����������� Horatius pulled the cloak tighter
around him, feeling the night air sneak upon him. Only moments ago, it seemed,
he was walking the paths around the manor and basking in the beautiful sunset.
Now, however, he had to strain his Aspian sight to its full extent to see anything
on this moonless night. Before him stood a structure that seemed older than
time itself, the small entrance so moss-covered and weatherworn. The four by
two foot door was cut right into the far side of the hill, impossible to see
from the only path that led towards it.�
The stones that outlined the arched entrance were smooth and rounded
from countless years of exposure, the writing engraved in the headstone
appearing nearly invisible now, illegible certainly. Beyond the arch, curtained
by the branches of an overhanging weeping willow, steps descended deep inside
the earth, as if reaching for the core itself. They too were lined in small
round stones, made slippery and slanted by the years of use.� He entered, hardening his resolve, as a part
of his mind annoyingly questioned his choice.�
But he had to go down, the rational part of his mind snapped
back, he had to make sure security around the manor had not been
breached. The only reason his father had let him come here, after all, had been
to scout some good places to train the Asps and to alert the overjoyed
house-elves of the extra charges that were due to arrive next week. He had
found a suitable field a while back, and he had alerted the house elves long
ago. The only reason he was still here, actually, was because he saw no better
way to spend the remainder of his Saturday than walking around the Manor,
getting to know the place. As he had walked the many paths, a serene smile upon
his face, the very air seemed to greet him! Every tree bowed before him
in the gentle wind, the birds hailed him from their wooden perches and the
distant waterfall murmured his name. He was where he belonged. He was home.
Honestly, who would have wanted to go back to school?
But no, the
serenity couldn�t last he mused as he entered the womb of Mother Earth herself.
He had to enter sideways through the slim entry, though the shaft did quickly
spread out and grow tall enough for him to walk upright. The air inside the
tunnel was stale, tinted with an old, mossy smell. The passage, climbing ever
deeper into the ground, was lined in similarly cut stones that now seemed
silver in the near absence of light. Their eternal presence seemed to tighten
the already small tunnel, making Horris glad he was not claustrophobic. He
shook his head, trying to focus on the faint wand light ahead. The person to
whom it belonged, whomever it may be, was the sole reason for his trek into
this less-than-pleasant hole. He had first seen the intruder on his way back
towards the Manor at dusk, and he could not ignore the person�s presence.� If security had been breached around the
estate, Horris had no choice but to address the problem. The Asps could
not train with onlookers, tactics could not be discussed, Horris could not
relax and any leaks in their preparations to leave Voldemort would prove
disastrous. Whoever this was, they could cross the wards and their presence had
seemingly no effect on the tigers (Sila and his dear Pazur). Those two could
usually sense anything bigger than an ant, only allowing admittance onto the
grounds to those a Snape had cleared. Horris knew his father would have told
him if anyone was supposed to come today, and even if they have been allowed to
come whenever (though Horris doubted his father would allow just anyone such
access), Horris would still have to tell them to stay away for the next few
weeks. So, making sure to mask his aura (a skill far easier than actually
reading it), Horris followed the unwanted presence.
When the tunnel turned,
the darkness became twice as pressing, the faint gray glow from outside being
sharply cut from view. Before him, the wand light was fading as well, and he
dared not light his own. He could hear someone talking faintly, the feminine
voice distorted as it echoed from the many stone walls. The woman�s words were
slurred to his ears, indecipherable. They seemed sad though, apologetically
mournful even. With a final turn the narrow tunnel ended, opening into a large
chamber. Horris suddenly felt extremely vulnerable for some reason, as if the
cave had eaten him and had stuffed him securely into its stomach. It took his
eyes a moment to adjust to the far-brighter light of torches, but Horatius
Ferox Snape remained frozen long after he could see. He froze because he
could see; for what he saw was the last thing he had expected.� When he first started following the figure�
the woman, he had expected the tunnel to be some sort of meeting place or
secret way out of the protected grounds. Either option would explain why the
entrance was located on the side of the hill opposite the only path in the
area, why the said path seemed so unused and why the structure was not noted on
his little map as anything more than a dead end with an illegible scribble for
a name. As far as Horris had figured, the early Snapes had made this tunnel an
escape rout if the Manor had been attacked and they needed to leave without
letting the wards down. It was quite near the manor, just far enough not to be
noticed but easily reachable in an emergency... Muggle castles had secret
passages, after all, and the weeping willow atop the hill did a rather good job
of hiding the small entrance, after all. If it had once had a door on it, or a
notice-me-not charm, none would be the wiser. But, as Horris was quickly
learning, few things about the Snapes were ever as it first seemed.
