PART 6: Nocturnes II
4.
Tuesday December 9,
1980, 9.00 PM, Flybynight Broomstick Port, Toronto.
It had been an extremely
long journey.
Pete Gudgeon dismounted
his broomstick gratefully (if a little stiffly), and looked around him, trying
to take in his unfamiliar surroundings: the long, wide landing strips that
stretched out before and behind him, the multicoloured luminous windsock
floating beside them, the noisy and bustling city below. The Flybynight
Broomstick port had been established on the top of an unplottable tower on one
of the islands overlooking the harbour, (ironically not far from its Muggle
equivalent) and the lights of the city spread out to the north of them in a web
of interlocking lines like the grids and contours of a living map.
"Sir!" A
Broomstick Port official, dressed in royal blue robes covered in reflective
stripes, waved him hastily away from the landing strip, and when he glanced up
he saw another broomstick already coming in to land. He moved hurriedly out of
its path, feeling dazed and somewhat bewildered by the sheer size of the city
below him, wondering how he was ever going to find his way about.
The official ushered
him towards the edge of the runways, where a small crowd of people stood in
knots and groups, and he joined them uncertainly, scanning the crowds for a
familiar face amid the strangers, almost sagging with relief when a small,
smartly-dressed man darted between a group of gossipping witches and a security
troll and came towards him, his face split by a wide grin.
"Pete! How are
you?" The man shook his hand vigourously. "It's been a while, hasn't
it?"
It had been fully three
years since Roy Weston, feature-writer for Toronto's wizarding newspaper, The
Town Scryer, had stayed at Gudgeon's Westmorland hill farm while
researching an article on rural wizardry in Britain. For some reason Weston, a
city boy to the core, had retained a long affection for the Gudgeon family and
their rustic ways and eccentric outlook on life. Why else, for instance, with a
perfectly adequate Portkey service available, would anyone choose to fly
from Appleby to Toronto?
It was an immeasurable
relief to see a familiar face in this strange city and Gudgeon grinned widely.
"Roy! How are you? Gladys and the kids send their love."
"I'm good. How was
your trip?"
"Better than I
expected, actually. I had the wind behind me for the first leg of the journey,
so I've made good time. I expect I'll be a bit saddle-sore for a few days,
though."
"Beats me how you
guys can put yourselves through that sort of thing. Give me a nice safe Portkey
any day, and no worries about cushioning charms or stray bristles. You need to
find a bathroom before we go anywhere?"
Gudgeon laughed.
"Oh no! Find me a cup of tea, and I'll be ready for anything."
* * *
The Flybynight's café
was dimly-lit and dingy, a place where nobody would linger through choice.
Gudgeon's tea was weak and lukewarm with far too much milk; Weston, very
wisely, had ordered coffee instead, a drink which turned out to be merely bad,
rather than appalling.
"Your first time
in Toronto, isn't it?," he asked his guest. "So what do you think?"
Gudgeon smiled, his
face still full of wonder. "I dunno - I've hardly had time to see any of
it yet. I mean, it's all so big. Like London, but huge! Is it all like
this? And where are the farms?"
Weston assured him that
most of Canada was very different indeed to the Golden Horseshoe. Gudgeon, poor
man, could not have looked more out of place in Toronto if he had tried.
Wizarding fashions in Toronto favoured long shimmering robes of midnight blue
or dark green or red, and Gudgeon, in waistcoat and knee-breeches and a long
tweed cloak, might have stepped off another planet. "So how is the farm
doing? Is Tom watching it for you?"
Tom was Pete's elder
brother, and kept the next-door farm with his wife Edith and younger son Davey.
"He said he'd keep an eye out for me. But it's quiet this time of year,
and now our Hetty's old enough to mind the farm I can leave most things to her
and Gladys for a bit. But I don't like to leave the farm for long, you know.
Don't suppose I'd be here now if Dicky hadn't moved here. You remember Dicky,
don't you? Tom's eldest lad."
"Of course I do!
I've run into him several times since I've been here." He took his pipe
out of his mouth and took a sip of the coffee. "He had a bit of trouble
settling in at first, but he's really found his bearings now, especially after
he switched positions to Keeper - you'd think he'd been doing it all his life.
He's got quite a following now, especially among the witches."
"Well, so long as
he's happy." Gudgeon suppressed a sigh. "What happened to the Appleby
Arrows really knocked him for six, y'know. We was all very worried about him."
Weston looked a trifle
awkward at this. "Ah, well. I, uh, never discovered quite what did happen.
Dicky's doesn't mention it, and nobody likes to ask."
"No? Well, there's
no secret about it. Dicky joined the Appleby Arrows straight from school, as a
reserve player. They're based not so far from us, so he could still come back
and help his dad and me come lambing time. He made the main team about four
years later, about the time that the Arrows started winning the league. But
that's by-the-bye." He took another sip of the tea and grimaced. "People
drink this stuff here? S'pose they must do. Anyway, about a year ago,
I don't know why but, ah, He Who Must Not Be Named started to take an interest
in the team. Games started being sabotaged and one of the chasers was
kidnapped, and a month later the Death Eaters stormed their headquarters just
outside Appleby. Only two of the team survived: Tom's lad Dicky and a Chaser,
Tarquin Boot."
