Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother by Pearl Drop Angel

Rating: PG13
Genres: Angst, Romance
Relationships: Harry & Hermione
Book: Harry & Hermione, Books 1 - 4
Published: 24/07/2003
Last Updated: 26/06/2004
Status: Completed

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans
didn't know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and
himself...or did she? See what knowing her leads to in Harry's final year at Hogwarts, what
Lily's Seer visions reveal to him, and how it will help him destroy his demons. Pre-OotP. I
suck at summaries, it's much better than it sounds, please read.




1. Prologue: Dread and Anticipation
-----------------------------------

Everyone leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t know,
when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and himself. …Or did
she?

Disclaimer: I own nothing. Don’t bother suing cuz you won’t get nuthen out of it neither.

Warning: First attempt at Harry Potter fanfiction. This is mostly an H/Hr romance (gotta love
those two) but also contains a LOT of Lily/James and Draco/Ginny. Please be kind. Also, this
prologue is a bit drawn out, since I wrote it in a bad mood moment (filled with frustrating
interruptions, which, of course, handicapped my train of thought greatly, so this does not reach my
usual level of perfection (yeah, right!). Anyway, I tried to fix it as best I can, so I hope it’ll
go. I’ll let you know that for this I’m putting my Anime related fics on the backburner, so I hope
you appreciate (they’ve actually been there for more than a year). Oh, and this was entirely
written before OofP entered my life, so be sure to keep that in mind, because it kind of makes this
an AU.

And now, on with the fic.

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

By Pearl Drop Angel

Prologue: Dread and Anticipation

*Tomorrow*, Harry thought. *Tomorrow is the beginning of the end of Hogwarts for me*.
But then again, was it? Hogwarts was so much a part of his life—or better yet, it had been the
start of a real life for him—that he knew he could never truly leave it behind. After all, how can
one forget the first home ever known? But still, tomorrow was the first day of his last year in
that wonderfully magical and heartwarming castle where he’d first known of friendship and rivalry,
of love and hate--for anything other than his adoptive family. The place where he’d found out the
truth about his lost family, and, all the while, made himself a new one.

He smiled at the thought.

He really had made himself a family there.

Dumbledore and McGonagall to him had become like grandparents—or what he thought grandparents
were supposed to feel like. Dumbledore, wise beyond words yet still a child at heart, had given him
advice and simple warmth with just a word, a smile, a twinkle from behind his half-moon spectacles.
McGonagall, strict and stiff in appearance, had tried to back him up in everything—as much as she
could while trying to maintain the objective teacher-student look of things—she’d understood him in
almost all his turmoil (especially regarding his parents), and she’d even spoiled him a little. He
smiled at the memory of the Nimbus 2000 that Hedwig had brought him the morning of his first
Quidditch game.

There were Ron, and Hermione.

Ron was his brother, in everything and every way, except for the blood relation part. They’d
shared laughs, fights, opinions, and an unhealthy growing obsession for a particularly dangerous
sport played on broomsticks called Quidditch. It had only gotten worse as Ron had made Gryffindor
Keeper at the beginning of their fifth year. And—though that would sound like any other best friend
to people—they were brothers. For one thing, Harry had felt an instant bond with him from the
start, and also for the fact that they were both—for different reasons—jealous of each other. And
that’s what made them brothers. Friends, after all, weren’t real friends if there was something
like jealousy amuck. Brothers, instead, couldn’t possibly consider each other so without it. He’d
come to this realization after several summers spent with the Weasleys.

Maybe it was better this way, for, this year, he couldn’t have bared to see the happy family
laughing and joking and arguing while among them there would be Hermione Granger.

Hermione. The constant female presence of his life, she’d been there just as long as Ron, and
she was the reason for the livid jealousy he felt towards the boy.

Harry James Potter, in fact, had been in love with Hermione Granger, for quite the duration of
their nothing-but-friendly relationship, and Hermione, though she’d always demonstrated no romantic
interest in anyone attending the Hogwarts grounds, was—as Harry was convinced—madly,
head-over-heels in love with the youngest Weasley man.

Of course, neither of them had openly come to tell him such news, but how could he deny it when
he’d witnessed himself the way, over the years, they acted differently around each other? The way
they were constantly touching, and the fight they’d had in forth year when Ron had asked her to the
dance as a last resort, and every fight thereafter, how could he ignore those? Especially since he
knew them both so well, and knew that they didn’t usually demonstrate open affection.

No, he was glad this year he wouldn’t be spending the summer with them. Even if that meant
having to suffer the Dursleys, at least he wouldn’t be forced to watch their blossoming love.
Maybe, if he was lucky, they would come to pick him up—as previously arranged—in the morning to go
together to King’s Cross and find them disgustingly happy announcing their engagement. Yes, at
least that way, his awkwardness would be justified*. I just hope they don’t ask me to take part
of the ceremony*.

"POTTER!" The loud booming voice of his uncle Vernon called from downstairs, startling
him out of his thoughts and the snow white owl next to him out of sleep. "COME DOWN AND GIVE
DUDLEY HIS DINNER! … NOW!" He bellowed.

*Good*, Harry thought. *I shouldn’t be thinking these thoughts about my friends*.

And as he stalked to the door he paused.

*Oh, things would be so much simpler if they were only friends!*

°*°

It was so early in the morning that it still was black and night seemed to be undecided whether
or not to stay or move on, and Harry couldn’t see the numbers on his wrist watch no matter how long
he stared at it. Hermione had written him telling that, since she had family in one of the little
towns in Surrey—not too far from where he was—and they had given their home to the Grangers for the
summer; Arthur Weasley would get a one day permit to link the borrowed chimney to the "Floo
Powder" line so that the Weasleys could apparate in and, with the Grangers, come and get him.
Considering how long it would take to get from Little Whinging to King’s Cross in a group of eight
people they would have to come and pick him up far before the sun would even contemplate rising.
Thank God Hermione had suggested she get his school supplies and whatever he would need from Diagon
Alley, for the Dursleys would have never permitted him to go.

He sighed heavily. *Hermione.* Maybe if she wasn’t so considerate of him, he wouldn’t have
such a hard time convincing himself that she could only ever be a…good friend to him. Nothing more,
nothing less, at least on her part. Thing was all her kindness towards him kept putting false hope
into his mind.

But before he could pursue that thought, a minivan and a station wagon pulled into the Dursleys
driveway, and—thanks to the headlights of the cars—he could make out the shape of six very
different looking shadows get out of the car and talk amongst themselves for a while. Finally, only
three people walked up to the door. He recognized one of the heads as Hermione’s—the hair kind of
gave her away—so he figured the other two must have been her parents for their shape didn’t seem
like anything even remotely close to the Weasleys.

Harry, of course, had told his Aunt and Uncle about this, and had also explained that they would
be coming with cars in the early morn. At first, he’d thought that uncle Vernon had simply
forgotten or not believed him, for, after a certain hour, no sounds had come from the house, and
Harry assumed they had fallen asleep. Now he realized that, instead of going to sleep, they had all
(Dudley included) stayed up for the length of the night while staring out the window much like he
had, for they were making quite a ruckus after the doorbell rang twice. He heard Dudley (for no
other footsteps could be that heavy on the poor abused stairs) run ahead of everyone to get to the
door and see his "weird" friends before the rest. Strange considering the last time he
met some his tongue had been on the wrong end of a joke.

He shrugged to himself, and, leaving his things in the bedroom as to not upset his uncles,
followed them down the stairs in time to see Dudley yank the door open and the three people behind
it gasp in surprise (hopefully his "family" would think it was from the sudden move and
not from the noticeable size of the human whale that was, in fact, his cousin).

He watched Dudley take in the three with his eyes and his jaw drop.

*Ogling git*, he thought to himself, knowing quite well what had made his lower mouth fall
like that.

"Uhm…hello, you *must* be Dudley," Hermione’s voice called and Harry snickered to
himself at the sarcasm barely laced in her voice. "I’m Hermione Granger, and these are my
parents. We’re here to pick up Harry," she announced.

Silence.

And more silence.

"I did get the right house, right?" She voiced after a second, and Harry this time
found it very difficult to keep his chuckling quiet.

More silence ensued.

Sighing, he descended the stairs and made his way to the front door, speaking before he got in
sight of the family on the threshold. "Come on in, Hermione, they wo—" his sentence hung
in mid air as he finally took in the person standing in the doorway. *Wow!* Was all he could
think as he looked down at her. She’d grown taller, but hadn’t managed to come even close to his
eye level for he had grown quite a bit as well, however it was not her height that impressed him.
There she was, in front of him, freckles more noticeable then usual because of the, rather lovely,
bronze colored suntan, hair—though always in a mass of unruly curls—longer (almost to her waist in
layered lengths) and lighter colored, eyelashes long, black and curly framing her warm chocolate
eyes and pink full lips slightly parted in surprise. Her lithe figure had filled out in a rather
billowy form, elegant, sweet, and sinful. Bodies like that shouldn’t be allowed on human beings,
especially when clad in only an oversized fleece sweater that did a poor job of hiding it, short
jeans mini (*God, those legs should be illegal*) and white cloth Sneakers.

Of course, he took in all this in the time span of three milliseconds, after which, he gave a
loud "Hermione" in precisely the same moment in which she shouted "Harry!" and
threw herself in his arms. He caught her, picked her up and spun her around in his arms laughing.
*Bloody hell!* He thought to himself. *She’s probably never going to touch me like this
again, I might as well enjoy it.*

"Oh, Harry! I missed you so much!" She shrilled in his arms amongst giggles. "Put
me down, let me take a good look at you!" She ordered, completely ignoring her parents
approaching the Dursleys after the doorway was freed.

"Argh! Always the bossy bookworm I see," he joked as he released her, stepping back,
arms held out at his side to give her a good view of himself. He saw her eyes become saucers and
her mouth part in pleasant surprise. She was sure Harry was oblivious of what a male specimen he
had become, but *she* definitely was not. She’s been subjected to his charms from the start,
but over the years, it had been harder and harder to keep it from showing, and she was afraid that,
looking at him now, this year would prove to be too much for her.

For one thing, he towered over her (and she realized, looking at him, that she definitely had an
unspoken attraction for tall men…or maybe it was just Harry). He must have reach the two meters,
and maybe passed it a little, she guessed, considering that she was around one seventy-eight (which
was, for a girl, rather very tall). He was slender and with long arms and legs (not skinny like
he’d been). "Looks like you’ve been eating all the treats we sent for your birthday,
huh?" She laughed, but the truth was, that he was beautiful. There was an underlying power in
his lanky frame, and, despite the fact that he was wearing some *very* old looking
hand-me-downs (probably from when Dudley went to grade school) that didn’t fit very well at all,
his tightly corded layer of Quidditch induced muscles was evident (at least to her) and quite
impressive. His shoulders and chest quite broad, his waist tapered, and she was sure that under
those huge pants he had what she called "the dimple of power" on the sides of his hips.
His legs were strong and tapered, and, in truth, he put to shame the Greek gods represented by the
masters of arts. His skin was darker, with a slight stubble growing on it (*God, that’s
sexy!*), and his face had become, to put it in one word: chiseled. The baby fat had disappeared
and had left behind a strong, determined, squared chin with just the slightest hint of a dimple,
sharp cheekbones, and well defined, thick black eyebrows. And his eyes…well, what could she
possibly say more about them after all those years of contemplating them? Magnetic emerald depths
that would bring her to her downfall if she stared at them too long.

