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Chapter thirty three

The Prince’s Tale

Harry remained kneeling at Snape’s side, simply staring down at him, until quite
suddenly a high, cold voice spoke so close to them that Harry jumped on his feet, the
flask gripped tightly in his hands, thinking that Voldemort had reentered the room.
Voldemort’s voice reverberated from the walls and floor, and Harry realized that
he was talking to Hogwarts and to all the surrounding area, that the residents of
Hogsmeade and all those still fighting in the castle would hear him as clearly as if he
stood beside them, his breath on the back of their necks, a deathblow away.
“You have fought,” said the high, cold voice, “valiantly. Lord Voldemort knows
how to value bravery.
“Yet you have sustained heavy losses. If you continue to resist me, you will all
die, one by one. I do not wish this to happen. Every drop of magical blood spilled is a
loss and a waste.
“Lord Voldemort is merciful. I command my forces to retreat immediately.
“You have one hour. Dispose of your dead with dignity. Treat your injured.
“I speak now, Harry Potter, directly to you. You have permitted your friends to
die for you rather than face me yourself. I shall wait for one hour in the Forbidden Forest.
If, at the end of that hour, you have not come to me, have not given yourself up, then
battle recommences. This time, I shall enter the fray myself, Harry Potter, and I shall find
you, and I shall punish every last man, woman, and child who has tried to conceal you
from me. One hour.”
Both Ron and Hermione shook their heads frantically, looking at Harry.
“Don’t listen to him,” said Ron.
“It’ll be all right,” said Hermione wildly. “Let’s – let’s get back to the castle, if
he’s gone to the forest we’ll need to think of a new plan – ”
She glanced at Snape’s body, then hurried back to the tunnel entrance. Ron
followed her. Harry gathered up the Invisibility Cloak, then looked down at Snape. He
did not know what to feel, except shock at the way Snape had been killed, and the reason
for which it had been done…
They crawled back through the tunnel, none of them talking, and Harry wondered
whether Ron and Hermione could still hear Voldemort ringing in their heads as he could.
You have permitted your friends to die for you rather than face me yourself. I
shall wait for one hour in the Forbidden Forest…One hour…
Small bundles seemed to litter the lawn at the front of the castle (?). It could only
be an hour or so from dawn, yet it was pitch-black. The three of them hurried toward the
stone steps. A lone dog, the size of a small boat, lay abandoned in front of them. There
was no other sign of Grawp or of his attacker.
The castle was unnaturally silent. There were no flashes of light now, no bangs or
screams or shouts. The flagstones of the deserted entrance hall were stained with blood.
Emeralds were still scattered all over the floor, along with pieces of marble and splintered
wood. Part of the banisters had been blown away.
“Where is everyone?” whispered Hermione.
Ron led the way to the Great Hall. Harry stopped in the doorway.
The House tables were gone and the room was crowded. The survivors stood in
groups, their arms around each other’s necks. The injured were being treated upon the
raised platform by Madam Pomfrey and a group of helpers. Firenze was amongst the
injured; his flank poured blood and he shook where he lay, unable to stand.
The dead lay in a row in the middle of the Hall. Harry could not see Fred’s body,
because his family surrounded him. George was kneeling at his head; Mrs. Weasley was
lying across Fred’s chest, her body shaking. Mr. Weasley stroking her hair while tears
cascaded down his cheeks.
Without a word to Harry, Ron and Hermione walked away. Harry saw Hermione
approach Ginny, whose face was swollen and blotchy, and hug her. Ron joined Bill, Fleur,
and Percy, who flung an arm around Ron’s shoulders. As Ginny and Hermione moved
closer to the rest of the family, Harry had a clear view of the bodies lying next to Fred.
Remus and Tonks, pale and still and peaceful-looking, apparently asleep beneath the dark,
enchanted ceiling.
The Great Hall seemed to fly away, become smaller, shrink, as Harry reeled
backward from the doorway. He could not draw breath. He could not bear to look at any
of the other bodies, to see who else had died for him. He could not bear to join the
Weasleys, could not look into their eyes, when if he had given himself up in the first
place, Fred might never have died…
He turned away and ran up the marble staircase. Lupin, Tonks… He yearned not
to feel… He wished he could rip out his heart, his innards, everything that was screaming
inside him…
The castle was completely empty; even the ghosts seemed to have joined the mass
mourning in the Great Hall. Harry ran without stopping, clutching the crystal flask of
Snape’s last thoughts, and he did not slow down until he reached the stone gargoyle
guarding the headmaster’s office.
“Password?”
“Dumbledore!” said Harry without thinking, because it was he whom he yearned
to see, and to his surprise the gargoyle slid aside revealing the spiral staircase behind.
But when Harry burst into the circular office he found a change. The portraits that
hung all around the walls were empty. Not a single headmaster or headmistress remained
to see him; all, it seemed, had flitted away, charging through the paintings that lined the
castle so that they could have a clear view of what was going on.
Harry glanced hopelessly at Dumbledore’s deserted frame, which hung directly
behind the headmaster’s chair, then turned his back on it. The stone Pensieve lay in the
cabinet where it had always been. Harry heaved it onto the desk and poured Snape’s
memories into the wide basin with its runic markings around the edge. To escape into
someone else’s head would be a blessed relief… Nothing that even Snape had left him
could be worse than his own thoughts. The memories swirled, silver white and strange,
and without hesitating, with a feeling of reckless abandonment, as though this would
assuage his torturing grief, Harry dived.
