I was in a crappy mood so I wrote
angst. Be happy. If that's possible by the fic's end.
Rating: T
/ PG-13 because of it's darker mood and frequent mentioning of death
and suicide.
Genre: Angst, Drama...the usual memorial genre shit.
Oh yes, and to contribute to the rating, pretty much the only swear
is riiight in the genre description here.
Oh yes, Harry Potter
belongs to J. K. Rowling and I doubt she'd do this to her characters
anyway...
AT WHAT COST
The pain seared
through the old wound for one last time. As it would certainly be
the last.
The lightning bolt shaped scar on his forehead, which
had once showed brightly, almost magnificently if it were possible
for such a dark imprint, began to fade away.
He was dying.
And
no one remembered him.
"Our great hero!" "Our saviour!"
The
compliments had poured in as the recognition did as well.
International and forever fame.
But no one remembered him now.
"Hello, Mr.
Potter," said the bright woman.
She was the highlight of the
day. He sat in St. Mungo's day after day... The only thing to
remind him of his past life was the redheaded nurse with the brown
eyes. She reminded him of something. Perhaps someone... It was
truly both. Both Ginevra Molly Weasley and regret came to him. He
shouldn't have said goodbye... He wouldn't have said goodbye if he
knew it would be the last time that he would speak to her. He
would've told her more. But no one ever seems to know that the one
of the people in your life that you love the most will be dead before
you see them again.
Some days he called the nurse Ginny. He'd
been senile before. It wasn't rare.
"You're getting
weaker now," she said, laying a comforting hand on his arm, "We
don't know how long you've got left..."
He'd been weaker many
years ago.
If he'd been stronger than they wouldn't all be gone
now.
If he'd been stronger than maybe someone besides him would be
here now. Saying words of comfort or giving him a quick prayer. But
they were all gone.
If he'd been stronger he wouldn't even be
here... he'd be out living a normal life with the ungrateful world
around him. Occasionally, he'd get an old, wheezy visitor. They
were usually younger than him. But they'd stop by the long term to
say that they knew someone who was gone because of the somewhat
ancient battle of Voldemort and that they wanted to thank him. But
that hadn't come for years. The thought that he would convert his
heavy thoughts to words—stories—was long forgotten.
"But you're a
great man, Mr. Potter," the nurse said, seemingly deep in thought,
"My great grandmother...before she passed...she said that you were
a good person. I pray you rest in peace."
If he'd had the
energy to smile, he would've given her his last.
He heard her call
for a healer before he blacked away. Lost into his thoughts...and a
coma.
The infamous final battle had been over a century ago. Back when the deaths of his headmaster, his godfather, and Cedric Diggery had plagued his subconscious mind. Now, the voices of those he should've saved haunted him. He'd rather himself dead than alive right now. The shame and grief wracked over his body at some nights. But he couldn't cry, he didn't have the energy to. Years ago, before he'd been put into critical condition, he'd broken down time after time. But now crying was childish and pointless. A few measly tears wouldn't bring them all back. It wouldn't turn back to the handles of time. Plots of sneaking in to the Department of Mysteries and stealing a time turner invaded him, but it was always too little, too late.
He wondered if this was what Sirius had felt like. When he was confined to his cell as Harry was confined to his bed... Did he think about the better days of the past when he'd hung around his father, his previous and dead professor Remus Lupin, and the also has been traitor. Back then he'd had childish dreams and what-if's about a day when Sirius would have never given up his position as secret keeper. But hopes were immature now and long gone. ...There is no sadder sight than a young pessimist, besides an old optimist." Mark Twain had said that. It sounded like something Hermione would quote. Hermione. Damnit...he hadn't meant to think of that. Remus—calling him Professor Lupin seemed to sentimental of the single year the excellent man had spent at his school, besides, he'd lived to a greater age than the werewolf had anyway—was probably someone that Sirius had referred to about quotes. He always seemed to speak of Remus as his most intelligent friend, not that it surprised him.
He wondered if
this was the same feeling that the order members, along with the
other massacred innocents, thought when their end had neared. Was it
the same helpless feeling of being backed into a
corner...
Defenseless, wandless...he'd watched them fall as he'd
been forced to continue pursuit of Voldemort. But Voldemort, the one
who had caused the pain of so many, had had a short, sweet death at
his hand. It was as if it were another, unfortunately ordinary,
homicide. He'd fallen to the ground... His hoarcruxes vanished. A
brief, panging flash of light. The darkest evil was gone. Yet, with
his brief demise, Harry had felt more pain than he had. He'd been
able to live on his own for several months. That was the bliss
period for the wizarding world. He was never alone. Never isolated
with his thoughts. But they were all gone. Everyone in his class,
everyone that mattered. The order. Diminished into one, himself, in
the course of just a few years. Despite their efforts, not everyone
could be happy. But it was the larger whole that mattered...right?
He shouldn't be
dying like this. It should've been dramatic, sudden, filled with
action. He should've gone down fighting like Sirius.
That's the
way everyone in the Order left. In fights. Aside from Remus, who
was fortunate to have lived without complication from his
transformations as long as he'd done. They had died on the
battlefield, carried back by anyone strong enough to hold their own
and one other. He'd never left strong. He'd always been weak. To
weak to pursue a murdered. Although he saw so many go down in his
honor, for his sake. Because he was the boy who lived. If he didn't
kill Voldemort, no one ever would...
But he didn't...Harry James
Potter—the name sounded so grand, made him feel young to refer to
someone that had been lucky enough to die in their prime instead of
at an old age—was lying here in a hospital bed, waiting him for the
supernatural to whisk him away.
He felt them. He
heard them.
They were there, waiting for him on the other
sides.
"Harry!" they cheered. They wanted him there. Maybe
they'd forgiven him for letting them down.
And suddenly, he saw
their faces slide into view.
But before he could make them more
clear, grasp them, embrace them, apologize in hopes they'd forgive
him for letting them die...they were gone.
"We saved him," announced one healer, clearly proud of his work, "He may be a little unresponsive for a bit but we've got him."
"Aren't you lucky, Mr. Potter," the assistant healer said, he could feel her happy smile, "You're just a miracle you know. A hero lives on."
So they'd saved
him again. They'd allowed him to live and never join the people he
loved most.
They would call him a hero again...
And he would live with the memories, the haunting tales of how he'd saved the world. Of how he'd let the wizarding and muggle worlds alike show their faces and not fear to return to the public. He would allow the world happiness.
Harry had saved the wizarding world...but he'd never saved himself. He slipped into depression more than occasionally. The healing staff often had to stop him from attempting to kill himself. It wasn't fair...but at the same time it was right. The life he'd deserved...never once had it been given to him.
So he'd saved the world...but at what cost?
Review please.
