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Harry Potter and the Psychic Serpent

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Epilogue

Full Circle

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On the last day of term, Harry, Hermione and Ron walked back to the castle after their morning run. Following breakfast, there would be the Dueling Club Exhibition, then the leaving feast and the long ride back to King's Cross. Harry could hardly believe that his fifth year was almost over, that he was almost sixteen. He thought of some of the things that had occurred during the previous year—not least among them, Hermione—and shook his head in wonder as he walked.

They left Hermione at the girls' prefects' bathroom, and Ron was going to leave Harry at the boys' bathroom and go up to Gryffindor tower, but Harry said, "Oh, come on, Ron; just use this one. It's early; no one's to know."

Ron looked up and down the corridor uncertainly, and after Harry gave the password, he followed him in. To say that Ron was floored by the opulence of the room would have been a gross understatement. Harry thought of the utilitarian white tile and simple candle-sconces lining the Gryffindor Tower bathrooms. He immediately wondered whether this was a mistake, another instance of his tactlessly rubbing Ron's nose in what he didn't have—in this case, regular access to a marble-lined Roman bath.

Then he thought it was a mistake for a different reason, as Ron's wondering gaze reached the tub and the person lounging there, eyes closed. The Dark Mark was clearly visible on his left forearm and his upper arms were still decorated with purple-green bruises.

"Oi! Malfoy!" Draco Malfoy opened his eyes and screamed, "Weasley! Potter, what the hell is he doing in here? He's not a prefect!"

"Stuff it, Malfoy. Who cares what shower he uses? Mind your own business."

"This is my business. It's bad enough my personal sanctuary is invaded by you on a regular basis, but when it's also invaded by Weasley, I draw the line."

Ron wasn't shaken by this; he merely smirked at Malfoy. "What's the matter? Afraid I'll tell my sister about your physical inadequacies?"

Malfoy looked uncomfortable and shifted some bubbles in the water with his hands. "Brilliant. Somehow, by being involved with your sister, I seem to have given you the idea I'm interested in you. Can't even take a simple bath without being ogled by Weasley. Or are you in here to see Potter? What about it Potter? Is there something the two of you should be telling Granger?"

Harry walked to the showers, humming. "Only if you want us to tell her about your 'physical inadequacies,' too."

"I do not—" Malfoy started to say, before realizing that he'd been tricked. Once he heard the showers running for both Harry and Ron they heard him get out of the tub and pad over to the wardrobe where the bathrobes were kept. A little later they looked up to see him peering round the corner at them in Slytherin green.

"If you two like, I could tell all the girls in the school about your 'physical inad—'" Then he got a really good look at them and was speechless. When he finally found words again, all he could utter was a soft, "Oh, shite."

Ron and Harry both threw back their heads and laughed. When they had finished their showers, they wrapped towels around themselves. Malfoy went to the door, trying to get in a last dig,

"I am so going to whip your arses in the exhibition," he sneered before leaving. He slammed the door and they couldn't help laughing again. Well, Harry thought as he retrieved a deep red Gryffindor bathrobe and handed one to Ron; Malfoy hasn't lost his edge. It was comforting, somehow, like Snape taking house points away.

While they were walking back to Gryffindor Tower, Ron suddenly stopped. "Harry, what do you suppose Malfoy meant? He's not supposed to be going up against us. You're paired with me and Roger Davies, and he's paired with Niamh and Fred. He and Hermione and I are supposed to be going up against you alone, but that's one of the scripted bits."

Harry shrugged. "I think he just meant he was going to do better than us in the individual duels. He's beaten Niamh. But Fred's good; he'll have to work hard to beat him. He and Yarrow were really impressive with the sun bulls and the Chthonians."

Ron shuddered. "Those things were…" Ron couldn't go on speaking and shuddered again. "I am so glad we don't have to worry about that for two more years."

Harry nodded in agreement. The Chthonians made him remember the skeleton in his dream. And seeing Hogwarts in ruins. These images haunted him during his waking hours now, in addition to his sleeping ones. He didn't need Ron reminding him of the dueling skeletons.

They dressed for breakfast in their best robes. The exhibition would immediately follow. It was originally going to be on Wednesday, but Snape rescheduled it because of Dudley's funeral. Harry's stomach was starting to act up in anticipation; he could barely get down a bite of toast or a sip of juice. He watched Ron eat a bowl of porridge, two slices of toast slathered with butter and marmalade, five sausages and some kippers.

"Hungry much?" he asked Ron, feeling ill as he watched.

"Mmm?" Ron mumbled, his mouth full. It seemed to be an effort for him to notice that anything in the universe existed outside of the food in front of him. "Wan' be bebaird," he said through a mouthful of porridge. Harry nodded, grimacing and leaning back in his seat, so he wouldn't be sprayed with food. You'd think it was a thirty-mile hike, he thought, not a dueling exhibition.

After breakfast the entire population of the school advanced on the Quidditch pitch. The spectators would have to stand round the edges of the pitch to watch the duelers in the center, since the stands were quite high up and designed for viewing people flying about in the air. The various duelers could stand at the edges and also watch, or wait in the Quidditch changing rooms, if they wished to continue to practice before they were slated to appear.

Harry went into the changing rooms and sat on a bench, trying to steady his breathing. Why was he so nervous? He'd do fine. He was the captain. Flitwick had given him an advanced Charms O.W.L. for his dueling. Nothing to worry about.

He thought he was going to throw up.

Hermione sat beside him and put her arm about his shoulders. "Harry?" she said uncertainly, peering in his face. He seemed not to hear her at first, then he lifted his eyes to hers and gave a feeble smile.

"Fine. I mean, fine I'm. I mean, I'm fine."

She smiled. "Okay, whatever you say. It's a good thing we're going out there to duel and not recite Shakespeare soliloquies."

He grimaced at her. "That wouldn't be a problem. Oh, that this too, too solid flesh would melt, thaw, and resolve itself into a dew, or that the Almighty had not fixed His canon 'gainst self-slaughter…"

She frowned. "Did you have to choose something about suicide?"

Harry's eyes opened wide. "Oh. It just came out. I didn't think. But Dudley didn't really commit suicide, remember."

"I know. It's just…" She stopped and drew her lips into a line. "Nothing. We'll be up soon. Ready?"

He nodded. Roger and Evan Davies stood nearby, and Draco Malfoy and Ginny were together near the door, their arms around each other in a gentle embrace. Ron sat near Harry and Hermione, clearly keeping an eye on his sister and Malfoy.

"We're next," Ron told Harry, not moving his eyes away from them as Ginny brushed her lips lightly against Malfoy's cheek. Harry turned to look at them.

