This short piece is the first of three projected side stories
to "Harry
Potter and the Legacy of the Light". If you've
ever wondered exactly
what happened in the space of time between Chapters Two and
Three, wonder no longer. Enjoy!
Standard disclaimers apply. Harry Potter, all related
characters, and
various media incarnations are copyright of the very talented J.
K.
Rowlings, Scholastic, and other international companies involved
in
its creation and distribution. Will Stanton and "The Dark Is
Rising"
series are both copyright of the wonderful Susan Cooper.
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The Changing of the Guard
(A "Harry Potter and the Legacy of the Light" Companion
Piece)
By: Gramarye
----------------------------------------------------------------------
The last thing [Harry] heard before his senses deserted
him was
a deep murmuring, and the thready voice saying in a low snarl,
quite different from its original tone:
"Those blasted Muggles--good riddance to them."
-- "Harry Potter and the Legacy of the Light", Chapter Two
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I hadn't expected such a dramatic reaction, but then again
from
what I knew of Harry Potter he was not known for doing things
by halves.
The boy's legs gave way beneath him as he swayed and started
to
fall backwards. The cage slipped from his slackening fingers, and
thesnowy owl within let out a startled, angry squawk as the cage
hit the ground.
Fortunately, I had set the trunk on the front walk before
ringing the
bell, and was able to break his fall somewhat. As he collapsed
into
my arms, Arabella threw open the door all the way.
"Get him in, get him in!" she hissed, grabbing for
the cage. "The
neighbours might see you!"
Manoeuvring boy, cage, and trunk through the narrow front
doorway
and into the tiny foyer was no small task, especially not with an
elderly
woman who seemed to be doing her best to block my every move.
She slipped behind me and slammed the door the second both boy
and belongings were inside, and immediately began to slide locks
and deadbolts into place.
I stood and waited, holding him, until the last chain latch
had slid
home and she had turned to face me.
Her hair was starting to come loose from the mass of hairpins
on top
of her head, and wisps of grey were falling into her face and
sticking
out every which way. Her expression was flat and unreadable, but
I
noticed that she did not meet my gaze. Her attention was fixed on
the
unconscious child in my arms.
"Come along," she said brusquely, with a jerk of her
head toward the
back of the house. "You can put him upstairs."
* * *
My 'upstairs' was the guest bedroom Harry had used when he was
younger. Living in a glorified two-up-two-down doesn't allow much
room for visitors, but he'd stayed so often that it was easier to
set up
a bed for him than to put him on a couch with blankets.
Not that he would have minded either way. Anything was better
than
a cupboard under the stairs.
The floorboards creaked like a shot as Stanton started to
climb the
stairs behind me.
"Watch your head," I warned him, over my shoulder.
"The ceiling's
lower than it looks."
Dutifully, he bent his head, and held the boy closer to his chest.
We reached the top without incident, and I led him the few
steps
to the closed bedroom door.
"Through here." I opened the door and felt for the
light switch.
Since it was starting to get dark outside, and the bedroom was
on the side of the house that only caught the morning sunlight,
the room looked like the inside of a cave. Flicking the switch
didn't help--with the lights on, the room looked like the inside
of a half-lit cave.
I made a note to add brighter bulbs to my shopping list.
I'd given the house a good scrubbing only a few days before,
so
the room was dusted and the sheets on the spare bed were freshly
laundered. I set to work at once, plumping pillows and turning
down
blankets, drawing the curtain and fiddling with the bedside
clock,
all nice domestic tasks that I could use as a cover to have a
better
look at both of them.
Stanton was impossibly immaculate. He looked none--good god,
did his trousers still have the creases in them?--none
the worse for
carrying a dead weight up a full flight of stairs. And the bland
look
on his face didn't fool me for a second--I could feel his eyes on
me
the entire time, watching me as I ran about the room like some
half-
trained chambermaid.
Harry, on the other hand, looked a mess. He was wearing a
shirt
and trousers that had probably once belonged to his fat slob of a
cousin. But even allowing for Muggle togs several sizes too big,
he
seemed to be swimming in his clothes. What was more, he was too
thin, and his face had no colour to it. He looked like one of
those
awful leaflets they post in the shops with starving children's
faces
on them, hungry and haunted eyes staring at you accusingly from
a smearily-printed sheet of paper.
