Trevor the Toad crept
along the dark corridor on the third floor, wishing he had stolen
Harry Potter's invisibility cloak. Sadly, it was locked away in
Potter's trunk; the boy finally caught on that it wasn't such a
good idea to leave such a valuable magical garment lying around
Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. How many times had he
left it unattended? Two, maybe three times that Trevor was aware of.
It was irresponsibility rivaled only by that demonstrated by Neville
on a daily basis. Had it not been for the unappreciated efforts of
Trevor, Neville would probably forget to bring his wand to class.
One good thing about being a toad was the incredible field of
vision. With his bulging eyes perched on top of his head, the toad
was able to see everything that was going on around him. This was
indeed fortunate because Mrs. Norris just came down the staircase
behind him. Her eyes gleamed spookily in the half-light of the
torches. She spied Trevor, and bounded toward him. The toad sprung
into action, in three great leaps he reached Sir Dinadin's suit of
armor. The little pads on his toes acted like suction cups (a gift
from his great, great grandmother, who was a Brazilian tree frog) and
he climbed with great agility, which was quite difficult because he
held a scroll in his mouth. Mrs. Norris skidded to a halt at the feet
of the armor, hissing with fury. Once again Trevor managed to elude
her. The toad pushed the visor up and hid inside the great helm that
Sir Dinadin wore a thousand years ago.
"What is it, my
pet?" Argus Filch, the bitter Hogwarts caretaker, said with a
creaky voice. He appeared seemingly out of nowhere. Trevor knew that
he had not Apparated, for the toad had read Hogwarts: A History,
which explained that the use of such magic was impossible within the
boundaries of the school grounds. More likely, Filch had just used
one of the many secret passages within the castle. Mrs. Norris meowed
and did a figure eight around the ankles of the shiny armor. Filch
inspected the armor, but saw nothing amiss. If Peeves or one of the
nasty little students had sabotaged it in anyway, the caretaker could
not figure out how. "Come, my love, let's get back to the office.
There are no students out and about tonight. They fear the High
Inquisitor much too much for that kind of foolery. Professor Sprout
gave me some fresh catnip..."
Trevor listened as the
caretaker's footsteps faded into the distance. He waited several
minutes to be sure that the coast was clear before he came out of his
hiding place. He carefully climbed down the suit of armor and
continued to make his way down the corridor, the letter still gripped
firmly in his mouth. Finally he came to the door he was looking for.
Trevor flattened himself like a pancake and squeezed through the
crack between the stone floor and the thick wooden door. The office
was nothing like what he imagined. Lace was draped over the desk and
shelves. There were dried flowers in vases decorated with pastel
colored images of bows and seashells. Trevor, like most toads, did
not have much of a sense for interior decoration, so the feeling that
he had just stepped into the home of an old maid was lost on him. He
was also very excited. He could have just hopped into the Chamber of
Secrets and his happiness would not have faded, for he was close to
completing his quest. He climbed up on the desk, which had a neat
pile of essays stacked on it along with a jar of bright pink flamingo
quills. He placed the scroll in plain sight on the desk, and looked
around for a good place to hide. He wanted to see the reaction that
the letter caused.
The toad decided the best place to hide
was behind a collection of plates that decorated one of the walls.
Trevor was somewhat displeased at the selection of animals that
served as decoration in the room. Apart from the seashells on the
vases, there was an overrepresentation of cats and kittens. The
ornamental plates were decorated with the latter. He was distressed
to see a complete lack of toads or any other amphibians, for that
matter. He wondered why. Why did some women have such an unhealthy
fixation for cats? These were not happy thoughts, and he ended up
sleeping fitfully, squashed behind a particularly ghastly plate,
which bore a picture of a kitten with huge, blue eyes.
A
bleak morning dawned. The sun was hidden behind a thick layer of gray
clouds, which threatened a downpour that very well might flood the
lake into the Forbidden Forest. Trevor awoke to the click of a key in
the lock of the door. Professor Umbridge oozed into her office and
flopped into the chair behind her desk. She hummed a tune, perhaps
"Mary had a Little Lamb," but toads were notoriously tone
deaf, so Trevor couldn't be sure. She fumbled around in her
voluminous purse. Trevor was startled to see that the bag was
unmistakably made from the skin of a couatl, an extremely rare
benevolent winged snake that inhabits Mexico. He remembered the
hypnotic twisting picture of the couatl he saw in Neville's
textbook, The Monster Book of Monsters. The feathers on its wings had
an iridescent quality that made them appear to be all colors of the
rainbow. It, the purse, must have been a gift. Surely Professor
Umbridge would never support the slaughter of such a magnificent
beast by barbarically purchasing such an item.
