After several curving, narrow corridors, they finally encountered people. Students were gathered in the corridors, lining the walls and talking in hushed voices. Finally, Ted led them into a round room with a very high ceiling; so high, in fact, that it was invisible in the dark, foggy heights of the tower. The floor was crowded with students, muttering in nervous anticipation. A rickety wooden staircase spiraled up the throat of the tower. After a cursory glance upwards, Ted began to climb the stairs. James, Zane, Ralph and Sabrina followed.
“McGonagall’s up there with… him?” Ralph asked. “How, er, good is she?”
6
“She’s the headmistress,” Sabrina answered seriously. “She’s good.”
“I hope so,” James said quietly.
They climbed the rest of the way in silence. It took quite a long time, and James was feeling remarkably tired and achy by the time he reached the top. Ralph was wheezing behind him, pulling himself up with both hands on the thick banister. Finally, however, the stairs opened onto a room that filled the top of the tower. It was low, thick with heavy rafters and dust and centuries of owl and pigeon guano. Narrow windows marched around the perimeter of the room, revealing slices of morning sunlight. There were several people present, although none of them appeared to be the Headmistress or Merlin.
“James,” a thick voice said, and a hand fell on his shoulder. “What are you doing here? This is no place for you, I’m afraid.”
“He was summoned, Professor Slughorn,” Sabrina said, following the others into the room. “The Headmistress herself asked us to bring him, as well as Ralph and Zane. They are to go up right away.”
“Up?” Ralph wheezed. “There’s more? This isn’t the top?”
“Ah, Mr. Deedle,” Slughorn said, spying Ralph. “Yes, I am afraid there is, but only a bit more. It is directly above us. Are you quite sure about this, Miss Hildegard? This is hardly the place for children.” James thought Slughorn seemed a bit ruffled that he, Ralph and Zane might be expected to go up while Slughorn himself was not.
“You were in the room when the Headmistress sent us to find them, Professor,” Ted said, allowing a hint of sternness to creep into his voice.
“So I was,” Slughorn acknowledged, as if the fact proved little.
“Let them proceed, Horace,” Professor Flitwick said from a bench near the window. “If they are summoned, they are summoned. They are hardly any safer with us here if that savage prevails.”
Slughorn stared at James, and then, with an apparent force of will, softened his expression. He turned to Ralph and clapped him stiffly on the shoulder. “Represent us well, Mr. Deedle.”
Ted motioned toward a short stone staircase that protruded through the wooden floor and up to a trapdoor in the ceiling. James, Ralph and Zane approached and climbed the worn steps slowly. The trapdoor wasn’t locked. James pushed it open and sunlight poured in, blinding him momentarily as he climbed onto the surface above.
It was almost exactly the same size and shape as the Grotto Keep, made almost entirely of stone but for the wooden floor in the center, from which the trapdoor opened. Marble pillars surrounded the space, but there was no roof. The morning sunlight filled the top of the tower, dazzling on the white marble and
7
stone terraces. Merlin sat only a few feet away, facing the three boys as they emerged into the soft wind and warm sunlight. His face was stony and immobile, only his eyes moving to watch them.
“Mr. Potter,” the headmistress’ voice rang out in the stillness. “Mr. Walker and Mr. Deedle. Thank you for joining us. Please, find your places on my left. We will come to your tale shortly.”
James turned as Zane lowered the trapdoor closed. McGonagall was seated behind them, across from Merlin. She was dressed in a flame red robe both far graver and more ostentatious than James had ever seen her wear. It made her look both younger and dreadful, like a sort of tyrant queen. The chairs that she and Merlin sat upon were embedded in the stone of the lowest terrace, so that both looked at each other across the wooden floor in the center. On McGonagall’s left, arranged along the rim of the highest terrace, were four more carven seats, although they were much less ornate. Seated on them were Neville Longbottom, Professor Franklyn, and Harry Potter.
“Dad!” James breathed, a smile of relief and joy surfacing on his face. He ran up the steps toward his father.
“James,” Harry said quietly, his face grim, “I was told you had gone missing. You had us very worried. I would have gone after the three of you myself, except that we received word you’d been found only moments after I arrived.”
“How did you find out?” Ralph asked, furrowing his brow.
Harry allowed a crooked smile and held up a Weasley rubber duck. On the bottom, Ted’s handwriting was scrawled: found them! Be there straight off! “This is Petra Morganstern’s, but she said they got the idea from you three. Very handy.”
“I’m sorry I took the Map and your cloak, Dad,” James said in a rush. “I know I shouldn’t have. I really made a mess of things. Merlin’s back and it’s all my fault.”
Harry darted his eyes meaningfully at the chairs in the center of the space. “Don’t be too hard on yourself, my boy. We’ll have loads of time to discuss this later. For now, I think we have other matters to attend to.”
James turned back toward the headmistress and Merlin. He’d nearly forgotten about them in the excitement and relief of seeing his dad. “Sure. Sorry.” The three boys remained standing along the top terrace, next to Harry, Neville and Franklyn. James noticed for the first time that the opposite side of the terrace was occupied by a surprising number of birds and creatures, all of which were staring hard at Merlin. There were owls and pigeons, ravens and even a few falcons, all arranged on the ledge of the railing, on the four carven seats, and on the floor of the top two terraces. Sitting incongruously among them, also staring at the bearded man, were a variety of creatures James recognized as House animals. Frogs and rats jostled slightly among the birds. Even Zane’s cat, Thumbs, was there, sitting near the front, his black and white nose twitching slightly.
8
“You were saying, Professor Longbottom?” McGonagall said, her gaze still locked on the huge, unmoving form of Merlin.
Neville stirred and stood. “I simply wish to register my objection to your speaking to this… this intruder, who has violently entered this school with who knows what nefarious purpose in mind, in a language that we, your long time associates and friends, cannot understand or follow. Between that and your, I must admit, surprising attire… well, surely you must know how this looks to us.”
“I apologize, Mr. Longbottom, and the rest of you,” McGonagall said, finally looking away from Merlin and meeting the eyes of those gathered to her left. “I had forgotten myself. This gentleman comes from a time of formality and ritual. I am meeting him as he expects to be met, in the ceremonial robe of my station. I am afraid that when he first found us, he assumed that all of us, including myself and the faculty, were peasants who had somehow managed to overrun the castle. It was extremely unbecoming in his time for the Pendragon to appear in the sort of colorless sacks that he mistook our robes for. As for the language…”
“I can speak in the language of your servants, if you wish it, Madam Pendragon,” Merlin interrupted in his low, carrying voice. “Although why you deign to speak to them as equals when they should be stropped for such impertinence, I cannot guess.”
McGonagall sighed and closed her eyes. James had the sense that these sorts of misunderstandings had been going on for some time. “These are my associates, not my underlings, sir. This is a different time, as I fear I must keep reminding you. I am not the Pendragon of a kingdom. I am Pendragon only of a tiny portion of land, all of which is within sight of this tower. But yes, please do speak so that all of us may understand.”
“As you wish, Madam,” Merlin answered. “I assume your council is fully present, then?”
“It is. James Potter, Ralph Deedle, Zane Walker,” the headmistress said, looking at each boy in turn. “This man claims to be Merlinus Ambrosius, returned to the world of men from an age of nothingness, by the combined arrangement of his ghostly apprentice and five other individuals. What can you tell us of this tale?”
James answered, explaining, as well and honestly as he could how the three Merlin relics came to be combined in the island of the Grotto Keep. He was careful to proclaim, to his own shame, how Professor Jackson had meant to protect the robe and keep it from the Grotto, foiling Madame Delacroix’s plan, but that James had inadvertently ruined his intentions.
“It was my fault,” he explained miserably. “Ralph and Zane only helped because I talked them into it. I wanted to…” he paused and swallowed. “I wanted to save the day, I guess. But I ruined everything. I’m sorry.”
McGonagall’s face was calm but unreadable as James finished. He hung his head, but a moment later he felt his dad’s hand on his shoulder, warm and heavy. He sighed.
9
Merlin let his gaze sweep over the gathering on and near the benches, then he slowly filled his chest. “Austramaddux’s plan abused the intentions of many, I see; some good and some bad. I assume, however, that after this boy’s testimony there is no doubt about my identity. Allow me to repeat, then: I have been, it seems, the subject of a very dire campaign of lies and slander. It has apparently become accepted lore that I was, in my own time, a capricious and dishonorable creature, a man of selfish alliances and endless guile. This is no more true than the litany of virtues embroidered into the history of this Voldemort villain you have described to me. I was no more evil than a storm is evil. I killed only when there was no hope of repentance or slavery. I collected dues only from those who deserved to pay, and even then, a third of my purse went to the poor and the church. I am no horror to be sought after by the pathetic creatures whom you gratuitously call ‘evil’, whose own wickedness is hardly a candle to the torches of iniquity I have observed in my own time.”
“I’ve no doubt you believe that,” McGonagall stated, “but surely you know that the legends of the dark heart of the world’s most powerful wizard began even before you stepped outside of your own time, while you still walked the earth. Many lived in fear of you.”
“Only those whose wickedness or ignorance lent them to that error,” Merlin rumbled. “And even in their case, I would more likely have approached them with the rod instead of the sword.”
“That may be so, Merlinus, but you yourself know that you dabbled in arts that, while technically allowed in your time, were not very allowed. You exposed yourself to currents of magic that separated you from the rest of humanity; currents that were, in fact, more than most human beings could touch and remain sane. You were changed by that dabbling. Perhaps even warped by it. Even you must have doubted your own judgment at times. The ambiguous morality of Merlinus Ambrosius was well known, as was his cavalier attitude towards the lives of the nonmagicked. It was legitimately suspected that you might side with those who wished the destruction and subjugation of the Muggle realm. I cannot speak for your own time, but in ours, those who wish war upon the Muggle world are our sworn enemies. Your allegiance must be decided before we can allow you to leave these halls.”
“You dare to challenge the nobility of such as me?” Merlin asked, his voice smooth and calm. “And to suggest that I could not merely wipe you all from the earth with a sweep of my arm if I so wished?”
“I dare to do both, and for good reason,” McGonagall said firmly. “You were of questionable motive in your own time, as even the best historians agree. You remain so in this time. And in regard to your powers, they may be formidable, but even in your time, the current from which you drew your power was waning as the earth was tamed. Don’t pretend that that wasn’t your greatest reason for stepping out of time. You hoped to return to an age when the current of the earth was restored, when your power would once again be uninterrupted and complete. But this is not that time. The current is more parsed than ever. Your power may still be great, and you might indeed defeat those gathered here, but you are by no means unstoppable. Choose carefully with whom you ally in this age, Merlinus.”
