A great black dragon was rearing in front of him: his father and mother were
waving at him out of an enchanted mirror: Cedric Diggory was lying on the ground
with blank eyes staring at him:
'NOOOOOOO!'
Harry was on his knees again, his face buried in his hands, his brain aching
as though someone had been trying to pull it from his skull.
'Get up!' said Snape sharply. 'Get up! You are not trying, you are making
no effort. You are allowing me access to memories you fear, handing me weapons!'
Harry stood up again, his heart thumping wildly as though he had really just
seen Cedric dead in the graveyard. Snape looked paler than usual, and angrier,
though not nearly as angry as Harry was.
'I - am - making - an - effort,' he said through clenched teeth.
'I told you to empty yourself of emotion!'
'Yeah? Well, I'm finding that hard at the moment,' Harry snarled.
Then you will find yourself easy prey for the Dark Lord!' said Snape savagely.
'Fools who wear their hearts proudly on their sleeves, who cannot control their
emotions, who wallow in sad memories and allow themselves to be provoked so
easily - weak people, in other words - they stand no chance against his powers!
He will penetrate your mind with absurd ease, Potter!'
'I am not weak,' said Harry in a low voice, fury now pumping through him
so that he thought he might attack Snape in a moment.
Then prove it! Master yourself!' spat Snape. 'Control your anger, discipline
your mind! We shall try again! Get ready, now! Leguimens!'
He was watching Uncle Vernon hammering the letterbox shut: a hundred Dementors
were drifting across the lake in the grounds towards him: he was running along
a windowless passage with Mr Weasley: they were drawing nearer to the plain
black door at the end of the corridor: Harry expected to go through it: but
Mr Weasley led him off to the left, down a flight of stone steps:
'I KNOW! I KNOW!'
He was on all fours again on Snape's office floor, his scar was prickling
unpleasantly, but the voice that had just issued from his mouth was triumphant.
He pushed himself up again to find Snape staring at him, his wand raised. It
looked as though, this time, Snape had lifted the spell before Harry had even
tried to fight back.
'What happened then, Potter?' he asked, eyeing Harry intently.
'I saw - I remembered,' Harry panted. 'I've just realised:'
'Realised what?' asked Snape sharply.
Harry did not answer at once; he was still savouring the moment of blinding
realisation as he rubbed his forehead:
He had been dreaming about a windowless corridor ending in a locked door
for months, without once realising that it was a real place. Now, seeing the
memory again, he knew that all along he had been dreaming about the corridor
down which he had run with Mr Weasley on the twelfth of August as they hurried
to the courtrooms in the Ministry; it was the corridor leading to the Department
of Mysteries and Mr Weasley had been there the night that he had been attacked
by Voldemort's snake.
He looked up at Snape.
'What's in the Department of Mysteries?'
'What did you say?' Snape asked quietly and Harry saw, with deep satisfaction,
that Snape was unnerved.
'I said, what's in the Department of Mysteries, sir?' Harry said.
'And why,' said Snape slowly, 'would you ask such a thing?'
'Because,' said Harry, watching Snape's face closely, 'that corridor
I've just seen - I've been dreaming about it for months - I've just recognised
it - it leads to the Department of Mysteries: and I think Voldemort wants something
from -'
'I have told you not to say the Dark Lord's name!'
They glared at each other. Harry's scar seared again, but he did not care.
Snape looked agitated; but when he spoke again he sounded as though he was trying
to appear cool and unconcerned.
There are many things in the Department of Mysteries, Potter, few of which
you would understand and none of which concern you. Do I make myself plain?'
'Yes,' Harry said, still rubbing his prickling scar, which was becoming more
painful.
'I want you back here same time on Wednesday. We will continue work then.'
Fine,' said Harry. He was desperate to get out of Snape's office and find
Ron and Hermione.
'You are to rid your mind of all emotion every night before sleep; empty
it, make it blank and calm, you understand?'
'Yes,' said Harry, who was barely listening.
