Harry
really was busy the next day. He refused to go on holiday looking like a tramp.
He had a funny feeling that he wouldn’t get through customs if he looked like
someone who had just rolled off of the street, so, without so much as a hello
to any of the Aurors, he slipped back out into Muggle London, this time
cheating and using the Knight Bus rather than going on foot, and purchased a
whole new wardrobe as well as another box of cards, this time from the new set
of boosters that had been released the day before.
When
he finally got back to the Leaky Cauldron, he half expected to get an earful
from whoever was supposed to be on duty, but the only complaints he had were
from Sirius, who had not enjoyed the fact he’d been cooped up all day and
wanted to stretch his legs, and from Hedwig who had brought yet another letter
from Hermione, who was planning on visiting the next day if he wasn’t busy.
Harry
sent a message back again, leaving Hedwig staring at him irritably, since she
wanted a rest, and took Padfoot for a walk and then settled down with his
purchases, organising his new clothes and sorting through the hundreds of new
cards, making note of a few that Luna might like, simply enjoying the peace
that came with having a few days away from Dursleys.
When
Hermione arrived the next day however, that peace and quiet was shattered, at
least for a little while as she ranted at him in person for not going to her or
Ron when he had been kicked out of his house. Right up until Padfoot licked her
hand. Then she was too engrossed in finding out where he’d gotten the dog and
where he was planning on keeping it during term time and did he know how to
look after it properly, and had he taken it to the vets yet?
Hermione’s
questions only stopped when Harry presented her with the books he’d bought. The
wizard swiftly wished he’d waited till after he’d introduced her to the game of
Duel Monsters because she proceeded to skim through all of them. She did,
however, come to the same conclusion he had about the Serpent Items, minus
knowledge about Powel, in half the time it had taken him.
Then
their conversation had taken a rather different route. Instead of ranting at
him Hermione started fussing, worrying for her friend and what using and owning
such a dangerous dark artefact could do. She did suggest that he got rid of it,
much as she had before they’d left school for the summer, but bit her tongue
when Harry reminded her that Dumbledore had stated that he should keep it with
him at all times.
Harry
got to watch, amused, as Hermione was torn between concern for her friend,
anger that Harry should shrug off the danger so easily and confusion since she
still wasn’t sure if Dumbledore was really looking out for Harry or not.
“You
are going to be careful with it, aren’t you?” Hermione asked finally, biting
her lower lip and watching her friend carefully, knowing him far too well to
ask him to stay out of trouble.
“Of
course.” Harry agreed, not particularly wanting to become known as the
Boy-Who-Sealed-Souls, “Though you know what I’m like. I’ll try and be careful
and end up getting eaten by a dragon or something...”
Hermione
glowered at Harry’s nochatlent shrug. “Harry James Potter. If I find out that
you’ve been playing with dragons, I’ll... I’ll...” She seized one of the
pillows off of his bed and swatted him with it repeatedly.
Harry
let out a yelp of shock, having never expected it from his bookworm of a friend
and grabbed the other, counter attacking and the pillow war didn’t stop until
next door complained that could whoever had let the herd of hippogriffs into
the room please let them back out again.
Neither
kid could resist dissolving into laughter the moment the door was shut behind
the complainer.
“We
sound nothing like a herd of hippogriffs.” Hermione stated as they pair of them
calmed down, stroking the fur on Padfoot’s back. “There’s much less squawking
and roaring for a start.”
“What’s
a hippogriff?” Harry asked only to earn himself a despairing look from his
friend.
“I
swear Harry, you don’t read anything you don’t have to, do you?”
“I
read all those books I showed you.” Harry stated a little defensively.
“Only
because they had information about your Bracer in them.” Hermione pointed out,
looking like the cat that’s gotten the cream as Harry couldn’t deny her point. “Otherwise
you wouldn’t have even thought about going into Flourish and Blotts would you?”
“Maybe.”
Harry grouched, wondering, once again, why Hermione was a Gryffindor when
clearly her love of knowledge should have made her a Ravenclaw.