10
Merlin’s face remained as impassive as stone as he stared at the headmistress. “I have truly returned to a time of darkness if the Pendragon believes that a mere threat of doom might sway the convictions of an honorable wizard. But I see that you are honest in your motive, even if your methods are mean. I have never foresworn allegiance to any whose hearts were turned hard against the nonmagicked. I worked to maintain the balance between the magickal and Muggle worlds, to keep the scales from tipping one toward the other, though none would have guessed my true aims. I serviced all, but always with that goal in my heart. Fairness is a myth among a fallen humankind, but equality of struggle can be maintained, even if it is only a pale ghost of true fairness.”
“You speak well, Merlinus,” the Headmistress said, “But you have not stated your purpose plainly. Are you here to overthrow us, or to work alongside us?”
For the first time, Merlin’s face showed emotion. He closed his eyes and pressed his lips together. His beard glistened with what James assumed was some sort of oil. Occasionally, the scent of it, wild and spicy, wafted in the breeze of the tower’s top. “Austramaddux deserved the fate I dealt him, and perhaps a hundredfold, for returning me to this time.” He opened his eyes again, and looked around at the assembly. “I approach a castle of the most solid construction I’ve ever witnessed, filled with glittering eyes of hardened sunlight, and yet I find no sentry, no vanguard, not so much as a servant to fill my bath or demand protocol. You meet me with no recognition of my status and no blessing upon my head, wearing the clothes of jesters and field boys, and yet you are surrounded by tables of plenty, on plates as round and smooth as the planets. The Pendragon herself is not revered or waited upon, but dresses like her minions in shapeless bags of tenting. And then, above all, my honor and allegiance is challenged, when I myself only refrain from demanding tribute out of respect for a foreign age. Truly, my mission has become as dust. There is no age ripe for me.”
“Selfish Austramaddux may have been,” McGonagall agreed, leaning slightly forward, “But it may not be a mistake that you were returned to this time, Merlinus. It was thought that you would lead the rebellion against the Muggle world, but if your claims are true, then you may have been brought here by an even greater providence so that you might aid us in preventing just such a tragedy. Even now, the powers of chaos have set in motion events that will lead to that end. This very day, a man resides among us, a Muggle man. He has been led here by agents of disorder, and he has bypassed our greatest defenses using a form of unmagic called ‘technology’. He has access to an engine called ‘the press’ by which he can make known the secrets of the magical world to the rest of humanity. It is only by maintaining that secret for the past millennium that the balance of powers has existed. If this man and his secret plotters succeed, they will abuse the recombination of the magical and Muggle world. They will plot divisions, seek power, and eventually, they will spawn a war. You, more than anyone, know what the result of such a scheme would be. You must help us. Those who plot chaos are expecting you. Let them eat the fire they intended to turn upon the world, Merlinus. Aid us.”
Merlin sat perfectly still for almost a minute, his beard glistening in the sun. The animals fidgeted slightly, noses twitching and feathers ruffling. Finally, Merlin stood, and it was like watching a mountain rise
11
from its foundation. He moved with slow, massive grace until he was fully erect, his staff held up-right next to him, his piercing blue eyes settling on the headmistress.
“You are correct, Madam,” Merlin said, his voice flat and undeniable. “It was my selfish aim to leave my own age only to find a time when my power would be restored in fullness. Arrogance is my iniquity, and it has undone me. I have returned now only to find my power cut to pieces, far more than it was in my own time. I beg your forgiveness, as a man of honour, but I am both unable and unwilling to rise to the post you have described for me. This is no longer my world. Perhaps you will prevail without me. Perhaps not. I cannot see any future in this time apart from knowing that the sun will arise tomorrow and travel across the heavens as it has done for the thousand years of my absence. Whether it shines down on war or peace, truth or lies, I know not, but I do know this: it will shine upon a world that knows me not, nor I it. I take my leave of you now, Madam. I bid all of you: fare thee well.”
Merlin raised his arms, holding his staff aloft. As one, the birds on the railings and benches launched from their perches. There was a thunderous sound as hundreds of wings beat the air. When the mass of birds broke apart, streaming from the top of the tower in all directions, there was no sign of Merlin.
James stared hard at the space where the great wizard had been standing. It was over. There was nothing left. Harry turned James around and folded him into his arms. “It’s all right, son,” he said. James didn’t believe anything was all right, but he was glad for the words anyway. He hugged his dad back.
“I wonder if he’s really gone for good,” Neville mused out loud.
“I’ve no doubt he means for us to believe that,” The headmistress replied, arising from her chair on the tower platform. “But the fact of the matter is that he has nowhere to go. His servant, Austramaddux, has apparently been banished to the Netherworld, thus Merlinus has no apprentice in this age to arrange for his reappearance if he should choose to step out of time again. I fear we must assume that Merlinus is with us, for better or worse. Mr. Potter, can he be tracked?”
12
Harry thought for a moment. “Difficult, but not impossible. He will probably retreat to the protection of the woodlands, where his power is strongest. No doubt he has many methods of surviving and hiding there, but a wizard of such abilities will always leave a detectable magical wake. I believe we can locate him, given a team of aurors and enough time. The question is: what do we do with him when we find him?”
“We must secure his intent,” Franklyn said somberly, slowly approaching the chair Merlin had occupied. “Merlinus is a creature of mystery and confusion. Despite his words, I sense that he himself does not trust his own allegiances. Things were much clearer in his time. Did you sense it as well? He is unsure in this age. He doesn’t know who to trust, whose aims most reflect his own. This is made worse by the fact that, as you pointed out, headmistress, Merlin’s own morality is ambiguous at best. He retreats now in order to examine his own heart as much as to study the factions of this age.”
“Do you really believe that, Professor?” Harry asked.
Franklyn had produced the same brass device he’d used to examine James’ broken arm on the Quidditch pitch. He was peering through it, studying the chair Merlin had occupied. He nodded slowly. “I do. Merlin admitted to us that pride is his greatest weakness. He cannot allow us to see his own lack of surety. But there is no doubt of it. He doesn’t know where he stands in this age because he doesn’t know where he stands in his own heart, and only now does he realize it.”
“That doubt won’t last forever, though,” Neville said, stepping down the terraces toward the wooden floor. “We can hardly sit back and wait until he decides whose side to join. His power may be diminished, but I’d wager he is still unmatched by any single wizard alive today. We have to assume he is with our enemies until he determines he is our ally.”
Harry was shaking his head. “I agree that he may be unsure in this time, but I don’t think he’s evil. Or at least, not willfully evil.”
“What do you mean?” Zane interjected. “He’s been sought after by the most evil wizards for the past thousand years or so, hasn’t he?”
“Not the most evil wizards,” McGonagall said pointedly.
“That’s true,” Harry agreed. “Only those who were confused or warped enough to believe their aims were good, somehow. Those who knew their hearts were evil, whose eyes were open to their own wickedness and embraced it, they never sought him. At least, as far as we know.”
“Let us repair to our offices for now,” McGonagall said, sighing. “Our day has barely begun and we already have far more to manage than we rightly know how. Besides, I wish to alleviate myself of this unbearable costume as soon as possible.”
Franklyn heaved the trapdoor open and the group began to file down the steps. The animals that had gathered on the tower platform threaded down as well, scampering and hopping around the groups’ feet.
13
Slughorn and the rest of the professors gathered below greeted them with worried faces and a flurry of questions. Ignoring them, James followed his dad down the spiral steps toward the far distant floor.
“How’d you get here so fast, Dad?” he asked. “Merlin didn’t get here until the middle of the night. How’d McGonagall get hold of you so quickly?”
“It wasn’t the headmistress that brought me here, James,” Harry replied, glancing over his shoulder at his son. “It was your letter. Nobby delivered it this morning, and I came as soon as I read it. The headmistress was as surprised as anyone when I showed up in her office fireplace.”
“But Sacarhina said you were off on some special assignment and weren’t to be bothered!”
Harry laughed humorlessly. “It was that detail in your letter that proved I needed to get here right away, James. I’m doing nothing but desk work this week. If Sacarhina says I’m on assignment, that’s just because she wants to make sure I’m not here.”
“Yeah,” James nodded. “The portrait of Snape told us Sacarhina and Recreant are both no good. They’re in on all this Progressive Element stuff.”
Harry stopped on the stairs, turning back to James, Ralph and Zane. “Be careful who you mention that to,” he said, lowering his voice. “The Ministry is riddled with people like Recreant and Sacarhina these days, although for most of them it’s just a way to appear a little daring and trendy. Hermione does what she can to fight the propaganda and weed out the instigators, but it’s complicated. Recreant is only a tool, but Sacarhina is dangerous. I think she’s the mastermind behind the return of Merlin, in fact.”
“What?” James said, dropping his voice to match his dad’s. “That can’t be. It was Madame Delacroix in the Grotto last night.”
“Yeah, Sacarhina didn’t even arrive until yesterday evening,” Zane added.
Harry’s expression was grave. “Sacarhina isn’t the kind of person to get her hands dirty with any of the actual work. She needed Delacroix for that, and Delacroix herself couldn’t have gotten the Merlin Throne out of the Ministry without Sacarhina on the inside, helping her. Recreant and Sacarhina are only here now because they claim to be escorting an ‘expert in Muggle-magical relations’ to deal with this Prescott person. There is no such expert. They were expecting to produce Merlin himself, and pass him off as that expert.”
“So they never intended to stop Prescott from revealing the magical world to the Muggle press!” Ralph said, his face white. “Sacarhina and Merlin were supposed to work together to make sure Prescott got his story out, weren’t they?”
Harry nodded. “That’s what I think. This is all no coincidence. It’s exactly the sort of thing people like Sacarhina have been hoping for all along. The recombination of the Muggle and magical world is essential to their final plan for all-out war.”
14
“But Merlin turned out to be on nobody’s side but his own, after all,” James said. “Does that ruin their plan?”
“I don’t know,” Harry sighed. “Things have been put in motion that will be very hard to stop now. Sacarhina may no longer need Merlin for this part of the plan.”
Zane asked, “So how are you planning to stop Prescott?”
“Stop him? I’m not even supposed to be here, remember? Sacarhina is in charge.”
“But she’s evil!” James exclaimed. “You can’t just let her run the show!”
“We won’t, James,” Harry said, putting a hand on James’ shoulder but hardening his voice. “But we have to be very careful. Sacarhina has a lot of influence in the Ministry. I can’t just defy her. She’s hoping that I’ll do something rash, something she can use against me. She wants the Department of Aurors shut down entirely. Keeping that from happening is of utmost importance. Even more so than protecting the secrecy of the magical world.”