So she looked away.

She was always afraid that looking at his eyes would bring the words that she swore she would
never say to him out of her mouth. Instead, she noted, his hair was always the uncontrollable black
mass of wavy yet straight strands.

She realized that if she didn’t say something soon the silence between them would become
uncomfortable, but (*Thank God!*) Ron and Ginny had come in to save her.

°*°

*Strange*, Harry thought to himself once the Hogwarts Express started moving. This was his
seventh trip to The Castle, and it had never been quite like this. In first, he’d started out on
his own, and, basically, everything was so new to him that, outside of meeting Ron and Hermione, he
just remembered being completely flabbergasted at how it was all so different. In second and
third…well, he’d found other ways of getting to destination because of…complications that he’d come
across. The other years, instead, he’d always found himself, for one reason or another, at the
Burrow during this particular time of year, so he’d found himself running a race against time with
the Weasleys just to be able to pass the barrier of 9 ¾ on time to catch the annoyingly punctual
train.

This time (probably because it had been the Grangers to organize everything), for once, they had
gotten to King’s Cross in plenty of time, had a lovely breakfast in a small bar outside the
station, and had been among the first ones to cross the barrier, barely passed 10:30. They had
found a spacious, clean, and well ventilated cabin (the very last one of the train) and had gone on
with their usual banter.

"Honestly, Harry! You’re cousin’s a cow!" Hermione sighed and plopped herself in the
comfortable cushioned seat of the cabin. "I mean, you did tell me about him, but…Honestly! I
would have never thought!" She exclaimed.

"Actually," Harry began with a hint of a smile at the corner of his lips betraying the
serious tone of his voice, "he dropped a whole of three pounds in the last four years. Never
mind he picked them all back up yesterday after he found a Snickers bar that had been under the
sofa pillows since at least ’89, among other things."

Ginny and Hermione were practically rolling on the floor. Well, it had been the truth, but maybe
they found it funny exactly because they thought it so.

"Yeah, Fred and George told me about him, but I had no idea he was *that* big! Maybe
we could use him as Keeper, nothing would be able to budge past him…then again, there’s no way in
bloody hell that a broom could hold him up," Ron started, and continued for a good half hour
on Dudley’s girth, before deciding that it was time to move onto the other Dursleys. "Oh, and
your uncles are lovely, too," he began. "Once they figured the Grangers were Muggles they
loved them!"

"No, they loved the fact that they’re orthodontists with an important studio in
London," Harry corrected. "Uncle Vernon thinks that no matter what business you’re in,
good connections are always important," he explained.

"Yes, I noticed," Hermione said rolling her eyes. " ‘Oh, but won’t you have some
tea with us? There’s plenty of time to get to the station’ ", she gushed, perfectly imitating
Petunia Dursleys rather quite annoying falsetto. "Then, of course, they saw the Weasleys and
suddenly decided that we were going to be late if we didn’t leave that precise second," she
pointed out with a sharp look to Harry, and then turned to Ron with knit eyebrows. "What
exactly happened with your brothers that year?"

Harry laughed, and Ron smirked. "Bloody hell, I wasn’t there, but they told me enough to
know that ton-tongue toffees shouldn’t have been tested on Muggles," he summed.

"Yeah," Harry agreed. "Dudley was going around on all fours with his tongue
flapping all over the place while my aunt was on his back trying to rip said tongue off with her
hands, all the while trying to keep Mr. Weasley away even though he was trying to bring his mouth
to normal. If I wasn’t so scared of Dudley dying while I got the blame for it, I would have found
it rather funny," he mused, the corners of his mouth pointing upwards.

"Looks to me like you find it quite amusing," Hermione said, poking him in the
ribs.

"Yeah, but what about when Hermione’s parents started saying how well they raised
Harry?" And, saying this, Ron cleared his throat and spoke as Mr. Granger. "I must say, I
only met Harry on few occasions, and the most I know about him is what my daughter told me, but I
must also say, that he must have been raised incredibly well, to be able to handle his fame and
fighting against the Dark Lord nearly risking his life for the sake of others. I, myself, don’t
know where my daughter would have been if he hadn’t been there to help her" and at that point
I was so ready to swear your uncle would have a stroke. He had no idea what the bloody hell Mr.
Granger was talking about, but when he heard the word "fame" I thought he forgot to
breath. "Well, sir, we never allowed him to lack anything he desired, but we sure had a firm
grasp on him while he grew up", Jeez, Harry, if I’d been in your place I would have made him
throw up slugs for a week!" Ron finished.

Before Harry could reply though, a group of thirteen girls or so ran up to their cabin, opened
the door, all breathless and red faced. One of them asked aloud for the others; "Uhm…do you
know if Harry Potter is on this train?" Four pairs of eyebrows touched four hairlines at the
same time. "Because we heard he went to Hogwarts, but we’re not sure if it’s just a rumor or
not," the pretty blond went on. By this time they had all figured out these were first years’
and had all turned to look at Harry who shrugged his shoulders. The girls obviously taking this as
a no began to turn away.

From the back they could hear one of them say, "I told you it was impossible! Even if he
goes to Hogwarts do you really think he would come with the Express, I mean he’s like, RICH!
Although those two guys in there were pretty hot! Did you see the one with the glasses? If he ever
talks to me I’ll faint in the halls!"

"Yeah, but I liked the redhead, did you see the biceps he had?" Another girl
exclaimed, and in the cabin the boys’ faces both turned redder than Weasley hair.

Deciding they were saved from the sea of raging eleven year old with some serious hormonal
dysfunction, ("Thank Merlin, we were never that scary at eleven!" Hermione sighed) they
relaxed in their seats, had not a familiar and mostly unwelcome voice broken into their cabin.

"Well, well, well, Potter, looks like this year your fan club’s getting head starts, we’re
not even on Hogwarts grounds yet," Draco Malfoy sneered at them. And from somewhere off to the
left that couldn’t be seen from the seat, came many a high pitched squeals, all saying pretty much
thousands of things that could be summed up in one word: "POTTER?!!"

Harry slapped his forehead in his palms, Ron looked ready to draw blood, and Hermione cast a
worried glance to Ginny who showed her first sign of life since they had reached King’s Cross. She
paled (which, in truth, made her look more dead than alive, but, oh, well).

"What do you want Malfoy?" And Ron dragged the name out like it were the most awful
word in the magical world, which, to him, it was.

The ferret’s eyes flickered towards Ginny, who was trying to make herself as small as possible
in her seat, before going back to sneer at Ron. "Nothing Weasel!" He half shouted at him
before leaving like a bat out of hell.

"Weird!" Ron exclaimed while throwing his hands up in the air. Ginny, in the meantime,
had gotten up to search in her bag, quickly pulling out a piece of parchment (slight beat up from
the ride), and hurrying out after the seething blond (having a hard time, though, for the sea of
raging-out-of-control-hormones had come back and was blocking rather magnificently the small
entry).

"Draco!" She called out to him, but froze when realizing that she’d just used his
given name. He stopped in his track too.

T*u-thump!* Was that her heart that she just heard in her ears?

*Tu-thump!* Yep, it was, and it was getting louder.

*Tu-thump!* Oh, good Gods, he was turning around so slowly that hell would freeze over
before he faced her.

*Tu-thump!* Oh, man, he’s mad! He’s mad! He’s so mad that he’s not even saying a word!

*Tu-thump!* Would you crack an expression already?!

*Tu-thump!* Oh, please—

"What did you call me?"

*Tu-thump, tu-thump, tu-thump-tu-thump-thump-thump-thump-THUMP!!!* Oh, God, her heart had
just ceased to exist after that one particularly explosive THUMP!

"Uh…Malfoy!" She finally squeaked out. "I…called you Malfoy…what…else…should I
call you?" She tried to cover up with a nervous giggle which sounded far too fake and guilty,
even to her own ears.

He grunted. "What do you want?"

"Uhm…" maybe this wasn’t such a good idea…. "I…wanted to give you this" she
finally said, cursing herself for actually letting herself admit that she was giving him something
that her very own hand had penned. As she extended her hand out to him, the parchment she was
holding trembled like if it had just been hit with a quivering spell. Sweat was lining her
forehead. "I wanted to write to you over the summer, but I thought that if your dad recognized
our owls we might never see them again, so I figured it was best to give it to you now," she
explained, her hand still extended to him.

He stared at her hand for what seemed like an eternity locked in a second, and finally said,
"My parents had…business to take care of. I was alone…all summer long." He replied, his
piercing gray eyes still fixed on her hand.

"Oh," she mumbled. "I’m…sorry. I didn’t know." He wasn’t taking the
parchment. Maybe if she slowly drew it back to herself, he wouldn’t notice how big of a fool she’d
made of herself. Maybe…

"No! I’ll take it!" He shouted. Reaching his hand out to take it from her. Trembling
more than before she very, very, *very* slowly began to bring the parchment back to him. And
just as slowly, he curled his fingers around it, making sure that there was absolutely no physical
contact between the two.

Then silence ensued.

Right as she was contemplating just turning around and going back to the cabin, he spoke again.
"It would not have displeased me to receive an owl this summer. Even if from a Weasley,"
He remembered to add at the end.

Strangely enough, she didn’t flinch at the last part of his statement. Instead, she smiled.
"Well, the next time you’re home alone and bored out of your wits, you might want to owl me,
so that I’ll know," and this time she did turn around and skipped her way passed the growing
sea of raging-out-of-control-hormones. Hermione was right. Thank Merlin they hadn’t been that scary
when eleven and with a big crush. She deliberately ignored the little voice in the back of her mind
telling her that her big eleven-year-old crush had brought her to confide in an evil diary which
had used her to petrify half the Muggle born student body of Hogwarts by freeing a Basilisk. Nope,
she had NOT been as scary as them.

Her thoughts were confirmed when she finally squeezed through to see Ron, with his back pressed
to the train’s window, holding Harry in a Muggle Wrestling style vice while keeping the black hair
away from the Lighting Bolt scar; Harry trying to flee for his life; and Hermione trying to get in
the way of Colin Creevy’s camera, while what seemed like thousands of hands were trying to rip off
a piece of the very oversized sweater that Harry HAD been wearing and was now reduced to
shreds.

Nope, they had definitely NOT been that scary.

Finally, Hermione had gotten tired and pulled out her wand, pointing it at the herd of
girls.

Obviously, the name Hermione Granger had become just as famous as Harry Potter’s, for it seemed
that the sea had been split as though it were Moses himself holding his shepard’s staff.

Some girls seemed ready to face her wand as well, but decided against it.

Definitely, definitely, they had not been this scary, she thought as she watched them walk away,
some of them triumphantly holding up a ripped piece of ancient sweater.

°*°

Harry sat with Hermione on his left, and Ginny and Ron across from him at the Gryffindor table.
Soon, the first years would walk in to be sorted out. He was enjoying himself, and he would have
enjoyed himself more if he didn’t have the full knowledge that only two seats away there were Colin
and his brother wasting as much Magic Camera Film as they could, and on the other side of the table
at much the same distance, Seamus Finnigan and Neville Longbottom were trying out new spells that
they learned over the summer. He just hoped they’d leave him with both his eyebrows at the end of
dinner.