Another sigh, another
sip of the disgusting tea. "Boot's paralysed from the neck down now --
he'll never walk again, much less play Quidditch. How Dicky survived I'll never
know, but he was in a pretty bad way. They'd tortured him -- a lot -- and then
left him for dead."
"A bad
business," Weston said softly. Gudgeon was staring unseeing down at his
teacup, and it was a few seconds before he continued.
"Well, he made a
full recovery, did Dicky, but he was never quite the same after. Went very
quiet -- kinda withdrawn. We was hoping the transfer to Canada might take him
out of his shell a bit. Change of scene, y'know. He was always such a chatty
lad before it all went rotten. He and his brother Davey - they could talk for
England, the pair of them."
A sullen-looking
waitress with spiky ginger hair approached their table. "We're closing
now," she said, in a bored, singsong voice.
Weston glanced towards
Gudgeon. "Let's go," he said. "It's not so far to my place.
There's an apparition point about twenty yards from my front door."
"Well ... could we
bob round and see Dicky this evening, do you think? He's not expecting me 'til
tomorrow, and I thought it would be a nice surprise for him."
Weston marvelled for a
moment at Gudgeon's seemingly inexhaustible stamina. "Oh, it will
be," he said. "He'll be delighted to see you, I'm sure."
* * *
"This is it. Savoy
Yard, Sultan Street."
Sultan Street, and its
fellow, Sultana Street, formed the heart of the Wizarding quarter of Toronto,
and Savoy Yard proved to be a very smart address indeed. It was an ornate
apartment block fifteen storeys high, the stonework wrought in Baroque arches and
Corinthian columns. A thick iron portcullis was set in the arched gateway, and
when Weston and Gudgeon approached it, it glided up silently to admit them.
Gudgeon hung back, daunted, but Weston walked straight in, nodding casually to
the goblin who stood, sentry-like, just beyond it.
"Roy Weston and
Peter Gudgeon to see Dicky Gudgeon," he told it. "Is he in?"
"Certainly, sir.
That'll be Number 12. Up one flight of stairs and third on the left."
They climbed the stone
stairs and Weston led the way down the torch-lit corridor to an arched door at
the end. A cast-iron number 12 was affixed to it, and it glowed blue when
Weston pulled the bell rope which hung to the side of the door. The two men
listened for a few seconds to the heavy footsteps on the other side of the
door, and then it was opened.
The man who stood in
the doorway was in his thirties, tall and muscular, though slightly less
heavily built than Gudgeon. His hair and beard were dark brown; the eyes a
bright sapphire blue.
Pete Gudgeon stepped
forward eagerly and grabbed his arm. "Dicky!" he exclaimed
affectionately, "How ye doing?" And then he stopped abruptly as his
brain caught up with what his eyes were telling him. "Hang on! You're not
-- "
"Obliviate."
The spell caught both
men in its blast and they stood there slack-faced for a moment. But the first
spell was followed by another. "Confundio," the man said
carefully. He thought for a moment, his wand poised, and then began to speak
softly to his companions. "I am Dicky Gudgeon. No doubt about my
identity will occur to you at any point. If I do anything unusual or
uncharacteristic you will not notice it or attribute any importance to
it."
He lowered his wand and
sighed. "Let's try that again, shall we?" he asked softly.
* * *
At least they had gone
now.
The man calling himself
'Dicky Gudgeon' sank gratefully into a plush leather armchair and breathed a
heartfelt sigh of relief.
It hadn't been his
choice -- would never have been his choice -- but that was irrelevant. He was
not in the habit of disobeying the Dark Lord. It was an honour, he supposed, in
its way, a sign that he was trusted, and the least he could do was fulfill his
duties well. After all, another few days and he'd be finished here. Back in
England, and out of disguise.
As usual after a close
shave his mind flew instinctively back to how it had all begun. That unexpected
summons in the small hours of the morning to a bare hillside somewhere in
Westmorland where his master had awaited him. He'd answered the summons as
quickly as possible, slightly nervous because of the lateness of the hour.
Summonses in the small hours usually indicated severe punishment.
But instead all he had
found was the Dark Lord and three of his servants on the mountain, and with
them a fourth man -- a prisoner. The Appleby Arrows Beater Dicky Gudgeon,
unconscious and badly wounded.
They'd had him take the
mask and hood off, and he had complied, well aware that such an order usually
preceded execution. No such act had been forthcoming. They had merely stood
there, watching him closely.
"You see?"
one of them had said. "Almost identical. Put ten years on him and darken
that ridiculous straw-coloured hair, and he'd fool almost anybody."