“So Sacarhina and Delacroix win?” James said, looking his dad in the eye.
“In the short run, perhaps. But don’t lose hope, any of you. Neville, the headmistress and I have a few tricks up our sleeves. We will survive the day, no matter what happens with Prescott. The only question now is who led him here in the first place?”
“Well, it would’ve been Sacarhina, wouldn’t it?” Zane suggested.
“No, couldn’t be,” James sighed. “She’s signed the vow of secrecy, just like every other witch and wizard. If she’d tried to tell Prescott anything, even through a letter, the vow would have stopped her somehow. Besides, she wouldn’t know anything about how a GameDeck worked, or how it could be used to lead somebody to Hogwarts.”
Voices and footsteps echoed from the spiral of stairs above them. The headmistress and the professors were descending behind them. Harry gestured for the boys to follow him the rest of the way down.
“That’s the only part of this that really baffles me,” Harry said as he tromped down the stairs. “Every witch and wizard is bound by the vow of secrecy. Any Muggle parent of a student is bound by their own contract of non-disclosure. That means no one who knows about the magical world would be capable of spreading the secret. And yet, someone obviously did. I intend to find out who.”
By the time they neared the last curve of the staircase, the headmistress, Neville, and the rest of the professors had caught up to them. McGonagall called down to the students who were waiting below.
“Ladies and Gentlemen, as you can see, we are all returning to you whole and well.” She stopped and regarded the assembly from above. “In order to dispel rumors and quell any fears, I intend to be quite forthright about what has been, and still is, occurring here today. Two men have found their ways rather
15
unexpectedly into these halls over the course of the last two days. The first is still here. His name is Martin Prescott and he is a Muggle. His intentions are quite questionable, but I can assure you that we, your faculty, are prepared to-”
“Thank you, Minerva,” a high, ringing voice interrupted. “I have, in fact, already briefed the students on today’s events. I appreciate your thoroughness, however. Do join us, won’t you?” Sacarhina and Recreant stepped out of the crowd of students and moved to the head of the staircase. Sacarhina’s smile was large and glinting in the dusty light of the tower floor. McGonagall stared down at her for a long moment, and then turned to address the students again. “In that case, I expect you all have classes to attend to. Your professors shall kindly lead you to your classrooms. Let us make what we can with the rest of the day, shall we?”
“Do you really believe it is necessary for classes to go forward today, Minerva?” Sacarhina said when the headmistress and the rest of the troupe reached the bottom of the steps. “This is rather an unusual day.”
“Unusual days are the best days for classes, Miss Sacarhina,” McGonagall replied, stepping past the woman. “Reminds everyone why we are here in the first place. If you’ll excuse me.”
“Harry,” Mr. Recreant said, smiling a bit too enthusiastically. “I admit, Brenda and I hadn’t expected to see you here today. Family occasion, is it?” He turned his grin on James, and then flashed it over Ralph and Zane as well.
Harry smiled stiffly. “I’m equally surprised to see the two of you here. I didn’t see any paperwork about a return trip to meet with the Alma Alerons. And I’ve been doing an awful lot of paperwork, as you know.”
Sacarhina took Harry’s arm, and he allowed her to lead him out of the tower, following the last of the students. “Very unexpected, this is,” she said in a confidential tone of voice. “Dreadful situation. Surely Minerva told you about it? Martin Prescott, a Muggle reporter, right here on the grounds. Still, the Ministry feels it is inevitable, really.”
“Does it?” Harry said, stopping near the door and facing Sacarhina. “So, Loquatious Knapp knows about this?”
“The Minister is aware of the general direction events have been leading,” Recreant interjected, “We hadn’t chosen to bother him with the particulars, per se.”
“So he doesn’t, in fact, know you are here?” Harry said, dropping his thin smile.
“Harry,” Sacarhina said silkily, “the fact is that this sort of scenario is exactly the purview of the Department of Ambassadorial relations. You, of course, do not require the signature of the Minister for every little maneuver of the Department of Aurors. Nor do we require his approval when dealing with the execution of our daily duties. Do you intend to stay for the day?”
16
“I believe so, Brenda,” Harry answered calmly. “I am curious to see what the Department of Ambassadorial Relations does to execute its daily duties in such a situation. Besides, surely you’d agree that an outside, objective witness might prove helpful in case of any… inquiries?”
“Suit yourself, Mr. Potter,” Sacarhina said, her smile snapping shut like a jewelry box. “It will all be over by four o’clock this afternoon. Prescott’s crew will arrive and they will get their tour. There is hardly any way to prevent it, after all, considering Mr. Prescott’s very ingenious fail-safes. You may accompany us, but please do not attempt to interfere. It would not go well for you. But I am sure I do not need to tell you that, do I?”
“Did you have a nice snooze down there by the front doors?” Zane said lightly as Sacarhina turned away. She stopped, and then very slowly turned back toward Zane.
“Whatever could you mean, young man?” she asked. Harry was looking at Zane with a mixture of curiosity and amusement.
Zane went on, “You two were both down there to meet Merlin when he made his grand entrance last night, but he was apparently looking for bigger fish than you, wasn’t he? He gave you both the old evil eye and froze you on the spot. Come on, now, that’s gotta hurt.”
Sacarhina’s smile eased back onto her face, as if it was the default expression at times when her brain was working hard on something else. Her eyes moved back to Harry. “I simply don’t know what you’ve been filling these poor children’s heads with, Mr. Potter, but it really doesn’t do for Ministry officials to tell such stories. Merlin, of all things.” She shook her head vaguely, then turned and walked through the archway with Mr. Recreant following nervously.
“You sure have a way with people, Zane,” Harry said, grinning and ruffling the boy’s hair.
“My dad says it’s a gift,” Zane agreed. “My mom says it’s a curse. Who can tell?”
“It looked like Miss Sacarhina was more confused than angry,” Ralph mused as they walked through the archway leaving the Sylvven Tower.
“Could be,” Harry replied. “It might be that everyone Merlin put to sleep forgot about him as well. She may have no recollection of his coming last night.”
“So she still expects him to show up when she takes Prescott and his crew on the grand tour?”
“Perhaps. Although it won’t trip her up for long when he doesn’t show. Merlin’s probably halfway across the Forbidden Forest by now, getting directions from the tree sprites, now that they’re apparently awakened.”
James stopped in the middle of the corridor. A few paces later, Harry stopped as well and turned to look back at his son. James’ face was wide-eyed and thoughtful. Suddenly, he blinked and looked at his dad.
17
“I need to go to the Forbidden Forest,” he said. “It’s not too late. Dad, will you come with me? Zane, Ralph, you too?”
Harry didn’t ask his son any questions. He studied James’ face for several seconds, and then glanced down at Zane and Ralph. “What do you two think? You up for playing a little hooky?”
James walked purposefully into the forest, followed at a short distance by Harry, Zane and Ralph. He threaded through the smaller trees at the perimeter, heading into the deeper heart of the forest, where the trees were huge and ancient and the sun was all but blocked out by rafters of dense foliage. For several minutes, the foursome walked in silence, and then, finally, James stopped. He turned on the spot, looking up into the shushing leaves and gently creaking branches. There were no other sounds. Harry, Zane and Ralph stood twenty feet away, watching quietly. James closed his eyes for a moment, thinking, and then opened them again and spoke.
“I know a lot of you aren’t awake,” he began, looking up into the looming heights of the trees, “and I know that some of you who are awake aren’t on our side. But the ones who are will hear me, and I hope you’ll help. Merlin is out there somewhere. He may be far, far away by now, but even so, I think you know where he is. He talks to you, and I am betting you talk to him, too. I know tree sprites can talk, because we’ve already met one of you. I have a message for Merlin.”
James stopped and took another deep breath, not entirely sure what he meant to say. It had simply occurred to him that he should try. He had been used by Delacroix to help bring Merlin into the world, despite the best efforts of those who’d wished to prevent it. The knowledge that he’d allowed himself to be manipulated was horrible to him. All this time, he’d believed he was doing good, saving the world from evil, walking in the steps of his hero father. And yet his best intentions had been warped against him, against the world he’d hoped to protect. He’d tried to do it alone, like his dad had done, but he’d failed. He’d aided evil. And now evil expected him to give up. James didn’t intend to give up, though. Maybe now he could try to help in a different way. It was probably a long shot, probably utterly hopeless, but he had to try. Maybe this was his way, after all.
“Merlin,” James said uncertainly, “You said that Austramaddux made a mistake in bringing you to our time. You said he was selfish, that he just wanted to get out of the duty he swore to you. But
18
headmistress McGonagall thinks that you’re wrong. She thinks that this is the very time you were meant to return to, because this world needs your help to stop a war that might destroy us all. Well… I know I’m just a kid, but I think you’re both wrong.”
James glanced back at his dad. Harry gave a small shrug and nodded.
“I listened to everything you said, and what everybody said after you left, and I think you were brought to this time because you need something. You don’t know for sure if you’ve really ever done right or wrong. You don’t know if you controlled your powers, or if they controlled you. I think the truth is that the world does need you now, but that you need this world, too. This is your chance- maybe your last chance- to prove that you are a good wizard after all. People have wondered for centuries whether you were good or bad, but who cares what the rest of history says about you? If you know in your own heart that you did the right thing when it really mattered, then it doesn’t matter what anybody else says. I don’t say this because I understand it myself yet, but at least I’m trying to learn it. You’re in this time no matter what, Merlin. Whoever brought you here means for you to rescue the world, but… I think you’re also here to be rescued from yourself.”
James finished and sighed. He looked up, craning his neck and squinting, searching the trees for some sign that his message had been heard, and that it might be delivered. The leaves simply continued to skirl and shush in the breeze. The branches creaked quietly to themselves. After a minute, James stuffed his hands into his pockets and walked disconsolately back to his dad, Ralph and Zane.
Zane clapped James on the shoulder as they turned to leave. “That was the hokiest pile of salami I’ve ever heard,” he said jovially. “But I think you meant it. I liked it, even if it never does get to Merlin’s ears.”
“Did you come up with that all by yourself?” Ralph asked. James shrugged and smiled sheepishly.
Harry didn’t say anything as they walked, but he put his arm around James’ shoulder and kept it there the whole way back. James thought it meant his dad approved, even if it wasn’t the way he himself would have done it. And then James realized, with some contentment, that his dad approved because it wasn’t the way he’d have done it. James smiled and enjoyed that moment of quiet revelation. Maybe learning this truth- the sort of truth that one has to learn on his own, despite all the people who’d tried to teach it with mere words- was worth everything that had happened so far. He only hoped that it was worth more than what might still be to come.