He watched in silence as the new recruits marched in, nervous and exited (flattening his hair at
the sight of several girls he recognized from the mob on the train, who were, to his chagrin,
pointing, giggling, and informing everyone they could that the "hot" guy with the round
glasses was, in fact, Harry Potter), and followed the Sorting Hat’s welcome with little interest.
His rhymes really needed a boost.

He noted with a smile that there were quite the number of Gryffindors among the new comers, and
his smile would have stayed put if he hadn’t heard the name of one particular boy being called out.
Kevin Creevy. He visibly shuddered. Could he handle yet another Creevy?

Slowly, fearfully, he looked up at the figure going to sit on the stool, under the hat, and…
nearly suffered his first heart attack. The kid looked like a bloody thug wearing a Creevy mask!
The face was basically like his brothers’, but…the long spiked hair, the incredible number of
piercings on his ears and eyebrows, and the black eyeliner (?) definitely didn’t put him into his
"Creevy" list.

And of course, he had to be sorted into Gryffindor.

Thank God, all the seats next to him were occupied. Oh, no, never mind, the elder Creevy
siblings had saved a spot for their family’s new addition to their house table. He groaned, and
Hermione laughed out right. He glanced over at her and understood that she’d practically read
everything that had just gone on in his mind.

He was about to comment, when the creature, that had caused the whole exchange in the first
place walked over to stand next to Ron, facing Harry. Several eyebrows shot up at this, wondering
just *how* THIS Creevy was going to react to Harry.

"You Potter?" He asked gruffly.

"Uh...yeah..." he answered uncertainly.

"Heard my bros were pressin’ on ya. If you need ‘em to stop just gimme a whistle. I’ll be
your personal Creevy bodyguard." And with that he just walked back to his seat.

Slowly, Harry turned to look at Hermione. "We were definitely NOT that scary," and
with that he listened as McGonagall and Dumbledore did their usual speeches.

"For the seventh years," Dumbledore began, and Harry realized that he’d never said
this at a sorting ceremony.. "I’m sure you’ve noticed how every year, the seventh years talk
about in secret about a certain project that they do not wish to share with their younger fellow
students as to not spoil the surprise for them. Generally, we present you with this project further
in the year, but, as you all seem to be more creative with each passing year, this term we’ll start
earlier. The head of your house will tell you where and at what time to meet. I believe it is
something very special that you will all enjoy."

"What could it be?" Hermione asked eager. "I’ve heard it was something very fun
from the seventh year prefects last year."

"I don’t know," Harry replied, touching his scar. It was strange. It tingled. Not the
burning, or itching, or hurting that he felt whenever Voldemort was up to no good.

It felt like the fuzzy feeling one got when anticipating something wonderful.

With this thought in mind he turned to Hermione. "I don’t know," he repeated.
"But I can’t wait till tomorrow."

She simply smiled at him in agreement.

Author’s Note: This is actually no indication of where the fic is going because it’ll get REALLY
angsty, and the plot will probably surprise you as it unfolds…I hope. Well, did you like it? Hate
it? Have any constructive criticism? Then drop me a line at Robbygal@hotmail.com or simply leave a review. If you want to
flame me, that’s fine, go on ahead, and I’ll just have a barbecue.

Pearl Drop Angel



2. Chapter 1: The Time Capsule
------------------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t
know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and himself...or
did she?

Disclaimer: I’m just borrowing characters and situations for entertainment purposes, personal
and non, and am making no money out of it. And all I own beside the plot are: the Diggorinta (which
only makes a brief appearance in this chapter and then gets mentioned on and off), the Stalker Mob
(which is very annoying to own because they keep on bugging me about putting snogging scenes
between themselves and Harry), Kevin Creevy (which is really scary to have around), the time
capsule, and what’s in it, including Lily’s diary. Don’t sue, all I own are professional fashion
designing markers and they only cost about euro 4.16 and they’re not worth it because the ink runs
out right away, and the chargers cost an arm and a leg. Just...don’t sue, it’s not worth it.

Warning: Dispite the fact that the prologue (and a good hefty chunk of this chapter) is rather
comical, the fanfiction itself is made up of tortured, angst-filled romances (I’m not kidding), and
we’ll start to see that at the end of this chapter. Don’t worry, though, I’m a professional when it
comes to comic relief (that’s the whole purpose of the first years, even though in this chapter
they don’t show up).

Anyway, I hope you enjoy as much as the prologue. I loved the reviews, even if they were few
(when I first posted this on ff.net I got 12 just on the prologue and am now standing at 233 for 14
chaps! That just really makes me happy)! Thank you all so very, very, much. Please keep them
coming, even if I’m practically almost done writing the whole thing it’s still really nice to get
these.

And now: on with the fic.

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Chapter 1: The Time Capsule

Since there were never any lessons the fist few days at Hogwarts—just to let everyone get used
to the castle again—the first day after their arrival the seventh year Gryffindors, led by a very
proud Head Girl by the name of Hermione Granger (could it have been anyone else?), were making
their way to the courtyard just as they had been told the previous night by McGonagall—who was
patiently waiting for them there.

Again, Harry felt his scar tingling the same way he’d felt the night before, and slowly,
gingerly, he placed his fingers on it. It had never felt that way before…it felt…pleasant. And
nothing that had ever concerned his scar had been pleasant.

Hermione was looking at him rather strangely—she was worried, he could tell—so he gave her a
reassuring half smirk, dropped his hand, and turned his attention to the stern looking teacher.
McGonagall, after making sure that they were all there, quickly said with a barely concealed smile
of anticipation, "Very well, follow me!" She turned on her heels wordlessly and began to
pace with long strides towards the lake.

The students followed.

The walk was long as they kept on siding on the lakeside. It felt like they had nearly made the
round of the blasted far-too-big mass of water, knowing quite well that they had barely even begun
to circle it, until finally McGonagall started to head a little off to the left into a clearing
filled with very unusual looking stones. Some were the size of fists, others seemed boulders. They
were all mostly covered in brownish moss, and far too regularly shaped to have been non magical.
They were also placed at very regular intervals, telling that someone had placed them there.

The smell itself that was in the clearing told of misty magical memories and dreams, and the
fact that the entire area was enveloped in a very light white fog only added to the atmosphere.

Then, interrupting everyone’s observations of the grounds, McGonagall spoke again. "Very
well, Gryffindors," and with this she pulled something out of her pockets. "Can anyone
tell me what this is?" And she opened her palms to show a very tiny creature that seemed
covered in the same moss as the stones. To Harry it looked like it had the body of a seal, but
without the teeth, and the "limbs"—or whatever they were for they looked like oval
paddles—were a lot larger and so thin that they seemed transparent. As he made these assertions the
tiny creature spread large wings—when open the complete width was about the length of an
outstretched arm—and lifted itself in the air. The wings were just as thin as the limbs, but with
the sunlight streaming through them—for they were almost completely see-through as well—showed a
rippling of very small muscles and vessels.

What a fascinating little creature that was. Harry smiled when the thing opened its mouth and
let out a tiny, but very high-pitched, sound that to him seemed like the word "Dig!"

Hermione’s hand, of course, shot up.

"Yes, Miss Granger?"

"It’s a Diggorinta," Hermione replied. "It is a magical creature that can assert
the character of a person, or group of people, and find the object—which is usually specified by
the owner—that most would suit, and brings it to light by digging."

"Very good, Miss Granger, ten points," McGonagall complimented. "Now," she
began to explain the point to their excursion, "the Diggorinta is very powerful, albeit small,
and it never fails its purpose. Its purpose today is to help us find the stone that would most suit
you young Gryffindors," and at this a lot of eyebrows shot up. Why would they need a
stone?

"This place, as a matter of fact, is the Gryffindors’ Forever Remember Garden. Beneath each
stone there are the history, actions, and thoughts of another already graduated Gryffindor class
such as yours," and with this she signaled the Diggorinta to do it’s work with a nod, to which
the creature replied with another very happy "Dig!"

With a few flaps of moss colored wings and sounds of "Dig!" the Diggorinta flew
swiftly around the students, pausing for a second before each one of them, and moving on. Ron,
Hermione, and Harry were the last three left, and the creature went about them in the same ordered
mentioned, pausing in front of Hermione longer than it had before Ron, and in front of Harry far
longer than it had with anyone else put together.

Finally it let out a particularly loud and enthusiastic "Dig!" before turning around
and floating to a particularly large boulder and sitting atop it. After a second it seemed that the
moss from the stone and the Diggorinta’s skin had become one thing all together, and with a flap of
its wings lifted itself and it’s perch in the air. It detached itself from the stone, leaving it
hovering about two meters in the air, and flew beneath it.

Flying so low that it’s wings touched the ground, the Diggorinta drew a circle in the moss, of
the same shape and size as the boulder, and lifted itself back up, all the while flapping its limbs
frantically like a dog digging in the yard to hide his bone. As it did this, the wet ground seemed
to split, and…something that was beneath began to push itself out.

And then, after the earth beneath their feet had stopped shaking, something that resembled an
old battered trunk laid hovering only centimeters from their feet.

"Oh, how strange it would be this one," McGonagall commented.

Harry wondered what she meant, but Hermione managed to answer that when she said, "Harry!
Look!" while pointing flabbergasted at the lock of the trunk.

There, before his eyes, in rusty gold, was engraved an image of a wolf standing in front of a
stag and a big dog, neck stretched toward the sky as if it were howling. Very small, at the wolf’s
feet was a mouse, and behind the animals, a cloaked shadow, and an eye, which—as Harry had
studied—represented a Seer.

This couldn’t have been…could it?

"Now, I don’t know what has been put into this trunk, but I do know that the class that
left it here had some very creative students, and I’m sure everyone of you has heard of them at
least once," she announced, and then looked straight at Harry and his two friends. "The
Marauders."

Despite the fact that Harry had already guessed it, hearing the words had made it settle in a
completely different way. In that trunk there were things that had to do with Wormtail, the blasted
traitor, and Moony and Padfoot, that since his third year had been surrogate fathers to him, and
then…of Prongs, his real father, and of his mother.

Hearing McGonagall say that was like having the wind knocked out of him. Thousands of thoughts
ran through his mind. *What did they leave? What’s it going to tell me? What if I find out more
about my parents?* His mind asked in trepidation. Could this possibly help him into knowing the
mother and father that he was never permitted to have? Remus and Sirius never told him much about
them or their years in Hogwarts, and he guessed that—even after sixteen years—the loss of two close
friends, the betrayal of another, and far too many years of lies, deceit and pain were still too
fresh in their minds. Harry had never pressed them.

But maybe here was their chance—for some reason Hermione and Ron were included—to find out about
people that Harry had only seen in his dreams and in the mirror of Erised. But then again, was it?
After all. in the trunk there were probably just a stack of moving pictures and a yearbook (at
least, that’s what Muggles put in time capsules, and he guessed wizards weren’t very different),
but then again, these were the Marauders.