"…love you," he saw rather than heard Ginny say, she was speaking so quietly. Malfoy swallowed and brushed her hair out of her face.

"I love you so much," Harry heard him say very softly before kissing her quickly and lightly on the lips. He looked startled to turn and meet Harry's eyes, and he frowned. "Ready, Potter?" Harry swallowed and turned to Hermione, who was looking at him strangely. He turned back to Malfoy and nodded. This was the scripted exhibition, Harry against the three of them. Ron looked suspiciously at Malfoy.

"You're sure you remember what you're supposed to do, Malfoy?" he asked.

Draco Malfoy gave a very unreassuring lopsided smile. "I know exactly what I'm going to do."

Harry thought, I don't like that answer, as they exited the changing rooms. Ginny followed them and took up a position on the edge of the pitch with the other spectators.

Snape stood in the center of the pitch. The spectators' applause for the previous duelers died down and Snape pointed his wand at his throat to announce the next combination.

"Sonorus. Next," his magically magnified voice sounded around the pitch, "Harry Potter will face Ronald Weasley, Hermione Granger and Draco Malfoy in a three-on-one attack."

Snape pointed his wand at his throat again. "Quietus," he said, moving to the perimeter of the pitch with the others.

Harry stood a little off from the center, where Snape had been, facing the goal posts nearest him. Ron, Hermione and Malfoy were arrayed behind him. When practicing this, it had reminded him unnervingly of when Ron had been about to curse him in the forest, and Lucius Malfoy, his son and Wormtail had been behind Ron. He tried to put that out of his mind. He knew just what was going to happen. It was all rehearsed.

Sandy hissed at him.

Uh oh, Harry thought. He didn't usually duel with Sandy on his arm, but he had forgotten to leave her by the fireplace in the common room before going to breakfast; the fire wasn't usually lit now that it was June. Harry worried about what to do. He'd have to think fast; with any luck, those in the crowd who weren't in the Dueling Club and hadn't seen them rehearsing wouldn't know that anything was wrong.

Harry braced himself; he didn't want to start too soon. Malfoy, Ron and Hermione were supposed to hit him very quickly from behind with successive Passus Curses that—in theory—were supposed to give him pain in three parts of his body.

"Gastro suo—" he heard Hermione begin, and he began the process, the separation of mind and body...

"Tracheo suo—" Ron said a split second after her.

"Capo suo—" Draco Malfoy said almost as soon as Ron had spoken.

"Passus est. Passus est. Passus est." All three finished their curses, but Harry didn't feel a thing, floating above his body, turning to look at them, their wands connected to his body by crackling waves of light. Then he saw it, he saw the moment when Malfoy turned and broke the connection between his wand and Harry, when he turned and pointed his wand at Ron, who turned his head slowly in surprise as Harry watched Malfoy's lips move in an unheard curse, as the beam of light arced the short distance to Ron's body. Ron's wand broke the connection with Harry as Malfoy's curse struck him.

Hermione broke her connection with Harry, turning to Malfoy, and Harry slid down into his body again, but before Hermione could get her curse out of her mouth, Malfoy had broken the connection between his wand and Ron, and pointed it at her instead, and the second that Harry was fully integrated again, he heard him cry, "Impedimenta! "

Now Hermione appeared to him to be moving even more slowly than when he had been in his separated state; so slowly that any movement was indiscernible. Harry had decided what to do. Originally, he was supposed to demonstrate a shielding charm that he could put upon himself, to allow him to continue to cast spells, but preventing people and most spells from penetrating from the outside and affecting him.

Instead, he did something he remembered from the book Sirius had given him for his birthday. Harry pointed his wand to his side, crying, "Serpensortia!" whereupon a snake began to emerge from the tip of his wand, growing more enormous by the second, until the spectators backed up from the pitch, nervous.

"Stop!" he hissed to it, and the huge serpent turned its head to look at him curiously. "You will obey me," he told it.

"Yessss," it answered.

"Position yourself in a circle around those people," he hissed, pointing at Ron, Malfoy and Hermione, "and take your tail in your mouth."

The snake slithered to do his bidding. When Malfoy had put the Impediment Curse on Hermione, Ron had had to catch his breath for a moment. He clutched his throat (Malfoy had done Tracheo suo for the Passus Curse he'd put on Ron) and turned his wand on Malfoy, saying, "Stupefy!" as the snake surrounded them and put its tail in its mouth. Malfoy promptly fell over, and that's when Ron noticed that he was surrounded by an enormous snake's body.

He looked with alarm at Harry; he knew that Harry was forced to improvise as much as he was, thanks to Malfoy throwing the script out, but suddenly he seemed much less sure of Harry than of Malfoy. Harry pointed at the Snake and cried, "AEGIS!"

A blue light sprang up from the snake's body, a glowing column that extended far over Ron's head, fading as it reached the clouds. The shield charm was now a prison charm, meaning that Harry could send spells into the blue column, but Ron could not send any out, or get out himself, though a rock or another inanimate object would go through. Ron hurled himself against the shield but his body stopped abruptly, as if he had struck a glass wall. Malfoy was on the ground beside him while Hermione stood nearby, also in the column, still moving with imperceptible slowness. Harry smiled at Ron, then pointed his wand toward the prisoners inside the snake's circle.

"Accio!" he cried, and all three of their wands flew through the shield and propelled themselves into Harry's outstretched hand. He turned to the spectators nearest him and smiled, holding his own wand in his outstretched right hand, the three other wands in his left.

He took a sweeping bow as the tumultuous applause started to move around the pitch. When he rose, he caught Snape's eye. He wasn't clapping, but he gave Harry a very small nod. Harry nodded back. He turned and pointed his wand, saying, "Finite Incantatem!"

The blue column of light and the snake disappeared. He walked to Hermione and took the Impediment Curse off her before pointing his wand at Malfoy and saying, "Enervate!"

Malfoy lifted his head, blinking and looking about with confusion. He saw Harry standing over him with a crooked smile and sighed. Harry helped him to stand and gave each of them their wands back. The four of them took a bow together as the applause increased. Malfoy muttered out of the side of his mouth, "Made it more interesting, didn't I Potter?"

"That's all you were trying to do?" Harry asked softly, unconvinced.

"Of course." Malfoy's smug grin was thoroughly unbelievable. Harry wondered again about trusting Malfoy. He can't even do a simple dueling exhibition without ruining hours and hours of planning and practice, Harry thought. And now Malfoy knew about Sirius. Well, Sirius had sanctioned that. There wasn't much Harry could have done to stop it.

When the applause died down they left the center of the pitch except for Malfoy, who was about to engage in a non-scripted duel with Niamh Quirke. Harry, Ron and Hermione stood near Ginny, whose hands were clasped in front of her stomach. Her knuckles were white.