I suddenly found myself feeling very glad that his eyes were closed.
Stanton waited until I'd arranged the sheets and pillows
before laying
Harry down on the bed. He made short work of things then,
removing
only the boy's shoes and glasses before pulling the bedclothes up
to
his neck. It was just as well--I didn't have any night clothes
for him
to wear, and we'd left his trunk downstairs.
There was something rather odd about the two of them, Harry
lying
in the bed and Stanton standing over him, doing little things to
make
him more comfortable. Adjusting the blankets. Loosening the
collar
of his shirt. Putting the glasses on the night table, the shoes
beneath the
bed. He soon finished tucking Harry in, but before he
straightened up
he paused, one hand resting on the boy's forehead.
"Sleep easy, child," he murmured, so softly that I
almost didn't hear
him at first. "You're safe here."
Harry made a little noise that sounded like a gasp or a sigh,
and
seemed to sink deeper beneath the bedclothes.
I had to ask the obvious question, of course, but for some
reason
it didn't want to come out. When it finally did, it sounded more
like
a frog's death croak than actual human speech. "Did...did
you...."
"No," he said in the same quiet voice, not taking
his eyes off the
boy. "It's a natural sleep, fortunately. From the look of
things, it's
something he hasn't had in some time."
Now, I know for a fact that Stanton has no family of his own,
but
as his hand moved to brush the hair out of Harry's shuttered face
he looked exactly like a father putting his child to bed.
At that point it was only a good half-century of rigorous
training
that kept me from shivering.
And the fact that he was wearing glasses didn't help matters,
either.
As he stepped away from the bed, he passed between me and the
window, and the weak light from one of the table lamps caught and
reflected in the lenses of his glasses.
Hell's bells. For half a second, he looked far too
much like James
Potter for anyone's comfort.
"....the clock round."
I blinked, and there he was, right in front of me. He'd been
talking
the whole time, and I'd been so busy woolgathering and seeing
ghosts that I'd missed whatever it was he'd said to me.
"Eh? What was that?" Brilliant response, Figg. Now
he'll think
you're deaf, as well as mad.
"I said, I wouldn't be at all surprised if he slept the
clock round."
He gave me a Very Concerned look. "Is something wrong?"
"Nothing," I said quickly, and turned toward the
door. He may
think what he likes, but he'll see soon enough that I've not
forgotten
how to entertain company. Even his kind of company.
"Come into
the kitchen--you'll stay for tea."
* * *
It was not an invitation; it fell more along the lines of a
royal command.
I followed her into the hall and down the stairs, pausing only to
pick
up my briefcase from the front hall before following her into the
kitchen.
The electric kettle on the kitchen countertop looked to be
more
of an electrocution kettle--it was sitting in a shallow pool of
water
that looked ready to overflow the counter and drip onto the
floor.
Muttering a few choice words, Arabella ripped the plug out of its
outlet, then tossed a dishcloth at the kettle to soak up the
spilled
water. She grabbed a regular kettle and began to fill it from the
tap,
keeping her back to me the entire time.
"What a charming place you have here," I said,
falling back on the
usual social niceties to break her self-imposed silence. "I
must say,
it's very...." I turned a few possible adjectives over in my
mind, and
settled on one that I thought suited the situation best. "Muggle."
"Don't you start." She flung the kettle onto the
cooker to boil and
spun around, levelling a glare at me. "Now, what's going
on?"
From the moment she had opened the front door, I'd been
wondering
if she had any idea as to what she was expected to do this
summer.
Her question merely clinched the matter.
Well. That would change things considerably.
"Your guess is as good as mine," I said, only half
hearing myself.
I would have to leave a note; there was no sense in waking the
boy
unnecessarily.
"My guess?" She squinted at me, and folded her arms
across her chest.
"Well, I don't have Harry Potter keeling over on my front
doorstep
every day, y'know. And I certainly don't have Will Stanton
showing
up with him and acting like a delivery man who's just popped
round
to drop off a parcel, either."
