"Cut!"
Was scrawled on page two-hundred-fifty-three of the Prisoner of
Azkaban galleys in a red ink that rooked no refusal. It was
followed by a rather distressed asterisk. The asterisk was met by
another, similarly distressed, at the bottom of the page giving the
following legend: "Pertinent to nothing."
And, with
a sigh, out the offending passage went; chucked into the bin where
all chucked passages go. It's a sad place, that realm of written
refuse; a muddled place where excessive adverbs and unresolved plot
points dwell, a place where we are given access:
"You're
the cleverest witch of your age I've ever met, Hermione," said
professor Lupin, appalled that his--shhh--secret had been unearthed
by a thirteen-year-old girl, but stunned by her prowess just the
same. So stunned, in fact, he had to give the narrative pause to
voice his surprise.
"Thank you, professor, but I prefer
the term 'wizardess.'"
A chuckle was heard from the
corner of the room. Lupin ignored it for he recognized the timbre
despite the withered texture twelve years of Azkaban had warped it
into. The note was still the same, however, it was Sirius having a
snicker at old Moony's expense.
"Wizardess?" Lupin
said, "I don't think that's the correct terminology."
"It
is!" Hermione cried. "It is! True, it's not official yet,
but through use it will be!"
"What's wrong with
'witch?'"
"It's not the same," she said.
"Everyone knows witches are warty old women, single and fat,
with cats because no one else can tolerate their lack of personal
hygiene."
More chuckling sounded. It was dry and broken,
a garbled variation on the standard "heh, heh."
"But
wizards, wizards are old men, figures of reverence, tall and thin,
with cool hats. Single, usually, just like the witches, but not fat
and ugly. And they'd never go 'bibbidty-bobbity-boo.' Honestly,"
she said, turning up her face and allowing a beam of light from a
broken slat in the Shack to hit her eye, giving it a glare of
maddened fury, "if I hear 'witch' one more time, I'm going to
ram my wand up someone's nose."
More chuckling.
"Mr.
Black, would you like to be the first to receive my wand's nasal
excavating?"
The chuckling ceased.
"But
wizardess," Hermione continued, "that is worthy of praise:
gosh, picture a woman in black robes, with long hair and maroon nail
polish, her hands outstretched, a curse on her lips--"
"Like
Elvira?" said Peter.
"Yes! Though, um . . . Did she
call herself a wizardess?"
"I dunno; I was always
distracted by her anatomy."
"She's got a good
anatomy," Sirius echoed.
"Mr. Black, I told you to
be quiet."
"Very well," Lupin said, massaging
his temples, "you're the cleverest wizardess of your age
I've ever met, Hermione." There was a pause. "God forbid
you give one of these modern kids a compliment."
A
suspicion of chuckle made another "heh" not finishing the
follow-through second "heh" for Sirius Black was shot a
look that not even the foulest Dementor could send his way.
Hermione's wand circled idly in her hand, its end pointing upward,
considering how deep it should plunge into Sirius's head without
jabbing his brain.
"Sorry," he said, and sulked in
silence.
It is here that the familiar plot resumes.
