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HARRY POTTER AND THE MIRROR'S GIFT
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CHAPTER THIRTEEN
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Nothing much happens in the first half of the school year, so we now jump to the end of March.
Harry might
find Professor Flynn irritating, but he definitely preferred it
when
Flynn took over the Potions classes from Snape. It was a relief
for Neville
too, for whom the memory of his disastrous Potions exam the previous
year
was still fresh.
Neville seemed to have lost all confidence in himself when it
came to Potions.
Snape was being as nasty to him as ever, and Neville even went
to pieces
when Professor Flynn conducted the class, although Flynn was very
kind to
him, probably because he knew Jeanne was tutoring him.
On one occasion, the students were supposed to prepare a solution
which
was used to turn gemstones greener.
"Used in the jewellery business," said Professor Flynn,
giving them his childlike
stare. "Improves emeralds of poor quality, and deepens the
green in jade."
Neville, his face screwed up in concentration, started work on
his potion.
Harry, sitting at the next table, noticed Trevor, Neville's pet
toad, watching
Neville with a rather bored look on his toady face.
Flynn came over to Neville several times to encourage him. Everything
seemed
to be going swimmingly, when all of a sudden, Pansy Parkinson,
one of the
Slytherins, let out a shrill scream.
Trevor had become tired of watching Neville, and had wandered
off to watch
some of the other students. He had come over to watch Harry for
a while,
then hopped over to the Slytherins' side. Here he suddenly felt
sleepy, so he
made himself comfortable on a pile of Pansy's luminous fungi -
one of the
potion's ingredients - and went to sleep. Pansy, intent on her
solution, didn't
notice him till she put out a hand to grab some fungi and caught
hold of Trevor
instead. She screamed.
Trevor gave an indignant croak and leapt up in the air - to drop
right into
Pansy's cauldron, which fortunately had cooled down. Solution
splattered
all over the place, onto Pansy, who continued shrieking, and Draco
Malfoy,
who was sitting next to her.
Pansy grabbed her wand and whacked it at Trevor. Trevor, now a
bright
grass green, hopped desperately off the table back to Neville,
who jumped
up in excitement, and accidently dropped a lump of sulphur into
both his
fire and his cauldron.
Flames sprang up, and the solution, bubbling furiously, shot out
in a fountain
toward the ceiling, raining onto the surrounding tables and students.
Pandemonium reigned. The girls all screamed, and everyone started
scrambling for cover. Harry, peering out from under his table,
saw that
Neville's solution was turning everything blue, not green. Trevor,
now an
electric blue instead of green, came hopping over to take refuge
under
Ron's cauldron, which was lying overturned on the floor.
Professor Flynn, his face a bright blue colour due to the solution,
shouted for
calm and started searching around the floor for his wand, which
Goyle had
knocked out of his hand while running past for cover.
In the midst of all the confusion, the door opened and Professor
Snape
came in with something in his hand. The class, seeing him, suddenly
fell silent.
Snape ignored the chaos in the class, and looked at Flynn with
a strange
glitter in his eyes.
"Donahue is dead," he said.
Flynn's face went a paler shade of blue.
"No!" he gasped. "You're joking!"
Snape said nothing, but merely held out a scrap of parchment.
Flynn read it, then looked at Snape.
"Murdered?" he said, almost in a whisper. "But
- who would want to murder him?"
Snape's lip curled.
"That is not our problem, Flynn. Our problem is whether there
is any point
continuing with the research now."
Flynn seemed to be thinking, and then an expression of mulish
determination
came over his childlike face.
"We must continue, Severus!" he said. "How can
we let our colleague down?
We will find a way!"
Snape was wearing his usual sneering expression.
"It's up to you, Flynn," he said coldly. "It is
of very little consequence to me
whether the experiment is successful or not."
"How can you say that, Severus?" said Flynn, looking
rather shocked.
Snape, however, was already leaving the room. He paused at the
door,
then turned around and snapped,
"We will be having a meeting immediately. The Headmaster
wishes to see us."
Flynn, his mouth slightly open, watched as Snape disappeared through
the
door. Then, he suddenly turned to the students and said, "Class
dismissed!
Excuse me, I have an urgent meeting." And he hurried through
the door after
Snape.
Ron, fishing Trevor - now a mixture of electric blue and grass
green - out of
his cauldron, turned to Harry.
"What on earth was all that about?" he asked.
-----* * *------
Harry couldn't sleep. He lay, wide awake, staring up at the canopy
of his bed.
Then, he got up and took out the album of his parents' photographs
and looked
through it. When he had finished, he placed it back in his trunk.
He then caught
sight of the bottle of stardust which Jeanne had obtained from
the mirror in
Deorg's fortress for him.
He took the bottle out, and idly turned it around in his hands
for a while,
watching the dust shimmer. Would it one day bring his parents
back?
He put the bottle back in the trunk, then saw his Invisibility
Cloak. He hadn't
used it for a while.
Harry stared at the Cloak for a minute or two, then made up his
mind. He
would just walk around the castle a bit, until he felt more sleepy.
Taking
up the Cloak, he went from the room.
He wandered down to the Great Hall, then over to the Charms corridor.