"Not so
fast," the Dark Lord had said, and then proceeded to fire a string of questions
at him.
"Our prisoner here
-- do you recognise him?"<
He'd nodded.
"Dicky Gudgeon. Beater for the Appleby Arrows."
"Do you know him?"
"By reputation.
I've seen him play."
"You play
yourself, I believe. As Reserve Keeper for the Wimborne Wasps, they tell me.
Have you ever played against him?"
"No. Never."
"Ever met him
socially?"
"No."
"What about the
family? Know any of them?"
"No." A
memory intruded. "Yes. Davey Gudgeon was at Hogwarts when I was. Graduated
at the end of my first year. I didn't know him."
"Very well,"
the Dark Lord had told him, apparently satisfied, and then surveyed him in
silence for a few seconds before continuing. "We have a job for you. A
very special undercover job. As from tonight, you will become
Gudgeon. You will take his place immediately, as the sole survivor of the
massacre that cost your teammates' their lives."
He had opened his mouth
to protest at this, but with an immense effort of will shut it again and said
nothing. The Dark Lord stared at him, and there was unmistakable amusement in
the burning red eyes.
"You need have no
fears - you will run little risk of detection. Gudgeon is due to transfer to
Toronto in just four weeks' time, and once you are overseas your safety is
virtually assured. In the meantime ... we shall make sure that his family
suspects nothing, of course." How? he had wondered, and then
suppressed the doubt with a twinge of guilt. "You are of course to tell
nobody of this," the Dark Lord continued, "Not your friends or your
family, not even your fellow Death Eaters. Arrangements will be made to explain
your disappearance. This operation is to be conducted in complete secrecy - not
even your mentor is to be told what has become of you."
"What am I going
to do?"
"That is no
concern of yours. You will be told when it becomes necessary for you to know.
In the meantime..." The reptilian eyes had bored into his, and then the
Dark Lord said, quite casually, the very thing that he'd been fearing. "Of
course ... we will have to give you some convincing injuries so that the
substitution is not suspected."
And then, almost as if
conferring a favour, he had raised his wand and proclaimed in a high, clear
voice the single word, "Crucio"...
'Gudgeon' pulled
himself back to the present, suppressing a shudder. They had been very, very
thorough over that part of the job, and he'd been in St Mungo's for
nearly a month, almost until the anticipated date for Dicky Gudgeon's
mid-season transfer to the Toronto Quidditch team, the North York Ninjas.
And that had been that.
He had lived as Dicky Gudgeon ever since, spending his days as a professional
Quidditch player, his free time in ... other work.
There had been no other
contact with the Death Eaters here, of course, except for two: a pair of
middle-aged men calling themselves Tom and Jerry (he was almost certain the
names were false) who came to deliver instructions periodically and then left,
barely saying a word to him. He'd done whatever was asked of him, and then returned
to his quiet life, unpunctuated by summonses from the Dark Lord. The work was
usually simple and mundane, done by stealth and in silence: planting evidence,
and sometimes removing it, the occasional death, usually made to appear
accidental. And of all those tasks, nothing - nothing at all - that revealed
the hand of the Dark Lord behind it.
And now he was nearly
finished here. One last job remained -- one assassination of a figure so
high-profile and powerful that the Canadian defences against the darkness would
be left in tatters. And then it would be back to England.
At last.
What would become of
him then he did not know. Resuming his real identity was out of the question:
they'd faked his death in order to explain his disappearance. Apparently he'd
been found drowned in Poole harbour (Gudgeon's body, he assumed), leaving
behind a letter to his mother and stepfather. Suicide, it seemed, after the
breakup of his relationship with the actress Dido Borgin, who'd recently left
him for another man.
Still, real identity or
no, he'd soon be back on English soil again. Just four more days and one last
job ... and then it would all be over.
Thursday December 11,
1980, 00.30 AM. 4 Shatter Lane, Kew.
Echo Rathbone watched
the door of her flat click shut, and gazed unseeing at it for a moment as she
listened to her lover's steps descending the stairs that led away from her.
The evening had not
gone well. She'd been ill at ease and inattentive - noticeably so, for he had
commented on it twice. The trouble was, the more she'd tried to hide her
unease, to act normally, the more stilted and unnatural her behaviour had
become.
He hadn't asked if
anything was wrong, for which she was immeasurably grateful. She supposed it
would have been nice to know that he cared, but she could hardly have told him
about her sister's letter, could she? Not that she would have aired her petty
fears in front of him even if she could. Rathbones were not supposed to show
weakness.
She wondered fleetingly
what he would have said if she had told him, what his reaction would have been.
"Oh, by the way, my sister's a Death Eater. She thinks I ought to join
too. Do you think I should?" But that wasn't quite true. The letter had
been an ultimatum, not a suggestion.
