'What can I get you, m'dears?' said Madam Puddifoot, a very stout woman with
a shiny black bun, squeezing between their table and Roger Davies's with great
difficulty. '
Two coffees, please,' said Cho.
In the time it took for their coffees to arrive, Roger Davies and his girlfriend
had started kissing over their sugar bowl. Harry wished they wouldn't; he felt
that Davies was setting a standard with which Cho would soon expect him to compete.
He felt his face growing hot and tried staring out of the window, but it was
so steamed up he couldn't see the street outside. To postpone the moment when
he would have to look at Cho, he stared up at the ceiling as though examining
the paintwork and received a handful of confetti in the face from their hovering
cherub.
After a few more painful minutes, Cho mentioned Umbridge. Harry seized on
the subject with relief and they passed a few happy moments abusing her, but
the subject had already been so thoroughly canvassed during DA meetings it did
not last very long. Silence fell again. Harry was very conscious of the slurping
noises coming from the table next door and cast wildly around for something
else to say.
'Er: listen, d'you want to come with me to the Three Broomsticks at lunchtime?
I'm meeting Hermione Granger there.'
Cho raised her eyebrows.
'You're meeting Hermione Granger? Today?'
'Yeah. Well, she asked me to, so I thought I would. D'you want to come with
me? She said it wouldn't matter if you did.'
'Oh: well: that was nice of her.'
But Cho did not sound as though she thought it was nice at all. On the contrary,
her tone was cold and all of a sudden she looked rather forbidding.
A few more minutes passed in total silence, Harry drinking his coffee so
fast that he would soon need a fresh cup. Beside them,
Roger Davies and his girlfriend seemed glued together at the lips.
Cho's hand was lying on the table beside her coffee and Harry was feeling
a mounting pressure to take hold of it. Just do it, he told himself, as a fount
of mingled panic and excitement surged up inside his chest, just reach out and
grab it. Amazing, how much more difficult it was to extend his arm twelve inches
and touch her hand than it was to snatch a speeding Snitch from midair:
But just as he moved his hand forwards, Cho took hers off the table. She
was now watching Roger Davies kissing his girlfriend with a mildly interested
expression.
'He asked me out, you know,' she said in a quiet voice. 'A couple of weeks
ago. Roger. I turned him down, though.'
Harry, who had grabbed the sugar bowl to excuse his sudden lunging movement
across the table, could not think why she was telling him this. If she wished
she were sitting at the next table being heartily kissed by Roger Davies, why
had she agreed to come out with him?
He said nothing. Their cherub threw another handful of confetti over them;
some of it landed in the last cold dregs of coffee Harry had been about to drink.
'I came in here with Cedric last year,' said Cho.
In the second or so it took for him to take in what she had said, Harry's
insides had become glacial. He could not believe she wanted to talk about Cedric
now, while kissing couples surrounded them and a cherub floated over their heads.
Cho's voice was rather higher when she spoke again.
'I've been meaning to ask you for ages: did Cedric - did he - in - in - mention
me at all before he died?'
This was the very last subject on earth Harry wanted to discuss, and least
of all with Cho.
'Well - no -' he said quietly. There - there wasn't time for him to say anything.
Erm: so: d'you: d'you get to see a lot of Quidditch in the holidays? You support
the Tornados, right?'
His voice sounded falsely bright and cheery. To his horror, he saw that her
eyes were swimming with tears again, just as they had been after the last DA
meeting before Christmas.
'Look,' he said desperately, leaning in so that nobody else could overhear,
'let's not talk about Cedric right now: let's talk about something else
But this, apparently, was quite the wrong thing to say.
'I thought,' she said, tears spattering down on to the table, 'I thought
you'd u - u - understand! I need to talk about it! Surely you n - need to talk
about it't - too! I mean, you saw it happen, d - didn't you?'
Everything was going nightmarishly wrong; Roger Davies's girlfriend had even
unglued herself to look round at Cho crying.