Re: eighth harry potter book

great great job duckie. I have saved the contents of page first and third. Will cherish them later. But the page second of this thread couldnt open with me :? have u pasted any of the chapters on page 2 too? if so, can u please pm those to me? It will be a great favour.

Re: eighth harry potter book

Wow, Only three more chapters left. I can't wait for them. Post them as soon as u get them duckie. & nice work :)

Re: eighth harry potter book

do you still want me to pm you?????????
oh yeah i read the end of the book very very very bad!!!!!!!1

Re: eighth harry potter book

chapter 19 below this post

Re: eighth harry potter book

**
1. 19. Secrets Unveiled
**[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Harry joined James, Zane and Ralph for a very late breakfast in the house elf kitchens below the Great Hall. James noticed that the house elf operating the enormous stove bellows was the grumpy house elf who’d told the three boys they were on probation. He eyed them with unguarded suspicion, but didn’t say anything. They crowded at a tiny table beneath an even tinier window and ate plates of kippers and toast and drank pumpkin juice and black tea. Finally, Harry suggested that the boys take a break and get cleaned up. They were still dressed in the clothes they had worn during the failed broomstick caper of the day before, and they were all decidedly grubby from their night in the forest. James was weary to the bone as well, and determined that he would collapse on his bed for at least ten minutes, school crisis or not.
On the way to the common room, James decided to take a detour to the hospital wing to collect his backpack. Philia Goyle and Murdock were no longer guarding the doors, of course, but James was surprised to see Hagrid crammed onto one of the benches nearby, flipping through a thick magazine called Beasts and Boondocks. He glanced up, closing the magazine. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]1
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"James, good to see yeh," he said warmly, apparently trying to keep his voice quiet. "Heard yeh was back safe and sound. Seen your father, then, I’d wager?"
"Yeah, just left him," James answered, peeking into the cracked doors of the hospital wing. "What are you doing here, Hagrid?"
"Well, it’s obvious, isn’t it? I’m keepin’ watch, I am. Nobody in nor out ‘less it’s by permission o’ the headmistress. Needs his rest and ‘cuperation, after all he’s been through."
"Who?" James asked, suddenly interested. He peered more closely into the crack between the doors. There was a shape lying still on one of the beds, but James couldn’t make out any features.
"Why Professor Jackson, a’course!" Hagrid said, standing and joining James by the doors. He peeked over James’ head with one beady black eye. "Haven’t you heard? Showed up in the courtyard ‘alf an hour ago, looking quite a fright," he whispered. "Caused no end o’ commotion when the students out there caught sight of ‘im. We brought ‘im in here straight away and I was given the post of keepin’ an eye on the doors while Madam Curio ‘tended to ‘im."
James looked up at Hagrid. "He’s injured?"
"That’s what we thought at first," Hagrid said, stepping back. "But Madam Curio says he’s all right except for a few broken ribs, some burns on ‘is arms, a nasty bruise on the skull and about a million cuts and scratches. He’s been in a duel, she’s says, and a long one, at that. Happened during the night, out in the forest. That’s all we could get out of ‘im before he konked out."
"A duel?" James repeated, knitting his brow. "But Delacroix broke his wand!"
"Did she?" Hagrid said, impressed. "Now why’d she go and do a thing like that, then?"
"She was the one he was dueling against, Hagrid," James said tiredly. "He and she… look, I’ll explain later. But I saw her break his wand in two pieces. I saw the bits. He left them behind."
"Weerrrll…" Hagrid said, resuming his seat and producing a long, pained groan from the bench. "He’s American, y’ know. They like to carry more‘n one wand around. Comes from all that old wild West lore and all. They sticks ‘em in their boots and up their sleeves and hide ‘em in their canes and such. Everybody knows that, don’t they?"
James peered into the crack of the hospital doors again, but he still couldn’t make anything of the shape on the mattress. "Sorry, Professor," he said quietly. "But I hope you gave her royal hell."
"What’s that, James?" Hagrid said, glancing up.
"I just came for my backpack," James answered quickly. "I left it in there last night." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]2
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I don’t s’pose yeh might want to come back later for it, would yeh?" Hagrid asked earnestly. "Only I’ve got my orders, here. Nobody in nor out. The headmistress thinks that whoever attacked Jackson might come looking for him. Can’t rule out it was that crazy nutter pretending to be Merlin."
"It was Delacroix, Hagrid. But, yeah. I can come back later. Good work."
Hagrid nodded, and then flopped his magazine open onto his lap again. James turned and headed back the way he’d come.
The Gryffindor common room was empty. The fire in the grate had burned down to red embers, but it had warmed up enough outside that it wasn’t necessary anyway. In fact, as James headed up the stairs to the sleeping quarters, he felt a gust of cool, fresh air push past him. Someone had apparently left a window open upstairs. He was just wondering if he should shut it or not when he topped the landing and saw Merlin reclined comfortably on his bed.
"Here is my little counselor, after all," Merlin said, looking up and lowering James’ Technomancy textbook.
James glanced at the open window next to his bed, then back to Merlin. "You," he said, his mind boggling slightly. "Did you…?" He pointed uncertainly at the window.
"Did I fly in through it?" Merlin said, laying the book aside almost reverently. "Lofted upon the wings of my sky-borne brethren? What do you think, James Potter?"
James closed his mouth, realizing that this was a kind of test. He pushed his first thoughts aside and looked around.
"No," he answered. "No, actually, I think you just opened the window because you like the air."
"I like the scents of the air, especially this time of year," the great wizard replied, looking toward the open window. "The essence of growth and life comes from the earth now, filling the sky. Even the nonmagicked feel it. They say that ‘love’ is in the air in springtime. It’s close enough to the truth not to matter, but it isn’t love of a man and a woman. It is the love of dirt for root, and leaf for sunlight, and yes, wing for air."
"But you wanted me to believe that you came in through the window, didn’t you?" James said, feeling carefully emboldened.
Merlin smiled slightly and studied James. "Nine-tenths of magic happens in the mind, James Potter. The greatest trick of all is to know what your audience expects to see, and making sure they do."
James approached another bed and sat on it. "Is this what you came to talk about? Or are you here because you got my message?" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]3
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I have been privy to many things since you last saw me," the wizard answered. "I have moved in and out, to and fro. I have conversed with many old friends, reacquainted myself with the earth and the beasts and the air. I have met very strange things in the forest, articles of this age, and learned much of the way the world is in this time. I have studied you, yourself, and your people."
James smiled slowly, realizing something. "You never left us! You vanished from the top of the tower, let us think you flew off with the birds, but you didn’t go anywhere, did you? You just turned invisible!"
"You have rather a talent for looking beyond the flat of the mirror, James Potter," Merlin said, his voice low and his face impassive. "But I will admit that I did hear everything your Professors Franklyn and Longbottom, and the Pendragon, and yes, your father, said about me. I was amused and angered that they presumed to know me so. And yet, I am no slave to arrogance. I asked myself if what they supposed was true. I left then, and I visited my old lands. I went in and out, to and fro. I studied my own deep soul, as Franklyn supposed I should. And I found there was a shadow of truth in their words. A shadow…"
Merlin paused for a long moment. James decided not to say anything, but simply watched the wizard. His face remained utterly immobile, but his eyes were distant. After no less than two minutes, Merlin spoke again.
"But a shadow was not enough to bring me back to the mire of double-speak and confused loyalties that pass for battle-lines in this benighted age. I was far off, exploring, seeking space and land and uninterrupted earth, already sinking into the deep language of the wind and the rain, when there was a new note in the song of the trees. Your message, James Potter."
James was amazed to see that there was finally emotion on the enormous man’s face. He looked at James nakedly, his eyes suddenly wet. James felt shame for the man’s raw expression of anguish. He even felt a little guilty for his own words, words that had apparently, shockingly, pierced this enormous man’s hidden heart. Then, as if the anguish had never been there, the massive, stony face composed itself. It was not a matter of masking the emotion, James realized. He was simply witnessing the workings of emotion in a man whose culture was utterly alien to him, where the heart was so close to the surface that deep emotion could pass over the face shamelessly and completely, like a cloud obscuring the sun but for a moment.
"Thus, James Potter," the wizard said, standing slowly, so that he seemed to fill the room. "I return. I am at your service. My soul does indeed require this. I have learned much of this world during my travels this day, and I love little of it, but there is a present evil, even though it is masked with duplicity and etiquette. Perhaps defeating that evil is secondary even to stripping that evil of its façade of respectability."
James grinned and jumped up as well, not sure whether to shake Merlin’s hand, hug him, or bow. He settled for pumping his fist once in the air and proclaiming, "Yes! Er, thank you, Merlin. Er, Merlinus. Mr. Ambrosius?"
The wizard simply smiled, his ice-blue eyes twinkling. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]4
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"So," James said, "What do we do? I mean, we only have a few hours before Prescott and his crew gather to film the school and everything. I guess I have to explain all that to you. Sheesh, this is going to take a while."
"I am Merlin, James Potter," the wizard said, sighing. "I have already learned as much as I need to know about this world and how it works. You’d be quite surprised, methinks, to learn how much the trees know of your culture. Mr. Prescott is not your problem. We simply need a council of allies to aid us."
"All right," James said, plopping back onto the bed. "What sort of allies do we need?"
Merlin’s eyes narrowed. "We require heroes of wit and cleverness, unafraid to foil convention in order to defend a higher allegiance. Battle skills matter not. What we need at this moment, James Potter, are scoundrels with honour."
James nodded succinctly. "I know just the group. Scoundrels with honour. Got it."
"Then let us have at it, my young counselor," Merlin said, smiling a little frighteningly. "Lead on."
"So," James said as he led Merlin down out of the portrait hole. "Do you think we’ll win?"
"Mr. Potter," Merlin said breezily, stepping out onto the landing and placing his fists on his hips. "You won the moment I decided to join you."
"Is that the famous Merlin pride talking?" James asked tentatively.
"Like I said," Merlin replied, turning to follow James with his long, slow stride. "Nine tenths of magic happens in the mind. The last tenth, Mr. Potter, is pure and unadulterated bluster. Take note of that and you’ll do very well."
After the bright, misty morning, the day progressed into a hazy stillness of unseasonable warmth. Headmistress McGonagall had insisted that classes continue, even during the tour of Martin J. Prescott and [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]5
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]his entourage, but in spite of her order, dozens of students had gathered in the courtyard to witness the arrival of the Muggle reporter’s crew. Near the front of the group, James and Harry stood side by side. Only a few feet away, Tabitha Corsica and her Slytherin compatriots were looking decidedly bright-eyed and eager. On the top of the main steps, Headmistress McGonagall was flanked by Miss Sacarhina and Mr. Recreant. Martin Prescott, on the lowest step, glanced at his watch.
"Are you sure they can get their vehicles in through the way you described, Miss Sacarhina?" he said, glancing up to where she stood, squinting in the sunlight. "They will be driving vehicles with wheels, as I’ve said. You know. Wheels. There aren’t any magical mud bogs or bridges with trolls living under them or anything, are there?"
Sacarhina was about to answer when the sound of automobile engines became audible in the near distance. Prescott jumped and spun on the spot, craning to catch a glimpse of his crew. James, standing near the front of the crowd of students with his dad, thought headmistress McGonagall was handling herself pretty well, considering everything. She merely pressed her lips tightly together as the huge vehicles rumbled into the courtyard. There were two of them, and James recognized them as the sort of enormous off-road trucks Zane called "Landrovers". The first one ground to a halt directly in front of the steps. All four doors popped open and men began to emerge, blinking in the hazy sunlight and carrying large leather bags covered in thick pockets. Prescott scampered down among the men, calling them by name, pointing and yelling directions.
"I want lights and reflectors on the left side of the steps, angled toward the doors. That’s where I’ll do my final commentary and conduct interviews. Eddie, you have the chairs? No? All right, that’s fine, we’ll stand. Sitting might seem too, you know, established, anyway. We want to keep the feeling of exposé alive the whole time. Which cameras do you have, Vince? I want the thirty-five millimeter handycam on everything. Double film the whole shoot with it, got it? We’ll edit the footage in here and there for that hidden-camera feel. Perfect. Where’s Greta with the makeup?"