She nearly laughed at the
absurdity of the suggestion, but the sound died stillborn, as she realised that
she had no idea how he'd react or what he would say. He would be shocked,
surely -- anyone would be. Yes, surely he must be. But there was doubt in her
mind even as she thought it. Would he care? Perhaps he'd just be indifferent,
shrug his shoulders and dismiss it, or possibly angry, at the idea that she
might give her allegiance to somebody else.
She was glad he'd gone.
She was too tense to act normally this evening. It was all she could do to
control the cold panic which sat like a toad in the pit of her stomach. Oh,
she'd known all along that the ultimatum would come eventually, but that hadn't
made the moment any easier.
It wasn't that Echo
didn't believe in the inferiority of Muggles. Of course she did -- who
couldn't? It wasn't even as if she disapproved of the Dark Lord's methods,
which she considered no business of hers. It was the certain conviction that
she would fail -- as she always did -- and fail badly. It was the awareness
that, once again, she would be placing her shortcomings under her sister's
nose, and that, once again, her sister would judge her, and find her wanting.
She sighed and turned
away from the door, padding with bare feet across the cold tiled floor, her
toenails painted a translucent pale pink that matched exactly the silk
dressing-gown she was wearing. She picked up the two wine glasses that stood on
the mahogany coffee table, absently examining their paper-thin bowls. One was
stained slightly with lipstick; the other was unmarked, but a poised drip of
wine at the rim showed the place where her lover's mouth had touched it. She
carried them into the kitchen and placed them in the sink, noting automatically
that the flowers in the vase on the windowsill were getting old and would need
replacing tomorrow. She could have prolonged their lives by magic, but to do so
would have destroyed their scent.
"Why do I do
this?" she asked them aloud. "It only makes me miserable." The
words came out in a pitiable whine, and she grimaced, thinking of her sister.
"But Cissy ..." she used to say, and her sister would snap back at
her: "Stop that noise. What do you want people to think of you? And don't
call me Cissy."
She ran a shallow bowl
of washing-up water and immersed the two glasses into it, wiping them absently
with the dish cloth that hung over the taps. Then she rinsed them carefully,
swilling the water around inside them, and stood them, upended, on the draining
board. She emptied the sink and rinsed it, wiping down the working-surfaces and
placing the empty wine bottle by the waste bin. It could all have been done in
seconds if she had used magic, but she found the mundane chores soothing.
The kitchen was spotless
now, and there was nothing left to be done in there. She left the two glasses
on the draining board and went out, drifting aimlessly into the bedroom, where
she stared down at the rumpled covers of the double bed.
She didn't want to be
alone, not tonight, not here, lying in that big empty bed, dreading the coming
day and the decision she still hadn't made. Suddenly she wished he'd stayed
with her, wished she could have woken up beside him in the morning. But he
never stayed the night, of course. He always left immediately without looking
back, back to his house in the suburbs of Leicester, back to the wife whom he
claimed didn't understand him, and the children he said bored him. In the early
days of their affair, Echo used to dream constantly of waking in the morning to
find him beside her. But what was the point of that? It had never happened, of
course.
She bit her lip, a
childish habit she'd never outgrown, and then stopped awkwardly, remembering
that she'd spoil her lipstick. There was no point in going through all that
again. He couldn't stay the night, she knew that. It was selfish of
her even to expect it.
She pulled the covers
back over the bed again in an unnecessary act of censorship, deliberately
banishing from her mind everything it stood for. Turning her back on the bed
she went into the en suite bathroom. Might as well get ready for bed. She
didn't exactly have anything else to do.
In the bathroom she
stopped before the mirror, examining the girl who faced her, wondering what on
earth he saw in her.
The face that looked
back at her was thin and pale, with light blue eyes and blonde hair, naturally
straight, which she charmed daily into ringlets. It was made up subtly and with
impeccable artistry, the makeup only slightly smudged. It was the family face:
her mother had had it before her; her older sister had it also. But they were
both beautiful, and she -- she was just Echo.
It was, as her sister
had always told her, character that was lacking. Her sister's pallor
always shone like the moon; hers was mere insipidity. Her sister always looked
radiant; she merely looked faded, an insignificant creature with rounded
shoulders and worried eyes.
Ever since she had been
a child, she had been the odd one - a quiet, awkward creature, in the midst of
a powerful, ambitious family. Her parents had eventually written her off, and
then her sister, eight years older than herself, had taken it upon herself to
mould Echo into what a Rathbone should be, but bullying, cajoling, threats --
all had failed. The more she'd been exhorted to be assertive -- to make
something of her life -- the more she had wanted to hide from the world.
She'd always so craved
her sister's respect, and at every obstacle, it seemed, she had failed.
It had been her arrival
at Hogwarts that had doomed her. That fateful day at the Sorting she hadn't
even made it into Slytherin, their ancestors' house for generations. She'd been
put instead into Ravenclaw, according to her sister the spiritual home of the
weak and apathetic. That was when her parents had given up on her, and her
sister had taken up the reins in their stead.