'Well - I have talked about it,' Harry said in a whisper, 'to Ron and Hermione,
but -'
'Oh, you'll talk to Hermione Granger!' she said shrilly, her face now shining
with tears. Several more kissing couples broke apart to stare. 'But you won't
talk to me! P - perhaps it would be best if we just: just p - paid and you went
and met up with Hermione G - Granger, like you obviously want to!'
Harry stared at her, utterly bewildered, as she seized a frilly napkin and
dabbed at her shining face with it.
'Cho?' he said weakly, wishing Roger would seize his girlfriend and start
kissing her again to stop her goggling at him and Cho.
'Go on, leave!' she said, now crying into the napkin. 'I don't know why you
asked me out in the first place if you're going to make arrangements to meet
other girls right after me: how many are you meeting after Hermione?'
'It's not like that!' said Harry, and he was so relieved at finally understanding
what she was annoyed about that he laughed, which he realised a split second
too late was also a mistake.
Cho sprang to her feet. The whole tearoom was quiet and everybody was watching
them now.
I'll see you around, Harry' she said dramatically, and hiccoughing slightly
she dashed to the door, wrenched it open and hurried off into the pouring rain.
'Cho!' Harry called after her, but the door had already swung shut behind
her with a tuneful tinkle.
There was total silence within the teashop. Every eye was on Harry. He threw
a Galleon down on to the table, shook pink confetti out of his hair, and followed
Cho out of the door.
It was raining hard now and she was nowhere to be seen. He simply did not
understand what had happened; half an hour ago they had been getting along fine.
'Women!' he muttered angrily, sloshing down the rain-washed street with his
hands in his pockets. 'What did she want to talk about Cedric for, anyway? Why
does she always want to drag up a subject that makes her act like a human hosepipe?'
He turned right and broke into a splashy run, and within minutes he was turning
into the doorway of the Three Broomsticks. He knew he was too early to meet
Hermione, but he thought it likely there would be someone in here with whom
he could spend the intervening time. He shook his wet hair out of his eyes and
looked around. Hagrid was sitting alone in a corner, looking morose.
'Hi, Hagrid!' he said, when he had squeezed through the crammed tables and
pulled up a chair beside him.
Hagrid jumped and looked down at Harry as though he barely recognised him.
Harry saw that he had two fresh cuts on his face and several new bruises.
'Oh, it's yeh, Harry,' said Hagrid. 'Yeh all righ?'
'Yeah, I'm fine,' lied Harry; but, next to this battered and mournful-looking
Hagrid, he felt he didn't really have much to complain about. 'Er - are you
OK?'
'Me?' said Hagrid. 'Oh yeah, I'm grand, Harry, grand.'
He gazed into the depths of his pewter tankard, which was the size of a large
bucket, and sighed. Harry didn't know what to say to him. They sat side by side
in silence for a moment. Then Hagrid said abruptly, 'In the same boat, yeh an'
me, aren' we, 'Arry?'
'Er -' said Harry.
'Yeah: I've said it before: both outsiders, like,' said Hagrid, nodding wisely.
'An' both orphans. Yeah: both orphans.'
He took a great swig from his tankard.
'Makes a diff'rence, havin' a decent family,' he said. 'Me dad was decent.
An' your mum an' dad were decent. If they'd lived, life woulda bin diff'rent,
eh?'
'Yeah: I's'pose,' said Harry cautiously. Hagrid seemed to be in a very strange
mood.
'Family,' said Hagrid gloomily. 'Whatever yeh say, blood's important:'
And he wiped a trickle of it out of his eye.
'Hagrid,' said Harry, unable to stop himself, 'where are you getting all
these injuries?'
'Eh?' said Hagrid, looking startled. 'Wha' injuries?'
'All those!' said Harry, pointing at Hagrid's face.
'Oh: tha's jus' normal bumps an' bruises, Harry,' said Hagrid dismissively,
'I got a rough job.'
He drained his tankard, set it back on the table and got to his feet.
I'll be seein' yeh, Harry: take care now.'
And he lumbered out of the pub looking wretched, and disappeared into the
torrential rain. Harry watched him go, feeling miserable. Hagrid was unhappy
and he was hiding something, but he seemed determined not to accept help. What
was going on? But before Harry could think about it any further, he heard a
voice calling his name.