Oh, boy, he was confused! As always, he looked to Hermione for help and reassurance. And it
looked like her thoughts were running along the same track as his. Though she’d never come out and
said it, he knew her—always-overactive—curiosity toward his parents. She was fascinated by the
stories told of them, foggy as they were. Especially his mother, Lily, fascinated her. And that was
understandable, for they had so many things in common. Beautiful, smart, capable witches born of
Muggles, both Head Girls, that had found themselves trapped in friendships—which were probably more
harm than good—with men who seemed unable to stay out of trouble, and caught in battles against the
Dark Lord.

Actually, Harry had always been very interested in knowing about his mother very much as well.
For some reason, he could imagine what his father had been like—maybe only because of the strong
physical resemblance that he held to him—but his mother to him was a mystery. Each time he thought
of her, he found himself imagining her quite like Hermione, but that was probably simply because of
the fact that Hermione was, by far, the strongest girl he had ever—and would probably ever—meet
and, of course, because of the strong feelings he had towards her. He liked the thought of the two
women of his life being so alike…but were they?

He had to stop his train of thought because McGonagall had walked up to the trunk, pointed her
wand at it, and called out "Alohomora!" and…nothing happened. A deep frown appeared
between her eyebrows, and she began ticking off other unlocking spells, all to no avail. After
about ten tries, she huffed loudly and openly gawked at the offending thing.

Whispers were spreading throughout the students.

"Well, these were the Marauders, they must have put a load full of charms and
spells."

"It’s going to take us days to get this thing open, if not more!"

"Do you think there’s anything dangerous in there?"

"Of course there is!"

Thoughts like these were spreading like a wildfire.

Harry looked at Ron, then at Hermione, and he found them wearing the same knowing smirk on their
faces that he had. His own growing wider he raised his hand and called, "Professor?"

Surprised, McGonagall snapped her eyes away from the mad trunk to look at her student.

"Yes, Mr. Potter?"

"May I try?" Again, a deep furrow appeared between the teacher’s eyebrows. Not knowing
what else to try, she gave him the clear. Harry pulled his wand out of his robes, pointed it at the
case at his feet, and pronounced loud and clear the words. "I solemnly swear I’m up to no
good!"

Laughter spread through the rest of the students and chuckled sentences along the lines of
"Harry’s gone mad to say that in front of McGonagall" were whispered behind hands.

That was until, of course, the case started shaking wildly still in midair, while shooting
sparks from the engraved golden seal. Loud gasps were heard all around, and everyone—but Harry,
Ron, and Hermione—backed several paces away from the maddened object.

Whistles started to accompany the sparks, which were actually starting to resemble miniature
butterfly fireworks. The students were backing up even more, and, finally, when the sparks had
become blinding, the whistling a high pitched squeal that made everyone grind their teeth, and the
trunk itself had started to spin faster and faster around until it had made a whirlwind around
itself that had the Diggorinta desperately trying to keep safe in midair until…

It stopped.

Everything.

Suddenly.

It stopped.

No more sparks, or whistling, or spinning, or shaking. It had gone back to the same position as
it had before Harry had pronounced the words.

"Harry, what did you do?" He heard Seamus ask terrified, but the trio turned to give
him a look of utter confidence before going back to study the object of their friends’ horrors.

And then, again, it began to shake, and finally, with a loud bursting sound the lid opened and
fireworks began to shoot high into the air in a very stunning pyrotechnics performance, not unlike
lava erupting from the Vesuvius when it wiped out Pompeii. None of them were harmful, for they shot
very high into the air and burst into colorful magical shapes, especially of animals, that actually
moved before fading out. Many represented a mouse doing various things, running, hitting the knot
on the Whomping Willow, scurrying about and such, and Harry felt his hands clench until they drew
blood as he thought of the person that had—obviously—charmed the candles.

He felt Hermione’s hand on his shoulders and he unconsciously relaxed his grip and his
stance.

Then there was a wolf, howling at the moon, biting himself to keep from hurting others,
sleeping, and simply walking in the streets of Hogsmeade. A dog, large and gruff, howling, barking,
running. And finally, a big, wonderful deer stomping through the forest, drinking from the lake,
and then, the last exploding candle represented the beautiful stag nuzzling into a girl’s neck.
Lily’s neck, and in turn she kissed the spot above its nose with a soundless giggle, and smiled at
the people that, mesmerized, had been watching the show from below.

And, just when everyone thought the show was over, another burst came from the trunk, and one
last image showed in the sky. A sign that read, "Mischief is done!"

Harry smiled.

Everyone behind him now stood with his or her jaws touching the mossy ground.

"You can come closer now," Hermione said as she bent over to look at the contained
items of the trunk. Slowly, apprehensively, the students—along with McGonagall—did.

"This was definitely Potter’s idea," the professor mumbled. Everyone heard.

"What?"

"Well, anything related to fireworks and Filibusters was always his doing. He would come up
with the idea, and Pettigrew would brew the potions," she answered. Strangely, some students
thought, her tone was quite bitter when she spoke Wormtail’s name.

Cautiously, the rest of the group made its way to the trunk, only to be hit in full by a blue
wrapped bundle of giggles that flew at all of their stomachs with the force of an atomic
missile.

"Hey what—!"

"What the bloody hell?!" (This was Ron.)

"What IS that?"

And the bundle spoke.

"I’m Cicciobello!"

"What’s a bloody Chee-cho-bel-loh?" Ron asked with a skeptical eyebrow at the
bundle.

"I’M Cicciobello!" the bundle repeated offended, and this time, everyone noticed how
very childish and high-pitched the voice was. But…hey! This was a baby!

"No, not him!" McGonagall exclaimed.

"Hi-ya prof! It’s been a while!" The ‘Cicciobello’ cried, and, in salutation, went
over, pulled down his pants, sitting on the woman’s hat, and—with a rather large ‘splat’—left a
little scented gift there. Then, giggling madly, pulled its pants back up and flew high into the
air. McGonagall was in fumes while the students were rolling on the ground laughing.

"It’s a doll," Hermione said, as she looked up. And she was right. The bundle was, in
truth a very likely imitation of a live baby, even in size. As she said this, the baby turned to
look at her, and then to Ron and Harry. At the sight of the last, it gasped loudly and flew
straight into Harry’s gut, knocking the wind out of him, all the while letting out loud cries of
"Dada!"

"DADA?!" The class asked collectively.

"Dada?" Harry repeated as well.

"Dada!" The Cicciobello exclaimed again. It took Harry quite a while to extricate the
deviled doll off of him, but when he finally did, it looked at him again in the face, and gasped.
"You’re not daddy!"

"DADDY?" The class collectively screeched again.

"Uh…no. Sorry. I’m not daddy," Harry replied nervously. The doll seemed to
deflate.

"No Cicciobello, he’s not your daddy," McGonagall told him.

"Then…who is he?"

"Your daddy’s son," she replied in a completely matter-of-factly manner.

The doll—again—gasped. It seemed to do that a lot. "Dada had a son?" McGonagall
nodded. Again Cicciobello looked at Harry, this time, seeming to decipher him. And then, suddenly,
it shouted out, "Brother!" and, again, threw itself at his gut.

"BROTHER?!" when was the class going to stop screeching like that?

"Oh, brother!" Harry sighed as he pinched the bridge of his nose with his fingers.

Cicciobello giggled.

"Very well Gryffindors, let’s see…what else these students placed in this," McGonagall
said, her voice losing enthusiasm with every word that she got out.

And they did just that. Although the rest of the contents of the trunk weren’t as exciting as
the fireworks, or the possessed Cicciobello, they found them all rather interesting. There were, as
expected, loads of moving pictures—most of them representing interesting pranks that the Marauders
had pulled on Slytherins (Snape’s younger face was quite reoccurring)—and a yearbook, telling of
each of the Gryffindors that had graduated that year. In addition, though, there were loads of
different—seemingly—non-hazardous things (such as cards, and handkerchiefs, and nail polish--?--),
all attached to a little instruction handbook. Marauders’ inventions obviously.

They spent the good part of three hours all sitting, laughing, and enjoying the creativity of
students that had attended the school far before they were even born, and, when it finally seemed
there were no more interesting objects in the trunk, Lavender looked into it and saw something that
almost everyone had written off as of no importance. Picking it up she asked Professor McGonagall
what it was about.

Piqued by the girl’s question, the teacher walked over, and took in her hands the thick leather
bound book that was held out to her. At first her eyes went wide, and then she opened to the front
page, as though to check out something that she knew was true but couldn’t quite have been
possible. "This can’t be," she mumbled.

But it was.

She stared at whatever must have been written on that front page for quite a long time. The only
thing that had managed to keep her from drowning into the thick book was the voice of Lavender
Brown asking, "What is it, Professor?" At this the addressed woman took in a sharp breath
turning her gaze away from the mesmerizing page, and looked at the girl before her, although not
seeing her at all.

Another second went by, and finally she spoke.

"Mr. Potter, come here," she ordered, not a note of expression in her voice. Harry,
who was, at that moment, reading the instructions, which had come with the nail polish along with
Ron, looked up confused, and shrugging, went over to see what his teacher wanted. Again, McGonagall
stared at him for a second. She seemed to be sizing him, trying to decide if he was ready for
whatever it was that she was about to present him with.

This only served to make the young man even more confused.

"Yes, professor?" He asked as an encouragement.

Finally the teacher came to her decision, and extended her hand out to him, holding the book for
him to take. Even more confused, Harry took the professed book, and held it, keeping his boggled
gaze onto the woman. "Open to the first page," she instructed. Looking down, he did just
that. He opened the hard front cover to the first page which had only three words scribbled onto it
in a pretty, orderly, legible handwriting, which had obviously belonged to a young girl.

At first, he stared. The words were there, ink on paper, black on white, but they just weren’t
registering. And then, when they did, the book slipped from his numb fingers, and hit the ground
with a muted ‘thump’.

Hermione, which had walked over in curiosity, knit her eyebrows before kneeling and picking up
the fallen item. She opened to the same page that had caused so much staring, and, reading the
words, finally understood why they had been so overwhelmed by those three simple words.

Actually, they weren’t even words.

They were a name.

There, clear as day, stood the name: Lily Marianne Evans.

Her mouth open, and her eyes clouded, she, too, looked at McGonagall. "This isn’t…is
it?" She asked.

"Yes, Miss Granger," the professor confirmed. "It’s Mrs. Potter’s Hogwarts
diary," she explained, and, turning to look at Harry, told him, even cleared, "This is
your mother’s diary."

And silence fell between them.

"Uhm…professor?" Again, Lavender snapped everyone out of their thoughts.

"Yes, Miss Brown?"

"I think it’s time to head back to the castle," she ventured uncertainly.

This seemed to bring McGonagall to her usual self. "Yes, quite right," and saying that
she turned toward the rest of her Gryffindors. "Very well everyone, put everything you found
back into the trunk. Don’t worry, it will be kept in your Head Girl’s room, so ask her, and you
will access it all you want with her permission. You may discuss what to put in your own memory
case amongst yourselves. Your case will be buried within the end of the last week of school. Now,
we will make our return to the castle for lunch," she explained, and then turned back to
Harry. "You will not be required to put the book back in the case, Mr. Potter," she told
him with a barely concealed smile. "If that diary has a place, it is in your hands," she
finished, and began to head back to Hogwarts with the rest of the Gryffindors following close
behind.