He fell headlong into sunlight, and his feet found warm ground. When he
straightened up, he saw that he was in a nearly deserted playground. A single huge
chimney dominated the distant skyline. Two girls were swinging backward and forward,
and a skinny boy was watching them from behind a clump of bushes. His black hair was
overlong and his clothes were so mismatched that it looked deliberate: too short jeans, a
shabby, overlarge coat that might have belonged to a grown man, an odd smocklike shirt.
Harry moved closer to the boy. Snape looked no more than nine or ten years old,
sallow, small, stringy. There was undisguised greed in his thin face as he watched the
younger of the two girls swinging higher and higher than her sister.
“Lily, don’t do it!” shrieked the elder of the two.
But the girl had let go of the swing at the very height of its arc and flown into the
air, quite literally flown, launched herself skyward with a great shout of laughter, and
instead of crumpling on the playground asphalt, she soared like a trapeze artist through
the air, staying up far too long, landing far too lightly.
“Mummy told you not to!”
Petunia stopped her swing by dragging the heels of her sandals on the ground,
making a crunching, grinding sound, then leapt up, hands on hips.
“Mummy said you weren’t allowed, Lily!”
“But I’m fine,” said Lily, still giggling. “Tuney, look at this. Watch what I can
do.”
Petunia glanced around. The playground was deserted apart from themselves and,
though the girls did not know it, Snape. Lily had picked up a fallen flower from the bush
behind which Snape lurked. Petunia advanced, evidently torn between curiosity and
disapproval. Lily waited until Petunia was near enough to have a clear view, then held
out her palm. The flower sat there, opening and closing its petals, like some bizarre,
many-lipped oyster.
“Stop it!” shrieked Petunia.
“It’s not hurting you,” said Lily, but she closed her hand on the blossom and
threw it back to the ground.
“It’s not right,” said Petunia, but her eyes had followed the flower’s flight to the
ground and lingered upon it. “How do you do it?” she added, and there was definite
longing in her voice.
“It’s obvious, isn’t it?” Snape could no longer contain himself, but had jumped
out from behind the bushes. Petunia shrieked and ran backward toward the swings, but
Lily, though clearly startled, remained where she was. Snape seemed to regret his
appearance. A dull flush of color mounted the sallow cheeks as he looked at Lily.
“What’s obvious?” asked Lily.
Snape had an air of nervous excitement. With a glance at the distant Petunia, now
hovering beside the swings, he lowered his voice and said, “I know what you are.”
“What do you mean?”
“You’re…you’re a witch,” whispered Snape.
She looked affronted.
“That’s not a very nice thing to say to somebody!”
She turned, nose in the air, and marched off toward her sister.
“No!” said Snape. He was highly colored now, and Harry wondered why he did
not take off the ridiculously large coat, unless it was because he did not want to reveal the
smock beneath it. He flapped after the girls, looking ludicrously batlike, like his older self.
The sisters considered him, united in disapproval, both holding on to one of the
swing poles, as though it was the safe place in tag.
“You are,” said Snape to Lily. “You are a witch. I’ve been watching you for a
while. But there’s nothing wrong with that. My mum’s one, and I’m a wizard.”
Petunia’s laugh was like cold water.
“Wizard!” she shrieked, her courage returned now that she had recovered from
the shock of his unexpected appearance. “I know who you are. You’re that Snape boy!
They live down Spinner’s End by the river,” she told Lily, and it was evident from her
tone that she considered the address a poor recommendation. “Why have you been spying
on us?”
“Haven’t been spying,” said Snape, hot and uncomfortable and dirty-haired in the
bright sunlight. “Wouldn’t spy on you, anyway,” he added spitefully, “you’re a Muggle.”
Though Petunia evidently did not understand the word, she could hardly mistake
the tone.
“Lily, come on, we’re leaving!” she said shrilly. Lily obeyed her sister at once,
glaring at Snape as she left. He stood watching them as they marched through the
playground gate, and Harry, the only one left to observe him, recognized Snape’s bitter
disappointment, and understood that Snape had been planning this moment for a while,
and that it had all gone wrong…
The scene dissolved, and before Harry knew it, re-formed around him. He was
now in a small thicket of trees. He could see a sunlit river glittering through their trunks.
The shadows cast by the trees made a basin of cool green shade. Two children sat facing
each other, cross-legged on the ground. Snape had removed his coat now; his odd smock
looked less pecular in the half light.
“…and the Ministry can punish you if you do magic outside school, you get
letters.”
“But I have done magic outside school!”
“We’re all right. We haven’t got wands yet. They let you off when you’re a kid
and you can’t help it. But once you’re eleven,” he nodded importantly, “and they start
training you, then you’ve got to go careful.”
There was a little silence. Lily had picked up a fallen twig and twirled it in the air,
and Harry knew that she was imagining sparks trailing from it. Then she dropped the twig,
leaned in toward the boy, and said, “It is real, isn’t it? It’s not a joke? Petunia says you’re
lying to me. Petunia says there isn’t a Hogwarts. It is real, isn’t it?”
“It’s real for us,” said Snape. “Not for her. But we’ll get the letter, you and me.”
“Really?” whispered Lily.
“Definitely,” said Snape, and even with his poorly cut hair and his odd clothes, he
struck an oddly impressive figure sprawled in front of her, brimful of confidence in his
destiny.
“And will it really come by owl?” Lily whispered.