"Indeed." She was right, at that. "Would you mind if I sat down?"
* * *
I wouldn't have minded throttling him if I hadn't
known that it wouldn't
do me any good. The Boy Who Lived (and I hope they sacked the
brilliant journalistic mind who first dreamed up that disgusting
turn of
phrase) was upstairs doing his best impression of a wet dishrag,
and
Stanton had the nerve to sit there and dig through his briefcase
as if
he hadn't a care in the world.
Perhaps he didn't realise the situation I was in.
"First of all," I said to him, trying to keep my
voice low and even, "I
get a letter from Albus Dumbledore, asking if I would be so kind
as
to let Sirius Black spend a day or two with me on the
way to meet
up with his old friend, Remus Lupin."
He had pulled out a sheet of paper from somewhere, and a pen,
and
now he was tapping the pen with his finger and frowning.
"Damn," he murmured, and glanced up at me. "I
seem to be out of
ink. Could I trouble you for a pen?"
There was a biro on the counter, the one I'd used to mark that
morning's paper. I nearly snapped it in two before I could pick
it up properly and hand it to him.
"Thank you," he said as he took it from me. He
resettled his glasses
on his nose, and started to write.
Perhaps I needed to make myself a bit more clear.
"And then, just as I've finished adjusting exactly
twenty-seven
distinctly complicated wards to allow a CONVICTED MURDERER
to pass through them, I find out that Black's an Animagus, of ALL
things, and I have to let a ruddy great DOG kip on my nice clean
couch and do you know how much a beast like that SHEDS?"
Stick
to the facts, woman--he's not going to care about dog hair on
your
furniture. "And of course he up and vanishes in the middle
of the night
without so much as a by-your-leave, and he's not been gone two
days
when I get ANOTHER lovely letter from Albus that purports to be
an explanation but makes absolutely no sense whatsoever,
and now
I've got Harry Potter out cold in my spare bedroom and the bloody
Watchman of the Light sitting at my kitchen table and he's
not even
LISTENING to me!"
"I have been listening, madam," he said, though he
never took his
eyes from the paper and the pen never stopped moving. "I
only
wanted to finish this note to Mr. Potter in case you'd rather I
left...before the neighbours saw."
* * *
It wasn't easy to keep from smiling when her jaw dropped open.
I knew that I was being rather unfair to her. She had, after
all, spent
fifteen years living amongst non-magical folk, completely
isolated,
unable to use her power for even the smallest of tasks. And now
she
had been confronted by her old life just when the wizarding world
was
in a state of confusion--and a state of denial that there was
anything
to be confused about.
On the other hand, anyone who agrees to operate undercover
ought
to keep in mind that they will have to come out someday. Today
had
simply happened to be Arabella Figg's day.
The kettle went off just then, a whistling blast of steam that
jolted
Arabella out of her stunned immobility. Without a word, she
picked
up the kettle and poured a little bit of the boiling water into
an old
china teapot. She swirled the water in the teapot and emptied it
into
the sink, then repeated the process.
The splash of water and the clanking of spoons against
crockery
were the only noises in the room as I finished the letter. I took
an
envelope from my bag, slipped the folded sheet inside and sealed
the whole thing. I glanced up to see Arabella gazing out the tiny
kitchen window, fingering the edge of the faded curtain with one
hand.
"Incorrigible snoops, the lot of them," she grunted,
without any of
the anger of a moment before. "Always peering through their
lacy
little curtains and poking their noses over your garden
fence."
"It sounds tiresome," I commisserated.
She let out a short, barking laugh. "I can't believe I'm
telling you this,
but I've almost gotten used to it." Turning, she picked up
an empty
mug and waved it in front of my nose. "Black or white?"
"Black, no sugar."
I watched as she poured a generous amount into the mug and set
it
before me. "Thank you," I said. "That's most
kind."
She poured for herself and added two spoonfuls of sugar from
the
bowl on the table. "Now you tell me," she said firmly
as she sank into
the chair opposite mine, "what's this all about? Did Albus
send you?"