Hermione
just let out a soft snort and leaned back, using her hands to support her as
she stared at the ceiling. “Mum and Dad have gone into London. Made me promise
to stay here and talk to you. I told them the Dursleys kicked you out and they
asked me if you’d consider staying with them?”
Harry
blinked, wondering where this had come from. Unlike Ron’s parents, Hermione’s
barely knew him. Certainly not enough, in his opinion, to make an offer like
that. “Why?”
Hermione
chuckled at him softly, though the sound was a mixture of bitter and something
Harry couldn’t quite catch. “You were my first real friend. My parents think
that’s important.”
Harry
stared at her. “You’re kidding? There was no one...?”
“I
don’t know where you went to school but no one wants to be friends with the
nerd.” Hermione snorted, “We tried a few schools, but it was always the same.
The kids my age didn’t want to know me, and the kids in the year I was always
placed in couldn’t stand that they had to deal with having a younger class
member.”
“You
got to skip years?” Harry asked, slightly envious since if he’d been jumped up
a year, he would no longer have had to share lessons with his cousin Dudley.
His envy vanished just moments later as he both envisioned the reactions of his
Aunt and Uncle if he had been jumped up a year and pulled ahead of their
precious ‘Duddykins’ and heard the soft snort that Hermione let out.
“It’s
not as good as it sounds. It just means you take tests quicker. Have to change
school faster and have more to unlearn when you go to Hogwarts.” Hermione
sounded frustrated.
“Is
that why you took every class you could when we picked our options?” Harry
asked, curious.
“I’m
bored in normal classes.” Hermione admitted, “And hopefully that much work will
keep me occupied. I mean I probably won’t get accepted for all of them, not
unless they can work out the schedules and that would be a nightmare. I’m sure
Professor McGonagall has enough on her plate already without having to worry
about reorganising all of our classes.”
Harry
just nodded his agreement. Between her duties as Head of Gryffindor House, the
fact she was Deputy Headmistress and all of her classes, he could well imagine
that scheduling headaches were the last thing she needed.
“Well,
think you’ll have time to learn one more thing?” Harry asked. “I mean it’s for
recreation, and that’s a necessary part of studying, isn’t it?”
“I
might. It depends what it is.” Hermione looked curious. “It doesn’t have
anything to do with broomsticks, does it?”
“No.
No flying. A few things that could fly, but no flying ourselves.”
“Oh?”
Hermione asked, curious now, “Do tell.”
“It’s
called Duel Monsters and...”
“You’re
not talking about the Muggle trading card game that’s been hovering around the
edges of popularity for a couple of years?” Hermione asked, confused. “Where
did you even learn about it?”
“Luna.”
Harry replied simply with a small smile.
“Ah.”
Hermione nodded in understanding. After all she’d learned that ‘Luna’ was a
perfectly rational excuse for almost anything, “I have a few cards, but I never
really got into the game.”
“Luna’s
teaching me how to play.” Harry replied, “I have plenty of spare cards if
you’re interested.”
Hermione
was and they spent an enjoyable afternoon going through Harry’s cards and
beating each other with their decks, Hermione favouring Spellcasters and sneak
attacks over Harry’s favoured heads on rush attack policy.
Midway
through their fourth test of Hermione’s deck a thought popped into Harry’s
head.
“Hey
Hermione?” Harry asked, curious about something.
“Hmm?”
Hermione replied, almost as engrossed in her cards as she had been in the books
earlier.
“What
do you know about Egypt?”
The
question threw Hermione, who looked up as him, confused. “Why?”
“Uh...”
Suddenly Harry wished he hadn’t asked since he had no idea if the Weasleys had
invited Hermione on their holiday. “Because Luna said these,” He held up the
arm with the Bracer on, “Have a base in Egyptian magic and I was curious as to
what you know.”