Her sister had already
left Hogwarts and was preparing for her wedding when Echo had started there,
but she had treated her new self-imposed mission like a vocation. Echo had been
grateful for the help -- she still was, of course -- but it hurt to know what a
disappointment she'd always been to her sister. She'd tried hard. She'd even
made friends with some of the Slytherins in her year, but her friends were
still the wrong ones. Frannie Zabini and Amber Pucey were not from the best
families, her sister said. They did not have the right connections.
"Make something of
yourself," her sister had told her, repeatedly. Make what, Echo had always
wondered. Her sister had married well, was renowned as a society beauty; Echo
spent her days as a junior filing clerk at the Arcane Records Office at Kew,
her evenings waiting for her lover. And when she saw her sister she spent all
her time vainly trying to pretend that she was doing what she wanted,
that she was in control and happy, and not merely the helpless victim of her
own weak nature.
She continued to frown
at her reflection in the mirror discontentedly, until it sprang suddenly into
life. "Smile, dear," it chirped at her. "You'll feel better for
it."
It was too late for
that. Echo did not even attempt it, merely turned away and left the bathroom,
wandering disconsolately back into the bedroom and sat down on the bed, her
mind drifting inexorably back to the ultimatum, and the decision that, more
than anything, she did not wish to make.
Yes. No. I will. I
won't.
It all looked
untenable. What choice was there? Join her relatives in the Death Eaters, and
be ridiculed as an inefficient servant of the Dark Lord who only got in because
of her influential family. Or refuse, and lose forever her chance to prove
herself to them.
She knew she ought to
say yes, and to say it willingly. It was sheer cowardice that had made her put
it off for so long, and it was probably cowardice that now made her want to
back out completely now and give up the perpetual futile quest to win her
sister's admiration, to give up the fight forever and just resign herself to
her inadequacy.
It was such an
attractive idea, never again to have to look into her sister's eyes, never to
be weighed in the balance and found wanting. Not to mention not having to do
difficult and dangerous things for a creature reviled by most of the Wizarding
world as the epitome of evil, and risk his wrath as well as her
sister's.
Echo sighed, not liking
at all where her thoughts were leading her. Refusing wasn't really an option,
for all that it seemed so attractive. She'd never have the courage to do it
anyway, not to her sister's face.
She sighed again, ruing
her own cowardice, and turned to her bedside table, opening the secret draw
concealed in its base. It was empty, save for a single narrow strip of
parchment, coiled into a tight roll. She unrolled the parchment carefully and
gazed down at it, looking at the writing without reading it. Her sister's
handwriting was flowing and elegant, the graceful loops and curlicues strangely
at odds with the terseness of the message her sister had sent her:
My dear Echo,
I don't know
what you think you are playing at, but I recommend strongly that you desist. I
urgently need an answer from you and I do not appreciate this perpetual
procrastination of yours. I should not need to tell you that this is important.
I will meet
you next Thursday at the Flying Cat Tea Room in Richmond. Be there at noon, and
have your answer ready.
Your loving
sister,
Friday December 12,
1980, 3.15 AM. An Cruachan, Scotland.
Snape left his workshop
and shut the door quickly behind him, mentally running through his habitual
security routine as he locked and sealed the workshop door.
It was a complex
ritual, involving three keys and seven charm, the words of one of the charms
varying according to the phase of the moon. He normally performed it rapidly,
accurate from long practice, but tonight he was too tired to do it quickly, and
plodded through, stage by stage, muttering the syllables of the charms as he
twisted the three keys in the deceptively simple-looking lock. First a jagged
brass key, then a flat one of dull grey pewter, and finally the largest key, a
complex filigree thing wrought of pale yellow electrum - silver and gold
united. The last key stuck repeatedly in the lock, and it was three long
minutes before it would turn smoothly in the lock to seal the charm.
It was a cold, clear
night. A fleshy segment of waxing moon hung just above the horizon and the
stars shone clear and bright, undimmed by the lights of the remote Muggle
towns. He walked slowly back to the door of the barn, the frosted grass
crunching softly under his feet, the world around him silent and grave. He
could feel the bite of the frosty air against his skin, seeming to tell him
that, yes, he was still alive. Alive on sufferance, perhaps, and living on
borrowed time, but alive nonetheless.
He reached the barn
door and let himself in, igniting the three lamps. Then he sat down in the
wicker armchair, pushing the greasy hair back from his face. He stared for a
moment at the empty fireplace and then, in defiance of his normal habit,
ignited a fire. He seemed to be feeling the cold more these days, and he made a
mental note to check the barn's weatherproofing charms.
He'd spent the evening
in his workshop, bottling and stoppering the new batch of Draught of Living
Death that he'd just completed. In its traditional state it produced a crude,
workable simulation of death, but he'd modified the formula somewhat to make
the deathlike appearance it produced more authentic, and the resultant black
liquid now stood in neat rows of vials in one of his most secure cupboards.