"Send me?" The idea of being regarded as Albus
Dumbledore's
personal courier service was hardly an appealing one. "Quite
the
contrary. I was heading into town today and happened to travel by
way of King's Cross. Since the Hogwarts summer holidays started
today as well, Mr. Potter was also at the station when I
arrived." I
sipped at the strong, scalding tea, letting it wash the taste of
envelope
adhesive out of my mouth. "Coincidentally, we happened to be
travelling in the same direction."
"Hmph." The look on her face was deeply skeptical.
"That's a likely
story. Nothing's ever coincidence with YOU."
"We happened to be travelling in the same
direction," I repeated, very
deliberately, "so I offered to share a taxi. I was present
when he was
unceremoniously turned away from Privet Drive. I knew you were
living close by, and I thought you would rather have him here
with
you than anywhere else." Which was mostly true.
Her expression grew stormy.
"Blasted Muggles," she growled. I couldn't tell
whether she was
referring to the ones currently living on Privet Drive or the
ones
who had left. For that matter, it could have easily been both.
"Quite. But for a boy who's supposed to be the saviour of
the
wizarding world, he really ought to be better supervised."
It wasn't
entirely my place to say so, but considering the fact that he had
been
left essentially to his own devices in the middle of a north
London
train station I felt that the point had to be made. "He
would have
followed me wherever I led him. I could have handed him over to
Voldemort himself, and he wouldn't have known...or cared."
* * *
That did it. I wasn't about to sit with my hands in my lap and
be
lectured like a spotty-faced schoolgirl--not by THIS creature,
certainly.
"Look, I heard they'd done a bunk," I snapped at
him. "Sent in
a report about it, too, through the usual channels. I thought
that
Albus had made other arrangements for him."
"Other arrangements?" He raised an eyebrow at that.
"But you are
Mr. Potter's legal guardian, am I right?"
Oh. Oh. So that's what he was getting at.
Why couldn't he just SAY
so and be done with it, like any sensible person?
"In Muggle eyes...yes," I had to admit. "But if
Black is...no, that's a
stupid question." I shook my head. "I'm left holding
the baby in this,
then."
He actually smiled at that, though the smile was mostly hidden
behind
the rim of his mug. "In a manner of speaking."
Well, whatever manner it was said in, it still made no sense.
"I thought
for certain Albus would have him live with those Weasley friends
of his.
At least until everything else was sorted out."
He took another sip and set his mug aside. "With the
events of the last
few weeks, could you blame him for the oversight? He is only
human,
after all."
I don't know what possessed me to say the first thing that
came into my
head, but I did. "Why does that sound like an insult, coming
from you?"
His eyes narrowed, and I would've sworn that I could hear him bristle.
"Really, madam," he said coldly, fixing me with a
frigid stare. "You
know me better than that."
"Do I?" I'd meant my reply to come out in the same
cold tone he'd
used, but it didn't sound quite the same.
He studied me with that icy glint of his for few more seconds,
then
closed his eyes. When he opened them again a second later the ice
was gone, as if it had never been there at all--and somehow that
made
my skin crawl more than his accusing stare had.
"I would hope so," he said, as easily as if the last
half-minute hadn't
happened. "But speaking of knowing, I must say that I'm a
bit confused
as to why you seem so surprised to see me. I would have thought
that
the perimeter wards you spoke of would have detected me."
I scowled at him, and drained my own mug. "My wards are
designed
to detect wizards and witches and any number of Dark
creatures...not
you." And that raised another unsettling thought--what
else could have
slipped past them? I'd nearly taken Black's sorry pelt off his
back when
he told me that he'd been the one who'd set off the wards two
years ago,
but it didn't change the fact that he'd still come far too close
to Harry.
And there was that damnable hint of a smile again. "As
there's only one
of me, you can hardly be faulted for that."
"You know what I mean," I said, scooping up the mugs
and half-empty
teapot before shoving my chair away from the table. "You.
Your sort, of
which you happen to be the only one. And don't look at me like
I've just
been and gone and fallen asleep in your class--there's absolutely
no reason
for you to be following Harry Potter around. He's not your
responsibility."
I turned the tap, and the water drumming into the sink nearly
drowned out
his reply:
"Isn't he?"
