Bellatrix Lestrange, convicted of the torture and permanent incapacitation
of Frank and Alice Longbottom.
Hermione nudged Harry and pointed at the headline over the pictures, which
Harry, concentrating on Bellatrix, had not yet read.
MASS BREAKOUT FROM AZKABAN
MINISTRY FEARS BLACK IS 'RALLYING POINT'
FOR OLD DEATH EATERS
'Black?' said Harry loudly. 'Not -?'
'Shhh!' whispered Hermione desperately. 'Not so loud - just read it!'
The Ministry of Magic announced late last night that there has been a mass
breakout from Azkaban.
Speaking to reporters in his private office, Cornelius Fudge, Minister for
Magic, confirmed that ten high-security prisoners escaped in the early hours
of yesterday evening and that he has already informed the Muggle Prime Minister
of the dangerous nature of these individuals.
'We find ourselves, most unfortunately, in the same position we were two
and a half years ago when the murderer Sinus Black escaped,' said Fudge last
night. 'Nor do we think the two breakouts are unrelated. An escape of this magnitude
suggests outside help, and we must remember that Black, as the first person
ever to break out of Azkaban, would be ideally placed to help others follow
in his footsteps. We think it likely that these individuals, who include Black's
cousin, Bellatrix Lestrange, have rallied around Black as their leader. We are,
however, doing all we can to round up the criminals, and we beg the magical
community to remain alert and cautious. On no account should any of these individuals
be approached.'
There you are, Harry,' said Ron, looking awestruck. That's why he was happy
last night.'
'I don't believe this,' snarled Harry, 'Fudge is blaming the breakout on
Sinus?'
'What other options does he have?' said Hermione bitterly. 'He can hardly
say, "Sorry, everyone, Dumbledore warned me this might happen, the Azkaban guards
have joined Lord Voldemort" - stop whimpering, Ron - "and now Voldemort's worst
supporters have broken out, too." I mean, he's spent a good six months telling
everyone you and Dumbledore are liars, hasn't he?'
Hermione ripped open the newspaper and began to read the report inside while
Harry looked around the Great Hall. He could not understand why his fellow students
were not looking scared or at least discussing the terrible piece of news on
the front page, but very few of them took the newspaper every day like Hermione.
There they all were, talking about homework and Quidditch and who knew what
other rubbish, when outside these walls ten more Death Eaters had swollen Voldemort's
ranks.
He glanced up at the staff table. It was a different story there: Dumbledore
and Professor McGonagall were deep in conversation, both looking extremely grave.
Professor Sprout had the Prophet propped against a bottle of ketchup and was
reading the front page with such concentration that she was not noticing the
gentle drip of egg yolk falling into her lap from her stationary spoon. Meanwhile,
at the far end of the table, Professor Umbridge was tucking into a bowl of porridge.
For once her pouchy toad's eyes were not sweeping the Great Hall looking for
misbehaving students. She scowled as she gulped down her food and every now
and then she shot a malevolent glance up the table to where Dumbledore and McGonagall
were talking so intently.
'Oh my -' said Hermione wonderingly, still staring at the newspaper.
'What now?' said Harry quickly; he was feeling jumpy.
'It's: horrible,' said Hermione, looking shaken. She folded back page ten
of the newspaper and handed it to Harry and Ron.
TRAGIC DEMISE OF MINISTRY OF MAGIC WORKER St Mungo's Hospital promised a
full inquiry last night after Ministry of Magic worker Broderick Bode, 49, was
discovered dead in his . bed, strangled by a pot plant. Healers called to the
scene were unable to revive Mr Bode, who had been injured in a workplace accident
some weeks prior to his death.
Healer Miriam Strout, who was in charge of Mr Bodes ward at the time of the
incident, has been suspended on full pay and was unavailable for comment yesterday,
but a spokeswizard for the hospital said in a statement:
'St Mungo's deeply regrets the death of Mr Bode, whose health was improving
steadily prior to this tragic accident.
'We have strict guidelines on the decorations permitted on our wards but
it appears that Healer Strout, busy over the Christmas period, overlooked the
dangers of the plant on Mr Bode's bedside table. As his speech and mobility
improved, Healer Strout encouraged Mr Bode to look after the plant himself,
unaware that it was not an innocent Flitterbloom, but a cutting of Devil's Snare
which, when touched by the convalescent Mr Bode, throttled him instantly.