The crew completely ignored the assembly of students and the headmistress and Ministry officials on the steps. All around the trucks was the well-oiled bustle of men assembling cameras, attaching electrical cords to lights, stringing microphones onto long poles, and saying "test" and "check" into smaller microphones meant to be clipped to Prescott’s shirt. James noticed a few individuals moving among the group that didn’t seem preoccupied with the technical preparations. They were dressed rather better and seemed curious about the castle and the grounds. One of them, an old, balding, friendly-looking man in a light grey suit, ambled up the stairs toward the headmistress.
"Quite the fuss, isn’t it?" he proclaimed, glancing back toward the trucks. He bowed slightly toward the headmistress. "Randolph Finney, detective, British Special Police. Not quite retired, but close enough not to matter. Mr. Prescott may have mentioned me? He made rather a big deal of my being here, it seems. Between you and me, I suspect he’d hoped for someone a bit more, er, inspiring, if you take my meaning. So. This is some sort of… school, I understand?" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]6
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Indeed it is, Mr. Finney," Sacarhina said, stretching out her hand. "My name is Brenda Sacarhina, head of the Department of Ambassadorial relations for the Ministry of Magic. Today is going to be a very interesting day for you, I suspect."
"Ministry of Magic. How perfectly quaint," Finney said, shaking Sacarhina’s hand rather distantly. His gaze hadn’t strayed from the headmistress. "And who might you be, Madam?"
"This is-" Sacarhina replied, but McGonagall, long accustomed to overriding unwelcome noises, spoke easily over her.
"Minerva McGonagall, Mr. Finney. Pleased to meet you. I am headmistress of this school."
"Charmed, charmed!" Finney said, taking McGonagall’s hand reverently and bowing again. "Headmistress McGonagall, I am delighted to meet you."
"Please, do call me Minerva," McGonagall said, and James saw just the slightest pained look pass over her face.
"Indeed. And call me Randolph, I insist." Finney smiled at the headmistress for several seconds, then cleared his throat and adjusted his glasses. He turned on the spot, taking in the castle and grounds. "I’d never known there was a school in this area, to tell you the truth. Especially one as magnificent as this. Why, it should be on the register of historic places and no mistake, Minerva. What do you call it?"
Sacarhina began to answer, but nothing came out. She made a tiny noise, coughed a little, and then covered her mouth daintily with one hand, a look of mild puzzlement on her face.
"Hogwarts, Randolph," McGonagall answered, smiling carefully. "Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry."
"You don’t say?" Finney replied, glancing at her. "How wonderfully whimsical."
"We like to think so."
"Detective Finney!" Prescott suddenly called, trotting up the steps, his face covered in pancake makeup and tissue paper stuffed into the collar of his shirt. "I see you’ve already met the headmistress. Miss Sacarhina and Mr. Recreant are here to conduct the tour, of course. The headmistress is just along for, er, color, as it were."
"And she performs her role quite well, doesn’t she?" Finney said, turning back to McGonagall with a grin. James saw that the headmistress was refraining rather heroically from rolling her eyes.
"You have met Miss Sacarhina and Mr. Recreant, then?" Prescott plowed on, moving between Finney and McGonagall. "Miss Sacarhina, perhaps you will tell Detective Finney a bit of what it is you do here?" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]7
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Sacarhina smiled charmingly and stepped forward, threading her arm through Finney’s in an attempt to lead him away from Headmistress McGonagall.
"…" Sacarhina said. She paused, then closed her mouth and tried to look down at it, which produced a rather odd expression. Finney regarded her with a slightly furrowed brow.
"Are you quite all right, Miss?"
"Miss Sacarhina is feeling just a tad under the weather, Detective Finney," Recreant said, adopting an ingratiating grin that was no match for Sacarhina’s practiced smile. "Do allow me. This is a school of magic, as the headmistress has already mentioned. It is, in fact, a school for witches and wizards. We-" Recreant’s next word seemed to catch in his throat. He stood with his mouth open, staring at Finney and looking rather like an asphyxiating fish. After a long, awkward moment, he closed his mouth. He tried to smile again, showing far too many large, uneven teeth.
Finney’s brow was still furrowed. He disengaged from Sacarhina’s arm and glanced between both her and Recreant. "Yes? Spit it out, then, why don’t you? Are you both ill?"
Prescott was very nearly hopping from foot to foot. "Perhaps we should just begin the tour, then, shall we? Of course, I know my way around the castle a bit now. We can begin as soon as… as soon as…" He realized he still had tissues jammed into the collar of his shirt. He grabbed at them and stuffed them into his pants pockets. "Miss Sacarhina, you had mentioned that there would be someone else? An expert in explaining things to the uninitiated? Perhaps now would be a good time to introduce this person?"
Sacarhina craned her head forward, her eyes bulging very slightly and her mouth open. After a few seconds of strained silence, the headmistress cleared her throat and gestured toward the open courtyard. "Here he is now, I suspect. You know how Mr. Hubert tends to be rather late sometimes. Poor man will forget his own head one of these days. Still, he is a genius in his own way, isn’t he Brenda?"
Her mouth still open, Sacarhina turned to follow McGonagall’s pointing hand. At the opening of the courtyard, another vehicle was entering. It was ancient, its engine choppy and puttering a pall of blue smoke. Finney frowned a little as it chugged slowly across the courtyard. Sacarhina and Recreant stared at the vehicle with twin expressions of pure bewilderment and disgust. The crowd of students gathered near the steps moved back as the vehicle squeaked to a stop in front of the first Landrover, pointing at it. The engine coughed, sputtered, and then died, slowly.
"That’s a Ford Anglia, isn’t it?" Finney said. "I haven’t seen one of those in decades! I’m amazed it still runs."
"Oh, our Mr. Hubert is very good with engines, Randolph," McGonagall said crisply. "Why he’s almost a wizard, really."
The driver’s door squeaked open and a figure clambered up out of it. He was very large, so that the car rose perceptibly on its springs as he arose from it. The man squinted at the stairs, smiling a little vacantly. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]8
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]He had long, silvery blonde hair and a matching beard, both of which were offset by a gigantic pair of black, horn-rimmed glasses. The man’s hair was pulled back in a natty, almost prim pony-tail.
"Mr. Terrence Hubert," McGonagall said, introducing the man. "Chancellor of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Welcome, sir. Do come and meet our guests."
Mr. Hubert smiled and then glanced aside as the passenger’s door of the Anglia screeched open.
"I hope you don’t mind, everybody." Mr. Hubert said, adjusting his glasses. "I’ve brought my wife along with me. Say hello to the folks, dear."
James gasped as Madame Delacroix climbed awkwardly out of the car. She smiled very slowly and deliberately. "Hello," she said in a strangely monotone voice.
Hubert grinned mistily at her. "She’s a dearie, isn’t she? Well, shall we begin, then?"
Sacarhina coughed, her eyes widening rather alarmingly as she watched Delacroix join Mr. Hubert in front of the Anglia. She nudged Recreant with her elbow, but he was as mute as she was.
"Chancellor?" Prescott said, looking back and forth between Hubert and McGonagall. "There’s no chancellor! Since when is there a chancellor?"
"I do apologize, sir," Hubert said, climbing the steps with Delacroix by his side. She grinned a bit wildly. "I’ve been away for the past week. Business in Montreal, Canada, of all places. Wonderful little distribution warehouse there. You know, we only use the highest quality magical supplies here, of course. I inspect all our materials by hand before ordering anything. Oh, but I shouldn’t say any more, of course. Heh, heh!" Hubert tapped the side of his nose with an index finger, grinning conspiratorially at Prescott.
Prescott’s face was tight with suspicion. He stared at Hubert, then at Madame Delacroix. Finally, he held up his hands and closed his eyes. "All right, who cares. Mr. Hubert, if you are our guide, then guide away." He threw a glance over his shoulder at the camera crew, gesturing wildly with his eyebrows, and then followed Hubert into the gigantic open doors. "Chancellor Hubert, can you tell us and our audience what you do here at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry?"
"Why of course," Hubert said, turning as he reached the center of the entrance hall. "We teach magic! We are, in fact, Europe’s premiere school of the magical arts." Hubert seemed to notice the camera for the first time. He grinned a little nervously into it. "Students, er, come from the farthest reaches of the continent, and even beyond, to learn the ancient arts of the mystical masters of the craft. To acquire, to absorb, to, er, steep, as it were, in the secret arts of divination, illumination, prestidigitation, and, er, etcetera, etcetera."
Prescott was staring very hard at Hubert, his cheeks reddening. "I see. Yes, so you admit that you teach actual magic within these walls?" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]9
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Why, certainly, young man. Why ever would I deny it?"
"Then you do not deny," Prescott said in a pouncing sort of voice, "that these paintings, which line this very room, are magical, moving paintings?" He gestured grandly toward the walls. The cameraman spun and walked as quickly and smoothly as he could toward a group of paintings by the doorway. The boom microphone operator lowered his apparatus, so as to be sure to capture Hubert’s response.
"M-moving paintings?" Hubert said in a distracted voice. "Oh. O-ho yes. Well, I suspect they could be said to move. Why that painting there, no matter where you are in the room, the eyes in the painting are always upon you." Hubert raised his hands mysteriously, warming to the subject. "They seem, in fact, to follow you everywhere you go!"
The cameraman took his eye away from the viewfinder and frowned back at Prescott. Prescott’s face darkened. "That’s not what I mean. Make them move! You know they can! You!" He spun on his heels and pointed at McGonagall. "You had a conversation with a portrait in your office just yesterday! I watched you! I heard the painting talk!"
McGonagall made a face that was so comically surprised that James, who was standing just inside the doorway with the rest of the assembled students, had to suppress a giggle. "I can’t imagine what you mean, sir," the headmistress replied.
"Here, now, you leave the lady out of this, why don’t you," Finney said archly, taking half a step in front of the headmistress, who was a full head taller than him. "Just you conduct your almighty investigation, Prescott, and let’s get this over with."
Prescott boggled for a few seconds, and then composed himself. "Ooookay. Forget the moving paintings. Silly me." He turned back to Hubert. "I presume class is currently in session, Mr. Hubert?"
"Hm?" Hubert said, as if startled. "In session? Well, I… I guess so. I wouldn’t expect-"
"You wouldn’t expect we’d like to see, would you?" Prescott interrupted. "Well we would. Our viewers have a right to know exactly what is going on here, right… under… our… noses."
"Viewers?" Hubert repeated, glancing back to the camera. "This is, er, live? Is it?"
Prescott dropped his head forward and slumped a bit. "No, Mr. Hubert. It isn’t. Didn’t any of you tell him how this works? We record it, we edit it, we broadcast it. Miss Sacarhina, you understood all of this, am I correct?" He glanced aside at Sacarhina, who smiled and spread her arms. She mouthed a few words, and then gestured vaguely at her throat. Recreant cinched his grin a notch higher. His forehead was beaded with sweat. "Great," Prescott muttered. "I see. Marvelous. Continuing." He straightened and glared at Hubert again. "Yes, our viewers would very much like to see what happens in these so-called ‘classrooms’, Mr. Chancellor. Please lead the way."
Hubert turned to Delacroix. "What do you think, dear? Divination or Levitation?" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]10
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Dey are both equally impressive. Honey," Delacroix said, forming the words rather awkwardly. She seemed to want to say more, but despite the workings of her jaw, her lips clamped tightly shut.
"My wife is foreign, as you can see," Hubert said apologetically. "But she does her best."
"The classrooms, please, Mr. Hubert," Prescott insisted. "You can’t keep the press out, sir."
"No, no, of course not. We appreciate the publicity, in fact," Hubert said, turning to lead the crew down a hall. "Prestigious as we are, sometimes it’s hard to keep our heads above water. Magic is a, er, specialized study, to say the least. Only a certain kind of individual has the patience and grace to learn it. Ah, here we are then. Divination."
Prescott walked briskly into the open doorway of the classroom, followed by his camera crew and boom microphone operator, scrambling to keep up with him. Finney remained near the back of the group, staying as close to headmistress McGonagall as he could. Harry and James, at the head of the crowd of curious students, leaned in through the door to watch.
"Here, our students learn the ancient art of predicting the future," Hubert said grandly. A dozen students were scattered around the room, staring grimly down at the objects on the desks in front of them. At the head of the class, as if on cue, Professor Trelawney raised her arms, producing a musical jingling from the assortment of bangles on her wrists.
"Seek, students!" she cried in her mistiest voice. "Stare deep, deep into the face of the all-knowing cosmos, represented in the swirling patterns and designs of the infinite! Find your destinies!"