Professor
Umbridge found what she sought: a small compact. She liberally
covered her face with puffy makeup, which Trevor found to be
completely unnecessary. She was already beautiful without it! Her
large bulbous brown eyes had the faintest hint of amber. Her wide
mouth nearly stretched from ear to ear, and her purple tongue
occasionally protruded from between her thin lips, as if it had a
mind of its own. Her squat, pleasingly plump figure was near-perfect.
If her legs were a bit longer, she would be perfect, but Trevor did
not hold that against her. He certainly wasn't perfect; his right
foreleg turned inward, which took its toll on his self-esteem.
Professor Umbridge looked in the mirror of the compact and surveyed
her work. She picked up her wand, blasted a couple of stray hairs
that curled out of one of her chins off, and clicked the compact
shut. She stuffed it back in her bag, and noticed the scroll on her
desk.
Trevor's heart raced, and he held his breath. The
moment had come. Professor Umbridge unrolled the parchment, and her
eyes narrowed with every line she read. Her complexion changed as
well. Her face, normally the color and texture of dough, changed to
an ugly shade of crimson. Trevor wasn't alarmed, because his own
coloring changed to match his environment (he was mottled gray at the
moment, to match the stonewall). He wondered what function turning
the color of an overripe tomato served, however. Surely it could not
be for camouflage.
The High Inquisitor grabbed a small box,
and tossed a pinch of glittering powder from it into the fire. The
flames turned green, and she stuck her head into them. Trevor croaked
with surprise, for her head completely disappeared, but then he
recalled Mrs. Longbottom using Floo powder, and deduced that
Professor Umbridge had done the same. Within seconds she pulled her
head out of the fireplace and sat back at her desk. She wore an
expression of anger mingled with sorrow. She sat with her
sausage-like fingers intertwined on the desk, waiting impatiently. A
couple of minutes passed before there was a knock on the door.
"Come in!" croaked Professor Umbridge with a hoarse
voice. In stomped Argus Finch. Mrs. Norris was not with him.
Presumably she was slinking around the castle, her eyes peeled for
rule-breaking students. Umbridge gestured for him to sit, and he
slouched into the chair opposite her. She cut right to the heart of
the matter.
"Argus, read this, and tell me which students
you suspect may have written this," she fumed. Argus squinted, and
held the parchment close to his crooked nose. He began to read,
quietly out loud:
"My Dearest Dolores,
Over the past
few months, I have come to only one conclusion: I love you. I find
you beautiful, an enchantress of the most amphibious quality. Your
eyes are like brown orbs, the color of rich soil from which only the
juiciest worms come. There is a twinkle in your eyes, too, like the
bright sun shining off of glistening mud.
My love for you, sweet
Dolores, runs deeper than the Amazon River, from whence I trace my
family line. I have never known love like this. All I have ever met
have been common garden toads, which are nice, but they lack the
intellect I need to compliment beauty. After watching you in action,
I've come to yearn for your mind.
I respect how deeply you care
for the students. Clearly you have their well being in mind, which is
why you protect them from the inherent dangers of the Dark Arts while
simultaneously educating them on it. You are the first D.A.D.A.
instructor who has demonstrated such care and competence. I admire
your strength of character.
I love you Dolores, mind, body, and
soul. I can only hope you can find it in your heart to love me in
return.
Yours truly,
Trevor the Toad"
Filch
finished reading the letter. He looked at Professor Umbridge,
searching for some sign of what his reaction should be. She shook;
her double chins rippled like when a stone is cast into a pond. Her
wrath seemed about to explode. With a shuddering breath, she mastered
herself, and to Trevor's great surprise tears welled up in her
beautiful eyes, leaving shiny wet trails behind, as if slugs had just
crawled down her cheeks.
"Who would dare write such a
thing, Argus?" whispered Professor Umbridge. Her normally girlishly
sweet voice was gone. In its place was the raspy voice of a person on
the brink of hysterical sobs. "I want names. I want to know how
they found out that when I was in Hogwarts students teased me
unmercifully by calling me...me...Delores Toadasaurus! 'Amphibious
quality,' how they dare.... I want names of suspects Filch, and I
will see if any of their relatives were tormentors in my days here! I
thought I had left this all behind." She whispered the last almost
to herself, but Filch caught what she said.