'St Mungo's is as yet unable to account for the presence of the plant on
the ward and asks any witch or wizard with information to come forward.'
'Bode:' said Ron. 'Bode. It rings a bell:'
'We saw him,' Hermione whispered. 'In St Mungo's, remember? He was in the
bed opposite Lockhart's, just lying there, staring at the ceiling. And we saw
the Devil's Snare arrive. She - the Healer - said it was a Christmas present.'
Harry looked back at the story. A feeling of horror was rising like bile
in his throat.
'How come we didn't recognise Devils Snare? We've seen it before: we could've
stopped this from happening.'
'Who expects Devils Snare to turn up in a hospital disguised as a pot plant?'
said Ron sharply. 'It's not our fault, whoever sent it to the bloke is to blame!
They must be a real prat, why didn't they check what they were buying?'
'Oh, come on, Ron!' said Hermione shakily. 'I don't think anyone could put
Devils Snare in a pot and not realise it tries to kill whoever touches it? This
- this was murder: a clever murder, as well: if the plant was sent anonymously,
how's anyone ever going to find out who did it?'
Harry was not thinking about Devil's Snare. He was remembering taking the
lift down to the ninth level of the Ministry on the day of his hearing and the
sallow-faced man who had got in on the. Atrium level.
'I met Bode,' he said slowly. 'I saw him at the Ministry with your dad.
Ron's mouth fell open.
'I've heard Dad talk about him at home! He was an Unspeakable - he worked
in the Department of Mysteries!'
They looked at each other for a moment, then Hermione pulled the newspaper
back towards her, closed it, glared for a moment at the pictures of the ten
escaped Death Eaters on the front, then leapt to her feet.
'Where are you going?' said Ron, startled.
To send a letter,' said Hermione, swinging her bag on to her shoulder. 'It:
well, I don't know whether: but it's worth trying: and I'm the only one who
can.'
'I hate it when she does that,' grumbled Ron, as he and Harry got up from
the table and made their own, slower way out of the Great Hall. 'Would it kill
her to tell us what she's up to for once? It'd take her about ten more seconds
- hey, Hagrid!'
Hagrid was standing beside the doors into the Entrance Hall, waiting for
a crowd of Ravenclaws to pass. He was still as heavily bruised as he had been
on the day he had come back from his mission to the giants and there was a new
cut right across the bridge of his nose.
'All righ', you two?' he said, trying to muster a smile but managing only
a kind of pained grimace.
'Are you OK, Hagrid?' asked Harry, following him as he lumbered after the
Ravenclaws.
'Fine, fine,' said Hagrid with a feeble assumption of airiness; he waved
a hand and narrowly missed concussing a frightened-looking Professor Vector,
who was passing. 'Jus' busy, yeh know, usual stuff - lessons ter prepare - couple
o' salamanders got scale rot - an' I'm on probation,' he mumbled.
'You're on probation?' said Ron very loudly, so that many of the passing
students looked around curiously. 'Sorry - I mean - you're on probation?' he
whispered.
'Yeah,' said Hagrid. "S'no more'n I expected, ter tell yeh the truth. Yeh
migh' not've picked up on it, bu' that inspection didn' go too well, yeh know:
anyway,' he sighed deeply. 'Bes' go an' rub a bit more chilli powder on them
salamanders or their tails'll be hangin' off 'em next. See yeh, Harry: Ron:'
He trudged away, out of the front doors and down the stone steps into the
damp grounds. Harry watched him go, wondering how much more bad news he could
stand.
* * *
The fact that Hagrid was now on probation became common knowledge within
the school over the next few days, but to Harry's indignation, hardly anybody
appeared to be upset about it; indeed, some people, Draco Malfoy prominent among
them, seemed positively gleeful. As for the freakish death of an obscure Department
of Mysteries employee in St Mungo's, Harry, Ron and Hermione seemed to be the
only people who knew or cared. There was only one topic of conversation in the
corridors now: the ten escaped Death Eaters, whose story had finally filtered
through the school from those few people who read the newspapers. Rumours were
flying that some of the convicts had been spotted in Hogsmeade, that they were
supposed to be hiding out in the Shrieking Shack and that they were going to
break into Hogwarts, just as Sirius Black had once done.