"Tea leaves!" Finney said happily. "My own Mam used to read fortunes in tea leaves for the tourists! Got us through some hard times, back in the day. How perfectly picturesque, keeping such traditions alive."
"’Traditions’, pah!" Trelawney said, arising from her seat and swirling her gauzy robes dramatically. "We find the embedded nature of perfect truth in the leaves, sir. Past, present, future, all bound together for those who bear the eyes to see!"
"That’s just what my Mam used to say, too!" chuckled Finney.
"This is how you tell the future?" Prescott said, staring disgustedly into one of the students’ cups. "This is ridiculous. Where’re the crystal balls? Where’s the swirling smoke and the ghostly visions?"
"Well, er, we have those things, too, Mr. Prescott," Hubert said. "Don’t we dear?"
"Advanced Divination. Second semester. Two hundred Euro lab fee," Delacroix replied mechanically.
"Covers the crystal balls," Hubert said behind his raised hand. "Those things aren’t cheap. We have them special made in China. Real crystal and everything. Of course the students get to take them home at the end of the school year. They’re kind of a memento." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]11
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"I believe you mentioned levitation!" Prescott said, marching out of the room. His entourage followed swiftly, clanking and unrolling more electrical cord.
"Certainly, yes. A staple of the magical arts," Hubert replied, following Prescott across the hall and into another classroom. "We combine that class with basic prestidigitation. Yes, right in here."
Zane stood in the center of the classroom with a wand in his hand. A few dozen other students sat along the wall, watching in amazement as the bust of Godric Gryffindor floated and bobbed around the room, apparently at the behest of Zane’s waving wand. There was a gasp and sigh of amazement from Prescott’s crew. The cameraman squatted slowly, zooming in on the action.
"Ah ha!" Prescott said excitedly. "Real magic! Being performed by children!"
"Just as promised," Hubert said proudly. "Mr. Walker here is among the best in his class. Mr. Walker, what year are you, by the way?"
"First year, sir," Zane said, grinning happily.
"Excellent form, my boy," Hubert replied. "Try a loop, why don’t you?"
The students applauded politely as the bust raised and spun slowly in the air. Then, suddenly, it dropped, falling onto a mattress which had been placed in the center of the floor.
"Oh, too bad, Mr. Walker. So close," Hubert chided.
"It wasn’t my fault!" Zane yelled. "It was my backstage! Ted, you dolt, you yanked when you were supposed to swoop! How many times do I have to explain that!"
"Hey!" Ted objected, bursting noisily out of a closet at the rear of the room. He held a handful of wires in his hand, all of which snaked up to a series of pulleys attached to the ceiling of the closet. "You want to try coming back here and working these controls in the dark? Huh? Besides, Noah is the one to blame. He was slow with the cross pulley."
A voice from the depths of the closet yelled angrily, "What? That’s it! I want to be on stage next time. I’ve had it with this ‘assistant’ role. I want to wear the hat!"
"Nobody’s wearing the hat, Noah," Zane said, rolling his eyes.
"Well somebody needs to wear the hat!" Noah cried, his face appearing around the doorway of the closet. "How does anybody know who’s the magician and who’s the assistant?"
"Boys, boys," Hubert placated, raising his hands. "We only have one hat per classroom, and Miss Morganstern is using it to practice the rabbit trick. Mr. Prescott, Mr. Finney, would you like to see the rabbit trick?"
"Why, yes," Finney said brightly. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]12
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"No!" Prescott yelled.Tabitha Corsica had pushed herself to the front of the students crowding the doorway. Her face was
red with anger. "Mr. Prescott," she began. "You-"
Hubert turned slowly to face Tabitha. "This is hardly the time for autographs, Miss Corsica."
"I’m not here to get his autograph, ‘Chancellor’…" Tabitha spat, raising her arm to point at Hubert.
There was a small notebook and a pen clutched in her hand. She stopped in mid-sentence, staring at the two items. The cover of the notebook was pink and had the word autographs printed on it in white script.
"There will be plenty of time later for such things, Miss Corsica. But I’m sure Mr. Prescott is flattered by your, er, interest."
"Chancellor Hubert?" Petra interjected, peering into a black top hat which was sitting atop a ridiculously glittery table. "I think something might be wrong with Mr. Wiffles. Do rabbits usually lie on their backs like that?"
"Not now, Miss Morganstern," Hubert said, flapping his hand dismissively. "Mr. Prescott, I believe you wanted to see our sawing-in-half room?"
But Prescott was gone, stalking past the suddenly silent Tabitha Corsica and heading down the corridor behind her. The crew scrambled to chase him as he poked his head into each room. At the end of the hall, he gave a muffled shout of triumph and waved for his crew to join him in the furthest classroom.
"Here!" Prescott yelled, gesturing wildly with his right arm. The crowd poured into the room, followed by the watching students, who were beginning to grin. "Right before your eyes! A ghost professor! Make sure you get plenty of footage of this, Vince! Proof of the afterlife!"
There was no gasp of surprise this time. Vince moved in close, focusing carefully with one hand.
"Ah, yes. Professor Binns," Hubert said happily. "Say hello to the nice folks."
Professor Binns blinked owlishly and passed his gaze over the crowd. "Greetings," he said in his thin,
distant voice.
"It’s just a projection on smoke," Vince, the cameraman, announced.
"Well," Hubert said, a bit defensively. "He’s not meant to be seen quite so close to like that. The
students are usually well back from him. Creates a nice sense of mystery and the supernatural, really."
Ralph was among the students seated in the classroom. He addressed the cameraman with a note of annoyance. "You’re ruining the effect, you know. You don’t have to go and spoil it for everybody."
"Greetings," Binns said again, passing his gaze over the crowd. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]13
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Impossible!" Prescott shouted angrily, striding toward the front of the room. "It’s a ghost! I know it is!"
"It’s a projection, Martin," Vince said, lowering the camera. "I’ve seen these before. It’s not even a very good one. You can hear the projector running. It’s right there, under the desk. And see here? Dry ice machine. Makes the smoke."
Finney cleared his throat near the door. "This is getting rather embarrassing, Mr. Prescott."
"Greetings," said professor Binns.
Prescott turned wildly. He was obviously coming rather unraveled. "No!" he shouted. "This is all a setup! It’s his fault! He’s trying to trick all of you!" He pointed at Hubert.
"Well, that is what we do here," Hubert said, smiling politely. "We’re in the business of tricks. Although we prefer the term ‘illusion’, if you don’t mind."
"It’s maaaaa-gic," Delacroix suddenly said, a bit inanely. She gave a ghastly grin.
"I see what you’re all trying to do here," Prescott said, still pointing at Hubert, and then McGonagall and even Sacarhina and Recreant, who shook their heads vigorously. "You’re trying to make me look like a madman! Well, my public knows me better than that, and so do my associates. You can’t hide everything! What about the moving staircases? Or the giants? Hmm? Or…" Prescott stopped, his finger still in midpoint. His eyes went unfocussed for a moment, and then he grinned maliciously. "I know just the thing. Just the thing indeed. Vince, Eddie, the rest of you, come with me."
Hubert followed as the crew clanked and jostled through the crowd of students. "Where are you going, Mr. Prescott? I’m your guide, if you recall. I’ll show you whatever you wish."
"Yes?" Prescott said, spinning back toward Hubert. The curious students had parted for him and his crew, so that Prescott glared back between them, glancing from side to side. "Will you show me-" he paused dramatically and tilted his head up, "-the Garage?"
"The…" Hubert began. He blinked, and then looked aside at Professor McGonagall. James suddenly felt Harry’s hand tighten on his shoulder. Something was wrong. "The… Garage?" Hubert repeated, as if he was unfamiliar with the word.
Prescott’s grin grew predatory. "Aha! Weren’t prepared for that, were you? Yes, I had myself a good long look around the grounds while you were all busy this morning. Peeked here and there and got quite an eyeful! There is a Garage," he said, turning to face the camera, "that penetrates the very fabric of space and time, creating a magical portal between this place and another place thousands of kilometers away! America, if I may be so bold as to guess! I have seen it myself. I have been inside the structure, and smelled the air of that far off place. I have seen the sunrise of that land, while the sun here was high above the horizon. It was no trick, no illusion. These people would have us believe that they are mere tricksters, while I maintain, as I [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]14
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]have witnessed with my own eyes, that they are dabblers in a form of magic that is purely and simply supernatural. Now, I will prove it!" With a flourish, Prescott turned and marched away, heading back to the Entrance Hall. Harry fell in line next to Hubert, but couldn’t get his attention.
"Mr. Prescott!" Hubert yelled over the sound of the now agitated crowd. "I really must insist that you allow me… Mr. Prescott! This is highly irregular!"
Prescott led his crew out of the main entrance and across the courtyard. The crowd of students had grown considerably, and the noise of their passage had become quite loud. Everyone had seen the exterior of the Alma Aleron’s Garage, but very few had been inside or seen what it housed. The babble of worry and curiosity was a dull roar.
"This could be bad, James," Harry said, keeping his voice below the noise of the crowd.
"What can we do?"
Harry merely shook his head, watching Prescott turn the corner, leading the group toward the canvas structure overlooking the lake. He turned, framing himself before its canvas walls. His crew arranged themselves in position, lowering the boom microphone over him and adjusting huge white umbrellas to reflect the sunlight on his shadowed side. Prescott turned slightly, showing his best side to the camera as Vince squatted slowly, focusing. It was, James had to admit, a very dramatic moment.
"Ladies and gentlemen," Prescott began, raising his natural orator’s voice. "My crew and I, and all of you, have been the victims of an elaborate hoax. This is no simple school of sleight of hand and card tricks. No, I have witnessed within these walls true magic of the most astounding and blood-chilling variety. I have seen ghosts and watched actual levitations. I have observed doors appearing magically in otherwise solid stone walls. I have seen beasts and giants that boggle the mind. Today, we have been played for fools, deceived by a pack of wizards and witches-yes, actual magical people-who believe they can fool us with parlor tricks. But now I will reveal the truth of this place. Behind this canvas is a form of uncanny magic that will shock and astound you. When this truth is revealed, Mr. Rudolph Finney, detective for the British Special Police, will be inclined to launch a full scale, official investigation into this establishment, with the help of police agencies from all across Europe. After today, ladies and gentlemen, our lives will never be the same again. After today, we will be living in a world where we know, without a doubt, that witches and wizards are real, and that they walk among us."
Prescott paused, letting his words echo over the stunned crowd. Then he turned toward the area where McGonagall, Hubert, Sacarhina and Recreant were gathered. Finney stood next to the headmistress, frowning slightly, his eyes wide. "Mr. Hubert," Prescott called out, "Will you open these doors for us? This is your last chance to do the right thing."
Hubert’s expression was grave. He stared very directly at Prescott. "I have to advise you against this course of action, Mr. Prescott." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]15
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"You open it or I will."
"You’ll ruin everything, sir," Hubert said. Next to him, Delacroix was grinning even more manically.
"I’ll ruin nothing but your secret, Mr. Hubert. The world needs to know what is behind those canvas doors."
Hubert seemed frozen in place. It looked as if he wasn’t going to do it. And then, he moved forward, lowering his head. There was a long, collective gasp from the crowd. Prescott stepped aside, glancing triumphantly at the camera as he did so. Hubert approached the tent and stood in front of it. He sighed deeply, and then reached up, grasping the knotted strips of canvas that held the tent’s wide flaps closed. He turned his head to look at Prescott. After a terrible pause, he pulled. The knot came undone and the flaps dropped open, unfurling like flags, slapping the poles at either side of the broad tent opening. The crowd gasped, and then there was a long, puzzled silence.
James peered in. He couldn’t immediately make out what it was. The inside of the tent was rather dark, but he could see that the flying vehicles were gone. Most of the tent’s interior was obscured by a large, oblong shape. A few people near the front of the crowd began to giggle, and then a wave of laughter washed over the crowd.
"Well, you’ve done it," Hubert said, still staring at Prescott. "You’ve ruined the secret. And this was meant to be our big finish. I have to say, sir, you are no fun at all." Hubert finally stepped back, getting out of the way of the tent so that the camera crew could see directly inside. Tiny, colored Christmas lights flashed in sequence around the huge, papier-mâché flying saucer. Black letters were painted on the side, clearly visible in the flashing lights.
"And I hate to say it, Mr. Lupin," Hubert said, turning to Ted. "But you misspelled ‘rocket’. How dreadfully embarrassing." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]16