Long, narrow labs
of Blue Pearl Granite ran the length of the chamber, stretching down as far as
the eye could see. The near-black slabs with their shining blue spots of
exquisite quality were intricately carved on the sides, detailed in delicate
silver. The metal and iridescent spots of the stone reflected the flickering
torchlight, reflecting the Snape family colors. The floor, too, was laid in the
expensive stone, with a large Snape crest laid out at the entrance. The crest,
too, was made of different types of granite or marble, most of which Horris
could not name. Silver connected the different stones in the crest, a thicker
vein of it connecting the design to the rest of the floor. The entire thing
seemed to be made of a single piece, whether through magic or simple age Horris
was uncertain. This, however, was not what caught the boy so unawares. No, it
was what lay upon the raised alters that froze him as no Stupefy could. Atop
these beds, as if in a calm and peaceful slumber, countless bodies lay. They
all looked alive, by means of what Horris assumed were heavy-duty preservation
charms. There was no smell, beyond the normal humid musk most underground
structures held, but Horris still felt off. It was one thing to know your
family was ancient, while quite another to see them all laid out before you in
timeless glory.
When he finally
pulled his gaze away from his ancestors and looked for the woman, he realized
his inner musings must have taken longer than he thought. The woman was looking
straight at him now, and she was the very woman he had seen in Professor
McGonagall�s office; the same person he was supposed to keep away from� his
father was not going to like this� he wouldn�t like this at all.
�Who the hell are
you?�
�I should be asking you that�
you are trespassing, after all.� Horris countered, mimicking her exact
tone, flashing his most intimidating smirk as he noted a bit of uncertainty
flash in her eyes.
�You� you�re that kid from Minnie�s
office.� She mumbled after a moment of thought. �The one Lord Snape is so
interested in.�
�Lord Snape?�
�Not a pureblood,� she noted the
moment she heard his slip, her tone annoyingly calculative. �Interesting. I
would have thought he�d at least suck up to a pureblood, being what he is and
all��
�My-� Horris snapped his mouth shut
in an instant. Defending his father�s reputation had long ago become instinct.
Many students had loved to note (indirectly) of his father�s supposed
alliances, as had the people around Hogsmeade. At times, Horris truly hated
that the Death Eater trials were public. This time, however, he�d have to curb
his tongue. ������
�����������
�My?� Abby
questioned, reeling over the reasons why a student would call Severus �his�.
�My Professor.� The kid
snapped back at once, clearly seeing his mistake. The lie would have worked,
too, had she not known Severus for so long� if she could tell when he lied,
she could tell when anyone lied.
She smiled sadistically, �I�m sure
that is all he is.� Abby had to hand it to the kid, he could control his
emotions better than most. She almost didn�t see his nervousness. This
nervousness did, however, raise a certain unsettling question�. Was this boy�
No, she shook her head slightly, though she could call Severus many things, but
that was not among them. Of that she was sure. So what was this
kid�s relationship with Sev? Student-teacher it wasn�t, of that �she was as sure of as that they weren�t� like
that. So how were they? Minerva had noted the boy was important to
Severus, and if he had come here the boy was certainly close to Sev� He
wouldn�t let anyone come here, especially not alone. Seeing as Severus
was not coming here screaming with his wand poised at her head, the boy was quite
alone. He had let the boy go to his quarters at school alone too, come to think
of it�
����������� Abby
studied the kid, unable to solve the riddle.
�What�s your name?�
�None of your business.� The boy
shot back, leaning against the wall.
�Manners are not your forte I see?�
�I have them, when needed.�
�Severus is rubbing off on you.�
She noted, only to see the boy smirk triumphantly. �That was not a
compliment kid.� She sighed, still studying him. He stood stoutly, arms folded
across his chest. His facial expression reminded her of a young Lucius perhaps,
though this child seemed far less conceited. He looked like Severus, come to
think of it, to an almost distinct degree. He had Sev�s smirk, for starters, a
smirk she had grown up with. He probably had Sev�s glare too, judging by the
brow structure� Severus always loved his high brows; perfect for glaring.
�I asked what your
name was.�
�And I asked why you were
trespassing.� The boy said in return.
�I highly doubt you are a new
security measure��
�But I am another obstacle
between you and the exit.�
�You think you�re a threat?�
�It isn�t wise to underestimate
me.�
�Me neither kid, and I can
use magic outside of school.�
�Very funny.���
As much as she was loath to admit
it, the kid scared her� especially when he scowled like that. At least
she now knew what Severus saw in the brat� the boy was entirely too much like
him. It was like time-turning back to her childhood, testing wills with
Severus. For some reason, the boy could put her on-edge as only her uncle
could� a skill not even dear Severus possessed. If she didn�t know any better,
she�d say this was said Uncle�s child, but the man had made a point of staying
single and heirless. Why hadn�t the cats done anything to him? He was obviously
here alone, and she knew full well how the tigers loved to chase strangers off
the grounds� and the only way for a non-Snape to be allowed here alone was if
Severus had permanently made them ignorant of the boy�s blood� an unpleasant
procedure at best.