“Normally,” said Snape. “But you’re Muggle-born, so someone from the school
will have to come and explain to your parents.”
“Does it make a difference, being Muggle-born?”
Snape hesitated. His black eyes, eager in the greenish gloom, moved over the pale
face, the dark red hair.
“No,” he said. “It doesn’t make any difference.”
“Good,” said Lily, relaxing. It was clear that she had been worrying.
“You’ve got loads of magic,” said Snape. “I saw that. All the time I was watching
you…”
His voice trailed away; she was not listening, but had stretched out on the leafy
ground and was looking up at the canopy of leaves overhead. He watched her as greedily
as he had watched her in the playground.
“How are things at your house?” Lily asked.
A little crease appeared between his eyes.
“Fine,” he said.
“They’re not arguing anymore?”
“Oh yes, they’re arguing,” said Snape. He picked up a fistful of leaves and began
tearing them apart, apparently unaware of what he was doing. “But it won’t be that long
and I’ll be gone.”
“Doesn’t your dad like magic?”
“He doesn’t like anything, much,” said Snape.
“Severus?”
A little smile twisted Snape’s mouth when she said his name.
“Yeah?”
“Tell me about the dementors again.”
“What d’you want to know about them for?”
“If I use magic outside school – ”
“They wouldn’t give you to the dementors for that! Dementors are for people who
do really bad stuff. They guard the wizard prison, Azkaban. You’re not going to end up
in Azkaban, you’re too – ”
He turned red again and shredded more leaves. Then a small rustling noise behind
Harry made him turn: Petunia, hiding behind a tree, had lost her footing.
“Tuney!” said Lily, surprise and welcome in her voice, but Snape had jumped to
his feet.
“Who’s spying now?” he shouted. “What d’you want?”
Petunia was breathless, alarmed at being caught. Harry could see her struggling
for something hurtful to say.
“What is that you’re wearing, anyway?” she said, pointing at Snape’s chest.
“Your mum’s blouse?”
There was a crack. A branch over Petunia’s head had fallen. Lily screamed. The
branch caught Petunia on the shoulder, and she staggered backward and burst into tears.
“Tuney!”
But Petunia was running away. Lily rounded on Snape.
“Did you make that happen?”
“No.” He looked both defiant and scared.
“You did!” She was backing away from him. “You did! You hurt her!”
“No – no, I didn’t!”
But the lie did not convince Lily. After one last burning look, she ran from the
little thicket, off after her sister, and Snape looked miserable and confused…
And the scene re-formed. Harry looked around. He was on platform nine and
three quarters, and Snape stood beside him, slightly hunched, next to a thin, sallow-faced,
sour-looking woman who greatly resembled him. Snape was staring at a family of four a
short distance away. The two girls stood a little apart from their parents. Lily seemed to
be pleading with her sister. Harry moved closer to listen.
“…I’m sorry, Tuney, I’m sorry! Listen – ” She caught her sister’s hand and held
tight to it, even though Petunia tried to pull it away. “Maybe once I’m there – no, listen,
Tuney! Maybe once I’m there, I’ll be able to go to Professor Dumbledore and persuade
him to change his mind!”
“I don’t – want – to – go!” said Petunia, and she dragged her hand back out of her
sister’s grasp. “You think I want to go to some stupid castle and learn to be a – a…”
Her pale eyes roved over the platform, over the cats mewling in their owners’
arms, over the owls, fluttering and hooting at each other in cages, over the students, some
already in their long black robes, loading trunks onto the scarlet steam engine or else
greeting one another with glad cries after a summer apart.
“ – you think I want to be a – a freak?”
Lily’s eyes filled with tears as Petunia succeeded in tugging her hand away.
“I’m not a freak,” said Lily. “That’s a horrible thing to say.”
“That’s where you’re going,” said Petunia with relish. “A special school for
freaks. You and that Snape boy…weirdos, that’s what you two are. It’s good you’re
being separated from normal people. It’s for our safety.”
Lily glanced toward her parents, who were looking around the platform with an
air of wholehearted enjoyment, drinking in the scene. Then she looked back at her sister,
and her voice was low and fierce.
“You didn’t think it was such a freak’s school when you wrote to the headmaster
and begged him to take you.”
Petunia turned scarlet.
“Beg? I didn’t beg!”
“I saw his reply. It was very kind.”
“You shouldn’t have read – ” whispered Petunia, “that was my private – how
could you – ?”
Lily gave herself away by half-glancing toward where Snape stood nearby.
Petunia gasped.
“That boy found it! You and that boy have been sneaking in my room!”
“No – not sneaking – ” Now Lily was on the defensive. “Severus saw the
envelope, and he couldn’t believe a Muggle could have contacted Hogwarts, that’s all!
He says there must be wizards working undercover in the postal service who take care of
– ”
“Apparently wizards poke their noses in everywhere!” said Petunia, now as pale
as she had been flushed. “Freak!” she spat at her sister, and she flounced off to where her
parents stood…
The scene dissolved again. Snape was hurrying along the corridor of the
Hogwarts Express as it clattered through the countryside. He had already changed into his
school robes, had perhaps taken the first opportunity to take off his dreadful Muggle
clothes. At last he stopped, outside a compartment in which a group of rowdy boys were
talking. Hunched in a corner seat beside the window was Lily, her face pressed against
the windowpane.
Snape slid open the compartment door and sat down opposite Lily. She glanced at
him and then looked back out of the window. She had been crying.