Oh yes! As if he'd be
able to administer it without arousing suspicion! That was just imbecile
naivete. But what other options did he have? There were no known charms to
simulate the effects of the killing curse. That had been the first thing he'd
checked, and not even the most up-to-date charms dictionary listed anything
remotely suitable. As for transfiguration into a corpse, it was simply too
slow, too fiddly and too cumbersome even to be attempted. And what was more,
any more overt means of trying to help his victims would get him killed quicker
than you could say 'Master, I-'
No. There was no point
in going through all that again. He knew he'd checked every possible avenue -
checked it about five times more than was necessary, if the truth be told - and
yet he was painfully aware that his arsenal of defences remained basic and
inadequate. He would need great skill - and not a little luck - to accomplish
anything. And yet all the skill and luck in the universe would be useless if he
lacked the self-mastery to overcome ... other things.
He stared into the
fireplace, where the restless red and gold flames were tracing complex patterns
against the black grate behind, and shivered, in spite of the restless heat
prickling against his hands and face. He had to get some sleep, he told
himself, if he wanted to be alert for tomorrow's raid.
They'd not given him
any details, which meant that the target was important. All he'd been able to
tell Dumbledore (in an anonymous owl sent to an even more anonymous Owl Office
Box) was that the victim was to be Ministry worker, probably living somewhere
near London - which meant it was all down to him to do what he could. After
all, not even Dumbledore could work miracles.
He was anticipating the
raid with a mixture of eagerness and dread. The previous two weeks had been a
strain, simultaneously the longest and the shortest of his life, and the forced
inactivity had come as both blessing and curse. It had given him time to
prepare, of course, and, more importantly, time to regain some measure of his
previous self-possession, but each passing day had grated on him. Two weeks,
and he still had not struck a single blow for Dumbledore. At least if he died
after even a single raid, he would die facing the right direction, having at
least started to pay his debts.
He didn't imagine he
would have long to wait.
It was strange, really,
how life could go on even knowing he was under a death sentence, how everything
was just the same when nothing ought to have been the same again.
The previous day, for
example. It had been a perfectly ordinary day in its way, dull, and reassuring
in its blandness. Most of the morning had been spent in a long and unnecessary
meeting about increasing Skower's market share (a matter of seemingly fanatical
obsession to Skowers' rather maniacal Sales Department), the afternoon spent
running the preliminary QC checks on MacPherson's handwash project, which had
turned out to be a surprisingly effective evil-smelling green jelly. He'd
stayed late to complete the monthly stock-take, and then returned home to work
in his own laboratory on his modified Living Death potion.
All the days had been
like that, in fact: bearable, reassuring almost in their set routines, running
in their set courses like so many trains along so many railway lines, their
routes and their stops pre-ordained by time-hallowed tradition. In daylight
those nightmarish twenty-four hours took on an ethereal, unreal quality like
some half-forgotten fever-dream. Amid the mundane surroundings of Skowers he
could almost believe nothing had ever changed.
And then would follow
the nights, when the trains would leave their tracks behind and blunder
headlong whither they would in the darkness - and he, who was supposedly their
driver, would be powerless to dictate their direction. It was in the nights
that the old demons would come back to him, the love of destruction and the
desire to harm, and the memories that had been their fruit. They haunted him
late into the night as he tried to sleep, torturing and tantalising him in
equal parts, leaving him racked with both revulsion and a yearning that was
almost physical in its intensity. And then, - almost at the point when the
memories and the fantasies became intoxicating in their vividness - then
the guilt would start, crushing him boulder-like beneath its load till it
choked the breath out of him leaving him with no answer to the voices of his
accusers.
How could he ever
cancel out such deeds? How could anyone blot out a past both unforgivable and
unforgettable? It was hopeless, pointless, utterly futile.
Snape put the thought
out of his head. He needed to sleep, if he was to be alert tomorrow night, and
dwelling on his misdeeds wouldn't help. He stood up slowly, his thin face rendered
skull-like by the dancing shadows of the fire and the flickering of the lamps.
He had to risk sleeping some time.
He went through the
preparations mechanically and slowly, without interest or care, like a puppet
whose clockwork had wound down. A bottle of sleeping potion stood on the
windowsill above his bed and he briefly contemplated taking a dose, and then
rejected the idea. He'd come to distrust sleeping potions recently. The
temptation was too great.
He climbed into the bed
and pulled the covers over him. The blankets of the bed were cold and damp, and
he reminded himself again about the weatherproofing charms, running through
them in his mind and pondering the ones most likely to be effective.
The longer he kept his
mind occupied, the longer he could keep control of it. The moment he began to
relax it would take charge of him and subject him to its filthy, degrading
fantasies.
It should never have
been like this. Why did I ever-?
But he knew the answer
to that, not that it helped. The conflicting loyalties that had dogged his
youth had all been severed forever by his father's death - and the betrayals
that had followed it - and he had been cast adrift, an anchorless, rudderless
ship, with neither star nor compass to guide it. When he had graduated from
Hogwarts he had gone out into the world caring for nothing and nobody, with
neither creed nor allegiance to support him.