At
one point he saw Mrs Norris coming up a flight of stairs, and
stopped until
she passed.
"Just one more round, and then I'll go back to bed,"
he said to himself.
The route he was taking would lead him past Professor Lupin's
room. He
was just passing by when the door opened, and Jeanne came out.
Harry
stopped short in surprise. He pulled the Invisibility Cloak more
tightly around
him and looked at her. Why was she with Lupin at this hour of
the night?
Lupin was at the door, looking at her. For a while, they faced
each other,
and something seemed to pass between them, though they did not
say anything.
Harry could tell by their faces that something was wrong.
At last, Jeanne said softly, "Are you sure, Remus?"
Lupin's gaze fell to the floor.
"Forgive me, Jeanne," he said, quietly.
She looked at him for a moment more, then turned and made her
way
down the corridor. Harry could clearly see tears rolling down
her cheeks
as she passed him.
Lupin stood at the doorway as if turned to stone, watching her
with an
obscure kind of pain in his eyes. Then, when she had gone, he
slowly
turned around and shut the door.
Harry stood there, petrified. What had happened?
He headed slowly back to the Gryffindor common room, and up to
bed,
still thinking.
The only thing he could think of, that could explain what he'd
just seen, was
that Lupin had decided he liked Professor Maricai after all, and
had dumped
Jeanne. But this seemed so impossible that Harry dismissed it.
He lay in bed
for a while, and fell asleep still wondering about it.
Jeanne seemed very subdued over the next few days. She was
wearing her
sullen expression even more than ever. Hagrid was worried about
her.
"She's almos' like she was when she firs' came here,"
he told Harry. "Not
talkin' ter anyone."
Harry, however, didn't tell Hagrid what he'd seen. He knew neither
Jeanne
nor Lupin would care for anyone to know.
Professor Lupin was also looking rather sober. He even looked
rather
irritated by Professor Maricai's constant attention at times,
which was
unusual for him. Harry couldn't help feeling pleased when he noticed
this.
"That rules out one reason, anyway," he said to himself.
During the next full moon, just a few days later, he checked the
Marauder's
Map. Jeanne was in Lupin's room during the day, but at night she
was back
in her own room. Harry felt his heart sink when he saw this.
He thought of trying to talk to her, but she seemed to be avoiding
him.
He finally had his chance a few days later, when he happened
to meet her
one afternoon down at Hagrid's. She was sitting on the floor,
reading a
thick book. In front of her was an array of small jars full of
unsightly
solutions. They reminded Harry of the jars he had seen in Snape's
study.
"Hagrid's gone to London on an errand for Dumbledore,"
she said when
she saw Harry. "He won't be back till tonight."
Harry sat down next to her, but before he could say anything,
there was
a knock on the door, and Neville came in. He was holding Trevor,
who
was still a peculiar mixture of grass green and blue.
"I've tried to make Trevor take his medicine, but he just
refuses to," said
Neville dolefully. "Can you persuade him a bit for me?"
Jeanne took Trevor on her palm and said something to him. Trevor
stared
back at her, gulping gently and blinking.
Jeanne looked at him for a while, then smiled at Neville.
"He says you're trying to give him the wrong medicine, Neville.
It should be
from the bottle with the red cap, not the black one."
"Oh!" said Neville, going pink. He thanked her, and
then trotted out the
door, clutching Trevor.
Harry looked at the thick book Jeanne was reading.
"Journal of Medicinal Potions and Herbal Remedies,"
he read. He looked
at her, puzzled.
"What are you reading that for, Jeanne?" he asked. "It
can't be for Neville;
it's far too advanced - those are published papers."
"So they are," agreed Jeanne. "Some of the terms
are so technical I don't
understand them." She shrugged, and said evasively, "It's
just for general
knowledge."
She picked up Hagrid's pink umbrella and started pointing it at
the jars on
the floor, labelling each one.
Harry sat and watched her.
"Are you still helping Snape?" he asked. "I would
have thought, with Flynn
around, you wouldn't have to, any more."
Jeanne pointed the umbrella at the last jar, but nothing happened.
She
whacked the umbrella on the floor, then tried again. A blank label
appeared on the jar.
She gave a small sigh.
"Hagrid's umbrella is acting up again," she said. "I
guess I have to do it the
other way."
She pointed a finger at the blank label, and the word "Agapanthus"
appeared on it.
Harry looked at her face. She was wearing her usual sullen expression,
and there were shadows under her eyes, like Lupin sometimes had.
"Are you all right?" he asked. "You look tired."
She just sighed again, and stared at the jars.
They sat in silence for a while, and then Harry spoke.
"Something's bothering you, Jeanne," he said. "I
don't want to pry, but both
Hagrid and I are worried about you. Can't we do anything to help?"
She looked at him, then shook her head.
She was silent a while longer, staring at the floor, and then
she finally spoke.
"A week ago I went to see Remus," she said. "I
more or less begged him
to change his mind, and to let us be more than friends. But he
wouldn't agree."
Harry looked at her in surprise.
"But - I thought you told me you were content to just be
friends!"
She bit her lip.