'And be warned, Potter: I shall know if you have not practised
'Right,' Harry mumbled. He picked up his schoolbag, swung it over his shoulder
and hurried towards the office door. As he opened it, he glanced back at Snape,
who had his back to Harry and was scooping his own thoughts out of the Pensieve
with the tip of his wand and replacing them carefully inside his own head. Harry
left without another word, closing the door carefully behind him, his scar still
throbbing painfully.
Harry found Ron and Hermione in the library, where they were working on Umbridge's
most recent ream of homework. Other students, nearly all of them fifth-years,
sat at lamp-lit tables nearby, noses close to books, quills scratching feverishly,
while the sky outside the mulhoned windows grew steadily blacker. The only other
sound was the slight squeaking of one of Madam Pince's shoes, as the librarian
prowled the aisles menacingly, breathing down the necks of those touching her
precious books.
Harry felt shivery; his scar was still aching, he felt almost feverish.
When he sat down opposite Ron and Hermione, he caught sight of himself in
the window opposite; he was very white and his scar seemed to be showing up
more clearly than usual.
'How did it go?' Hermione whispered, and then, looking concerned. 'Are you
all right, Harry?'
'Yeah: fine: I dunno,' said Harry impatiently, wincing as pain shot through
his scar again. 'Listen: I've just realised something
And he told them what he had just seen and deduced.
'So: so are you saying:' whispered Ron, as Madam Pince swept past, squeaking
slightly, 'that the weapon - the thing You-Know-Who's after - is in the Ministry
of Magic?'
'In the Department of Mysteries, it's got to be,' Harry whispered. 'I saw
that door when your dad took me down to the courtrooms for my hearing and it's
definitely the same one he was guarding when the snake bit him.'
Hermione let out a long, slow sigh.
'Of course,' she breathed.
'Of course what?' said Ron rather impatiently.
'Ron, think about it: Sturgis Podmore was trying to get through a door at
the Ministry of Magic: it must have been that one, it's too much of a coincidence!'
'How come Sturgis was trying to break in when he's on our side?' said Ron.
'Well, I don't know,' Hermione admitted. That is a bit odd:'
'So what's in the Department of Mysteries?' Harry asked Ron. 'Has your dad
ever mentioned anything about it?'
'I know they call the people who work in there "Unspeakables",' said Ron,
frowning. 'Because no one really seems to know what they do - weird place to
have a weapon.'
'It's not weird at all, it makes perfect sense,' said Hermione. 'It will
be something top secret that the Ministry has been developing, I expect: Harry,
are you sure you're all right?'
For Harry had just run both his hands hard over his forehead as though trying
to iron it.
'Yeah: fine:" he said, lowering his hands, which were trembling. 'I just
feel a bit: I don't like Occlumency much.'
'I expect anyone would feel shaky if they'd had their mind attacked over
and over again,' said Hermione sympathetically. 'Look, let's get back to the
common room, we'll be a bit more comfortable there.'
But the common room was packed and full of shrieks of laughter and excitement;
Fred and George were demonstrating their latest bit of joke shop merchandise.
'Headless Hats!' shouted George, as Fred waved a pointed hat decorated with
a fluffy pink feather at the watching students. Two Galleons each, watch Fred,
now!'
Fred swept the hat on to his head, beaming. For a second he merely looked
rather stupid; then both hat and head vanished.
Several girls screamed, but everyone else was roaring with laughter.
'And off again!' shouted George, and Fred's hand groped for a moment in what
seemed to be thin air over his shoulder; then his head reappeared as he swept
the pink-feathered hat from it.
'How do those hats work, then?' said Hermione, distracted from her homework
and watching Fred and George closely. 'I mean, obviously it's some kind of Invisibility
Spell, but it's rather clever to have extended the field of invisibility beyond
the boundaries of the charmed object: I'd imagine the charm wouldn't have a
very long life though.'
Harry did not answer; he was feeling ill.
'I'm going to have to do this tomorrow,' he muttered, pushing the books he
had just taken out of his bag back inside it.
'Well, write it in your homework planner then!' said Hermione encouragingly.
'So you don't forget!'