“I don’t want to talk to you,” she said in a constricted voice.
“Why not?”
“Tuney h-hates me. Because we saw that letter from Dumbledore.”
“So what?”
She threw him a look of deep dislike.
“So she’s my sister!”
“She’s only a – ” He caught himself quickly; Lily, too busy trying to wipe her
eyes without being noticed, did not hear him.
“But we’re going!” he said, unable to suppress the exhilaration in his voice. “This
is it! We’re off to Hogwarts!”
She nodded, mopping her eyes, but in spite of herself, she half smiled.
“You’d better be in Slytherin,” said Snape, encouraged that she had brightened a
little.
“Slytherin?”
One of the boys sharing the compartment, who had shown no interest at all in Lily
or Snape until that point, looked around at the word, and Harry, whose attention had been
focused entirely on the two beside the window, saw his father: slight, black-haired like
Snape, but with that indefinable air of having been well-cared-for, even adored, that
Snape so conspicuously lacked.
“Who wants to be in Slytherin? I think I’d leave, wouldn’t you?” James asked the
boy lounging on the seats opposite him, and with a jolt, Harry realized that it was Sirius.
Sirius did not smile.
“My whole family have been in Slytherin,” he said.
“Blimey,” said James, “and I thought you seemed all right!”
Sirius grinned.
“Maybe I’ll break the tradition. Where are you heading, if you’ve got the choice?”
James lifted an invisible sword.
“‘Gryffindor, where dwell the brave at heart!’ Like my dad.”
Snape made a small, disparaging noise. James turned on him.
“Got a problem with that?”
“No,” said Snape, though his slight sneer said otherwise. “If you’d rather be
brawny than brainy – ”
“Where’re you hoping to go, seeing as you’re neither?” interjected Sirius.
James roared with laughter. Lily sat up, rather flushed, and looked from James to
Sirius in dislike.
“Come on, Severus, let’s find another compartment.”
“Oooooo…”
James and Sirius imitated her lofty voice; James tried to trip Snape as he passed.
“See ya, Snivellus!” a voice called, as the compartment door slammed…
And the scene dissolved once more…
Harry was standing right behind Snape as they faced the candlelit House tables,
lined with rapt faces. Then Professor McGonagall said, “Evans, Lily!”
He watched his mother walk forward on trembling legs and sit down upon the
rickety stool. Professor McGonagall dropped the Sorting Hat onto her head, and barely a
second after it had touched the dark red hair, the hat cried, “Gryffindor!”
Harry heard Snape let out a tiny groan. Lily took off the hat, handed it back to
Professor McGonagall, then hurried toward the cheering Gryffindors, but as she went she
glanced back at Snape, and there was a sad little smile on her face. Harry saw Sirius
move up the bench to make room for her. She took one look at him, seemed to recognize
him from the train, folded her arms, and firmly turned her back on him.
The roll call continued. Harry watched Lupin, Pettigrew, and his father join Lily
and Sirius at the Gryffindor table. At last, when only a dozen students remained to be
sorted, Professor McGonagall called Snape.
Harry walked with him to the stool, watched him place the hat upon his head.
“Slytherin!” cried the Sorting Hat.
And Severus Snape moved off to the other side of the Hall, away from Lily, to
where the Slytherins were cheering him, to where Lucius Malfoy, a prefect badge
gleaming upon his chest, patted Snape on the back as he sat down beside him…
And the scene changed…
Lily and Snape were walking across the castle courtyard, evidently arguing. Harry
hurried to catch up with them, to listen in. As he reached them, he realized how much
taller they both were. A few years seemed to have passed since their Sorting.
“…thought we were supposed to be friends?” Snape was saying, “Best friends?”
“We are, Sev, but I don’t like some of the people you’re hanging round with! I’m
sorry, but I detest Avery and Mulciber! Mulciber! What do you see in him, Sev, he’s
creepy! D’you know what he tried to do to Mary Macdonald the other day?”
Lily had reached a pillar and leaned against it, looking up into the thin, sallow
face.
“That was nothing,” said Snape. “It was a laugh, that’s all – ”
“It was Dark Magic, and if you think that’s funny – ”
“What about the stuff Potter and his mates get up to?” demanded Snape. His color
rose again as he said it, unable, it seemed, to hold in his resentment.
“What’s Potter got to do with anything?” said Lily.
“They sneak out at night. There’s something weird about that Lupin. Where does
he keep going?”
“He’s ill,” said Lily. “They say he’s ill – ”
“Every month at the full moon?” said Snape.
“I know your theory,” said Lily, and she sounded cold. “Why are you so obsessed
with them anyway? Why do you care what they’re doing at night?”
“I’m just trying to show you they’re not as wonderful as everyone seems to think
they are.”
The intensity of his gaze made her blush.
“They don’t use Dark Magic, though.” She dropped her voice. “And you’re being
really ungrateful. I heard what happened the other night. You went sneaking down that
tunnel by the Whomping Willow, and James Potter saved you from whatever’s down
there – ”
Snape’s whole face contorted and he spluttered, “Saved? Saved? You think he
was playing the hero? He was saving his neck and his friends’ too! You’re not going to –
I won’t let you – ”
“Let me? Let me?”
Lily’s bright green eyes were slits. Snape backtracked at once.
“I didn’t m ean – I just don’t want to see you made a fool of – He fancies you,
James Potter fancies you!” The words seemed wrenched from him against his will. “And
he’s not…everyone thinks…big Quidditch hero – ” Snape’s bitterness and dislike were
rendering him incoherent, and Lily’s eyebrows were traveling farther and farther up her
forehead.
