Author's Note: There are two
consistent "bad guys" in Harry Potter's daily life at Hogwarts:
Malfoy and Snape. But there is a difference in how JK Rowling portrays them.
There are subtle hints, especially in books 3 and 4 that there are reasons why
Snape is the way he is. Certainly the people at Hogwarts must have their
opinions and suspicions. Minerva McGonagall for instance...
"And Yet He Flinched"
I know that I am impatient with him
at times, but I cannot help myself.
I suppose you might say that
impatience is a reasonable and understandable reaction when dealing with
Severus, but I cannot help but regret it.
I see the tense angular lines of
his back as he walks away and I think of that tense little boy who arrived here
at age 11 concealing his terror behind a sour mask. I chalked his disposition
up to his family, of whom "sour disposition" would be only a mild
description.
I remember that morning in First
Year Transfiguration with an immediacy that makes it seem like it happened
yesterday instead of so long ago. I was walking up and down the aisles of my
classroom watching the class attempting to turn beetles into coat buttons.
Severus was trying very hard, as he always did. He always seemed desperate to
get it right. As I came up behind him, something in the hunch of his shoulders
drew me to him. Without thought, as I looked to see how he was progressing, I
lightly placed my hand on his shoulder.
I don't know why I did that. I
am not a demonstrative person, after all. Now I wonder if I wasn't trying to
smooth away whatever I sensed caused the desperate, tense hunch of his
shoulders. Then again, I may simply have overbalanced for a brief moment.
It was the lightest of touches,
barely qualifying as human contact. And yet he flinched. Sharply and
instinctively he flinched away from the contact and, before he could think to
cover up his reaction he drew in his breath and every muscle in his body grew
taut with what I recognized as fear.
You don't have to be an teacher
of long experience to know there is something wrong in that and to reason out
what it must be. I recognized Severus' reaction for what it was, what it meant.
For you see, I knew I was not the one of whom he was afraid. Severus was afraid
of someone who wasn't in the room, at least not physically.
He regained his composure so
quickly that no one, save I, had a chance to notice anything. Severus' usual
sour glower once again closed over his face. But for the briefest of moments it
had slipped and I was distressed to see what was behind it.
Of course I went to the
headmaster and told him what I saw, what I suspected. Albus told me he would
speak to the boy and he did. But when I was called back into Dumbledore's
office the news was not what I wanted to hear.
"I'm sorry, Minerva, but
young Severus chose not to confide in me."
"What do you mean, Albus?
Are you saying he didn't want to talk about it?"
"Well, yes. But more than
that, he emphatically denied there is anything wrong."
"And you believed
him?"
"No, I most certainly did
not. But without a complaint from the boy there is very little we can do."
"You don't mean to tell me
you intend to do nothing?!"
Dumbledore sighed heavily and
his eyes held a hint of despair Minerva had rarely seen.
"At present, nothing is all
we can do."
"Albus! You can't seriously
tell me you intend to let the boy return to his home? We can't do that... not
knowing what we know... we can't!"
"Ah, but that is just the
thing, Minerva," Dumbledore sighed, "We don't KNOW anything from a
factual standpoint. All we know is that the boy flinched."
"I know. I know in my gut
with a certainly I'd wager against almost anything."
Dumbledore was nodding slowly,
"That is true for me as well. Frankly, Minerva, I'd feel better trusting
your instincts that some persons' facts, but your gut is not acceptable
evidence for the Magical Law Enforcement Squad nor is it any good in the eyes
of the Council of Magical law. Besides," he added in a sad tone, "If
we do this against the boy's will and wishes it will likely do no good. In
fact, it may do a great deal of harm as he is likely to regard it as a
betrayal. Aside from this, since such action could not possibly be successful
at this time it would only serve to further enrage those we would like to
protect him from but cannot. We would only make it much worse. Until Severus is
ready to tell us the truth there is very little we can do."
He was right, of course. I knew
that. I just didn't want him to be right.
Our only hope was for Severus to
trust us and that wasn't likely to happen. He, after all, wasn't letting anyone
past his very well defended battlements.
Of course, Albus and I both
continued to be as kind as we could to him. We tried to let him know that we
were available to him, but it seemed to do little good.
Over the next several years I
occasionally thought I saw a glimpse of something... trust? need? When he was
sixteen I thought that he might finally be toying with the idea of at least
opening up to one of us.
But whatever door might have
opened given time was slammed shut and locked by that infernally stupid bloody
irresponsible "prank." It's true that Sirius Black's appalling lack
of judgement surely arose from demons of his own... but at sixteen I think we
could have expected better.
Severus never understood
Dumbledore's reaction, never. To this day I think he trusts Dumbledore more
than he has ever trusted anyone but he still holds himself back even from
him... and I can see in his face, in the set of his body, that it troubles him
still.
"But he tried to kill me,
they all did!"
He kept saying it over and
again. He wouldn't, couldn't hear Dumbledore's reasoned response that Lupin
could not have been in on it, that Potter was likely not in on it either, and
that Black had been a foolish, reckless, irresponsible idiot but that he meant
no harm.
I could see it on his face
without him speaking it aloud, he tried to kill me and it doesn't matter to
you. It was there, right before his face closed off and settled into that
pinched sour expression from which it has rarely wavered since.
I would gladly have expelled
Black upon the spot, but Severus never saw that. He was too stunned, I think,
by what he perceived as Dumbledore's betrayal and soon it was too late to try
and talk to him about it. All too soon it was simply "too late" in
general.
I thought we'd lost him forever.
How hard it was for him to come
back to us - but so much worse not to.
For a short time afterward,
there were chinks in his battered defenses.
One afternoon, when news came of
yet another person sent to Azkaban for using the Cruciatus Curse, he lost
himself for a moment, letting his guard down.
He spoke to me, but never looked
at me, he just kept his eyes fixed on the window.
"It doesn't leave any marks
you know, the Cruciatus," he said.
"I know." I said
gently. I thought he must be thinking of having used the curse. There was a
silence that felt longer than it actually was. Then he spoke again, picking up
his thread as if I hadn't spoken at all.
"...not even on
children."
I looked at him then, expecting
to see a terrible guilt that he must have felt had he been forced to use the
curse on a child, on children. But guilt is not what I saw.
There was no guilt there only
memory. I could see the memories were not of what he had done, but of what he
had endured. Instinctively I reached out to touch his arm in sympathy -
And he flinched.