Most of his former
friends had not bothered to keep in touch (but then nor did I, some
part of his mind reminded him), and even Evan Rosier, who had been perhaps
closer to him than the others, only contacted him infrequently. His job at
Skowers had been mind-numbing - dull and repetitious - and his new colleagues
there disliked him, even those who had at first given him the benefit of the
doubt. As for his family, he'd already severed all contact with them.
And then had come the
day that Travers had first made contact with him. He'd had no particular reason
to listen to him, but then again there'd been no reason not to. He could have
decided either way.
But he hadn't.
Hadn't Potter (damn
him) always predicted he'd come to a bad end? Well, you were perfectly
right, Potter - and much good may it do you.
Potter, of course,
would never even have contemplated talking to Travers - but then Travers would
have recognised Potter for what he was at once, and steered well clear, warned
off by the invisible badge of office that all the Gryffindors seemed to wear on
their souls. If there's one thing I envy you now, Potter, he thought
wearily, it's your virtue, your effortless, natural virtue - and yet you
take it so much for granted you probably don't recognise the protection it
gives you.
But he couldn't get
himself to care what Potter might have thought. He could feel the beginnings of
sleep settling around him, and mentally braced himself for the visions it would
bring with it. Tonight, however, they did not come. Perhaps the weariness kept
them at bay; perhaps the awareness of the following night's impossible task.
But whatever the cause, only a single memory, vivid as the day he had lived it,
came to disturb his rest.
* * *
It's a hot humid day in
August, and Severus is eleven years old. In three weeks he will be leaving home
for the first time, to attend Hogwarts. His mother has taken the three of them
to Diagon Alley to buy school supplies. She's looking very thin and pale, with
long black hair that curls in graceful arcs down her back, and she's wearing
the dark green velvet robe that makes her look like a banshee. Even in summer
she finds England cold.
Nero, who's fifteen,
has gone off to find his friends the moment he arrives in the street, but
mother keeps tight hold of Severus's and Agrippina's hands while she takes them
round the shops, buying the things that Severus will need in his first year at
Hogwarts. Severus doesn't want Agrippina there while he looks at schoolbooks
and is fitted for his first school robes, but she tags along like an annoying
shadow, and mother won't let her out of her sight.
It's towards the end of
the day when they arrive at Ollivanders; for some reason mother has left buying
Severus' first wand until last.
A bell above the door
rings as mother leads them into the shop. It's a dull, doleful sound that
echoes on and on, long after the door has shut behind them. An old man with
creepy silvery eyes is sitting behind the counter, trimming what looks like the
end of a dragon heartstring from a pale unpolished wand. He leaves the work
aside and stands up as he sees them.
- Good afternoon, he
says politely.
- Good afternoon, Mr
Ollivander. It is good to see you again.
- Of course. Madam
Snape, is it not? A birch wand, with a unicorn-hair core, as I recall. To
replace one that was lost when you left Israel.
- As you say. This is
my second son, Severus. He will be starting at Hogwarts in September.
- Ah, yes... I remember
him from your last visit. But he used to have hair like yours, Madam. It is a
shame to straighten it like that.
- His father prefers it
like that.
Mother's voice invites
no further discussion on the subject.
Aggie has left her
mother's side and is carefully exploring the piles of boxes. She seems
unaffected by the heavy silence of the shop as she reads the labels, even takes
one lid off and peeks inside, before going over to the counter to examine the
wand that Mr Ollivander has just been making.
- Dad doesn't like
Sevvie, she announces to the world in general. - Dad thinks Sevvie's a wimp.
Severus mutters
something rude at her and she sticks her tongue out at him. Severus tries to
kick her in the shins, but mother pulls the two of them apart, her mouth set in
a thin line. Mr Ollivander ignores them and picks up a tape measure from the
counter.
- Now, Severus, he
says, - Which is your wand hand?
Severus looks at his
hands, unsure. He uses both equally. He knows there's a special word for it,
but he can't remember it.
- Either.
- His right. He writes
with his right, Mother tells Mr Ollivander.
Severus would rather be
left-handed like mother. He only writes with his right hand because Father insists.
Mr Ollivander starts to
measure his arms and legs, or rather the tape measure starts to measure him. It
moves strangely, like a snake, and Severus watches it, fascinated, until Mr
Ollivander commands it to stop and it drops to the floor, becoming a tape
measure again.
Mr Ollivander hands him
a wand -- birch and phoenix-feather, he says -- and bids him try it. Severus
looks at it doubtfully. It looks and feels very ordinary, but he raises it
obediently -- and it is snatched out of his hand again.
- No, no. Try this one.
Oak and dragon heart-string.
A second time he
scarcely has time to raise it before it is pulled from his fingers again, and a
third and fourth follow it in quick succession. More wands are pulled out for
him to try, so many that Severus loses count of the types and combinations, and
wands and boxes are scattered over Mr Ollivander's tidy workbench.