Harry watched the duel without really seeing it. Luckily, Sandy had told him what Malfoy was going to do before he turned to attack Ron. Harry knew that having Sandy with him, predicting things, was perhaps not the most sporting thing to do, but he was glad now that he had not removed her from his arm before breakfast. Malfoy hadn't been sporting either.

After several feints and some exchanges of curses, Malfoy landed the disarming charm on Niamh, and she flew backward into the crowd, her wand zooming into Malfoy's hand. As the people on whom Niamh landed helped her to stand, applause went round the pitch. Niamh and Malfoy returned to stand with the other spectators, Niamh near her brother and sister, Malfoy with Ginny, standing beside Ron and Hermione.

It was time for Harry and Ron to duel. Hermione turned to Harry and kissed his cheek. "Good luck." She stopped Ron from going and stood on her toes to kiss his cheek also. "Good luck," she said again, more softly. Ron glanced at her, then Harry. He nodded at Harry. There was a strange look in Ron's eyes.

They both advanced to the center of the pitch. After bowing, Ron promptly pointed his wand at him and cried, "Apiarium!" Immediately, Harry had the sensation of there being bees all over his body, crawling on every square inch, exposed and unexposed. He jumped; this was new. Ron had never done this before; indeed, Harry had never heard of the spell before.

Then the stinging began.

Harry cried out once before clamping his jaw shut. He could do the pain blocking, but he decided to work through the pain instead, so he would be able to cast spells on Ron as well. The unseen bees were starting to sting him in very sensitive places…

He pointed his wand at Ron, wincing as he cried, "Otoexodus!" He watched Ron's bafflement as his hearing left him. Ron stared round at the cheering crowd, who, Harry knew, would now look to Ron like a television with the sound turned off. People moved their mouths, and yelled and shouted, but Ron could hear none of it. He wouldn't be able to hear his own voice, or the spells that Harry was casting. He was temporarily deaf.

Ron and Harry circled each other. There was a light in Ron's eye that made Harry nervous. It reminded him of the way he had looked in the forest, when he'd been speaking so hatefully to him and Hermione. This, Harry thought, wasn't just about dueling. This was about much more, and Ron had permission to do whatever he wanted, within reason. He was torn between letting Ron get it out of his system and protecting his reputation as captain of the Dueling Club. Harry wished Sandy would say something, but he knew her Sight could not be forced, he couldn't even ask her. If she had something to tell him, she would.

Harry twitched more than a little from the sensation of still being covered by stinging bees. Sweat ran into his eyes, and he blinked. His glasses were fogging; Ron appeared to be advancing on him through a cloud of mist. He dodged Ron's curse and Ron dodged one of Harry's. A few more exchanges like this occurred, and Harry remembered that Ron had been watching when he'd been dueling Flitwick. Taking notes, Ron? he thought, as he dodged another hex and sent an ankle-stabbing Passus Curse in Ron's direction.

Ron went down on one knee, his face contorted in pain, his head bowed. Harry smiled. He would be all right. Ron was in a good deal of pain, and now he could just—

"Expelliarmus!"

Ron pointed his wand at Harry suddenly, lifting his head. Harry had thought Ron was caught up in his pain, but knew he'd been a fool as he felt himself flying backwards, his wand leaving his hand, drawn to Ron like a magnet. Harry landed on the pitch, breaking his fall by throwing his hands behind him. He remembered Flitwick telling him the duel was a draw, then disarming him. He stood uncertainly after a moment, brushing grass off his robes (and still flinching from the bees). He walked back to Ron, who took the Beehive Hex off him, and Harry restored his hearing. They shook hands and turned to acknowledge the applause, but Harry couldn't help noticing where Ron's eyes had gone.

Hermione smiled at them both, laughing merrily. Harry looked back at her, also trying to smile. It wasn't just that Ron had been more aggressive in the duel than Harry had ever seen him; he seemed to have as much to prove as the day they'd heard the Ravenclaws gossiping and had charged upstairs to Parvati. Now he could say that he'd beaten Harry Potter, captain of the Dueling Club. Of course, some people would think that this was a choreographed duel, or that Harry had thrown it so his best friend could win. In a way, he had won because he was Harry's friend, because Harry had paused to let him get his breath, where he might not have done that with someone else. Harry looked sideways at Ron, smiling at Hermione. He felt his stomach clench and remembered the way Ron had looked in the forest again. He was suddenly more worried about Ron than about Malfoy, and he didn't like feeling that way.

They moved to the perimeter to stand with Hermione and watch the others duel. In a little while Harry would go up against Roger Davies. Lovely, he thought. A Head Boy with something to prove. He had drawn some fantastic dueling partners.

Hermione stood between them, and Harry could look over her head at Ron. Ron turned and met Harry's eyes. He suddenly seemed very hostile. Then Ron looked down at Hermione, and his gaze softened, a smile in his eyes.

Harry turned to watch the duels, suspecting that his hardest fight lay ahead of him, and that it would not be with Roger Davies, but with his best friend.

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On the way back to the castle, Colin and Dennis Creevey were animatedly dissecting Harry's performance against Roger Davies (Harry had won) and the three attackers as well.

"And when the snake just oozed out of your wand…"

"And when you hissed at it…"

Harry grimaced and looked sideways at Will Flitwick, walking nearby. Colin and Dennis were one and two years behind him, still star struck about The Great Harry Potter, while Harry felt that Will Flitwick, a full four years behind him, treated him like a normal person.

"Uncle Filius said you did really well on your Charms O.W.L.s, and that you'd dueled with him."

Harry frowned. "Who? Oh, Professor Flitwick. Yeah, he was pretty tough."

"I reckon you wanted to give Ron a chance to win one, yeah?"

He hesitated for a moment. "Something like that, yeah."

The leaving feast was waiting for them when they returned. Everyone was ravenous from standing about watching the dueling or participating. They filed into the Great Hall and went to their house tables, anxiously awaiting the news of who had won the House Cup. No one house had won the year before; the decorations on the walls had been black, in honor of Cedric. At least, Harry thought, none of the students had died this year. None of the students at this school, anyway. He thought of Dudley.

The food was already on the tables and everyone started heaping their plates with their favorite dishes. Ron started in on a large turkey drumstick as if he hadn't had a perfectly enormous breakfast. Harry smiled at Hermione and they shook their heads over Ron. He seemed perfectly normal again; Harry tried to put out of his mind the entity he now thought of as Dueling Ron.

Before going to the Slytherin table Draco Malfoy dramatically kissed Ginny's hand, while she looked at him with a glazed expression. Ron snapped his fingers in front of her face.