"Things have changed," she said, not looking at him.
"Time is running out."
Harry looked blank.
"I'm sorryI - I don't understand."
She sighed.
"I'm sorry, Harry. I don't really want to talk about it.
Please try and understand."
She put all the jars into a box, and got up to go. At the door,
she paused,
and looked at Harry.
"And please don't tell Hagrid."
"All right," said Harry, feeling rather worried.
She looked depressed. Without another word, she turned and left,
shutting
the door behind her.
Harry knew he was being a busybody, but he was so worried about
Jeanne
that he started keeping tabs on her by using the Marauder's Map.
She had
been suicidal in the past, and he wasn't going to take any chances.
The Map seemed to be behaving better lately. Harry didn't notice
any more
people suddenly mysteriously vanishing, and Jeanne now always
appeared
to be in Hogwarts. He noticed she seemed to be spending a lot
of her time
closeted in her room. Harry wondered what she was up to; at first
he
thought she was sick, but then he would see her later that same
day
looking fine, if a bit tired.
She was still giving Neville tuition; but she stopped attending
Hagrid's Care
of Magical Creatures classes.
"Tol' her she needn' come," said Hagrid, when they asked
about her. "She
ask'd me if she could stop, an' I said yes, since she's not bin
lookin' well
lately. Guess it was jus' a matter of time before she has ter
drop somethin',
she can't keep havin' a finger in so many pies."
But the most extraordinary thing that Harry noticed from the Map
was that
Jeanne seemed to be spending more time with Marcus Flynn. At first,
he
thought she must be discussing potions with him, just as she did
with Snape.
But then, he saw them together in Hogsmeade.
Harry had just come out of Zonko's, together with Ron and Hermione,
when the latter grabbed his arm and said, "look!"
Jeanne and Flynn were standing nearby, looking at jewellery. The
jewellery
shop was not Grenivere's, where Professor Lupin had obtained the
wolf pendant,
but a new and trendier looking shop which had booths outside so
as to attract
more customers. Signs stuck on each booth said, "Anti-shoplifting
charm activated".
Harry couldn't believe his eyes.
"But - Jeanne doesn't even like jewellery!" he said.
"I've seen her in a jewellery
shop before, and she looked totally bored."
"She doesn't look bored, now," said Ron. "She looks
like she's having the time
of her life. And Flynn seems to be buying up half the shop for
her."
They went a bit closer, close enough to hear what Jeanne and Flynn
were saying.
"We might want to have a look at Grenivere's shop after this,"
Flynn said.
Jeanne frowned.
"I don't go to Grenivere's, Marcus," she said. "His
wares are all of very low quality."
Harry couldn't believe his ears. He watched as Flynn bought five
necklaces,
and gave them to Jeanne. They then turned and disappeared into
the crowd.
"Those necklaces cost a lot," said Hermione. "I
didn't know Jeanne had such
expensive taste."
"She doesn't!" said Harry, still unable to believe what
he'd just seen.
"Looks like Flynn's persistence has paid off," said
Ron. "Though I must
say it's odd. He really doesn't seem to be Jeanne's type."
"No," agreed Hermione sadly, "I thought she and
Professor Lupin made a
much better couple."
Several days went by before Harry had an opportunity to talk
to Jeanne.
His chance came when he met her one day, after his Herbology class.
She had just collected some plant samples from Professor Sprout,
probably for one of Snape's potions.
"Are you going back to the castle as well, Jeanne?"
he asked, falling in
step with her.
She nodded, but did not smile. She seemed rather distant, and
there was a
strangely resolute look on her face.
Harry looked at her.
"I saw you at Hogsmeade last weekend, with Professor Flynn."
He'd half expected her to look guilty, or start explaining why
she'd
been with Flynn, but she didn't.
"Did you?" she said quietly. "I didn't see you."
Harry felt something wasn't quite right.
"I thought you didn't like Flynn, Jeanne."
She didn't look at him.
"Things have changed, Harry."
Harry was nonplussed.
"Is - is everything all right?" he asked.
"It's as fine as it can be."
Harry couldn't stand it any more.
"Jeanne!" he said, coming to a halt, and looking at
her.
She stopped, and looked at him. There was an odd expression in
her
eyes - determined, resolute and strangely despairing.
"What's happening? Why were you with Flynn? What about Professor
Lupin?"
Jeanne looked slightly bitter.
"I told you already, Harry. Remus and I are through,"
she said.
"I don't believe it!" said Harry. "Don't tell me
you don't care for him any more."
She looked at him, then looked away.
"I've made my choice," she said quietly.
Harry couldn't believe his ears.
"You mean, you're really going together with Flynn?"
he said incredulously.
She nodded.
"But - how can you?" Harry asked. "You don't care
for him, do you?"
"That's not important, Harry," she said.
Harry opened his mouth to speak, but she held up a hand.
"I've made my choice, Harry," she said. "I know
what I'm doing. You don't
understand now, but maybe you will, one day."
She dropped one of the plants, and bent to pick it up.
"I have to go now," she said, not looking at him. "I'll
talk to you another time."
And she walked off without another glance, leaving Harry staring
after her in amazement.
-