“I know James Potter’s an arrogant toerag,” she said, cutting across Snape. “I
don’t need you to tell me that. But Mulciber’s and Avery’s idea of humor is just evil. Evil,
Sev. I don’t understand how you can be friends with them.”
Harry doubted that Snape had even heard her strictures on Mulciber and Avery.
The moment she had insulted James Potter, his whole body had relaxed, and as they
walked away there was a new spring in Snape’s step…
And the scene dissolved…
Harry watched again as Snape left the Great Hall after sitting his O.W.L. in
Defense Against the Dark Arts, watched as he wandered away from the castle and strayed
inadvertently close to the place beneath the beech tree where James, Sirius, Lupin, and
Pettigrew sat together. But Harry kept his distance this time, because he knew what
happened after James had hoisted Severus into the air and taunted him; he knew what had
been done and said, and it gave him no pleasure to hear it again… He watched as Lily
joined the group and went to Snape’s defense. Distantly he heard Snape shout at her in
his humiliation and his fury, the unforgivable word: “Mudblood.”
The scene changed…
“I’m sorry.”
“I’m not interested.”
“I’m sorry!”
“Save your breath”
It was nighttime. Lily, who was wearing a dressing gown, stood with her arms
folded in front of the portrait of the Fat Lady, at the entrance to Gryffindor Tower.
“I only came out because Mary told me you were threatening to sleep here.”
“I was. I would have done. I never meant to call you Mudblood, it just – ”
“Slipped out?” There was no pity in Lily’s voice. “It’s too late. I’ve made excuses
for you for years. None of my friends can understand why I even talk to you. You and
your precious little Death Eater friends – you see, you don’t even deny it! You don’t even
deny that’s what you’re all aiming to be! You can’t wait to join You-Know-Who, can
you?”
He opened his mouth, but closed it without speaking.
“I can’t pretend anymore. You’ve chosen your way, I’ve chosen mine.”
“No – listen, I didn’t mean – ”
“ – to call me Mudblood? But you call everyone of my birth Mudblood, Severus.
Why should I be any different?”
He struggled on the verge of speech, but with a contemptuous look she turned and
climbed back through the portrait hole…
The corridor dissolved, and the scene took a little longer to reform: Harry seemed
to fly through shifting shapes and colors until his surroundings solidified again and he
stood on a hilltop, forlorn and cold in the darkness, the wind whistling through the
branches of a few leafless trees. The adult Snape was panting, turning on the spot, his
wand gripped tightly in his hand, waiting for something or for someone… His fear
infected Harry too, even though he knew that he could not be harmed, and he looked over
his shoulder, wondering what it was that Snape was waiting for –
Then a blinding, jagged jet of white light flew through the air. Harry thought of
lightning, but Snape had dropped to his knees and his wand had flown out of his hand.
“Don’t kill me!”
“That was not my intention.”
Any sound of Dumbledore Apparating had been drowned by the sound of the
wind in the branches. He stood before Snape with his robes whipping around him, and his
face was illuminated from below in the light cast by his wand.
“Well, Severus? What message does Lord Voldemort have for me?”
“No – no message – I’m here on my own account!”
Snape was wringing his hands. He looked a little mad, with his straggling black
hair flying around him.
“I – I come with a warning – no, a request – please – ”
Dumbledore flicked his wand. Though leaves and branches still flew through the
night air around them, silence fell on the spot where he and Snape faced each other.
“What request could a Death Eater make of me?”
“The – the prophecy…the prediction…Trelawney…”
“Ah, yes,” said Dumbledore. “How much did you relay to Lord Voldemort?”
“Everything – everything I heard!” said Snape. “That is why – it is for that reason
– he thinks it means Lily Evans!”
“The prophecy did not refer to a woman,” said Dumbledore. “It spoke of a boy
born at the end of July – ”
“You know what I mean! He thinks it means her son, he is going to hunt her down
– kill them all – ”
“If she means so much to you,” said Dumbledore, “surely Lord Voldemort will
spare her? Could you not ask for mercy for the mother, in exchange for the son?”
“I have – I have asked him – ”
“You disgust me,” said Dumbledore, and Harry had never heard so much
contempt in his voice. Snape seemed to shrink a little, “You do not care, then, about the
deaths of her husband and child? They can die, as long as you have what you want?”
Snape said nothing, but merely looked up at Dumbledore.
“Hide them all, then,” he croaked. “Keep her – them – safe. Please.”
“And what will you give me in return, Severus?”
“In – in return?” Snape gaped at Dumbledore, and Harry expected him to protest,
but after a long moment he said, “Anything.”
The hilltop faded, and Harry stood in Dumbledore’s office, and something was
making a terrible sound, like a wounded animal. Snape was slumped forward in a chair
and Dumbledore was standing over him, looking grim. After a moment or two, Snape
raised his face, and he looked like a man who had lived a hundred years of misery since
leaving the wild hilltop.
“I thought…you were going…to keep her…safe…”
“She and James put their faith in the wrong person,” said Dumbledore. “Rather
like you, Severus. Weren’t you hoping that Lord Voldemort would spare her?”
Snape’s breathing was shallow.
“Her boy survives,” said Dumbledore.
With a tiny jerk of the head, Snape seemed to flick off an irksome fly.
“Her son lives. He has her eyes, precisely her eyes. You remember the shape and
color of Lily Evans’s eyes, I am sure?”