And then Mr Olivander
pulls a box from near the bottom of a very old and dusty stack near the back of
the room. It doesn't look as though it's been touched for decades.
- Now perhaps ... this
one may work better...
Mr Ollivander seems to
be talking half to himself and he sounds pleased, as though he's just solved a
tricky problem. He draws the wand out and offers it to Severus.
- Cedar and dragon
heart-string. Give it a try.
And this time the
slender strip immediately comes to life under his fingers, with a thin stream
of purple and green sparks.
- Hmmm...
Mr Ollivander doesn't
seem entirely satisfied.
- Perhaps your other
hand-
Severus transfers the
wand to his left hand, glancing at his mother for approval, but her face is
expressionless. The wand feels more comfortable there and he raises it again,
bringing it down in a wide diagonal arc. A fountain of sparks, far brighter and
more abundant than before, flow from the end as he tries it for the second
time.
- Beautiful, his mother
says. - A lovely wand.
- Is that all? Aggie
asks, rolling her eyes ridiculously.
Mr Ollivander takes the
wand from his hand and examines it. Severus peers up at it too. The cedar wood
is reddish in colour and slightly flexible, the heart-string at its core
invisible.
- Ah yes ... a most
distinctive wand. The cedar was an import I picked up from the Holy Land decades
back. Very little of it was useable, but it produced some very fine wands,
powerful in their way. This wand will be excellent for healing spells and
hexes.
Severus looks at it,
wondering how Mr Ollivander can tell, but Mr Ollivander is still speaking, in
an absent, remote voice, as though he's talking to himself.
- Healing spells and
hexes: two opposed branches of magic. It's a unique combination -- the two
rarely mix. I wonder which you will choose, young Severus.
- Hexes, if he has any
sense. Healing spells are for wimps, Agrippina interrupts, but Mr Ollivander is
nose-to-nose with Severus again, and Severus is trying to stop himself backing
away.
- Hexing and healing,
healing and hexing. The choice isn't as easy as it seems - such choices seldom
are. I hope you choose wisely, Severus Snape.
PERPETRATOR'S NOTE:
I know, I know - it
took a while.
These two episodes, I'm
afraid, come to you without benefit of beta. Earthwalk has been net.absent for
about two months, so I bring these to you untouched by human hand. (I
don't count.)
Earthwalk, as everybody
reading this ought to know, is by way of being one of the finest authors on
ff.net, and the writer of the definitive Snapefic, I was right.
Both as a writer and as a beta she's had a massive influence on this fic, &
for both of which I am extremely grateful. Like many others, I'm rather worried
about her, as it's a long time for an unexpected net.absence, & I would
very much like to know she's okay.
The only part of this
that has been beta-ed at all is the Toronto sequence at the start of LRD6,
which the magnificent Margot has kindly checked for Toronto-cred for me. All
hail to her. I also owe thanks to Sphinx and CLS for intelligent conversations
and moral support while I've been writing this. They're both great authors, and
CLS in particular is drastically under-reviewed.
As usual, the Nocturnes
sequence has all manner of allusions chucked in, most of which seemed like a
good idea at the time (Ellis Bell, anybody?). There's no prizes for spotting them,
but a few points deserve particular mention.
Trident (Lucrezia's
manticore) is not named after the missile, but is merely a reference to the
fact that manticores are often depicted with three rows of teeth.
The character of Echo
sprang, fully-formed, into my head, as a result of listening to the great Nina
Simone singing 'The Other Woman'. Since then she has refused to leave it and
has insinuated herself right into the centre of this fic. This would be fine,
except that she irritates the hell out of me. Nobody that weak-willed
should be allowed to hijack my plot so completely. Anyway, if she suddenly dies
horribly two eps from now you'll know I've finally got sick of her and ditched
her.
Left-handedness, and to
some extent, ambidextrousness, are both traits mentioned frequently in the
Bible with the tribe of Benjamin. Whether it still holds true I doubt very
much. More to the point, it's an attempt to reconcile the fact that the books
imply Snape is right-handed, but apparently one of the American illustrations
portrays him as left-handed. (I know, I could just have ignored the
illustration anyway, especially as I've never even seen it.)
Right, before you all
go and review (hint, hint), I have a bijou announcementette to make to y'all.
Basically there is now a Yahoo Group for LRD and a number of other fics. It's
run by Flourish (yes, that Flourish), and it's called HP_Angel. The
other fics are Flourish's An Angel Came to Babylon (the main fic,
for which the list is named), Nemesis's The Best of Friends, and
Morsus Crustum's The Solitaire Mystery. Should anyone feel an
unaccountable urge to join it, (go on, I know you want to), there's the usual
blank e-mail to [email protected],
or the site is at http://groups.yahoo.com/groups/HP_Angel.
Chapter 7 is entitled
'Irresistible Force, Immovable Object', and we'll get to see two rather
different Death Eater raids taking place.