He turned to his twin.
'George,' said Fred, 'I think we've outgrown full-time education.'
'Yeah, I've been feeling that way myself,' said George lightly.
Time to test our talents in the real world, d'you reckon?' asked Fred.
'Definitely,' said George.
And before Umbridge could say a word, they raised their wands and said together:
'Accio brooms!'
Harry heard a loud crash somewhere in the distance. Looking to his left,
he ducked just in time. Fred and George's broomsticks, one still trailing the
heavy chain and iron peg with which Umbridge had fastened them to the wall,
were hurtling along the corridor towards their owners; they turned left, streaked
down the stairs and stopped sharply in front of the twins, the chain clattering
loudly on the flagged stone floor.
'We won't be seeing you,' Fred told Professor Umbridge, swinging his leg
over his broomstick.
'Yeah, don't bother to keep in touch,' said George, mounting his own.
Fred looked around at the assembled students, at the silent, watchful crowd.
'If anyone fancies buying a Portable Swamp, as demonstrated upstairs, come
to number ninety-three, Diagon Alley - Weasleys' Wizarding Wheezes,' he said
in a loud voice. 'Our new premises!'
'Special discounts to Hogwarts students who swear they're going to use our
products to get rid of this old bat,' added George, pointing at Professor Umbridge.
'STOP THEM!' shrieked Umbridge, but it was too late. As the Inquisitorial
Squad closed in, Fred and George kicked off from the floor, shooting fifteen
feet into the air, the iron peg swinging dangerously below. Fred looked across
the hall at the poltergeist bobbing on his level above the crowd.
'Give her hell from us, Peeves.'
And Peeves, who Harry had never seen take an order from a student before,
swept his belled hat from his head and sprang to a salute as Fred and George
wheeled about to tumultuous applause from the students below and sped out of
the open front doors into the glorious sunset.
- CHAPTER THIRTY -
Grawp
The story of Fred and George's flight to freedom was retold so often over
the next few days that Harry could tell it would soon become the stuff of Hogwarts
legend: within a week, even those who had been eye-witnesses were half-convinced
they had seen the twins dive-bomb Umbridge on their brooms and pelt her with
Dungbombs before zooming out of the doors. In the immediate aftermath of their
departure there was a great wave of talk about copying them. Harry frequently
heard students saying things like, 'Honestly some days I just feel like jumping
on my broom and leaving this place,' or else, 'One more lesson like that and
I might just do a Weasley.'
Fred and George had made sure nobody was likely to forget them too soon.
For one thing, they had not left instructions on how to remove the swamp that
now filled the corridor on the fifth floor of the east wing. Umbridge and Filch
had been observed trying different means of removing it but without success.
Eventually the area was roped off and Filch, gnashing his teeth furiously, was
given the task of punting students across it to their classrooms. Harry was
certain that teachers like McGonagall or Flitwick could have removed the swamp
in an instant but, just as in the case of Fred and George's Wildfire Whiz-bangs,
they seemed to prefer to watch Umbridge struggle.
Then there were the two large broom-shaped holes in Umbridge's office door,
through which Fred and George's Cleansweeps had smashed to rejoin their masters.
Filch fitted a new door and removed Harry's Firebolt to the dungeons where,
it was rumoured, Umbridge had set an armed security troll to guard it. However,
her troubles were far from over.
Inspired by Fred and George's example, a great number of students were now
vying for the newly vacant positions of Troublemakers-in-Chief. In spite of
the new door, somebody managed to slip a hairy-snouted Niffler into Umbridge's
office, which promptly tore the place apart in its search for shiny objects,
leapt on Umbridge when she entered and tried to gnaw the rings off her stubby
fingers. Dungbombs and Stink Pellets were dropped so frequently in the corridors
that it became the new fashion for students to perform Bubble-Head Charms on
themselves before leaving lessons, which ensured them a supply of fresh air,
even though it gave them all the peculiar appearance of wearing upside-down
goldfish bowls on their heads.