“DON’T!” bellowed Snape. “Gone…dead…”
“Is this remorse, Severus?”
“I wish…I wish I were dead…”
“And what use would that be to anyone?” said Dumbledore coldly. “If you loved
Lily Evans, if you truly loved her, then your way forward is clear.”
Snape seemed to peer through a haze of pain, and Dumbledore’s words appeared
to take a long time to reach him.
“What – what do you mean?”
“You know how and why she died. Make sure it was not in vain. Help me protect
Lily’s son.”
“He does not need protection. The Dark Lord has gone – ”
“The Dark Lord will return, and Harry Potter will be in terrible danger when he
does.”
There was a long pause, and slowly Snape regained control of himself, mastered
his own breathing. At last he said, “Very well. Very well. But never – never tell,
Dumbledore! This must be between us! Swear it! I cannot bear…especially Potter’s
son…I want your word!”
“My word, Severus, that I shall never reveal the best of you?” Dumbledore sighed,
looking down into Snape’s ferocious, anguished face. “If you insist…”
The office dissolved but re-formed instantly. Snape was pacing up and down in
front of Dumbledore.
“ – mediocre, arrogant as his father, a determined rule-breaker, delighted to find
himself famous, attention-seeking and impertinent – ”
“You see what you expect to see, Severus,” said Dumbledore, without raising his
eyes from a copy of Transfiguration Today. “Other teachers report that the boy is modest,
likable, and reasonably talented. Personally, I find him an engaging child.”
Dumbledore turned a page, and said, without looking up, “Keep an eye on
Quirrell, won’t you?”
A whirl of color, and now everything darkened, and Snape and Dumbledore stood
a little apart in the entrance hall, while the last stragglers from the Yule Ball passed them
on their way to bed.
“Well?” murmured Dumbledore.
“Karkaroff’s Mark is becoming darker too. He is panicking, he fears retribution;
you know how much help he gave the Ministry after the Dark Lord fell.” Snape looked
sideways at Dumbledore’s crooked-nosed profile. “Karkaroff intends to flee if the Mark
burns.”
“Does he?” said Dumbledore softly, as Fleur Delacour and Roger Davies came
giggling in from the grounds. “And are you tempted to join him?”
“No,” said Snape, his black eyes on Fleur’s and Roger’s retreating figures. “I am
not such a coward.”
“No,” agreed Dumbledore. “You are a braver man by far than Igor Karkaroff.
You know, I sometimes think we Sort too soon…”
He walked away, leaving Snape looking stricken…
And now Harry stood in the headmaster’s office yet again. It was nighttime, and
Dumbledore sagged sideways in the thronelike chair behind the desk, apparently
semiconscious. His right hand dangled over the side, blackened and burned. Snape was
muttering incantations, pointing his wand at the wrist of the hand, while with his left
hand he tipped a goblet full of thick golden potion down Dumbledore’s throat. After a
moment or two, Dumbledore’s eyelids fluttered and opened.
“Why,” said Snape, without preamble, “why did you put on that ring? It carries a
curse, surely you realized that. Why even touch it?”
Marvolo Gaunt’s ring lay on the desk before Dumbledore. It was cracked; the
sword of Gryffindor lay beside it.
Dumbledore grimaced.
“I…was a fool. Sorely tempted…”
“Tempted by what?”
Dumbledore did not answer.
“It is a miracle you managed to return here!” Snape sounded furious. “That ring
carried a curse of extraordinary power, to contain it is all we can hope for; I have trapped
the curse in one hand for the time being – ”
Dumbledore raised his blackened, useless hand, and examined it with the
expression of one being shown an interesting curio.
“You have done very well, Severus. How long do you think I have?”
Dumbledore’s tone was conversational; he might have been asking for a weather
forecast. Snape hesitated, and then said, “I cannot tell. Maybe a year. There is no halting
such a spell forever. It will spread eventually, it is the sort of curse that strengthens over
time.”
Dumbledore smiled. The news that he had less than a year to live seemed a matter
of little or no concern to him.
“I am fortunate, extremely fortunate, that I have you, Severus.”
“If you had only summoned me a little earlier, I might have been able to do more,
buy you more time!” said Snape furiously. He looked down at the broken ring and the
sword. “Did you think that breaking the ring would break the curse?”
“Something like that…I was delirious, no doubt…” said Dumbledore. With an
effort he straightened himself in his chair. “Well, really, this makes matters much more
straightforward.”
Snape looked utterly perplexed. Dumbledore smiled.
“I refer to the plan Lord Voldemort is revolving around me. His plan to have the
poor Malfoy boy murder me.”
Snape sat down in the chair Harry had so often occupied, across the desk from
Dumbledore. Harry could tell that he wanted to say more on the subject of Dumbledore’s
cursed hand, but the other held it up in polite refusal to discuss the matter further.
Scowling, Snape said, “The Dark Lord does not expect Draco to succeed. This is merely
punishment for Lucius’s recent failures. Slow torture for Draco’s parents, while they
watch him fail and pay the price.”
“In short, the boy has had a death sentence pronounced upon him as surely as I
have,” said Dumbledore. “Now, I should have thought the natural successor to the job,
once Draco fails, is yourself?”
There was a short pause.
“That, I think, is the Dark Lord’s plan.”
“Lord Voldemort foresees a moment in the near future when he will not need a
spy at Hogwarts?”
“He believes the school will soon be in his grasp, yes.”