"What? Oh, Ron—" she said, flustered. Then she noticed his plate. "Oh my! Are you afraid Mum and Dad won't have food when we get home? Because you could probably ask the house elves to pack you a picnic hamper for the train…" Ron looked at her, chewing. "Ver' fuh-ee."

Ginny laughed and sat beside him. After he chewed and swallowed, he looked at her very seriously. "Gin—I just want to know. Malfoy. He—treats you all right?"

She put her hand over his and patted it. "Yes, Ron. He treats me like a princess." She smiled at him and kissed his cheek. He recoiled slightly.

"What was that for?"

"Ron, you're sixteen. Grow up! You were being sweet. Note the past tense. Sorry to alarm you."

Ron went back to eating but Harry noticed him looking surreptitiously in his direction and at Hermione. Harry remembered the intensity of dueling with him. It had meant far more to Ron than to him. He was getting something out of his system by coming after Harry that way.

After the pudding Dumbledore stood and everyone looked at him expectantly; they would finally find out who had won the House Cup. He gazed round the hall at them, his blue eyes twinkling behind his half-moon spectacles and a gentle smile on his face.

He held a parchment before his face and peered at it. "Well! I am pleased to announce that this year, the House Cup goes to—"

"Excuse me, Headmaster," Snape said suddenly, appearing at his elbow. "I have a deduction in house points to report. A student in Gryffindor left the school grounds without permission. I neglected to tell you before, but I have it right here." He handed a small piece of parchment to Dumbledore.

Ron, Ginny and Hermione glared at Harry, who felt like disappearing under the pile of turkey bones on Ron's plate. Dumbledore opened the folded slip of parchment and read, "Fifteen points from Gryffindor. Well, let's see how that leaves us…"

Harry frowned, looking straight at Snape. He met Harry's gaze, expressionless. He'd taken twenty-five points away, not fifteen points. What was he up to?

"Actually, that leaves us exactly where we already were! Gryffindor was twenty-five points ahead of Slytherin, and now they are ten points ahead. Gryffindor wins the House Cup! And now for the appropriate decor."

He clapped his hands and the red-gold Gryffindor hangings showing a rampant lion rolled down the walls of the hall, warming the grey stone. He could have tied us for the House Cup, Harry thought. Like I did with the Quidditch Cup. But he didn't. He could have taken away a few more points and won it for Slytherin, but he didn't.

Harry's throat felt tight. He looked at Snape and Snape gazed back at Harry, expressionless. The Slytherins weren't looking very happy, but the Gryffindor table was in an uproar, as palms slapped each other in the air and some couples kissed (a bit too enthusiastically for Professor McGonagall, who broke Lee and Katie apart with some well-aimed sparks).

Harry grinned at Hermione, Ron and Ginny, who looked floored. Dumbledore quietly waited for peace to return. "Congratulations, Gryffindors. Tying for the Quidditch Cup with Slytherin made it very close, but it's my understanding that Professor Moody—" and he turned to the old Auror sitting near him "—received some especially fine essays from the fifth years which warranted house points a number of times. You should be proud of yourselves." Ron colored deeply, and Neville did too. They were the only ones to get points from Moody for their essays, and Ron received points more often than Neville. Dumbledore didn't mention the three-hundred points they'd earned for their house because of the Lucius Malfoy affair. That had been a draw with Slytherin as well, as Draco Malfoy had received the same number of points afterward.

"And now, for some sadder news. At the end of last year, we mourned the death of Cedric Diggory. Fortunately no such tragedy has occurred this year to any Hogwarts student. However, that does not mean that we here at Hogwarts have been untouched by the return of Voldemort, who was responsible for Cedric's death. A number of young people have recently been recruited to be Death Eaters, as you may know. Many of you here knew Penelope Clearwater and Marcus Flint, who completed their education here in recent years. Marcus was a fine Quidditch player. He also had the strength of character to say 'no' when his own father wished him to become a Death Eater. He and his mother are now dead. Penelope was a prefect in Ravenclaw here at Hogwarts and worked at Witch Weekly; she will be missed by many. Her family was also killed, including her brother Jeremy, who would have been in first year here at Hogwarts in September.

"Cedric was one of the first casualties in this war, for we are at war, I am sorry to say, and the Clearwaters and Flints shall not be the last people we mourn, I fear. Some of you—especially those finishing your seventh year—may be approached to serve Voldemort. Penelope and Marcus were meant to be lessons, to show you what might happen if you refuse. I cannot tell you what to do; I think all here know what decision I would recommend if you were to find yourself in such a position. Just remember what you have learned here, and think about what is important to you. I have spoken before about choosing between what is right and what is easy. I am not here to preach. But I hope that if we have taught you anything, it is how to make sound decisions, to weigh the consequences of your actions, and to make well-considered sacrifices when necessary.

"That said, I ask you all now to stand and remember your former classmates, Penelope Clearwater and Marcus Flint."

The students stood as one and raised their goblets. Even every last Slytherin was standing in honor of Flint. The names rumbled through the hall, and some Ravenclaws who hadn't heard about Penelope and her family were crying quietly, while the Scottish girl at the Slytherin table put her hand on Malfoy's arm, her eyes wet. Harry looked at Ginny. She hadn't seen. Well, Harry thought. We already know she's got nerve. She asked me out. Perhaps it doesn't bother her that Draco has a girlfriend. He's not interested anyway, Harry thought. He looked at Ginny again. If Malfoy hurt her, he'd…

"Harry!"

He looked around, confused. Hermione pulled at his robes to get him to sit. Everyone else had sat again. He stopped worrying about Malfoy and the Scottish girl and drank some pumpkin juice. They socialized at the table for a little longer; in half an hour, the carriages would take them to the train. Suddenly, Harry felt a hand on his shoulder and he looked up into the contorted face of Mad Eye Moody.

"Potter," he said gruffly. "A word before you go."

Harry nodded and rose, following Moody to the entrance hall, where house elves were still moving students' trunks into the carriages.

"Potter," he said again. "I didn't have a chance to give you my condolences on your cousin's death."

Harry hadn't expected this. "Oh. Um. Thank you." He knew he was being stupid and awkward, but he was caught off-guard. Moody seemed to be overlooking this, however.

"It's hard. Losing a mate at your age. I know. I think I mentioned that I finished school in 1915?"

"Yes."