“Well
I’ve never really looked into Egyptian forms of magic.” Hermione admitted,
“Thought about it when Ron mentioned that his brother was a curse breaker for
Gringotts, but never got around to it. I was a little busy trying to learn
ahead. After all the Pure-Bloods have been around magic for much longer than we
have and...” She looked a little embarrassed, “I might have been asking the
upper years for book suggestions.” She paused at the look on Harry’s face, “Yes
I know, I’m being a know-it-all.”
“No,
no it’s not that.” Harry shook his head, though the thought had crossed his
mind, “I’m just surprised that anyone was willing to give you a book list. I
mean other than the Weasley twins none of the upper years seem to like us...”
Hermione
chuckled slightly. “Oh believe me Harry, the upper year students from our house
love you for your Quidditch skills and the fact you brought Gryffindor the
house cup for the last two years running. But no, the ones who gave me the
information I wanted were the Ravenclaws.”
“How?”
“They
appreciate anyone trying to get ahead.” Hermione chuckled, “Keep wondering why
I’m not a Claw too.”
“Why
aren’t you a Ravenclaw if you’re so interested in learning?” Harry asked.
“Nearly
was. The hat was torn between Gryffindor and Ravenclaw.” Hermione blushed, “I
had to ask to be put in Gryffindor. Embarrassing huh?”
“No.”
Harry thought about how he’d pleaded with the Sorting Hat not to be put into
Slytherin. “Not really but why Gryffindor?”
“Well,
the only people I knew I wanted to be Gryffindors.” Hermione blushed, “And I
kind of hoped...” She mumbled the next bit but Harry grinned at her the same.
“Well
considering how little people seem to spend time with others outside their own
house. I’d say it’s a good thing, right?” The smile that grew on Hermione’s
face was enough to tell Harry that had been the right thing to say, even if he
wasn’t quite sure where it came from.
Hermione
had to leave before their duel ended, having realised the time and needing to
meet up with her parents who had agreed to come back for her after they went
shopping in London. Harry saw her out and then took Padfoot for a walk, taking
a slightly different route again as he successfully got himself lost down the
various alleys that led away from the main shops, the ones that he was always
taken to when he came to Diagon with his friends, and towards the little shops
that had sprung up on the outskirts.
He
felt a little safer, taking a different route back to the pub every time as the
only part of his walk that was predictable was the four or five yards he had to
walk to enter the leaky Cauldron. Not that he seemed to have come under attack
again since that one incident, causing him to wonder if it had been planned or
if he’d just happened to have the bad luck to run into a drunk Death Eater.
At
worst it might have been Lucius Malfoy. Harry hadn’t forgotten about the
promise Draco’s father had made after he’d outed him as the man who had set the
problems of last year into motion. He had a funny feeling that if Dobby hadn’t
intervened when he had, either he wouldn’t be walking around or he’d have had
another Penalty on his conscious.
Somehow
he doubted he’d get away as lightly as he had over the Dursleys if the spirit
of his Bracer had sent a member of a rich Pure-Blood family insane. Harry was
under the impression that, considering how well Mr. Malfoy appeared to get on
with a certain family, that the Weasleys wouldn’t be sorry if Powel had taken
matters into his own hands and they probably wouldn’t have been the only ones.
When
his stomach rumbled he headed back the way he’d come, finding his way by trying
to recognise the shops he’d passed, all of whom had closed by the time he had
finally hunted down Padfoot’s lead which had somehow ‘mysteriously’ ended up
under the bed. He was a couple of alleys away from home when he overheard a
conversation he probably shouldn’t have done.
“Give
me one good reason why I should listen to anything you have to say.” The voice
of someone Harry didn’t know but set Sirius’s tail wagging echoed around the
corridor.
“I
need your help.” The second voice, a panicked man’s voice, made Padfoot start
growling and Harry had to dig his feet in to prevent the huge dog rushing
around the corner, “Please, you’re the only one I could turn to.”
“You’re
dead.” The first voice growled, deep and rough, a tone that was rather similar
to Padfoot’s.
“Please
Remus.” The second man begged, “I had to hide. Sirius had friends that would
have been out to get me. I...”
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