On the walk back, Harry, walking at the very end of the line, found himself clutching the book
to his heart with one arm, and Hermione’s fingers (she was walking very closely on his right) with
his hand.

°*°

At lunch, the seventh years (of all houses) had secluded themselves from their younger
counterparts to plan well what to put in their own time capsules. Hermione, as Head Girl, along
with the two seventh year prefects, had the assignment of writing everything down, keeping record,
and basically organizing the whole thing. As her peers shot off all kinds of different ideas, she
diligently reported everything onto a fresh piece of parchment, completely ignoring her lunch,
although, Harry could tell, her mind wasn’t with it.

He guessed it was with his mother’s diary, much like his own was. As much as he tried to bring
himself to participate, he simply couldn’t. So instead, he listened to Ron tick off all kinds of
absurdities, demonstrating to the world that he was, in fact, Fred and George Weasley’s little
brother. Nearly everything that the redhead had suggested had been enthusiastically approved and
placed on the list, which, outside of his creative implications, held the same usual things, such
as yearbooks, and pictures, reports of major events and a hall of fame (which, everyone was sure,
would mostly be composed of Ronald Weasley, Hermione Lynn Granger, and Harry James Potter).

As Ron was ranting about placing carnivorous frogs into the case to come out in much the same
manner that the fireworks had, McGonagall tapped her goblet with her spoon, getting the attention
of the entire school. Dumbledore, it seemed, had to make an announcement.

The hall went mostly quiet, so the aged wizard spoke.

"It has been brought to my attention that our Quidditch field, is, unfortunately, not going
to be available for the next several months. We have a, rather growing and annoying, infestation of
carnivourous beetlesquash. Now, thankfully, they have limited themselves to our Quidditch field,
and we’ve been able to prevent them from expanding their territory, but, since we do not wish to
have our Quidditch teams and spectators eaten alive, we will have to postpone any games until after
Christmas, and possibly more," at this he stopped, waiting for the outraged mass of students
to calm down.

Ron could be heard throughout the castle with his shouts of "What? But you can’t! I mean
it’s Quidditch! What’s school without Quidditch?" Only Hermione’s strong slap to the back of
his head managed to stop his ranting, making him, instead, yelp in pain.

"Yes, Mr. Weasley. School would be a much less interesting place without Quidditch, which
is why I said postponed. The games won’t be canceled, but will, once they start, be performed all
in a much shorter period of time, and later in the year. You will still hold your practices like
you regularly would, just not inside the Quidditch field. The head of your house will tell you
where your team will practice, and I would advice you, Mr. Weasley, to take this as an advantage,
for, now, you have all the time you want on your own training ground, which, you won’t be sharing
with other teams. That’ll be all," Dumbledore explained, and with this sat back down in a
manner that told that there wouldn’t be any more arguing over the topic.

Ron, who had been Gryffindor Keeper since fifth, and Caftain since sixth, and was all around the
most Quidditch obsessed person left in the wake of Oliver Wood, was, still, outraged. "Who
cares if we can train all we want? They’ll probably put us in the courtyard where everybody can see
us and study our moves! What would be the point of practice then?" He began to spew forth all
questions of the sort, and continued, and continued, not even realizing that Professor McGonagall
was behind him when he moved on to speak of her. "And how could McGonagall allow this!? I
mean, wasn’t she supposed to be the biggest Quidditch supporting teacher of the school? I can’t
believe she’d let this happen! How—?" He was finally interrupted by said teacher’s very, very,
stern voice.

"Mr. Weasley!"

Suddenly, Ron stopped, paled, gulped, and slowly turned at the sound of the
higher-than-usual-pitch that McGonagall had used pronouncing his name. "Y--?" He began,
but, realizing that his voice was far too squeaky, cleared his throat and tried again.
"Yes?"

"I just came over to inform you of which grounds you will be allowed to use as practice
fields," she said sternly. Of course, Ron should have expected this, as he was Captain, and
therefore, the one that should have been informed. Still rather peeved looking, McGonagall stood so
that she was eyelevel with the redhead and whispered so that only he, Harry, and Hermione could
hear. "The Gryffindor Forever Remeber Garden," she revealed in a very secretive
manner.

Hermione gasped. "But wasn’t that supposed to stay secret until seventh year for everybody?
Outside of Ron and Harry, all the others are sixth year and below," she protested.

"Yes, but they don’t need to know what its name is or what it’s for until they reach
seventh, do they?" She asked mischieviously, and they all could guess the teacher liked to
keep secrets. "However, it is a perfect location, for it can’t be seen from any part of the
castle, since it is hidden by several charms, and it’s secluded and hard to find. There, you will
be able to practice all you want with no interruptions, and very little possibility of being spied
on," she explained, and, deciding she’d said enough, stood back up straight, and marched back
to her place at the faculty’s table.

Ron was extatic and couldn’t shut up about it for the rest of the evening.

Harry and Hermione were both quiet, not listening to their blabbering friend, completely
absorbed in thoughts of Lily Evans’ diary, and whatever it could possible bare to them.

°*°

It was late, and, as Hermione made the last round of the school, checking if everything was
alright, she couldn’t manage to keep her thoughts from wandering to the thick, still in exceptional
state diary that had been found not even 24 hours before.

Moslty, when everyone heard of what it was, they all said, "Great! This way you’ll find out
more ways to fend off You-Know-Who!" But she knew very well that Harry, as much as she, was
more concered with what the woman might have been like, what she thought, what she said, how she
lived at Hogwarts and how she lived at all.

Hermione had always been fascinated by the idea of her.

She, having been raised by wonderful loving parents all her life, had no idea what it might have
been like without them at all, not even knowing what they were like, what they smelt like, how it
would feel to come down to breakfast in the morning and hearing "Goodmorning, Harry," or
something of the sort. She knew very well that his aunt Petunia had probably never wished him a
‘goodmorning’ in his entire life.

*How can Harry be so wonderful when he’s been raised by those self centered barbarians?*
She asked herself as she whispered the password to the Fat Lady. Maybe, if she could read that
diary, she could find out what his parents had been like. Find out if just being related to them
made him what he was, or if he was just like that of his own nature.

Even though she was Head Girl she’d asked to be able to stay in the Gryffidor tower, so she had
been showed a portrait that would have led her, from the girl’s dorm, directly to her rooms, and
she much preferred to use those. She felt at home there, and the Head Girl-Boy tower was so
desolate.

As she was about to reach the stairs that would bring her to the Gryffindor dormitories she
stopped upon noticing that someone had been sitting at the foot of the overstuffed couch in front
of the hearth. She didn’t need to closer inspect the person, for nobody else in Gryffindor could
have such unruly pitchblack hair, and those broad shoulders and lanky figure.

"Harry," she whispered as to not jolt him out of his thoughts while making her way
around the couch. "What are you still doing here?" She asked as her hands found her hips,
but dispite the fact that she stood in her lecturing pose, her voice held absolutely no
reprimand.

She just watched him as he turned his head slowly to look up at her, noticing how he was
slumping, more than sitting, on the carpet covering the cold surface of the floor. His mother’s
diary lay unopened on his lap. Dropping her arms at her sides with a heavy sigh, she sat on the
couch next to him, her calves brushing his arm, putting a hand on his mess of hair, gently scraping
his scalp in a reassuring manner. "What are you still doing here?" She reapeated softly,
worry and uncertainty clear, now, in her voice.

"Couldn’t sleep," he mumbled expressionlessly, but she saw clearly how his hands
clutched even tighter the book between his hands.

"Are you scared of it?" She asked, still quietly, for breaking the comfortable,
conspirative silence seemed like a crime to her.

Harry seemed to contemplate the question for a second. "Would it be stupid?" He asked
finally.

Hermione shook her head. "No, I could understand it if you were," she reassured him.
"You’ve never truly known her, Harry. Even if you wanted to, you never had a chance to find
out what she was like, and, in a way, that always gave you a chance to make up your own mind about
her," Hermione explained.

"Would it be bad if I said I was afraid that she didn’t live up to my expactations?"
He asked again. He looked like a small child afraid to say that he liked to fantasize because
scared of adults reactions.

"No," she replied, fully meaning it. "I’d be scared, too," she continued,
"I’ve somewhat an idea of her, too, but Harry, this is your mother. No matter what, I don’t
think you could ever bring yourself to be disappointed in her, even when she’d different from what
you expect," she finished.

"Would you--?" He began, but stopped himself. He looked to be debating in his own head
whether or not asking the next question was appropriate. *Oh, come on, Harry! This is Hermione!
The worst thing she could do is say ‘No’.* And so he asked. "Would you mind...reading it
out loud for me?" He asked nervously, and then, almost as though he had to justify his
question, added, "Maybe, with a girl’s voice I’d get more of an idea."

He was so vulnerable at that moment, afraid that she would say ‘no’ and leave him alone in a
journey in which her company was absolutely necessary (at least she hoped), that she felt the
tell-tale stinging behind her eyes. "I’d love to," she replied quietly, and extended her
hand out to take the diary, and slowly, apprehensively, Harry gave it to her.

He didn’t move to get closer or change position to hear better. For some reason, he preferred to
stay as he was, the flames in the fireplace reflected in his spectacles and warming away the
anxiety that he’d worked up during the day. All he did was lean his head over slightly so that it
rested against her knee. He’d always wished that he could touch Hermione the same way Ron did, like
the way he’d laid back to back with her at lunch, but for some reason, to Harry, the small touches
like this were already so overwhelming, that anything more would be dangerous to their platonic
relationship. He felt her hands scrape his scalp soothingly again in a comforting manner, and
closed his eyes at the touch.

They’d laid like that for a while before Hermione stopped stalling and opened to the first page
of the diary. She realized that her hands were trembling. She was nervous. Over the years she’d, in
some way, come to idolize this woman, for the way that she’d stayed close to James throughout the
tough times, kept the Marauders’ secrets, and sacrificed her life for that of the boy—man—that sat
there with his head resting on her *knee!* How could she not see this woman as a goddess,
for—had it not been for her—Harry might not even be here, and she would have been hopelessly alone.
Even her friendship with Ron had come about because of him. She owed him so much, and loved him so
much, that, even the image of his mother had become holy to her.

Clearing her voice she began out loud with the date.