"Well, there was a war going on, and I had had enough of magic for a while—or so I thought—so instead of looking for a job in the wizarding world, I signed up for the Muggle army. My best mate from home was going. He was a Muggle. I'm half and half. He knew from the time I got my Hogwarts letter that I was a wizard. I didn't spill it before then; even though some strange things had happened, I wasn't completely certain I wasn't a Squib until then. He never stopped being my friend. When he told me he was going into the army, at first we thought it would be Ireland, for The Troubles. Rather close by, blokes you're fighting also speak English. Not too bad. Not great, but there you go. If you had to pick a war, he thought—"

Moody looked out the front doors. "But he was sent to the Dardanelles. Gallipoli, in Turkey. I got myself sent, too, so I could be by his side and protect him. We were both eighteen. I knew it wasn't legal, of course, to help a Muggle with magic, interfering in a Muggle war. The Ministry would have broken my wand if they knew. But I wasn't planning to try to win the war for England; just protect my friend from harm. In the end, it didn't matter. I wasn't prepared for the trench warfare, for the mustard gas, for the commanding officers sending mere lads over the top of the trenches, running into machine-gun fire with nothing but effing bayonets…"

He sighed and his magical eye rolled around to look at Harry. His normal eye was still fixed on the road to Hogsmeade. "There was nothing I could do for him. I carried his body back to the trenches, so his parents could bury him properly. I hated the idea of his being out there on the battlefield, carrion birds circling overhead…" Moody shuddered. Harry swallowed, to think of something so horrible it made Moody react this way. "The Anzacs were much worse off than we were." He noted Harry's puzzlement and explained, "That's Australian and New Zealand troops. Horrible, horrible number of dead.

"When I was back home I took his mum and dad some letters he'd written that never got posted. I didn't get off scot-free either. A month after he died, my leg was amputated in a field hospital. I was broken up about my mate; didn't much care about taking care of myself anymore. I'd cut my calf on a rusty piece of barbed wire and put a pain charm on it so it wouldn't hurt. Turned out that was the worst possible thing I could have done. If I could have felt the pain, I'd have known it was infected. Gangrene. No choice. It was amputated by a twenty-six year old Muggle doctor with a saw he'd poured rubbing alcohol on. I had no anesthesia. So I didn't lose my leg to dark wizards, as you might assume, but I did lose it to evil. Gallipoli is something I'll never forget." Harry remembered him talking about Gallipoli in Defense Against the Dark Arts. Worse than decimation, he'd said. He knew firsthand.

Harry swallowed, watching the last of the trunks float into the carriages. "I'm glad," he said throatily, "you came back to teach. I'm glad you recovered from—from what happened last year."

He nodded. His magical eye swiveled around to look at the road outside the door again. "Well, as I've just told you, I've been through worse. Not much worse, but worse. I'm afraid, Potter," he put his hand on Harry's shoulder again, "you are not out of the woods yet."

Harry grimaced. "I know. Just when everything seemed to be improving—Dudley."

"Well, you should have a summer that's all right. You'll be well looked-after."

Harry frowned. "How do you know? I'll just be with my old baby sitter."

He brought both of his eyes to focus on Harry. "You don't know?" He glanced into the Great Hall, then back at Harry. "Well, I don't see the harm in telling you. The Headmaster's having his brother check up on you. He doesn't mind the Muggle world, unlike many wizards. He's better at blending in than some of us, too." He smiled craggily at Harry. "In fact—they call the Headmaster a Muggle-lover, but his brother, well—he lives in the Muggle world all the time. Hardly ever uses magic, except emergencies. Or like when he came here to teach in Flitwick's place. That's the real reason he's got such a bad reputation. He's got a philosophical problem with it. Doing magic, that is. Thinks it's an unfair advantage we have over Muggles."

"But—he never said anything when he was teaching us. And he was really good, too."

"It's not that he can't do magic. He's perfectly competent. He knew it wasn't his job to feed you propaganda. He's a good man, Aberforth Dumbledore. That goat thing was just a cover his brother made up for him, complete with the rumor that he might be illiterate. To take the focus off the real issue. He goes along with the joke. But even some folks you'd think would be tolerant of this sort of thing are scandalized." Harry remembered Flitwick's reaction to Aberforth teaching his lessons; McGonagall and Sprout were also not Aberforth supporters.

"So that's it? He doesn't use magic, and that's why he's—"

"Persona non grata. There are things some magical folk can't contemplate, like marrying Muggles or Muggle-borns. There's some who can't stand the idea of walking around in Muggle clothes, or going to Muggle shops. But almost all magical folk can't stomach the idea of a magical person who won't use his magic, just on principle. It rubs 'em the wrong way."

Harry looked at him shrewdly. "It doesn't seem to bother you."

"It doesn't. You're looking at someone who decided at eighteen to go to Turkey to fight in a war I didn't understand because my best mate was going, and he was a Muggle. I don't hold anything against Aberforth Dumbledore. I like a man with principles, even when sticking to them makes his life harder than it has to be. He's one of the few people I truly admire in this world, Potter. I won't tell you who the others are. If I want to see you turn red, I'll get your girlfriend out here to kiss you."

He smiled again and Harry felt himself redden anyway. The other students had started coming into the entrance hall from the Great Hall, and Harry extended his hand to the old Auror, who took it.

"Thank you, sir. It's been a privilege."

Moody nodded. "The pleasure's been all mine, Potter. All mine." He turned and hobbled up the marble stairs one at a time while a sea of students surrounded Harry. Soon he was swept down the steps and into a carriage by Ron and Hermione, Ginny and Malfoy following closely behind. He tried to look back, to see Dumbledore, but he could not. He thought about Aberforth and his self-imposed exile from the wizarding world.

We must choose between what is right and what is easy.

Aberforth Dumbledore, like his brother, had made that choice, and had accepted the consequences of it. Harry felt himself, like Moody, admiring the renegade wizard with all his heart. And now he knew what Aberforth had meant when he said he'd see Harry soon. He smiled in anticipation. Perhaps this would be a good summer after all.

#/#/#

Ron had claimed a compartment for the five of them. They sat as they had on the trip to London for the trial, Harry and Hermione on one side, Ron, Ginny and Draco Malfoy on the other. They tried to keep things light, with card games and playing with the three cats (Crookshanks, Mackenzie and Argent). They needled each other (especially Ron and Malfoy—Ron swore he'd get back at Malfoy for the Passus Curse during the exhibition). They ate too many Chocolate Frogs and pumpkin pasties. And, as much as they professed to be annoyed with each other over various things, they all seemed to feel a dread at the impending separation that would come when they arrived at King's Cross. Ron and Ginny would go back to the Burrow; Harry would go back to Surrey; Malfoy was being picked up by his former nanny; Hermione could go home and see her parents at last. But they wouldn't be together.

As they neared London Ginny was using her wand to heal some scratches Malfoy had received from Mackenzie. Harry held the black cat on his lap, rubbing her under the chin while she purred. Crookshanks slept on Hermione's lap and Argent on Ron's. Harry had tried to warn Malfoy about Mackenzie; not because Ginny's cat was known to be vicious, but because Sandy had said, "A cat will scratch a dragon." Possibly the least cryptic prediction she'd ever given Harry. He'd told Malfoy to be careful or he'd get scratched, and sure enough, he had. As a result, Harry was able to give Malfoy a smug I-told-you-so look, which he rather enjoyed.