Those who came from wizarding families had grown up hearing the names of
these Death Eaters spoken with almost as much fear as Voldemort's; the crimes
they had committed during the days of Voldemort's reign of terror were legendary.
There were relatives of their victims among the Hogwarts students, who now found
themselves the unwilling objects of a gruesome sort of reflected fame as they
walked the corridors: Susan Bones, whose uncle, aunt and cousins had all died
at the hands of one of the ten, said miserably during Herbology that she now
had a good idea what it felt like to be Harry.
'And I don't know how you stand it - it's horrible,' she said bluntly, dumping
far too much dragon manure on her tray of Screechsnap seedlings, causing them
to wriggle and squeak in discomfort.
It was true that Harry was the subject of much renewed muttering and pointing
in the corridors these days, yet he thought he detected a slight difference
in the tone of the whisperers' voices. They sounded curious rather than hostile
now, and once or twice he was sure he overheard snatches of conversation that
suggested that the speakers were not satisfied with the Prophets version of
how and why ten Death Eaters had managed to break out of the Azkaban fortress.
In their confusion and fear, these doubters now seemed to be turning to the
only other explanation available to them: the one that Harry and Dumbledore
had been expounding since the previous year.
It was not only the students' mood that had changed. It was now quite common
to come across two or three teachers conversing in low, urgent whispers in the
corridors, breaking off their conversations the moment they saw students approaching.
They obviously can't talk freely in the staff room any more,' said Hermione
in a low voice, as she, Harry and Ron passed Professors McGonagall, Flitwick
and Sprout huddled together outside the Charms classroom one day. 'Not with
Umbridge there.'
'Reckon they know anything new?' said Ron, gazing back over his shoulder
at the three teachers.
'If they do, we're not going to hear about it, are we?' said Harry angrily.
'Not after Decree: what number are we on now?' For new notices had appeared
on the house noticeboards the morning after news of the Azkaban breakout:
BY ORDER OF THE HIGH INQUISITOR OF HOGWARTS
Teachers are hereby banned from giving students any information that is not
strictly related to the subjects they are paid to teach.
The above is in accordance with Educational Decree Number Twenty-six.
Signed: Dolores Jane Umbridge, High Inquisitor
This latest Decree had been the subject of a great number of jokes among
the students. Lee Jordan had pointed out to Umbridge that by the terms of the
new rule she was not allowed to tell Fred and George off for playing Exploding
Snap in the back of the class.
'Exploding Snap's got nothing to do with Defence Against the Dark Arts, Professor!
That's not information relating to your subject!'
When Harry next saw Lee, the back of his hand was bleeding rather badly.
Harry recommended essence of Murtlap.
Harry had thought the breakout from Azkaban might have humbled Umbridge a
little, that she might have been abashed at the catastrophe that had occurred
right under the nose of her beloved Fudge. It seemed, however, to have only
intensified her furious desire to bring every aspect of life at Hogwarts under
her personal control. She seemed determined at the very least to achieve a sacking
before long, and the only question was whether it would be Professor Trelawney
or Hagrid who went first.
Every single Divination and Care of Magical Creatures lesson was now conducted
in the presence of Umbridge and her clipboard. She lurked by the fire in the
heavily perfumed tower room, interrupting Professor Trelawney's increasingly
hysterical talks with difficult questions about ornithomancy and heptomology,
insisting that she predicted students' answers before they gave them and demanding
that she demonstrate her skill at the crystal ball, the tea leaves and the rune
stones in turn. Harry thought Professor Trelawney might soon crack under the
strain. Several times he passed her in the corridors - in itself a very unusual
occurrence as she generally remained in her tower room - muttering wildly to
herself, wringing her hands and shooting terrified glances over her shoulder,
and all the while giving off a powerful smell of cooking sherry. If he had not
been so worried about Hagrid, he would have felt sorry for her - but if one
of them was to be ousted from their job, there could be only one choice for
Harry as to who should remain.