*August 23rd,*

*Hello, my name is Lily Evans, I’m going to be eleven soon, and have recently found out
that...I’m a Witch! Well, I always knew I was different, but a WITCH! I have to admit that was
pretty exciting. Finding out I mean. Just two days ago, a pretty, big, brown owl swooped in the
window, dropped a letter on top of the milk jug, and flew right out. My sister Petunia began to
scream her head off, but I’d already known that something would have happened that morning. You
see, well, not many people besides my parents know about this, but, ever since I was little, I
would get this feelings sometimes. Even visions once in a while. Of the future, the present
happening somewhere else, or the past.*

*I never told anyone, because, well...it’s not normal to feel these things, and, even if my
parents were actually proud of it (they said it made me even more special) almost everyone else,
especially Petunia, thinks it’s scary.*

*Anyway, that morning I felt like something wonderful would happen, something that would
change my life forever, bring me to a place where I truly belonged. And while I said this to my mom
as she put the bacon on my breakfast place, I had no idea how true that was. When mom read out loud
the letter that had been sent to me, telling me that I’d been excepted to the ‘Hogwarts School of
Witchcraft and Wizardry’ I thought my heart was going to burst.*

*I really WAS going to find a place in which I belonged.*

*Of course, I have friends here, but they always seemed detached. I think they’re afraid of
some of the things that I made happen a couple of times when mad. Once, when I was eight, at my
birthday party, Kiana Jenkins, from down the street, started making fun of my red hair saying that
I looked like a carrot, and that my eyes looked like the color that swimming pools turn to when
people don’t clean them right. Well, usually I don’t care when people make fun of my hair, but she
was always real mean to me, ever since I was a kid (probably the reason for why she gets along so
magnificently with Petunia, I’ll bet they just sit together all day talking about how awful I am,
and how they can’t stand me), so I lost my temper with her, and, as if by magic (and now I know it
really WAS magic) she turned puple and an endless stream of EGGS started to come out of her
mouth.*

*Since then, I really didn’t make anything so big happen, but still, nobody forgot. I’m sure
that at Hogwarts there are lots of people who can do these things, and I won’t feel so weird
anymore. Mom and Dad were real proud, and promised to take me to Diagon Alley (it was suggested in
the letter) for school shopping, and that’s what we did today.*

*It was SO neat! I admit, it took us a real long time to figure out how to get there. We
wondered around London for about three hours before stumbling onto a bar called ‘The Leaky
Couldron’. For some reason, it seemed just like the place to go for information on how to reach a
place where they sold Magic stuff. The people in there were dressed rather strangely, but they all
seemed to enjoy themselves much. They seemed nice. Well...maybe not at first, when they all went
quiet when seeing us, whispering something like "Muggles", but when dad asked how to get
to Diagon Alley, the man behind the counter (his name was Tom) asked if I was to attend Hogwarts.
Dad said yes, and then everybody congratuled me and wished me good luck.*

*Petunia didn’t seem to like it much when he brought us out back in front of a dead end. All
there was in front of us was a brick wall, and, well...it did seem much like a joke, but then Tom
tapped a couple of bricks, and they all started MOVING! Yes, moving! And they made a passageway
that we crossed.*

*And then it was like being inside a fairy tale. The street was small, and crooked, and some
of the buildings looked like they were make of cards. Everything was magic! People went around with
WANDS! There were candy shops with the strangest things, like Every-flavor+1 Beans and Chocolate
FROGS, books with pictures that moved, strange creatures walking around, and so much more that it
would take me years to write about.*

*The things that I liked the most were Ollivanders, where I got my first wand (who would have
every thought that I would one day have a magic WAND! He told me all the descriptions about it, but
all I remeber is that inside there’s a unicorn’s hair, and supposedly unicorns have seer’s powers,
and it’s supposed to be good for Charms), a store that sold everything for a sport called
Quidditch, which is played on BROOMSTICKS! And then there was the animal shop. In there, all the
animals could do something magical! Mom and Dad, bought an owl to keep at home (the clerk in the
store told us that people in the magical world communicate long distance with owl post), I don’t
need one because the school has a lot to let the students borrow, and for me, they bought a
beautiful cat. She’s red with green colored eyes (like me!), and a fluffy tail and puffy whiskers,
she looks half persian. Petunia said she looks like her legs are crooked and the fur is mangy, but
I think she’s beautiful. But maybe that’s because she’s magical. Anyway, I named her Rajah (because
she always looks everyone from down her nose, like an exotic queen), and I’m already in love with
her.*

*Anyway, it was in Diagon Alley that I bought this diary. The salesclerk said that it was best
if I waited a couple of years before writing in it, because it’s magical and hard to control, but I
liked it too much, and decided to write in it anyway. You see, I’m afraid that if I don’t write all
the unusually wonderful things that I’m sure are going to happen to me, I’ll forget them, and I’ll
miss out on beautiful memories that could have been with me but that wouldn’t be. And I hate that
thought.*

*But it’s late now, the day has been long (and wonderful), and it’s time for me to go to bed.
But since I know for certain that after all this excitement I won’t get a wink of sleep, I’m going
to pull out one of the books that Dad bought me for fun (he’s always spoiling me) and read that
until I actually do fall asleep. This book’s called "Hogwarts: A History" and we got it
because, maybe, if I read it, I’ll understand a little more of the place that I’m about to go into
and spend a whole of SEVEN years in.*

*The idea’s scary, but exciting, and I can’t wait.*

*Goodnight.*

*Lily*

At that Hermione stopped reading. For a second it was quiet. She’d stopped because she’d felt
that, for both herself and Harry, this night shouldn’t have gone any further. Even though Lily
hadn’t said anything particularly different from what any other muggle born Hogwarts student might
have after having been to Diagon Alley, it was, in a sense, overwhelming.

This was what Lily had been like at eleven (almost eleven, she corrected herself). A young girl,
full of expactation and anxiety. *And power*, Hermione added in her mind. To do that thing
with the eggs at the age of eight was something, and, in addition, Lily has some sort of seer’s
power. Now, it was a widely known fact that Hermione didn’t believe Trelawny’s codswallop and would
have gladly shoved it in her face, but Lily was different. She was eleven when she wrote this, and
didn’t know anything of Inner Eyes and Divination. But she did have visions.

Hermione believed that there were people capable of sensing things around them. She didn’t
believe that they could be taught however (at least she’d come to believe that during her third
year), especially by a fake like Trelawny. Even if, apparantly, even that charlatan made a couple
of real prophesies every once in a while.

But that wasn’t the matter at hand.

Finally, she spoke the question.

"Are you disappointed?"

Harry was quiet for a second, and she scraped her nails across his scalp again. She liked doing
that. It almost seemed to her that the affection that she placed in the little gesture seeped right
through to him and warmed him out of his dark thoughts. *Besides*, she thought to herself
bitterly, *this is probably as close as I’ll ever get to him.* Anyhow, that small sign of
incouraged him, and quietly, almost as though it was a sigh, he whispered the word.
"No."

She smiled down at him, and he turned to grin at her.

"She kind of sounds like you," he went on, and she raised her eyebrows at him.
"You know, a red cat with crooked legs, ‘Hogwarts: A History," he jested, and she threw a
pillow at his head, which was still, by the way, comfortably resting on her knee. She had to push
the little voice in her head back as it pointed out how natural it felt to be like that with
him.

"Why you—!" She gasped as he pulled the pillow out of her hands and hit her with it
(although very gently).

They didn’t pursue the pillow fight. They just looked at each other for a second. Hermione
wanted to tell him what she knew about Lily’s power, as, for certain, Harry had paid as little
attention to that as possible, and only cared about the girl’s opinions of Diagon Alley, and life
itself, but, then again, it was best like this. Let him enjoy his mother for what she was. A witch,
certainly, and a powerful one, but a girl above all, and a woman later in life.

"Let’s continue tomorrow," she decided. Maybe letting him digest what the brief
introduction revealed would be better than hitting him with everything all at once. "Now it’s
late," she explained, and he nodded.

"Okay," he agreed, and, before he even realized it and could stop himself, he turned
to face her, stood on his knees so that he was eyelevel with her, and dropped a soft kiss on her
forehead. "Thank you," he whispered. He had to force himself not to look at her as he
stood. Looking at her would ruin everything. Whispering a soft goodnight he made his way to the
stair that led to the dormitory, closely followed by Hermione (who was trying desperately to keep
her blushing and her hopes down).

They had both been so absorbed in their thought that neither had noticed how a certain redheaded
male had been listening to the whole exchange from the beginning and had run to his dorm room
scowling before the two would see him.

That night, Harry laid wide awake, thousands of thoughts in his troubled mind as he remembered
his mother, and thought of Hermione. Had he looked over to his best friend’s bed, he would have
seen Ron still awake, and scowling more than he ever had in his entire life.

To be continued.

Author’s note: Ah, finally, I’m getting into the plot. Oh, and the mob of crazy stalkers, along
with Kevin Creevy didn’t show in this chapter because I didn’t think they were necessary (and
because, for most of the day Harry kept to himself trying to decide whether or not to actaully OPEN
Lily’s diary), and besides, for now, the crazed Cicciobello was enough. By the way, after the time
capsule, he ran off to get reacquainted with the castle, and therefore we won’t know what he’s been
up to til next chapter (hehehe, I’m so evil). By the way, Cicciobello is owned by an Italian toy
company, Giochi Preziosi, and if you want to know what Cicciobello looks like to go:
www.giochipreziosi.it/cicciobello/ Oh, and for Lily’s middle name, well, I just made that up, as
well as Hermione, if they’re incorrect, tell me and I’ll fix.

Anyway, you know the drill, if you’ve read, review, or mail me at Robbygal@hotmail.com for any
comments, criticisms or flames (go ahead and I’ll have a BBQ).

Ja

Pearl



3. Chapter 2: The Diary
-----------------------

Sorry about the inconvenience with this chapter, but I wasn’t aware there was a problem with it.
I hope it’s okay now.

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

By Pearl Drop Angel

Chapter 2: The Diary

That morning Harry awoke late.

He’d fallen asleep shortly before sunrise (the sky was already lightening outside the window
before he nodded off to dreamland) and now he was late for breakfast.

He’d dressed in a hurry and run down to the Common Room, expecting it to be empty.

*Well, maybe Hermione will be there, but no-one else*, he thought to himself.

Boy, was he wrong.

As a matter of fact, the second he took the last five-step jump, with which he’d cleared the
whole landing in only six strides, a young, female, and, very likely, insane, voice shouted:
"There he is!" Therefore snapping Harry’s eyes and attention upon herself.

*Oh, crap!* He, very eloquently, thought.

Before he even realized what was going on, a thick mob of celebrity obsessed teenagers had
tackled him with squeals. Since he had been pushed with his stomach on the ground, he really
couldn’t see much, but he felt the weight of at least four girls sprawled across his body, a pair
of hands was strangling him trying to get his tie off his neck, two others were trying to take his
robe *while* the other four were still on top of him, making the task hard, and he’d even felt
someone trying to rip off his belt despite the fact that the belt buckle was on the front of his
pants, and, therefore, unreachable.

Then, two, very heavy, feet, stepped close to him, one on each side of his head (actually one
was standing on his nose, the other on his hair). The feet were apparently covered in very punk,
black leather boots completely covered in spikes, with a pair of scary looking stirrups on the
back. He hoped the owner wouldn’t step closer because a couple of the spikes were *very* close
to his eyes (he dimly realized that he didn’t have his glasses on anymore).

And then he heard the still undeveloped voice of the speaker (trying his hardest to sound gruff)
speak to the raging, out of control sea of adolescent hormones.

He graoned to himself, as best he could with that heavy boot standing on his nose anyway, and
hoped this was just a bad dream.

The sea of raging, out of control adolescent hormones wasn’t enough. Kevin Creevy, had been
waiting there as well, probably thinking that his main job as a self proclaimed bodyguard was to
defend him from the aformantioned sea.

His nose was telling Harry that Kevin wasn’t doing a very good job, so far.

"Yo! Get off!" He heard the boy shout.*Yes, Kevin, that’ll do it!* He thought
sarcastically.

And, as expected, the girls *didn’t* get off.