Filch prowled the corridors with a horsewhip ready in his hands, desperate
to catch miscreants, but the problem was that there were now so many of them
he never knew which way to turn. The Inquisitorial Squad was attempting to help
him, but odd things kept happening to its members. Warrington of the Slytherin
Quidditch team reported to the hospital wing with a horrible skin complaint
that made him look as though he had been coated in cornflakes; Pansy Parkinson,
to Hermione's delight, missed all her lessons the following day as she had sprouted
antlers.
Meanwhile, it became clear just how many Skiving Snackboxes Fred and George
had managed to sell before leaving Hogwarts. Umbridge only had to enter her
classroom for the students assembled there to faint, vomit, develop dangerous
fevers or else spout blood from both nostrils. Shrieking with rage and frustration,
she attempted to trace the mysterious symptoms to their source, but the students
told her stubbornly they were suffering from 'Umbridge -itis'. After putting
four successive classes in detention and failing to discover their secret, she
was forced to give up and allow the bleeding, swooning, sweating and vomiting
students to leave her classes in droves.
But not even the users of the Snackboxes could compete with that master of
chaos, Peeves, who seemed to have taken Fred's parting words deeply to heart.
Cackling madly, he soared through the school, upending tables, bursting out
of blackboards, toppling statues and vases; twice he shut Mrs Norris inside
a suit of armour, from which she was rescued, yowling loudly, by the furious
caretaker. Peeves smashed lanterns and snuffed out candles, juggled burning
torches over the heads of screaming students, caused neatly stacked piles of
parchment to topple into fires or out of windows; flooded the second floor when
he pulled off all the taps in the bathrooms, dropped a bag of tarantulas in
the middle of the Great Hall during breakfast and, whenever he fancied a break,
spent hours at a time floating along after Umbridge and blowing loud raspberries
every time she spoke.
None of the staff but Filch seemed to be stirring themselves to help her.
Indeed, a week after Fred and George's departure Harry witnessed Professor McGonagall
walking right past Peeves, who was determinedly loosening a crystal chandelier,
and could have sworn he heard her tell the poltergeist out of the corner of
her mouth, 'It unscrews the other way.'
To cap matters, Montague had still not recovered from his sojourn in the
toilet; he remained confused and disorientated and his parents were to be observed
one Tuesday morning striding up the front drive, looking extremely angry.
'Should we say something?' said Hermione in a worried voice, pressing her
cheek against the Charms window so that she could see Mr and Mrs Montague marching
inside. 'About what happened to him? In case it helps Madam Pomfrey cure him?'
'Course not, he'll recover,' said Ron indifferently.
'Anyway, more trouble for Umbridge, isn't it?' said Harry in a satisfied
voice.
He and Ron both tapped the teacups they were supposed to be charming with
their wands. Harry's spouted four very short legs that could not reach the desk
and wriggled pointlessly in midair. Ron's grew four very thin spindly legs that
hoisted the cup off the desk with great difficulty, trembled for a few seconds,
then folded, causing the cup to crack into two.
'Reparo,' said Hermione quickly, mending Ron's cup with a wave of her wand.
That's all very well, but what if Montague's permanently injured?'
'Who cares?' said Ron irritably, while his teacup stood up drunkenly again,
trembling violently at the knees. 'Montague shouldn't have tried to take all
those points from Gryffindor, should he? If you want to worry about anyone,
Hermione, worry about me!'
'You?' she said, catching her teacup as it scampered happily away across
the desk on four sturdy little willow-patterned legs, and replacing it in front
of her. 'Why should I be worried about you?'
'When Mum's next letter finally gets through Umbridge's screening process,'
said Ron bitterly, now holding his cup up while its frail legs tried feebly
to support its weight, 'I'm going to be in deep trouble. I wouldn't be surprised
if she's sent another Howler.'
'But -'
'It'll be my fault Fred and George left, you wait,' said Ron darkly. 'She'll
say I should've stopped them leaving, I should've grabbed the ends of their
brooms and hung on or something: yeah, it'll be all my fault.'