Re: eighth harry potter book

chapter 20 below this post

Re: eighth harry potter book

**
1. 20. Tale of the Traitor
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"But, I saw them!" Prescott said insistently, his voice growing rather hoarse as he followed Vince between the Landrovers. "Giants! One of them was as tall as the trees! They made footprints the size of… the size of…!" He gestured with his arms desperately. Ignoring him, Vince packed his camera into a foam-lined suitcase.
"You’ve made quite a fiasco for yourself, Mr. Prescott," Detective Finney said, polishing his glasses on his tie. "Don’t make it any worse."
Prescott turned to the older man, his eyes wild. "You’ve got to investigate this establishment, Detective! It’s not right! They’ve tricked you all!"
"If I spearhead any investigations, Mr. Prescott," Finney said mildly, "they’ll be investigations of you and your methods. Did you have permission to trespass on these grounds in the first place?"
"What, are you mad?" Prescott sputtered. He stopped and collected himself. "Of course. As I’ve already told you, I was tipped off about what was happening here. Someone on the inside led me here." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]1
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"And you checked the background of this person?""Well," Prescott said, "the chocolate frog was pretty convincing. I didn’t really…""Excuse me. Did you just say ‘the chocolate frog’?" Finney asked, his eyes narrowing."I… er, well. The point is, yes, my source was quite certain that something strange was going on
here…"
"That they were, in fact, teaching magic?"
"Yes. Er, no! Not tricks! Real magic! With monsters and giants and… and… vanishing doorways
and flying cars!"
"And the chocolate frog confirmed this, did he?"
Prescott opened his mouth to answer, and then stopped. He straightened to his full height, angry
and indignant. "You’re making fun of me."
"You make it hard not to, sir. Would you be willing to let me speak to this source of yours?"
Prescott brightened. "Yes! In fact, I would! I arranged with Miss Sacarhina for him to come along.
He’s right over…" He glanced around, his brow furrowing.
"You arranged with Miss Sacarhina?" Finney asked, glancing up toward the top of the courtyard steps. Much of the school faculty, as well as a number of students, were watching with benign interest as the crew industriously packed their gear. Neither Miss Sacarhina nor Mr. Recreant was in sight. "She knows this
source of yours, does she?"
"She knows him, all right," Prescott said, still scanning the crowd. "Where is he?"
"He came with the crew?" Finney asked, glancing around. "I don’t remember meeting him."
"He was there. Quiet, squirrelly fellow. Had a twitch in his right eyebrow."
"Ah, him," Finney nodded. "I thought he was a little odd. I’d very much like to have a word with
him."
"So would I," Prescott agreed darkly.
On the top of the steps, Mr. Hubert turned toward Headmistress McGonagall, Neville and Harry
Potter. "I think we can trust our friends to manage their departure from here. Madam Headmistress, I believe we have a few loose ends to attend to?"
McGonagall nodded, then turned and led the group inside. Harry smiled down at James. "Come along, James. Ralph and Zane, you too." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]2
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Are you sure?" Ralph asked, glancing up at the headmistress as she strode into the hall.
"‘Mr. Hubert’ specifically asked for you three to accompany us," Harry replied.
"Nice to have friends in high places, isn’t it?" Zane said happily.
"Well," the headmistress said as they entered the empty silence of the Great Hall, "that went as well as could be expected, even if Mr. Ambrosius was a little heavy-handed with his amorous charm. Mr. Finney has insisted that I join him for dinner next time I find myself in London."
"An offer I believe you should take him up on, Madam," Merlin replied, taking off the gigantic horn-rimmed glasses and shaking his hair out of the ‘Mr. Hubert’ pony tail. "I enchanted him with the slightest possible charm. How could I have known that Detective Finney would have a natural predilection for tall, strong, handsome women?"
"How indeed," McGonagall answered. "I believe you are grinning, sir."
James spoke up. "But how’d you know about the Garage, Merlin? I thought for sure we were sunk!"
Merlin glanced back over his shoulder. "I didn’t know about the Garage, James Potter. It was beyond the knowledge of the trees, unlike the Anglia vehicle and Madame Delacroix. Improvisation, however, has always been one of my stronger talents."
"But how’d you get the Wocket in there?" Ralph asked. "That was totally brilliant!"
"The trees knew about that, therefore I did as well," Merlin replied. "It was simply a matter of encouraging an exchange of environments."
Zane grinned. "So the Alma Aleron’s cars are out in that old barn in the field?"
"It’ll do them some good, I expect," Merlin nodded.
The group walked purposefully through the Great Hall and climbed the stairs onto the dais. McGonagall opened a door in the rear wall and led the others through, into a large antechamber with a stone floor and a dark fireplace. Sacarhina and Recreant were there, sitting on either side of a third person James didn’t recognize.
"This is an outrage, Headmistress," Recreant said, leaping to his feet. "First, you bring in this… person to usurp our authority, and then you have the gall to perform the langlock curse on us! The Minister will-"
"Do shut up, Trenton," Sacarhina said, rolling her eyes. Recreant blinked, wounded, but clamped his mouth shut. He looked back and forth from Sacarhina to the Headmistress.
"Wise advice, if ever I heard it," Harry agreed, stepping forward. "And I suspect that the Minister will, in fact, hear about this." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]3
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"We’ve done nothing wrong, Mr. Potter, as you know," Sacarhina said, glancing idly at her fingernails. "Mr. Ambrosius’ appearance has secured the secrecy of the magical world. All is well."
Harry nodded. "I am glad you feel that way, Brenda, although I find it interesting that you already seem to know ‘Mr. Hubert’s’ real name. No doubt there will be no link proven to connect him, you and the unfortunate Madame Delacroix. What are we to make of your friend, here, however?"
All attention turned to the man seated in the chair between Sacarhina and Recreant. He was small, pudgy, with thinning black hair and a twitch in his right eyebrow. He shrunk from the gaze of everyone in the room.
Ralph, who’d been the last to enter, pushed his way between Merlin and Professor Longbottom, his brow furrowed in bewilderment. "Dad?" he said, frowning. "What are you doing here?"
The man grimaced miserably and covered his face with his hands. Merlin looked down at Ralph, his large, stony face somber. He placed a hand on the boy’s shoulder. "This man says his name is Dennis Deedle. I was afraid you’d recognize him."
"What is he doing here?" Neville asked.
"I think his role in this debacle is fairly evident," the Headmistress replied, sighing. "He is the man responsible for leading Mr. Prescott into our midst."
"What?" Ralph said, rounding on McGonagall. "Why would you say that? That’s terrible!"
"He came with Mr. Prescott’s crew," Harry said quietly. "He was trying to remain unobtrusive. Perhaps he was worried that you’d recognize him, Ralph. Later, when it was all over, it wouldn’t have mattered, of course. But then again, things didn’t happen as he expected."
"This is ridiculous," Ralph insisted. "Dad’s a Muggle! He signed the Muggle’s non-disclosure contract, didn’t he? He wouldn’t do this, even if he could! I don’t know what he’s doing here, but it isn’t what you all think!"
Merlin still had his hand on Ralph’s shoulder. He patted him slowly. "Perhaps you should ask him yourself, then, Mr. Deedle."
Ralph glanced up at the enormous wizard, his face pinched with anger and trepidation. He looked around the rest of the room, from face to face, ending with his father. "All right, then. Dad, why are you here?"
Dennis Deedle still had his hands on his face. For several seconds, he didn’t move. Finally, he took a huge breath and sat back, dropping his hands. He looked at Ralph for a long moment, and then glanced around at everyone assembled. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]4
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"All right. Yes," he said, having composed himself. "I told Prescott. I sent him the chocolate frog and the GameDeck. I’d used it to communicate with somebody on the school grounds, somebody who went by the name Austramaddux. Once I’d done that, I knew that Prescott could locate the school with his GPS."
Ralph’s face was frozen with disbelief and misery. "But why, Dad? Why would you do such a thing?"
"Oh, Ralph. I’m sorry. I know this looks bad to you," Dennis said. "But it’s all very… very complicated. Prescott’s show, Inside View, they offer money for proof of the supernatural. Well, we haven’t been doing all that well, son. I’ve been looking for work ever since I got laid off, but it’s been hard. We needed the money. I thought the chocolate frog would be enough. I really did! But Prescott wanted more. I knew I’d have to show him something really amazing, so…" He faltered, glancing nervously around the room again.
"But you never got the money," Merlin said in his low, rumbling voice. "And that wasn’t the real point, was it?"
Dennis’ eyebrows worked furiously as he gazed up at Merlin, apparently struggling with what to say. Next to him, Sacarhina cleared her throat meaningfully. Dennis glanced at her, taking his eyes from Merlin. "The money," he said uncertainly. "Prescott said we’d get it when the program aired. He promised."
"But there will be no program now," Merlin said quietly.
"You thought it’d be worth selling out the whole magical world just to help us get by for awhile, Dad?" Ralph said, his voice not accusing but truly questioning. It broke James’ heart to hear the disappointment in the boy’s voice.
"No, son!" Dennis answered, but then looked away. "I didn’t think it’d threaten the whole magical world. I mean, it’s just a stupid television show. Besides…" he stopped, chewing on his words, wrestling with himself.
"Besides what?" Merlin asked calmly.
Dennis looked back at Merlin, his face tense, his right eyebrow twitching. "Besides, what did the magical world ever do for me?" he spat, then covered his face with his hands again. He took a deep, shuddering breath. "Left me all alone, that’s what. Shunned and abandoned, like some kind of… some kind of worthless mutant! Stripped of my name and my family, abandoned by my own parents because I wasn’t like them! I was forbidden to ever contact them or speak of them again. They said I’d be adopted into the Muggle world, where I belonged. They said I’d be happier there. Well, I guess I showed them, didn’t I? They didn’t want me to ruin their reputation in the magical world. Well, why should I care about the secrecy of the magical world at all?" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]5
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Ralph’s face was a mask of unhappy consternation. "What are you talking about, Dad? You’re not a wizard. Grandma and Grandpa died before I was born. You were as surprised as me when we got the letter from Hogwarts."