While Ginny was still working on his hands, he looked at the four of them. "Well," he said. "You may thank me, Gryffindors."

They frowned at him, Ginny included, as she finished putting the binding charms on his cat scratches. It really hadn't taken Sandy to predict his getting scratched. He wasn't a cat person.

"What for, Malfoy?" Ron wanted to know.

"I am why you won the House Cup."

Harry's jaw dropped a little; had he told Snape to do what he did?

Hermione made a face. "What did you do, break into McGonagall's office and get her to dock you a hundred house points?"

"No, but close. I took them away from my own housemates. Prefect's privilege."

Now all of their jaws had dropped open. "What?" Ron said.

Hermione added, "You didn't."

"What, Granger, you never took house points from anyone, in your house or out of it? Or you Potter?"

They shook their heads. He shook his head back at them, for a different reason. "You two had better toughen up. You probably saw someone doing something they should have been called on. I certainly—experienced enough." He sighed. "Ever since my dad's trial, most of the Slytherins have been such pricks. Except for a couple of people. I expected some of that. But after a while, the shitty stunts they were pulling on me were growing tiresome. Turning my mattress into a bed of nails, taking my clothes before the house elves could get them and soaking them in itching potion, stealing my homework, transfiguring my texts into poisonous frogs—you name it. I got bloody tired of it. Every chance I got, every small infringement of the rules that I could catch someone in, I took away house points. I told them, all right, if they wanted Slytherin to lose the sodding House Cup, that was fine with me. I'd take away house points until we were in negative numbers, if I had to. It took a while, but the harassment finally stopped. They realized I was serious. And Snape backed me up. Millicent Bulstrode did too. She even took some points away from people who were pulling stunts on me. I reckon Snape knew what he was doing making her a prefect. But there were still some things that happened where I never caught anyone."

Ron actually looked concerned. "What are you going to do in September? You're just going to have to go back to Slytherin again."

"I'm going to owl some of the other Slytherin students this summer who I think were just going along to go along. Try to find out who's with me. What I need is a block of allies in Slytherin. I don't seriously think everyone is from dark wizard families. I know Bulstrode isn't. And take Mariah, for instance…"

Ginny frowned. "Mariah? Mariah Kirkner?"

"Yeah. She's in your year. You have Potions and Care of Magical Creatures with Slytherin, yeah? She's got kinky black hair, skinny, pale."

"Yes, I know what she looks like," Ginny said absently, looking at him.

"Well, she's all right. Older brother works at the Ministry. Her dad's at Sweetbriar Publishing and her mum's on staff at St. Mungo's. She's going to help me owl people. Try to get a feel for what camp everyone's in."

Harry nodded. So that was her name. Now that he'd heard the name, he was sure he'd heard it before.

"She's a pureblood, but her parents are actually kind of ashamed of it, or something. Her mum was in Slytherin when she was in school, but her dad was in Ravenclaw, and so was her brother. She says her mum says the women in their family have always been devious and ambitious." He paused, looking at their impassive faces. "It's a joke."

They smiled feebly, Ginny's smile being feeblest of all. Harry remembered the times she'd been disturbed by Malfoy's attentions to Hermione; now she seemed equally disturbed about Mariah Kirkner.

"Well," Harry said, "don't go overboard taking house points away from Slytherin next year. We're going to win the House Cup again, but it won't be by default."

"Oh really? How close was it this year?"

"Ten points."

"Want to know how many points I took from Slytherin? It was a hell of a lot more than ten. As I said, you may thank me."

They looked back and forth at each other, then said in unison, "THANK YOU!" before breaking up into laughter.

They chatted innocuously during the rest of the ride back to London, trying not to think about parting. As the train pulled into King's Cross they looked at each other wistfully. They'd been through so much together during the previous year, weathered so many changes in themselves and their relationships. If possible, they'd become even more important to each other. Harry thought fleetingly again of the wisdom of his having friends at all…

But then he thought about not having friends. He remembered the young Tom Riddle, from the diary. A handsome and charming boy, bright and quick. But did he have friends? Not that Harry had seen when he had entered the diary. It used to worry Harry that Percy was like that, so dedicated to being Head Boy, then a perfect Ministry lackey. But though he didn't have a slew of friends, he had his family, to which he was devoted. He'd had the love of Penelope Clearwater, and her parents as well, who had clearly been looking forward to welcoming him into the family. He worried about Percy now, but not because he thought he might become dark. Not anymore. He worried about Percy spiraling downward in despair, now that Penelope was gone. He had already asked Ron and Ginny to be especially nice to him over the summer, to not let him isolate himself too much and wallow. Yes, he would need to mourn, but he shouldn't cut himself off from his family. He needed them.

And of course, Harry realized, he needed his friends. As tempting as it was to cut them off and say that they'd be better off without the danger of being his friends, he knew he couldn't do that. Even Draco Malfoy. Draco Malfoy, a friend, he thought in wonderment. But it seemed to have happened. He remembered the small eleven-year-old boy chatting him up in Madam Malkin's robe shop, not realizing that he was the Harry Potter. He remembered talking to him on his first train ride to Hogwarts, trying to warn him about associating with "the wrong sort" of people. Harry smiled to himself; now he was seeing Ron's sister. Perhaps he'd really been trying to make friends with Harry and just didn't know how. He remembered him saying in Arthur Weasley's office that he'd never had a friend, not really. Like Tom Riddle. Like the young Severus Snape, supposed vampire.

Harry thought of dueling with Malfoy again and shuddered; he was becoming a very powerful wizard and knew how to Apparate already (which he was not supposed to do again for another year, when he would be of age and could apply for a proper license). He was glad that Ginny was such a good influence on him. He thought of the two of them behind Hagrid's hut again, how intense that had been, the way she had responded to his touch. Harry shook his head, to clear it. He hoped Malfoy wouldn't pressure her too much, wouldn't make her push him away. He also hoped she would continue to resist his advances… No, no. He tried yet again to clear his head. He had no business hoping that. He had Hermione, and he wasn't Ginny's brother, not truly. She had plenty of brothers.

The train came to a full stop and then they were on the platform, having collected their trunks. They stared at one another while a maelstrom of people swirled around them. Saying goodbye was so hard… Finally, Hermione put her arms around Ron, who reciprocated, and she kissed his cheek quickly.

"Have a good summer," she said with wet, shining eyes. He stepped back, nodding mutely.