"GET OFF PEOPLE!" He hollered, this time, managing to sound menacing. For a second it
seemed to work, for, even if for a very brief moment, the girls stopped their unearthly squealing,
and, Harry guessed, looked at the young boy.

*Please, let them be scared of him! Please, let them be scared of him!* Harry chanted, over
and over in his mind. He remembered how in the train, all it took was the sight of Hermione’s wand
to get them to retreat, but that was different. Hermione was famous. Back in forth year, Rita
Skeeter had written many awful things about her (for which she received not less than one howler),
and, since it was becoming very disturbing for the entire school, Dumbledore had asked Harry
himself to write a short article about her to post in the Daily Prophet. He didn’t think it would
do much, but apparently it did. After that, Hermione had gone from being the worst witch that had
ever walked the Hogwarts grounds, to the heroine that she deserved to be known as.

But Kevin wasn’t Hermione. He wasn’t famous, or a spectacular wizard, and, more than being scary
was ridiculous.

Obviously, the crazy stalkers thought so too.

After a, very brief, sizing of him on the girls’ part, they simply went back to their defiling
of Harry’s person.

Harry, who’d been struggling to get free, decided that, if he held no resistance, maybe it would
make their defiling of him quicker and get the whole thing over with.

Kevin didn’t agree. He stepped off of his nose and hair (*Oh, thank you!*) and walked over
to grab the girl that was still trying to strangle Harry. He put his arms around her waist, hefted
her (rather effortlessly) off of him, and threw her on the oversized sofa in front of the hearth.
Many outraged squeals followed, and, after having trampled all over Harry’s poor abused body, the
girls went to attack Kevin, who was shouting at Harry: "Run, Potter, I’ll keep ‘em busy till
you’re out of reach."

*No,* Harry thought convinced. *He is definitely NOT doing a good job so far!*

Off to the side, Harry heard Hermione’s familiar sigh of resignation, and a mumbled "Oh,
for goodness sake!" He turned his head (or what was left of it) to look at her, as best he
could without his glasses on, just in time to see her raise her wand and let out a tired,
"Immobilus!"

And, finally, everything went quiet.

His savior walked over to him, and helped him lift himself up. He slighly wobbled on his legs
while she did a quick clean up spell on him, setting his clothes back to the way they were, and
removing the footprints stains off of him. "Dangs," he mumbled, rubbing his abused nose,
and trying to pronounce the words as best he could, still trying to fully grasp what had happened.
He looked over to see the full stalker squad from the Hogwarts Express (with a few new additions,
he noted grumly) attacking poor Kevin, who, being the only one facing him, blinked blankly at him,
and then at the girls. Two pairs of hands were blocked in a rather thorough wringing motion around
his neck, two pairs of arms were holding each one of his for three girls to bite his left arm,
while two others were trying to rip off the right one. The rest of the mob still hadn’t reached the
boy. "Uhm...maybe we should free him," he thought out loud. *After all he DID make an
effort,* he finished in his mind.

"Oh la la! A good, vresh ganvaz," a new voice added from somewhere above their heads.
Harry and Hermione looked up to see who the high-pitched voice with the cheap, fake, french accent
belonged to.

Again, upon recognizing him, Hermione sighed in resignation.

"Cicciobello, what--?" Harry began.

"Don’t vurry, bvodah, Shishiobelloh iz he-ah," he reassured, in a rather non
reassuring manner, and, as he flew down, Harry noticed that he was now wearing a berret of the kind
that usually french painters were represented with, and a large paint stained overall suit.

In his hands were a paint pallet and a very scary looking paintbrush which was longer than Harry
himself in height.

"Uhm...what do you plan to do with them?" Harry asked apprehensively. He didn’t know
Cicciobello all that well yet, after all, he’d come out of the time capsule only the day before,
and had disappeared shortly after the "Dada-Brother" thing. Still, from the little that
people had told him of the little possessed creature, he tought he had the right to ask.

"Tuvn dem into a mastahpeice!" Cicciobello replied with a great flourish.

"Harry, I think it best for us to leave for breakfast," Hermione suggested, and,
looking at Cicciobello, Harry realized that it would have been the only thing to do, for the doll
seemed set in his decision to turn the eleven year olds into what he thought was a ‘masterpiece’.
He just hoped it wasn’t as bad as it sounded when he walked through the portrait hole with Hermione
following closely.

However, as he took in all the portraits on the stairway, and their apparently unscheduled
modifications, he was sure it was far worse than whatever he could possibly come up with.

"Let’s hope they survive," Hermione mumbled, and Harry was sure that telling what he
thought at that moment wouldn’t have been the best thing, so he kept it to himself. However, the
thought stayed in his mind.

Of course, Cicciobello wouldn’t kill them, and for a very simple reason. After that, he wouldn’t
be able to use them for fun anymore if he killed them off right away.

Certainly, however, his victims would wish for death everyday of their Hogwarts career until
Cicciobello disappeared.

Would he ever?

°*°

They reached the breakfast table a short time later, to find that, thankfully, people were still
only about halfway through it. Hermione had given his glasses back to him repaired right before
coming into the Great Hall, so now, mercifully, he could see.

And he saw very clearly that Ron got up the very second they had walked in, leaving his
breakfast nearly untouched, and stalked off without talking to them, and very openly avoiding
him.

Harry found himself staring at the Great Hall entrance.

"Hermione, I’m not hungry, you go ahead," he told her, his eyes still glued to the
thick doors. Not even waiting for her response, he took off in much the same manner the redhead had
done.

"Ron!" He called out to his friend, who was only a few paces ahead of him, and,
therefore had to have heard him.

But no answer came.

"RON!" He called out again, louder this time, with some insistance under his tone.

Even Ron realized that he couldn’t ignore a shout that loud. He stopped in his tracks, without
bothering to look back at Harry.

"Yeah?" There was no expression in his voice, but his stiff posture told Harry that
his friend was upset about something.

"Uhm...well...I was just...uhm..." now what could he say? He had absolutely no idea
what he wanted to ask. What could get Ron’s attention? "Quidditch!" He exclaimed
triumphantly, if there was something that could make Ron feel better about anything, it was
Quidditch. "Want to go practice with me in The Garden?" He asked hopefully.

Ron still didn’t turn toward him. "No," he answered with the same flat voice from
earlier, "didn’t sleep last night," and with that took off in one of the many hallways,
leaving a baffled Harry behind.

Something was wrong if he didn’t even want to practice, and persuing him would only make him
more upset. But what could have possibly made his friend so cold all of a sudden. As far as Harry
knew, Ron was having a rather happy period. He was Captain of the team, his grades were all very
good (thanks to Hermione), he was having a blast coming up with things to put in the time capsule,
and now, they had a secluded field in which they could practice every waking moment that wouldn’t
be occupied by class.

To top it off, his relationship with Hermione was better than ever.

*Actually*, Harry thought bitterly, *his life is perfect right now*.

Ron’s life was what Harry wanted. Not because of Quidditch or grades, but because, instead of
having insane eleven year olds chasing him all over the grounds, Ron had Hermione.

He was so absorbed in his thoughts, staring at the spot in the hall that Ron had just vacated,
that he registered too late the soft footsteps that made their way up to him. When a soft hand
touched his shoulder, Harry nearly jerked out of his skin.

He quickly spun around to see Hermione there, one hand outstretched toward him, and a delicious
smelling bundle wrapped in a napkin in the other.

She jumped back too at his reaction. "I—I’m sorry...I didn’t mean to startle you," she
stuttered quietly. She wasn’t used to Harry being this jumpy toward her. Ever since fourth year,
he’d been really uncomfortable when people touched him, but, with her he’d never minded. She always
liked to think that somehow her touch soothed him. *Obviously it doesn’t*, she thought
bitterly at his overtly frightened and disgusted reaction.

Harry could see that he’d upset her.

*Oh, bloody hell!* He didn’t want this. Ron was avoiding him, and now, he was doing a
fantastic job at involuntarily pushing away everyone that was close to him. What a wonderful day
this prospected to be.

"No," Harry spoke frantically and nervously. Hermione had stepped away from him, and
he hated that. "No, I just...didn’t hear you coming," he tried reassuring her. It didn’t
seem to work. "I was just thinking a lot, and I didn’t expect it. That’s all," he tried
again. Groaning inwardly, he took a step toward her, placed his hand on her shoulder the same way
she had to him, and tried again. "I just wasn’t expecting it, Hermione, really," and
giving her his toothy grin, he added, "so long as it’s you, you can startle me everytime you
feel like it...but...just give me a little warning first."

That got a laugh out of her.

"If I were to give you a warning, it wouldn’t startle you, now, would it?" She asked
impishly.

He grinned. "No, I guess not."

For a second, they both stood there wearing their goofy smirks, simply glad to be in front of
each other. But then, Hermione had to ask. "Harry, what was wrong with Ron, did you two
fight?" She asked as her eyebrows knit.

Great, her thoughts are always on Ron, his mind told him bitterly. He didn’t answer her, and it
seemed like she could read the self righteous loathing on his face at the moment, for she didn’t
press him right there in the hall. After all, that wasn’t really the place for heart to hearts.

"Uhm...I took some food for us from the table, want to have breakfast with me
outside?" She asked, changing conversation, and beginning to walk toward the exit to the
courtyard. It was so much like her to try and put him at ease, that his foul thoughts had to melt
away to give way to his genuine smile. He could be happy with this. He could be happy with just
being her friend. No matter how much he wanted them to be more, he knew that he couldn’t live
without her caring, and if having more meant losing her, well, he’d settle for this.

And Ron was good.

If it had been anyone else, he would have fought for her, tried to get her to change her mind,
but Ron was good, and he would make her happy.

So he agreed to breaking his fast in the courtyard with her, even though he knew that she would
only try to find out what was wrong with Ron.

As much as he wished for more, he would be happy with this.

*And besides*, he thought again, *she deserves so much better than me, and Ron’s better.
Much better.*

°*°

ron hadn’t made it much further, when he heard Hermione’s voice mixing with Harry’s, so he
eavesdropped again. Harry would have felt bad about it, but he’d grown up in a family of seven,
tormented by Fred and George, so, to him, it was completely natural. It was always good to have an
edge over the enemy.

He didn’t know exactly when, over the night, Harry had become ‘the enemy’. He just had. And as
unfair as that was toward the green eyed boy, he couldn’t help himself.

Harry had it all.

The fame, the fortune, youngest Quidditch player in a century, people adored him, and he didn’t
even try. He managed all of it by simply existing.

Of course, Ron had always loved him, dispite the fact that his perfection always did put a real
strain on his self confidence, but he always managed that. Well...maybe not in fourth, but since,
he’d always ignored the nagging jealousy that would bite him from time to time.

But now, Ron realized, he had Hermione, too.

Hermione had been his friend just as long as Harry’s. Well, ok, so maybe in the beginning he’d
thought she was a stuck up know-it-all, and if it hadn’t been for Harry, he and Hermione might have
never spoken to each other without malice...and maybe if it weren’t for Harry, Hermione might not
have survived the whole troll in the bathroom incident, but still, he’d been Hermione’s friend for
a very long time.