“And if it does fall into his grasp,” said Dumbledore, almost, it seemed, as an
aside, “I have your word that you will do all in your power to protect the students at
Hogwarts?”
Snape gave a stiff nod.
“Good. Now then. Your first priority will be to discover what Draco is up to. A
frightened teenage boy is a danger to others as well as to himself. Offer him help and
guidance, he ought to accept, he likes you – ”
“ – much less since his father has lost favor. Draco blames me, he thinks I have
usurped Lucius’s position.”
“All the same, try. I am concerned less for myself than for accidental victims of
whatever schemes might occur to the boy. Ultimately, of course, there is only one thing
to be done if we are to save him from Lord Voldemort’s wrath.”
Snape raised his eyebrows and his tone was sardonic as he asked, “Are you
intending to let him kill you?”
“Certainly not. You must kill me.”
There was a long silence, broken only by an odd clicking noise. Fawkes the
phoenix was gnawing a bit of cuttlebone.
“Would you like me to do it now?” asked Snape, his voice heavy with irony. “Or
would you like a few moments to compose an epitaph?”
“Oh, not quite yet,” said Dumbledore, smiling. “I daresay the moment will present
itself in due course. Given what has happened tonight,” he indicated his withered hand,
“we can be sure that it will happen within a year.”
“If you don’t mind dying,” said Snape roughly, “why not let Draco do it?”
“That boy’s soul is not yet so damaged,” said Dumbledore. “I would not have it
ripped apart on my account.”
“And my soul, Dumbledore? Mine?”
“You alone know whether it will harm your soul to help an old man avoid pain
and humiliation,” said Dumbledore. “I ask this one great favor of you, Severus, because
death is coming for me as surely as the Chudley Cannons will finish bottom of this year’s
league. I confess I should prefer a quick, painless exit to the protracted and messy affair it
will be if, for instance, Greyback is involved – I hear Voldemort has recruited him? Or
dear Bellatrix, who likes to play with her food before she eats it.”
His tone was light, but his blue eyes pierced Snape as they had frequently pierced
Harry, as though the soul they discussed was visible to him. At last Snape gave another
curt nod.
Dumbledore seemed satisfied.
“Thank you, Severus…”
The office disappeared, and now Snape and Dumbledore were strolling together
in the deserted castle grounds by twilight.
“What are you doing with Potter, all these evenings you are closeted together?”
Snape asked abruptly.
Dumbledore looked weary.
“Why? You aren’t trying to give him more detentions, Severus? The boy will
soon have spent more time in detention than out.”
“He is his father over again – ”
“In looks, perhaps, but his deepest nature is much more like his mother’s. I spend
time with Harry because I have things to discuss with him, information I must give him
before it is too late.”
“Information,” repeated Snape. “You trust him…you do not trust me.”
“It is not a question of trust. I have, as we both know, limited time. It is essential
that I give the boy enough information for him to do what he needs to do.”
“And why may I not have the same information?”
“I prefer not to put all of my secrets in one basket, particularly not a basket that
spends so much time dangling on the arm of Lord Voldemort.”
“Which I do on your orders!”
“And you do it extremely well. Do not think that I underestimate the constant
danger in which you place yourself, Severus. To give Voldemort what appears to be
valuable information while withholding the essentials is a job I would entrust to nobody
but you.”
“Yet you confide much more in a boy who is incapable of Occlumency, whose
magic is mediocre, and who has a direct connection into the Dark Lord’s mind!”
“Voldemort fears that connection,” said Dumbledore. “Not so long ago he had
one small taste of what truly sharing Harry’s mind means to him. It was pain such as he
has never experienced. He will not try to possess Harry again, I am sure of it. Not in that
way.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Lord Voldemort’s soul, maimed as it is, cannot bear close contact with a soul
like Harry’s. Like a tongue on frozen steel, like flesh in flame – ”
“Souls? We were talking of minds!”
“In the case of Harry and Lord Voldemort, to speak of one is to speak of the
other.”
Dumbledore glanced around to make sure that they were alone. They were close
by the Forbidden Forest now, but there was no sign of anyone near them.
“After you have killed me, Severus – ”
“You refuse to tell me everything, yet you expect that small service of me!”
snarled Snape, and real anger flared in the thin face now. “You take a great deal for
granted, Dumbledore! Perhaps I have changed my mind!”
“You gave me your word, Severus. And while we are talking about services you
owe me, I thought you agreed to keep a close eye on our young Slytherin friend?”
Snape looked angry, mutinous. Dumbledore sighed.
“Come to my office tonight, Severus, at eleven, and you shall not complain that I
have no confidence in you…”
They were back in Dumbledore’s office, the windows dark, and Fawkes sat silent
as Snape sat quite still, as Dumbledore walked around him, talking.
“Harry must not know, not until the last moment, not until it is necessary,
otherwise how could he have the strength to do what must be done?”
“But what must he do?”
“That is between Harry and me. Now listen closely, Severus. There will come a
time – after my death – do not argue, do not interrupt! There will come a time when Lord
Voldemort will seem to fear for the life of his snake.”
“For Nagini?” Snape looked astonished.
“Precisely. If there comes a time when Lord Voldemort stops sending that snake
forth to do his bidding, but keeps it safe beside him under magical protection, then, I
think, it will be safe to tell Harry.”
“Tell him what?”
Dumbledore took a deep breath and closed his eyes.