Then he turned to Harry. Ron swallowed. "Bye, Harry. I—what I mean is—"

Harry nodded. "Yeah." He stepped forward and, for the first time, hugged his best friend. He did it quickly, and when he stepped back, he could see the emotion on Ron's face. Ron was the best friend anyone could have, and Harry had spent the better part of the previous year lying to him. He never wanted to do that again. He knew that technically, Ron forgave him, but the memory of that deception would always be with them. And then there was the memory of things said and done in the Forbidden Forest, and the look on Ron's face during the duel that morning. Forgetting was not an option.

"Bye, Malfoy," Ron said croakily. "Try not to be such a git next year."

Malfoy smirked. "Yeah. Having you for a role model probably made me damn annoying."

Ron laughed, turning and dragging his trunk behind him as he walked toward the barrier. Argent rode on his shoulder, claws sunk in deeply, as he didn't have a carrier for her. He was shaking his head and still laughing. Will wonders never cease? Harry thought. Malfoy insults him, and Ron laughs. No wonder he forgave me; if he could forgive Malfoy, he could overlook just about anything, Harry thought.

There were hardly any people left. Harry put his hand out to Malfoy, who took it with no hesitation. Harry remembered shaking hands with him before the Quidditch match. That seemed a hundred years ago. Throwing him for a loop by using Ginny as the Seeker, then defending him afterward… They didn't need to say a word. Malfoy nodded and Harry nodded back. If we spoke, we'd just insult each other, Harry thought. It's better this way.

Ginny and Hermione had exchanged a hug while Harry and Draco shook hands, and now each boy turned to the girl beside him. Harry swallowed and looked into Hermione's face, brushed a curl away from her brow. He could never have imagined this a year ago, all of the things that had happened between them. She slid her arms around his neck and he held her closely, hesitating for a moment, looking over her shoulder at the few remaining people on the platform before lowering his mouth to hers. He drank her in, holding her tightly, trying to imprint her on his memory for two months. He couldn't believe they would be apart for so long! It had never mattered before, in other summers. Now owl post just wouldn't be enough.

He opened his eyes a crack while kissing her; over her shoulder he could see that Malfoy had also enfolded Ginny in his arms. She grasped his upper arms as he held her waist; he didn't have to bend over, as Harry did with Hermione. Then he realized that Ginny was looking at him too, over Malfoy's shoulder, and he closed his eyes abruptly, but he ended the kiss, planting additional kisses on her cheeks and forehead. She gazed hungrily at him, as if she would scandalize everyone left on the platform by ripping off his clothes and attacking him. He caught his breath. There, that was it. That was the look in her eyes that he would miss…

They heard Sandy hissing. Harry was startled. Could he have heard correctly? He looked at Ginny and Malfoy. He didn't know what to make of what she'd said. He looked back at Hermione.

"Well, Harry? I asked you what she said."

"Oh, she just said—that friends would say goodbye." She smiled and nodded, kissed him again on the lips, briefly, then turned with her trunk and Crookshanks' carrier, walking toward the barrier. Malfoy also took his trunk and headed toward the barrier; they reached it at the same time, and Harry could see Malfoy's lips moving, then Hermione's, her face contorted sarcastically. They're at it again, he thought, smiling and shaking his head. But Hermione could give as good as she got, he knew.

He looked around the platform. Everyone else had gone. He and Ginny were the only ones left. He looked at her, and she met his eyes; he could see that she wasn't the same little girl who had peered through cracks in doorways at him when she was eleven. She was a beautiful young woman, a powerful witch, and a good friend. He still started to shake when he remembered finding her in the Potions Dungeon, Malfoy apparently attacking her; that it turned out to be fake was immaterial. It didn't change the way he felt, seeing that.

He stepped toward her and she nodded. With a small smile, she put her arms around his neck and he put his around her back. They held each other closely, more an affirmation that they were there for each other than a hug. His face was buried in her hair and his throat felt tight.

"Gin, I just wanted you to know how scared I was—when we found you in the Potions Dungeon…"

She separated from him, reddening. "I know that was stupid, Harry. We just—we had to think of something that would really wind up Ron." She paused and looked at him. "Or you."

Harry gazed at her, unable to get the dream Ginny out of his mind, his hands on her silky skin… He swallowed and whispered, "I was so glad that you were all right."

She leaned forward, kissing him quickly and lightly on the lips. "Thank you, Harry," she said softly. Harry stared at her. Even though Sandy had said, "A ram will kiss a lion," he still felt like he might have misunderstood what she meant. It reminded him of something: The lion will lie down with the lamb…and a little child shall lead them. He thought that was it. A lamb was just a young ram. He had a vague memory of the fragment of scripture from Christmas or Easter when he was young. Going to St. Bede's for the funeral must have jogged his memory.

He checked the rest of the platform; it was deserted. Everyone else had gone through the barrier. He looked at her. She was turning to go through, back to the Muggle station. He watched her disappear; she didn't look back. He stood on the platform for what felt like a long time, gazing at the empty space where so many bodies had been jostling not too long ago. It was time; it was time to face his aunt and uncle. Time to get on with the business of living. He reached down for his trunk with his right hand, picked up Hedwig's cage with his left, and walked toward the barrier.

#/#/#

"Petunia!" Uncle Vernon's voice bellowed from their bathroom. "Where are the extra loo rolls?"

Harry smiled; some things never changed. Vernon Dursley had cut himself shaving again, and had run out of toilet paper to put on the cuts. Though he knew his uncle probably wasn't comforted by having small nicks and cuts all over his face, Harry was. It was a constant.

Harry had just finished showering and shaving himself, in the bath that opened off the hall, between his bedroom and the guest room. He'd picked up an electric razor at MacTavish's when they'd been shopping there; he knew that to stay within the law, he should use neither his wand nor his Animagus training to take care of shaving while he wasn't in school. He still wondered why his uncle didn't use an electric, but he also knew that no well-meaning suggestion from Harry would ever be taken in the spirit intended.

He rubbed his face as he returned to his room, towel wrapped around his waist. It wasn't as smooth as when he used magic, but he wasn't covered in cuts, either. After he dressed, he put Sandy around his arm and went downstairs, humming. He planned to call Dick after breakfast, ask for a job. It was nice to feel that he might be really useful, and make some money as well, doing something he enjoyed. He tried to think of what wizarding jobs might take place out-of-doors, for he'd decided that, when possible, he didn't want to work in cooped-up, enclosed spaces. Quidditch player was all that came to mind so far. Oh, well, he thought. There's time to consider all that.

He sat at the table in his usual spot. There were places laid for three of them; Dudley's side of the table was bare. It even looked as if they were avoiding putting the newspaper and toast rack and teapot there. No man's land.