'Harry! Harry, over here!'
Hermione was waving at him from the other side of the room. He got up and
made his way towards her through the crowded pub. He was still a few tables
away when he realised that Hermione was not alone. She was sitting at a table
with the unlikeliest pair of drinking mates he could ever have imagined: Luna
Lovegood and none other than Rita Skeeter, ex-journalist on the Daily Prophet
and one of Hermione's least favourite people in the world.
'You're early!' said Hermione, moving along to give him room to sit down.
'I thought you were with Cho, I wasn't expecting you for another hour at least!'
'Cho?' said Rita at once, twisting round in her seat to stare avidly at Harry.
'A girl?'
She snatched up her crocodile-skin handbag and groped within it.
'It's none of your business if Harry's been with a hundred girls,' Hermione
told Rita coolly. 'So you can put that away right now.'
Rita had been on the point of withdrawing an acid-green quill from her bag.
Looking as though she had been forced to swallow Stinksap, she snapped her bag
shut again.
'What are you up to?' Harry asked, sitting down and staring from Rita to
Luna to Hermione.
'Little Miss Perfect was just about to tell me when you arrived,' said Rita,
taking a large slurp of her drink. 'I suppose I'm allowed to talk to him, am
I?' she shot at Hermione.
'Yes, I suppose you are,' said Hermione coldly.
Unemployment did not suit Rita. The hair that had once been set in elaborate
curls now hung lank and unkempt around her face. The scarlet paint on her two-inch
talons was chipped and there were a couple of false jewels missing from her
winged glasses. She took another great gulp of her drink and said out of the
corner of her mouth, 'Pretty girl, is she, Harry?'
'One more word about Harry's love life and the deal's off and that's a promise,'
said Hermione irritably.
'What deal?' said Rita, wiping her mouth on the back of her hand. 'You haven't
mentioned a deal yet, Miss Prissy, you just told me to turn up. Oh, one of these
days:" She took a deep shuddering breath.
'Yes, yes, one of these days you'll write more horrible stories about Harry
and me,' said Hermione indifferently. 'Find someone who cares, why don't you?'
They've run plenty of horrible stories about Harry this year without my help,'
said Rita, shooting a sideways look at him over the top of her glass and adding
in a rough whisper, 'How has that made you feel, Harry? Betrayed? Distraught?
Misunderstood?'
'He feels angry, of course,' said Hermione in a hard, clear voice. 'Because
he's told the Minister for Magic the truth and the Minister's too much of an
idiot to believe him.'
'So you actually stick to it, do you, that He Who Must Not Be Named is back?'
said Rita, lowering her glass and subjecting Harry to a piercing stare while
her finger strayed longingly to the clasp of the crocodile bag. 'You stand by
all this garbage Dumbledore's been telling everybody about You-Know-Who returning
and you being the sole witness?'
'I wasn't the sole witness,' snarled Harry. There were a dozen-odd Death
Eaters there as well. Want their names?'
'I'd love them,' breathed Rita, now fumbling in her bag once more and gazing
at him as though he was the most beautiful thing she had ever seen. 'A great
bold headline: "Potter Accuses:" A sub-heading, "Harry Potter Names Death Eaters
Still Among Us". And then, beneath a nice big photograph of you, "Disturbed
teenage survivor of You-Know-Who's attack, Harry Potter, I5, caused outrage
yesterday by accusing respectable and prominent members oj the wizarding community
oj being Death Eaters:"'
The Quick-Quotes Quill was actually in her hand and halfway to her mouth
when the rapturous expression on her face died.
'But of course,' she said, lowering the quill and looking daggers at Hermione,
'Little Miss Perfect wouldn't want that story out there, would she?'
'As a matter of fact,' said Hermione sweetly, 'that's exactly what Little
Miss Perfect does want.'
Rita stared at her. So did Harry. Luna, on the other hand, sang 'Weasley
is our King' dreamily under her breath and stirred her drink with a cocktail
onion on a stick.