* * *
"Of course he's not yo--"
There was a clatter and a stifled crash, as if she had tried
and failed to
catch the crockery that slipped from her fingers and fell into
the sink. She
gripped the edge of the counter with one hand, and with the other
she
fumbled for the tap to turn off the running water.
The rush of water gurgled down the drain, and there was
silence in the
kitchen for a long moment.
"I'm a stupid old woman," she said at last, a
statement that sounded more
like a long sigh. "I should have guessed as much. Some
guardian I've turned
out to be, eh?"
"The wizarding world does not have the resources to fight
the Dark Lord
alone." I didn't want her thinking that she'd somehow been
derelict in her
duties. "Voldemort has called upon powers that only the
Light knows
how to combat--it would be perfectly logical for his opponents to
seek
the assistance of the Light."
She turned around and leaned against the counter. One corner
of her
mouth twitched upwards in a quirk of smile. "So what you're
saying is
that Albus decided it was high time to call in the
professionals?"
"You can think of it that way, if you like," I
replied dryly. "Though you
must admit that my rates are better and I'm not one for long
tea-breaks."
She chuckled at that, and looked a little less dour.
"What a way to start
the summer."
"To put it mildly."
A shadow suddenly crossed her face, and she glanced up at the
ceiling.
"Say, is he...all right? I mean...you know...all right?"
"That I don't know," I admitted truthfully. "He
was in a bad way when I
first met him, and today's events won't have helped matters any.
But a
summer spent with you will do him a world of good."
That said, I picked up my briefcase and stood, pushing in my
chair. "And
now I really must be going."
* * *
"Going?" Talk about an abrupt way to end a
conversation. "Where are you
off to?"
He clasped his hands on top of his briefcase. "I've done
what I came for.
Mr. Potter is home, or in as close to a home as he has at the
moment. And
with Mrs. Arabella Figg to watch over him, no one need fear for
his safety
and comfort."
I didn't know whether to blush or smack him for the flattery,
so I simply
said, "If you say so."
He held out the sealed envelope that held the letter he'd
written. "Will you
give this to him for me? And please tell him I'm sorry I couldn't
stay longer."
"To Harry?" I took the envelope and turned it over
in my hands. "What does
it say?"
"That he should listen to every word you say and not make
any trouble for
you," he replied genially.
"Harry Potter, make trouble?" I had to laugh as I
walked him to the door
and started to undo all the locks. "You know full well that
he doesn't have
to MAKE it."
"Very true." He paused with his hand on the
doorknob, and looked me full
in the face. "Take care, madam. I'm certain Mr. Potter will
have a number
of questions to ask you when he wakes. You know where I can be
found,
if you have need of me."
"Let me see if I can translate that into something
approaching normal
speech," I said with a smirk. "'Watch your back, don't
fuss the boy too
much, and I'll be spending the entire summer shut up in my
office.' That
about right?"
"Close enough." He took my hand, and gave a little
bow over it in the
old-fashioned way that he had. (It reminded me of when I was a
girl,
of the way my father's friends would do the same thing when they
left
after calling at our house.) "Thank you for the tea, and
good evening to
you."
And he was gone, and the door closed behind him.
My mind was racing as I started to lock up, but I hadn't even
turned
the first deadbolt when all of a sudden I remembered that Stanton
and
Harry had both come in a taxi. That taxi would have been long
gone
by now--and it was a long walk to London.
Hastily, I opened the door, and called after him. "Should I call a--?"
But there was no one there. The street was completely
deserted,
without so much as a stray dog in sight.
"...cab," I finished, rather lamely.
Well, that was that.
Oh, well. No sense in worrying about him--he'd get to
wherever he
had to go all right. My concern was for the one upstairs...or
rather,
what I was going to feed him when he woke up and wanted to know
what he was getting for breakfast.
But Stanton did have a point. Harry was his responsibility,
and mine,
too, and I knew what my responsibility was. Those blasted Muggles
had
treated the boy like dirt all his life, and now that he was in my
keeping
he was going to have a real summer holiday for once.
Hmph. Trust a Watchman to let you know when the watching stops
and the doing begins.
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Gramarye
gramarye@postmaster.co.uk
May 3rd, 2003