“Tell him that on the night Lord Voldemort tried to kill him, when Lily cast her
own life between them as a shield, the Killing Curse rebounded upon Lord Voldemort,
and a fragment of Voldemort’s soul was blasted apart from the whole, and latched itself
onto the only living soul left in that collapsed building. Part of Lord Voldemort lives
inside Harry, and it is that which gives him the power of speech with snakes, and a
connection with Lord Voldemort’s mind that he has never understood. And while that
fragment of soul, unmissed by Voldemort, remains attached to and protected by Harry,
Lord Voldemort cannot die.”
Harry seemed to be watching the two men from one end of a long tunnel, they
were so far away from him, their voices echoing strangely in his ears.
“So the boy…the boy must die?” asked Snape quite calmly.
“And Voldemort himself must do it, Severus. That is essential.”
Another long silence. Then Snape said, “I thought…all those years…that we were
protecting him for her. For Lily.”
“We have protected him because it has been essential to teach him, to raise him,
to let him try his strength,” said Dumbledore, his eyes still tight shut. “Meanwhile, the
connection between them grows ever stronger, a parasitic growth. Sometimes I have
thought he suspects it himself. If I know him, he will have arranged matters so that when
he does set out to meet his death, it will truly mean the end of Voldemort.”
Dumbledore opened his eyes. Snape looked horrified.
“You have kept him alive so that he can die at the right moment?”
“Don’t be shocked, Severus. How many men and women have you watched die?”
“Lately, only those whom I could not save,” said Snape. He stood up. “You have
used me.”
“Meaning?”
“I have spied for you and lied for you, put myself in mortal danger for you.
Everything was supposed to be to keep Lily Potter’s son safe. Now you tell me you have
been raising him like a pig for slaughter – ”
“But this is touching, Severus,” said Dumbledore seriously. “Have you grown to
care for the boy, after all?”
“For him?” shouted Snape. “Expecto Patronum!”
From the tip of his wand burst the silver doe. She landed on the office floor,
bounded once across the office, and soared out of the window. Dumbledore watched her
fly away, and as her silvery glow faded he turned back to Snape, and his eyes were full of
tears.
“After all this time?”
“Always,” said Snape.
And the scene shifted. Now, Harry saw Snape talking to the portrait of
Dumbledore behind his desk.
“You will have to give Voldemort the correct date of Harry’s departure from his
aunt and uncle’s,” said Dumbledore. “Not to do so will raise suspicion, when Voldemort
believes you so well informed. However, you must plant the idea of decoys; that, I think,
ought to ensure Harry’s safety. Try Confunding Mundungus Fletcher. And Severus, if
you are forced to take part in the chase, be sure to act your part convincingly…I am
counting upon you to remain in Lord Voldemort’s good books as long as possible, or
Hogwarts will be left to the mercy of the Carrows…”
Now Snape was head to head with Mundungus in an unfamiliar tavern,
Mundungus’s face looking curiously blank, Snape frowning in concentration.
“You will suggest to the Order of the Phoenix,” Snape murmured, “that they use
decoys. Polyjuice Potion. Identical Potters. It’s the only thing that might work. You will
forget that I have suggested this. You will present it as your own idea. You understand?”
“I understand,” murmured Mundungus, his eyes unfocused…
Now Harry was flying alongside Snape on a broomstick through a clear dark
night: He was accompanied by other hodded Death Eaters, and ahead were Lupin and a
Harry who was really George… A Death Eater moved ahead of Snape and raised his
wand, pointing it directly at Lupin’s back.
“Sectumsempra!” shouted Snape.
But the spell, intended for the Death Eater’s wand hand, missed and hit George
instead –
And next, Snape was kneeling in Sirius’s old bedroom. Tears were dripping from
the end of his hooked nose as he read the old letter from Lily. The second page carried
only a few words:
could ever have been friends with Gellert Grindelwald. I think her mind’s going,
personally!
Lots of love,
Lily
Snape took the page bearing Lily’s signature, and her love, and tucked it inside
his robes. Then he ripped in two the photograph he was also holding, so that he kept the
part from which Lily laughed, throwing the portion showing James and Harry back onto
the floor, under the chest of drawers…
And now Snape stood again in the headmaster’s study as Phineas Nigellus came
hurrying into his portrait.
“Headmaster! They are camping in the Forest of Dean! The Mudblood – ”
“Do not use that word!”
“ – the Granger girl, then, mentioned the place as she opened her bag and I heard
her!”
“Good. Very good!” cried the portrait of Dumbledore behind the headmaster’s
chair. “Now, Severus, the sword! Do not forget that it must be taken under conditions of
need and valor – and he must not know that you give it! If Voldemort should read
Harry’s mind and see you acting for him – ”
“I know,” said Snape curtly. He approached the portrait of Dumbledore and
pulled at its side. It swung forward, revealing a hidden cavity behind it from which he
took the sword of Gryffindor.
“And you still aren’t going to tell me why it’s so important to give Potter the
sword?” said Snape as he swung a traveling cloak over his robes.
“No, I don’t think so,” said Dumbledore’s portrait. “He will know what to do with
it. And Severus, be very careful, they may not take kindly to your appearance after
George Weasley’s mishap – ”
Snape turned at the door.
“Don’t worry, Dumbledore,” he said coolly. “I have a plan…”
And Snape left the room. Harry rose up out of the Pensieve, and moments later he
lay on the carpeted floor in exactly the same rooms Snape might just have closed the door.



 

 


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