Dennis tried to smile at his son. "I’d almost forgotten about my own past, Ralph. It had been so long, and I’d tried so hard to bury it. I’m a squib, son. Your grandparents and your uncle were witches and wizards, but I wasn’t born with their powers. They raised me for as long as they could, but they hated my nature. When I came of age and they could see for sure that I didn’t have any magical skills, they couldn’t bear it. They hid me from the rest of the magical world. I was their ugly little secret. But they couldn’t hide me forever. Finally, when I was twelve, they sent me away. I went to a Muggle orphanage, under the pretense that my parents had died in an accident. They made me vow never to mention them and never to try and seek them. My mother was… she was sad. She cried and hid her face from me. But my father was hard. She couldn’t budge him. He rented a Muggle driver to take us to the orphanage. Mother stayed in the car when my father took me inside. She tried to embrace me, to say goodbye, but Father wouldn’t let her. He said it would be better for both of us. He performed memory modifications on the workers at the orphanage. He made them believe I had been delivered by the state after the deaths of my parents. I was given a bed and a set of clothes, and then my father left. I never saw my parents again."
Dennis Deedle’s eyes didn’t leave his son’s face when Merlin spoke. "You were very hard done by, Mr. Deedle. I assume Deedle is not your given name, is it?"
"No. My father invented that name for me," Dennis said blandly. "I hate it."
"What is your given name, sir?"
"Dolohov," Ralph’s father answered, his voice growing distant, almost dead. "My name is Denniston Gilles Dolohov. Son of Maximillion and Whilhelmina Dolovov. Younger step-brother of Antonin."
There was a moment of very cold silence, and then McGonagall spoke. "Mr. Dolohov, do you realize that what you’ve done could send you to Azkaban?"
Dennis blinked, as if coming out of a trance. "What? No, no, of course not. I was promised that nothing I did was against the law."
Sacarhina coughed lightly. "Perhaps, Mr. Deedle, you’d prefer to refrain from answering any more questions until your legal representation can be present."
"Why?" Dennis said, glancing at her in alarm. "Am I in trouble? You said-"
"It would be for your best interests, sir," Sacarhina interrupted.
"You said I was doing the world a favor!" Dennis exclaimed, getting to his feet. He glanced at Harry. "She promised me that I’d be taken care of even if Prescott and his people didn’t come through with the money! She said this was more important than money, anyway! When I came to them-" [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]6
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Sit down, Mr. Deedle!" Sacarhina said, her voice icy.
"Don’t call me that! I hate that name!" Dennis backed away from her, glancing back at Harry. "They told me it was all right to talk to Prescott! I told them what I was thinking of doing. I knew I had to check with the Ministry. They said the contract I’d signed wasn’t binding because I wasn’t a Muggle. And I left the wizarding world before I was old enough to sign the wizarding vow of secrecy, too, so I wasn’t breaking any laws. She promised me it was all right! She said it was for everybody’s good and that I’d be a hero!"
"Miss Sacharina," Harry said, producing his wand but not quite b
***shing it. "What do you have to say in response to this man’s accusations?"
"I have nothing to say whatsoever," she replied easily. "He is clearly deranged. No one would believe the word of such a person."
"Mr. Recreant?" Harry said, turning to the stunned man. "Do you concur with Miss Sacarhina’s assessment?"
Recreant’s eyes moved like flies, flicking back and forth between Sacarhina and Harry. "I’d…" he began, and then lowered both his eyes and his voice. "I’d like the chance to discuss this outside of Miss Sacarhina’s hearing."
"Mr. Recreant, as your superior, I forbid-"
"You’ll forbid nothing, Madam," Neville said sternly, slipping his own wand from his robes.
"In the name of ambassadorial security, I have to insist…" Sacarhina began, but stopped as Harry pointed his wand at her.
"In the name of the Ministry of Magic and the Department of Aurors," he said, "I place you, Miss Brenda Sacarhina, under arrest for attempted violation of section two of the international law of secrecy and for the theft of Ministry of Magic property."
Sacarhina tried to smile, but it was a relatively poor attempt. "You can’t prove anything, Mr. Potter. This is a foolish and dangerous game you are playing. I will only warn you once to stand down."
"You should think twice before conspiring with people who despise you, Miss Sacarhina," Merlin said, smiling ruefully. "I had a charming and illuminating conversation with Madame Delacroix when I discovered her in the forest. She has much to say about you, I’m afraid, and very little of it is what I’d be prepared to call flattering."
Neville was leading Mr. Recreant out of the room, with the headmistress following. Harry gestured with his wand. "Come, Miss Sacarhina. Titus Hardcastle awaits to escort you back to the Ministry, and patience is not one of his stronger suits." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]7
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]Sacarhina’s face went blank as she realized she had no choice but to follow along. No doubt she had a very good defense ready, James thought as she stalked out of the room in front of his dad. People like her always had lots of ways to cover their tracks. Still, it didn’t look good for Brenda Sacarhina. As the door leading to the Great Hall swung open, James saw Titus Hardcastle grinning mirthlessly, his wand pointing carefully at the floor.
James found himself left only with Merlin, Zane, Ralph and Dennis Dolohov
Dennis looked at his son, and then touched him on the shoulder. "I’m sorry, Ralph. I really am. I was… confused."
"You should’ve told me, Dad," Ralph said, dropping his eyes.
Dennis nodded. After a moment, he raised his eyes to Merlin. "Am I going to go to wizarding prison?" he asked, trying to firm his voice. "I’ll… I’ll go along quietly, I guess."
"Somehow, I suspect not, Mr. Dolohov," Merlin said, turning to lead the group out of the chamber. He opened the door leading to the Great Hall. "But your actions have resulted in quite a conundrum. It appears that this school’s security, strong as it may once have been, is not quite prepared to meet the challenges of modern Muggle technology. Perhaps you’d have some thoughts on how to improve it?"
Dennis frowned. "What are you suggesting? You want my help?"
Merlin shrugged. "I am simply acknowledging a rather curious coincidence. You are in need of employment, and we are in need of a revised security programme. As a wizard who also happens to be an expert in Muggle technology, you seem rather uniquely qualified to serve in that regard."
Dennis grinned in relief. "I’ll think about that, sir."
"I am in no position to make any offers on behalf of this school, of course," Merlin said, crossing the Great Hall with his long, commanding stride. "But I know the headmistress. I’ll see what I can do."
"So," Zane said, following Ralph and James into the Entrance Hall. "Turns out you were of solid magical stock after all, Ralph, even if they were a bunch of cruel, heartless purebloods. Not that it matters, really, but it does sort of explain why you were made a Slytherin."
"Maybe," Ralph said quietly. "This is all too much for me to take in one day. Either way, none of that magic was mine. It was the staff."
Merlin stopped near the stairs, and then turned slowly. He gazed at Ralph speculatively. "You were the keeper of my staff?"
"Yeah," Ralph answered dejectedly. "I kept it from killing anyone, I guess. But barely." [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]8
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Don’t listen to him," Zane said. "He was spectacular with it. Saved James’ life once with it. Grew a peach tree out of a banana, too! So he once burned a bald stripe onto Victoire’s head in D.A.D.A. All of us have thought about doing that to her from time to time just to shut her up."
Merlin approached Ralph. James was certain the wizard hadn’t been carrying his staff a moment before, but as he lowered himself to one knee in front of Ralph, he now held it in his right hand. The runes along its length were dark, but James remembered how they’d pulsed with green light the night before.
"Mr. Deedle-or shall I call you Mr. Dolohov?" Merlin said.
"I’m kind of attached to the Deedle," Ralph answered, glancing up at his father. "I don’t know if I’m ready to be a Dolohov yet. Sorry, Dad." Dennis gave a small understanding smile.
"Mr. Deedle, then," Merlin said. "Not just any wizard could have born the responsibility of the staff. You have heard it said that the wand chooses the wizard, and this is true. Madame Delacroix believed you were merely a vessel to bring the staff to her, but she was mistaken. The staff chose you. A lesser wizard would have been unable even to hold the staff, much less use it. But you, without knowing it, brought the staff under your own power. You had no idea of the strength of it, and yet you managed it. It obeyed you, and that is the mark of a wizard of very, very great potential. Part of this staff now belongs to you, Mr. Deedle. I have felt it. I knew that a portion of it was no longer my own, but I knew not whose it was. Now I know."
Merlin lowered his staff so that it lay across his knee. He closed his eyes and felt along the length of the staff, his hand barely touching the wood. Faint green light moved within the runes, flickering. Merlin wrapped his hand around the lower, tapered end of his staff, then, with barely a twist, broke off the last foot of its length. He opened his eyes again and held the length of wood out to Ralph.
"You are, I believe, in need of a wand, Mr. Deedle."
Ralph took the length of wood from Merlin. As he did, the wood became his wand again, still ridiculously fat and chunky, with the lime green painted tip. Ralph grinned, turning it over in his hands.
"I wouldn’t expect it to be quite as powerful as it once was, of course," Merlin said, turning his staff upright and using it to stand again. The staff was noticeably shorter now. "But I suspect you will still be able to do remarkable things with it."
"Thanks," Ralph said seriously.
"Don’t thank me," Merlin said, raising an eyebrow. "It’s yours, Mr. Deedle. You made it so."
"So the wizard gives the cowardly lion his courage," Zane said, grinning. "When does James here get some brains?"
Merlin cinched his eyebrow a bit higher, looking from Zane to James. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]9
[FONT=Adobe Garamond Pro,Adobe Garamond Pro]"Don’t pay him any attention," James said, laughing and leading the group to the stairs. "It’s a Muggle thing. We wouldn’t understand."
"Come on!" Ralph called, running up the steps. "I want to show Ted and the rest of the Gremlins I’ve got my wand back! Tabitha Corsica can keep her stupid broom."
The three boys scrambled up the moving staircases, followed more sedately by Merlin and the newly reborn Dennis Dolohov.
"Will he be okay with that thing?" Dennis asked Merlin, frowning a little.
Merlin merely smiled and clacked his staff on the steps as he climbed. Unnoticed, a jet of lime green sparks shot from the tip, swirling and glowing like fireflies in their wake. [FONT=Calibri,Calibri]10

Re: eighth harry potter book

chapter 21 below this post