Harry and Ron exchanged looks as he reached into his bag, withdrew the planner
and opened it tentatively.
'Don't leave it till later, you big second-rater!' chided the book as Harry
scribbled down Umbridge's homework. Hermione beamed at it.
'I think I'll go to bed,' said Harry, stuffing the homework planner back
into his bag and making a mental note to drop it in the fire the first opportunity
he got.
He walked across the common room, dodging George, who tried to put a Headless
Hat on him, and reached the peace and cool of the stone staircase to the boys'
dormitories. He was feeling sick again, just as he had the night he had had
the vision of the snake, but thought that if he could just lie down for a while
he would be all right.
He opened the door of his dormitory and was one step inside it when he experienced
pain so severe he thought that someone must have sliced into the top of his
head. He did not know where he was, whether he was standing or lying down, he
did not even know his own name.
Maniacal laughter was ringing in his ears: he was happier than he had been
in a very long time: jubilant, ecstatic, triumphant: a wonderful, wonderful
thing had happened:
'Harry? HARRY!'
Someone had hit him around the face. The insane laughter was punctuated with
a cry of pain. The happiness was draining out of him, but the laughter continued:
He opened his eyes and, as he did so, he became aware that the wild laughter
was coming out of his own mouth. The moment he realised this, it died away;
Harry lay panting on the floor, staring up at the ceiling, the scar on his forehead
throbbing horribly. Ron was bending over him, looking very worried.
'What happened?' he said.
'I: dunno:' Harry gasped, sitting up again. 'He's really happy: really happy:"
'You-Know-Who is?'
'Something good's happened,' mumbled Harry. He was shaking as badly as he
had done after seeing the snake attack Mr Weasley and felt very sick. 'Something
he's been hoping for.'
The words came, just as they had back in the Gryffindor changing room, as
though a stranger was speaking them through Harry's mouth, yet he knew they
were true. He took deep breaths, willing himself not to vomit all over Ron.
He was very glad that Dean and Seamus were not here to watch this time.
'Hermione told me to come and check on you,' said Ron in a low voice, helping
Harry to his feet. 'She says your defences will be low at the moment, after
Snape's been fiddling around with your mind: still, I suppose it'll help in
the long run, won't it?' He looked doubtfully at Harry as he helped him towards
his bed. Harry nodded without any conviction and slumped back on his pillows,
aching all over from having fallen to the floor so often that evening, his scar
still prickling painfully. He could not help feeling that his first foray into
Occlumency had weakened his mind's resistance rather than strengthening it,
and he wondered, with a feeling of great trepidation, what had happened to make
Lord Voldemort the happiest he had been in fourteen years.
- CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE -
The Beetle at Bay
Harry's question was answered the very next morning. When Hermione's Daily
Prophet arrived she smoothed it out, gazed for a moment at the front page and
gave a yelp that caused everyone in the vicinity to stare at her.
'What?' said Harry and Ron together.
For answer she spread the newspaper on the table in front of them and pointed
at ten black-and-white photographs that filled the whole of the front page,
nine showing wizards' faces and the tenth, a witch's. Some of the people in
the photographs were silently jeering; others were tapping their fingers on
the frame of their pictures, looking insolent. Each picture was captioned with
a name and the crime for which the person had been sent to Azkaban.
Antonin Dolohov, read the legend beneath a wizard with a long, pale, twisted
face who was sneering up at Harry, convicted of the brutal murders of Gideon
and Fabian Prewett.
Algernon Rookwood, said the caption beneath a pockmarked man with greasy
hair who was leaning against the edge of his picture, looking bored, convicted
of leaking Ministry of Magic secrets to He Who Must Not Be Named.
But Harry's eyes were drawn to the picture of the witch. Her face had leapt
out at him the moment he had seen the page. She had long, dark hair that looked
unkempt and straggly in the picture, though he had seen it sleek, thick and
shining. She glared up at him through heavily lidded eyes, an arrogant, disdainful
smile playing around her thin mouth. Like Sirius, she retained vestiges of great
good looks, but something - perhaps Azkaban - had taken most of her beauty.