'Well, if she does say that it'll be very unfair, you couldn't have done
anything! But I'm sure she won't, I mean, if it's really true they've got premises
in Diagon Alley, they must have been planning this for ages.'
'Yeah, but that's another thing, how did they get premises?' said Ron, hitting
his teacup so hard with his wand that its legs collapsed again and it lay twitching
before him. 'It's a bit dodgy isn't it? They'll need loads of Galleons to afford
the rent on a place in Diagon Alley. She'll want to know what they've been up
to, to get their hands on that sort of gold.'
'Well, yes, that occurred to me, too,' said Hermione, allowing her teacup
to jog in neat little circles around Harry's, whose stubby little legs were
still unable to touch the desktop, 'I've been wondering whether Mundungus has
persuaded them to sell stolen goods or something awful.'
'He hasn't,' said Harry curtly.
'How do you know?' said Ron and Hermione together.
'Because -' Harry hesitated, but the moment to confess finally seemed to
have come. There was no good to be gained in keeping silent if it meant anyone
suspected that Fred and George were criminals. 'Because they got the gold from
me. I gave them my Triwizard winnings last June.'
There was a shocked silence, then Hermione's teacup jogged right over the
edge of the desk and smashed on the floor.
'Oh, Harry, you didn't!' she said.
'Yes, I did,' said Harry mutinously. 'And I don't regret it, either. I didn't
need the gold and they'll be great at running a joke shop.'
'But this is excellent!' said Ron, looking thrilled. 'It's all your fault,
Harry - Mum can't blame me at all! Can I tell her?'
'Yeah, I suppose you'd better,' said Harry dully, "specially if she thinks
they're receiving stolen cauldrons or something.'
Hermione said nothing at all for the rest of the lesson, but Harry had a
shrewd suspicion that her self-restraint was bound to crack before long. Sure
enough, once they had left the castle for break and were standing around in
the weak May sunshine, she fixed Harry with a beady eye and opened her mouth
with a determined air.
Harry interrupted her before she had even started.
'It's no good nagging me, it's done,' he said firmly. 'Fred and George have
got the gold - spent a good bit of it, too, by the sounds of it - and I can't
get it back from them and I don't want to. So save your breath, Hermione.'
'I wasn't going to say anything about Fred and George!' she said in an injured
voice.
Ron snorted disbelievingly and Hermione threw him a very dirty look.
'No, I wasn't!' she said angrily. 'As a matter of fact, I was going to ask
Harry when he's going to go back to Snape and ask for more Occlumency lessons!'
Harry's heart sank. Once they had exhausted the subject of Fred and George's
dramatic departure, which admittedly had taken many hours, Ron and Hermione
had wanted to hear news of Sirius. As Harry had not confided in them the reason
he had wanted to talk to Sirius in the first place, it had been hard to think
of what to tell them; he had ended up saying, truthfully, that Sirius wanted
Harry to resume Occlumency lessons. He had been regretting this ever since;
Hermione would not let the subject drop and kept reverting to it when Harry
least expected it.
'You can't tell me you've stopped having funny dreams,' Hermione said now,
'because Ron told me you were muttering in your sleep again last night.'
Harry threw Ron a furious look. Ron had the grace to look ashamed of himself.
'You were only muttering a bit,' he mumbled apologetically. 'Something about
"just a bit further".'
'I dreamed I was watching you lot play Quidditch,' Harry lied brutally. 'I
was trying to get you to stretch out a bit further to grab the Quaffle.'
Ron's ears went red. Harry felt a kind of vindictive pleasure; he had not,
of course, dreamed anything of the sort.
Last night, he had once again made the journey along the Department of Mysteries
corridor. He had passed through the circular room, then the room full of clicking
and dancing light, until he found himself again inside that cavernous room full
of shelves on which were ranged dusty glass spheres.
He had hurried straight towards row number ninety-seven, turned left and
run along it: it had probably been then that he had spoken aloud: just a bit
further: for he felt his conscious self struggling to wake: and before he had
reached the end of the row, he had found himself lying in bed again, gazing
up at the canopy of his four-poster.