"Dolores, you
were not the only one who was an outcast when growing up." Filch
was a Squib, born into a wizarding family, but without the ability to
perform magic. "I know what it feels like to be laughed at. To have
no friends."
"To cry yourself to sleep at night,"
Umbridge blubbered.
"To never have someone love you,"
wept Filch.
"Our time has come, Argus!" Professor
Umbridge shouted suddenly. She slammed her fist down on the desk,
making her jar of flamingo quills jump. "No more will we be the
objects of ridicule. No more will we be powerless. We are going to
seize control here, and vengeance will be ours. Get ready Mr. Filch,
the winds of change are blowing in Hogwarts!" Filch leapt to his
feet, and they shook hands. An unholy alliance was forged. This is
not what Trevor the Toad had in mind. His heart went out to her; he
shared the tears she shed, for he could understand her pain as well.
"I can think of two names already who very well might have
done this," Filch was saying. "Fred and George Weasley. Those two
have been troublemakers since the first day they set foot in
Hogwarts. They have no respect for me, nor do they respect the rules.
Plus, if I'm not mistaken, Trevor the Toad is a nasty little pet of
the Longbottom boy, who's in their House. Oh, how I'd like to
flay them alive!"
"Oh, Argus, this is perfect! Not only
will we get revenge on those wicked, heartless brutes, but we'll
also expel them. That will be a heavy blow to that Muggle-loving
fool, Arthur Weasley. Cornelius Fudge will be pleased by that!"
No! Trevor thought. This is going all wrong. The Weasley
twins, no, no, no! He squeezed one of his little feet into a balled
fist, so frustrated he was. How could they so thoroughly
misunderstand his letter? Trevor could see opportunity slipping from
his grasp. Instead of stoking the fires of love, his letter
backfired, and lit the inferno of hate within Professor Umbridge.
Filch and Umbridge enjoyed a cup of tea together. The bell sounded,
and Umbridge bustled off to go teach Defense Against the Dark Arts
while Filch had an appointment with a malfunctioning shower in
Ravenclaw Tower. For some reason, butterbeer was coming out of the
showerhead instead of water.
Trevor left the office soon
after. He hopped dejectedly toward Professor Flitwick's class,
where he intended to meet Neville in the afternoon. A few hours
later, the rest of the Gryffindor fifth years had all arrived, but
Neville was nowhere to be seen. Trevor hopped onto an empty seat,
hoping that his presence there would indicate that Neville had been
there on time, but had to duck out of the classroom to hit the water
closet. Class started, and Professor Flitwick told the students to
pick up either a raven or a bullfrog, for they would be practicing
Silencing Charms. Trevor did not like the look of the bullfrogs. They
seemed to have a superior attitude about them, when they were just
big, stupid bullies. The toad was in a foul mood.
"Sorry
I'm late, Professor Flitwick, I forgot my wand," said an
out-of-breath Neville when he finally stumbled into the lesson, ten
minutes late. Professor Flitwick, a kindly little wizard, smiled and
told Neville to take a frog. Neville did so, and looked for a place
to sit. He spied the empty table at which his toad sat.
"Trevor!"
Cried Neville joyously. It had been at least two days since they had
seen each other. Neville happily scooped up his pet and placed him on
top of his head, Trevor's preferred perch. Professor Flitwick took
time to instruct Neville one on one, for the boy needed it. Come on,
you're better than that, thought Trevor as Neville's Silencing
Charm caused the bullfrog to let out a thunderous croak.
When
Charms ended, they walked down the corridor, surrounded by his peers
yet alone among them. Neville continued to mutter the word "Silencio"
with the dim hope he would remember it. Trevor rode on Neville's
head, deep in thought. How could he convince Professor Umbridge that
he wrote her the letter in earnest? They returned to dormitory, where
Neville fed Trevor some mealworms. Trevor wasn't a big fan of
mealworms, but he had eaten little more than a couple of spiders over
the past two days, so any food was pretty welcome. The toad could see
the sky darken outside the window. It was the end of a
disappointingly eventful day.
That night Trevor lay awake,
racking his brain for a new idea on how to win Dolores's love. He
concluded that another letter pouring out his heart would do no good.
She would, for some reason, take a toad's love as some kind of
malicious prank once more. He needed to change his tactics. A new
plan began to hatch in Trevor's head. He would have to brave the
lair of his least favorite being, but surely Dolores was worth such
risk.