����������� She
looked him over once more, trying to place him. He felt so familiar, his
appearance that is, so he just had to belong to an old family. Dark hair
crossed out the Malfoys and LeStranges, he was too tall for the Macnairs� His
green eyes got rid of the Blacks�
She tried looking at his wand, but
he (oddly enough) hadn�t drawn it. She couldn�t get a good view of the cloak
clasp either, his arms crossed right over it. Damn those kids and their fashion
statements! All she could see was a little of a deep blue background� that
could be Black, Wikes, Rosier, Dolokov, Snape and Chang� if she assumed him to
be of a traditionally dark family.
�I don�t believe it!� She
practically screamed when the kid finally shifted. She knew that crest, she
loathed that crest, she had worn that crest!
The kid�s eyes widened at her
outburst, though he regained his composure in an instant.
�You�re adopted.� She snapped after
looking for any plausible explanation, �Severus needed an heir so he adopted
you.�
�����������
�Why the hell does
everyone think that?� Horris growled. Was it really so hard to accept
that he was a Snape? He could have AK-ed himself for forgetting to hide the
clasp, but he knew that it would be useless to deny it now.
�Who are you?�
�Horatius Ferox Snape.� He
deadpanned, knowing that if she knew who he was, his name could do no more
damage.
�And your real name?�
�Horatius Ferox Snape.�
�And before you were adopted?�
�I was not adopted.�
�Unless Severus cooked you up in
one of those gigantic cauldrons, you�re not his. �
�He was married you know.�
�Not to your mother he wasn�t. His
wife and I knew each other since her third year, and you are no child of hers.�
�Are you going to claim I�m not my
father�s son as well?� He questioned coldly. He made sure his tone implied
disagreement with her earlier statement, but technically he hadn�t lied. He
wondered how well this woman had known his real mother, wondered if she might
endanger them far more than his father feared. No one had questioned his
parentage before, not his mother�s side, anyway.
�You might be Severus�� I�ll
give him that, though him using an adoptive potion on you is still my first
inclination.�
Horris glared.
����������� �How
about you tell me who in seven hells you are, seeing as you�re so
knowledgeable about my family.�
�You don�t know? You, who claim to
be the great Snape heir, don�t know? How like Severus to keep things of such
importance secret� even from the heir that is supposed to knw everything about
his family!� She mocked him, making him redouble his glare.
�He hated not knowing things, an attitude forged after years
of being told on a need-to-know basis. She had insinuated his father did not
trust him! But Horris knew he did, his father told him things, he wasn�t
Dumbledore!
�Even Lucius tells his son all he
needs to know to be able to take over the family at any given moment.�
Horatius smirked, not about to be
abashed by this woman� whomever she was. �Perhaps dad simply trusts me to run
things my way?�
The woman was visibly taken back by
his rebuttal, as he knew she would.� Draco,
even when only with Horris or Lea, never called Lucius �dad�� always
�father�.
�Perhaps.� She agreed after a long
silence, a thoughtful look on her face. �I would assume, however, that he would
still feel it necessary to inform you of the family conflicts, feuds and
alliances.�
�Or he might have simply not seen
you as important enough to warrant a full lecture and details��
Her eyes clouded over, �Yes,
perhaps he did. It has been years, after all.�
����������� �You
still have not answered my question.� The boy reminded her once more. She
wondered if Severus had truly changed as Minerva seemed to think, or had he
made this boy think he was not being manipulated. Did the boy even know
of Severus� alliances? The boy was so sure of himself, yet he was so unlike all
the heirs she had met.
�Abdicaterra.�
�No shit.�
Definitely not like the
other heirs.
�I asked you who you were, not what
your name was.�
�I am your teacher�s
daughter-in-law.�
�That doesn�t tell me why you�re supposedly
dangerous.�
�I switched sides.� she answered,
shrugging. �I know dark secrets of many families and am unafraid to use them.�
�Many people know secrets� what
makes you different?�
She sighed at his question. The
more he spoke the more sure she was that Severus had indeed sired the boy. This
kid certainly had Sev�s biting tone and calculating mental abilities. Most
people would have accepted (did accept) the reason she just gave him. But no,
not a Snape. She knew better than most how hard it was to fool a Snape� she had
been one, after all.