Harry poured himself orange juice from the pitcher on the table and reached for the toast and marmalade. He practically jumped out of his skin when his aunt spoke. She had her back to him, standing at the stove making his uncle's eggs.

"That Dick called," she said sharply. "Wants you to go to Seven Magnolia Crescent tomorrow morning at eight. Says he has a job for you. What good you'll be to him, I hardly know," she added, putting a great deal of salt on Vernon's eggs. Well, he thought, that saves me from having to call Dick. Harry looked at her back. She's pretty damn constant too, he thought. He was glad she hadn't designated him a substitute for Dudley; he couldn't have taken it. The fussing would have been unbearable. He was used to this; this was far better.

"Do you want me to give the garden here a going-over today? Looks like there's a fair number of weeds. And that wild ivy's going to choke the climbing roses."

She made a noise like, "Hmmph!" Then she said, "If you like. If you aren't so soft that a little real work will kill you." Then she stopped and looked at Harry, horrified. Harry froze. He never thought about it much, but death really did crop up in everyday speech a great deal. He swallowed the bite of toast he'd been chewing, wondering what she was thinking. Pity it wasn't you instead of my Dudley, probably. It would be logical. It's what I would be thinking, he realized. Who wouldn't?

He nodded. "I've already been running this morning. I'm all set to go. Is the shed unlocked?"

She pointed mutely to the key on a nail by the door, still looking appalled that she'd used the turn of phrase she had. He felt that he should probably say or do something compassionate, pat her hand, at least, but instead he rose and moved toward the door to the garden, unhooking the shed key, leaving her standing there, letting Vernon's eggs burn.

Suddenly, she came to life again as her Dudley-substitute entered the kitchen. She smiled and laughed, turning off the flame under the eggs. Then she took sausages from a pan where they'd been staying warm. She arranged them on a plate, put the plate on the table and pulled out the chair slightly.

A small Yorkshire terrier leapt upon the chair where Dudley used to sit and brought his front paws up onto the table, starting to nudge the sausages with his nose. After a couple of tries, he finally succeeded in getting one in his mouth, and he chewed it contentedly. Aunt Petunia cooed to him and patted him on the head while he chewed.

"There's my little Dunkirk! My little Dunky-wunky! What a good boy!" Aunt Marge had brought the terrier over the day after the funeral. She had thought Petunia could use the companionship. His aunt had taken to the small off-white dog right away, and he to her. Aunt Marge isn't so bad, Harry thought, when she isn't insulting people's parents.

She returned to the stove, preparing to dish up the burnt eggs to her husband. Harry could hear him descending the stairs. He'd already become accustomed to his wife putting Dunkirk first; he didn't question it. Harry actually thought this bit of consideration was rather touching. He never really thought of his aunt and uncle showing affection for each other. (Though they must have, once, to have Dudley.) The dog's sausages had been carefully heated so as not to be too hot for him, nor too cold, but just right. Vernon, on the other hand, could eat burnt eggs.

Dunkirk barked when Vernon entered and sat at the table, taking his place opposite him. The dog barked again. Vernon smiled feebly at Dunkirk, looking a little nervous. Harry tried not to laugh. Dunkirk did not recognize Vernon as his daddy, that much was clear.

Harry smiled at the cute little dog, then started to also pat him on the head, as his aunt had done. The dog turned his head and gave a growl low in his throat when he saw Harry's hand approaching. He pulled his hand back abruptly; he had thought the dog was just in a mood and hadn't grown used to him when he'd tried that upon returning home, but now he was wondering whether he was possessed by the spirit of Dudley Dursley. Another possible constant, he thought. Or maybe—Sirius aside—I'm just more of a cat person. He watched the dog observing Vernon with what seemed to be suspicion. Clearly, Dunkirk was Aunt Petunia's puppy, and that was that. Harry opened the back door.

The garden was in half shade in the morning, until the sun passed over the house. In the shadow of the house it was cool and moist from the dew still clinging to the blades of grass and the leaves and flowers growing so profusely from the wet English spring Surrey had experienced. After taking a trowel and pail from the shed he went to work first where it was warm and sunny, where the early morning dew had already evaporated. He knelt on the soft, springy grass, throwing uprooted weeds into the pail, the satisfaction of restoring order to the flower beds bringing him a sort of contented calm.

"Harry Potter," Sandy hissed suddenly.

He was momentarily startled. She'd been very quiet since he'd returned to Privet Drive. "Yes, Sandy?" he hissed softly.

"Please put me on the ground."

Harry did as she asked and went back to work. She slithered around the roots of one of the rose bushes, then moved on to the ivy, quickly disappearing among the dark green glossy leaves that served as ground cover before rising up to cling to the wall of the house. Harry had a sudden thought.

"Sandy?"

"Yes, Harry Potter?"

"Do you want your freedom?"

There was a pause. "I have not been free?"

Harry frowned. "That's not quite what I meant."

"Have you been keeping me prisoner?"

"Not exactly."

"I was with you of my own volition, Harry Potter. But I think now—I think now I will live as I was meant to once more."

Harry swallowed, watching the last place where he'd seen her. The leaves under which she'd disappeared still vibrated. Sandy gone. He'd just offered her the chance to leave, but he hadn't thought she'd really consider it. He thought of all the times her predictions had changed his life; but it was possible that just being able to talk with her had been the most important thing to him. Perhaps he should have known that she wouldn't want to stay with him forever.

"Of course, Sandy. I understand."

"We each have a place where we are meant to be. This is mine."

He nodded, though of course, she couldn't see this. He wished he knew where he was meant to be. "I understand, Sandy," he said again, his throat tight.

"I know you do, Harry," she answered. He smiled through the beginnings of his tears. She had called him by just his first name. He would miss her a great deal.

"Will I see you here in the garden?"

"Possibly. And other gardens, perhaps. You will find other garden snakes, no doubt. I will tell of you to all of the snakes that I meet. When any of them meets you, they will hear of the young wizard who is a Parselmouth, who can become a golden griffin, but who is not our enemy."

He nodded again. "I hope I see you again soon."

He waited for her response. And waited and waited.

"Sandy?" It sounded like English to him.

She was gone.

Harry tried not to cry but it was difficult. He would encounter her again, he told himself. He would. He thought again about one of the last things she had said to him.

We each have a place where we are meant to be. This is mine.

Perhaps someday, Harry thought, I'll be able to say that as confidently as she did. But for now, he had the dark, moist soil under his fingers and the sun on his back and the smell of the garden in his nose…

That was enough.

THE END

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What's next?

Harry Potter and the Time of Good Intentions

(or: The Last Temptation of Harry Potter)

Sequel to Harry Potter & the Psychic Serpent. Harry's 6th year. Is giving Harry exactly what he wants Voldemort's ultimate revenge?