In the first years, their friendship had seemed like three equal parts of a triangle, but he’d
begun to realize that things might have been different in third, when he’d been told of what had
happened to the two as they had saved Sirius Black without him. Then he’d felt left out. He’d felt
like Harry and Hermione had gotten closer, and he had found himself distanced without even knowing
it. He felt like they could have done perfectly without him.

And in forth it had been worse.

When he hadn’t spoken to Harry until the first trial had been over, while, in the meantime,
Hermione had gone back and forth between the two, trying to sew back together their bond. And she’d
only done it for Harry, because at the time, the only one that had been nice to him was her. She’d
wanted him to have a companion.

And he knew very well that the only reason *he’d* been placed in the lake for Harry was
because Hermione was there for Krum. If it hadn’t been for that, he would have stood on the
sidelines, waiting for Harry to emerge with their bookworm friend in his arms.

Now, he felt as though he was totally useless, and he hated it.

And, most of all, he hated what Harry had with Hermione, because he could never have that.

"It’s not nice to listen in on other people’s conversations, you know," a sweet
feminine voice called out from behind him, startling him out of his thoughts, and making him turn
around in a way that made him seem like the thief that had been caught with his hands in the
safe.

"Krista," he called out breathlessly when recognizing the pale, blond beauty in front
of him. "Why aren’t you at breakfast?" He asked trying to get her mind off the fact that
she’d just caught him listening in on his ‘friends’ conversation.

Krista Perril was a lovely girl from Ravenclaw, not very tall, only around 1,65cm, with soft
baby blue eyes, long, straight blond hair, and full peach colored lips that always seemed to be
hinting at a smile. He’d met her the year before after a game against Ravenclaw. He’d been in the
hospital wing, occupying the bed next to that of her boyfriend (that had gotten him into that bed
in the first place), and had apologized on behalf of the violent boy. Since then, they’d spoken to
each other off and on, and they’d come to something somewhat resembling friendship.

He’d remembered hearing that she’d broken up with Seth, her Quidditch playing boyfriend, shortly
after that game.

And, of course, he’d only paid attention to that bit of gossip simply because such a nice girl
deserved someone better. Nothing more.

"Don’t try to change the subject Mr. Weasley," she said, walking up to him, looking at
him from down her nose, and managing to look quite emposing despite the fact that she was a good
35cm difference between the two. "If Harry and Hermione’s friendship bothers you so much, then
you should talk to them, instead of avoiding them, and clear everything with them. Especially
Harry, you shouldn’t be mad at him for something petty, and don’t look at me like that, I know you
well enough to be aware that your sudden animosity toward him is due to something very petty,
probably regarding Hermione. His friendship really means a lot to him," she finished quietly,
pointing a finger at his chest.

He felt the blood boiling in his veins. How dare she? "And how would you know?" He
asked, standing as tall as he could, slightly bending over to try and intimidate her. How dare she
know exactly how he felt?

Her eyes snapped heatedly at him. She was angry, he could tell, and the constant smile that
usually played on her lips seemed to melt away in a matter of seconds. "I happen to know
because I’ve been watching since you all started here at Hogwarts. And, upsetting as it may be to
you that those two might actually care about each other, they are your friends. I don’t think you
noticed how lonely Harry felt when you left him completely alone in forth. Yes, he cares for
Hermione, even I’ve noticed that, although I don’t think anyone else has, but he also needs you, so
I’d advise you, my dear Mr. Weasley, that you think back for a little while of the last few years,
and figure out which, of the three of you, has been the truly selfish one in your relationship,
because even if this bit of information might have conflicting effects on you, the reason why the
two of them are still *only* friends, is because of you!" She spat out in the end,
jabbing her finger into his chest making him stumble backwards, and, without paying any heed to
the, very similar to a goldfish, expression that he was wearing, turned on her heels and walked
back toward the Great Hall.

*What?* He thought to himself as he stood the way she’d left him, with his mouth gaping
open, his eyes popping out in surprise, and his finger lifted in midair as if to ask a question.
What had just gone on? How could she know all those things? How could she know that Harry and
Hermione had feelings for each other? Nobody but him had noticed, and how could she know about
their very thorough avoiding of each other in forth? Okay, maybe he’d been the one avoiding, but
that was beside the point. And how could she say that he’d been selfish in their friendship?

Harry had been the one that had dragged him into countless amounts of dangerous adventures,
making him risk his life for his personal fight against You-Know-Who! He’d *never* asked him
if he actually *wanted* to come or not! ...Well...maybe once or twice he *did* ask...and
maybe in a couple of occasions he’d even used them to show off, but even that was besides the
point.

Ron had never been selfish in their friendship, and his friends secret relationship with each
other was as selfish as anything could come.

Well...they didn’t *actually* have a secret relationship, but they might as well. He pushed
the little voice in the back of his mind as far away as he could when he realized that it was
telling him, like Krista had, that they weren’t having that relationship simply because of him. Of
course they weren’t having it because of him, they felt guilty!

*That* was truly selfish! Wasn’t it?

No, he hadn’t been selfish at all. Hadn’t he?

Oh, how he hated Krista at the moment. It had been so simple to hate his friends before she came
and put those useless doubts in his mind. She shouldn’t have said those things, and, most of all,
she shouldn’t have known those things. He’d always felt that their almost friendship was safe,
because they could be civil to each other and enjoy each others company without many complications,
because, after all, they weren’t all that good of friends.

But were they? How could she know him like that? No one knew him that well besides...well,
Harry.

God, how he hated her at the moment. And most of all he hated the fact that she knew him so
well, and, over her, he didn’t hold any advantage at all, because, in truth, he’d never bothered to
find out anything about her.

He hated this.

°*°

Harry was worried.

Ron hadn’t come to lunch, and nobody had seen him since he flew off at breakfast. He hadn’t been
in his room, or flying over the Gryffindor Memory Garden, or goofing off with his friends, or
anywhere else where he would usually be. In a desperate attempt, Harry and Hermione had even tried
to find him in the library.

That truly showed how desperate they were because they both knew that Ron would never go in the
library unless dragged there by force with the excuse of an impending important exam, and, since
they didn’t have any of those coming up, and they hadn’t even started classes yet...well, it really
was a desperate attempt.

So now they were heading off to the Great Hall for dinner, both wearing deep furrows between
their eyebrows in concern for the red head that had been acting strange since the beginning of the
day.

But, apparantly, they had worried for nothing.

There he was, Ronald Weasley, sitting in his usual spot, with two empty seats next to him (left
for the two of them) as always, eating like the pig Hermione said he was, as always, talking with
his mouth full, as always, and splattering his food as he spoke all over poor Colin, as always.

Everything seemed to be normal.

Of course, Harry and Hermione had often been subjected to Ron’s foul moods, so they knew that
something was wrong when he pulled himself so quickly out of one. After all, they usually lasted no
less then three weeks at a time, and this was...well...scary.

They exchanged a worried glance and, both raising an eyebrow at each other, made to walk
over.

They saw Ron look their way, so they knew he had seen them, but this time, he didn’t make any
move to leave. They both let a releaved breath that they hadn’t realized they’d been holding, and
made their way next to him, one on each side of him.

They said their usual greeting to him, and he answered in kind, spitting food all over them as
usual.

"Okay, this is freaky," Hermione mumbled. Harry nodded his head, and Ron looked
between the two of them confused for a second.

"watafyoofawfinfafout?" He asked with his mouth full of four biscuits.

But Hermione was used to this and, translating in her mind that he’d asked what they were
talking about answered exhasperated, "I mean your good mood, Ron. This morning you looked like
you hated Harry and I worse than...Malfoy even, and now, you’re only...you again," she said
waving her hands as though the question had been stupid and the answer obvious, which, actually, it
was.

Ron, for once, actually swallowed his food before answering. With a shrug he said, "Well,
now I’m mad at someone else," and continued to eat as nothing was, but neither of them missed
the dagger filled glare that he sent at the Ravenclaw table, where a pretty blond was returning his
look full fledged.

Hermione raised an eyebrow. "Krista Perril?" She asked indignantly. "Why exactly
would you be mad at her? She’s a lovely person! And besides, why were you mad at us in the first
place? Last I recall, we were all the big happy family we were yesterday," she asked, a slight
screech of disbelieving anger in her voice.

"Yeah, well, this morning I didn’t think we were that happy of a family, and I didn’t feel
like talking to you! If you can’t figure out why, that’s *your* problem!" He exclaimed,
upset again, this time at her rather than at Harry. How could she not understand what she had done?
And how dare Krista say that his reason to be upset was petty? And with that he turned to glare
daggers at the blond, his anger toward Hermione completely forgotten. "I hate her!" He
hissed.

Hermione exchanged another worried glance with Harry. "Listen, Ron," she began, and
her tone made Ron turn to look at her. "We’re starting to get really worried here," she
continued. "Tell us what’s bothering you," she pleaded. Seeing Ron like this scared her.
She’d always thought of him as the irresponsible brother that had to be protected, and, since she
was looking intently at him, she didn’t notice Harry flinch at the soft, caring voice that she’d
been using.

However, when the voice of Lavender and Parvati were heard saying "Aww..." in a dreamy
sigh, Hermione turned her eyes from Ron’s onto them, along with Ron, who was just as confused as
she.

Harry just stared at his plate, picking at his food.

"’Aww’ what?" They asked in unison.

"You guys are so cute together," Lavender said, still using the annoying drawl that
had been used for the ‘aww’. Ron’s eyes lit up, yet Hermione turned her face into a mask that
seemed to scream "Yeah, right!"

"Yeah, but your hair colors clash," Parvati said, a little more seriously than her
counterpart. Ron’s happy grin was instantly smothered, and Hermione seemed to be asking herself
what the two had been smoking locked up in that Divination tower all day long. "But you’re
still real cute together," Parvati continued, and, for some reason, the whole Gryffindor table
seemed to have heard.

"What? You’re a couple?"

"Ron, you sly dog!"

"How’d you get such a good catch Hermione?"

"I want to be invited to the wedding!"

"Wedding? When are you getting married?"

"You’re getting married? Is Harry going to be best man?"

At the last Harry’s head made a loud ‘thonk’ sound as it loudly, and rather painfully, hit the
surface of the wood. Hermione’s eyes bugged as she feared like she’d never feared before, that
Harry might actually believe that she was getting married to Ron. *Well, he won’t believe that,
but what if he thinks that I like Ron?* Oh, no! She had to do something. So she began to deny.
Vehemently. Like she’d never denied anything in her entire life. "No, we’re not together.
There’s no way we’d ever get married, we’re just friends, nothing more! We’ve never liked each
other that way!" And on and on like that.

"Yes, but why are you two always touching each other?" She didn’t even know who was
confronting her. Her head was swimming, and it felt like every Gryffindor in school was in front of
her questioning her all at once.

"Well, because we’re friends, and we’re comfortable with each other," that was the
truth, and they should believe it, but she knew very well that those scoop hungry mad teenagers
wouldn’t.

"Then why don’t you touch Harry like that?" Who dare ask that?

"Because they’re different!" And they were! When Harry touched her it was special.
Like the night before, when all she did was scratch his scalp, and all he did was rest his head
against her knee (well, that wasn’t *all* he did, she reminded herself as she thought of the
slow lingering kiss he’d pressed to her forehead). Yes, Harry’s touches were special, they weren’t
like the completely casual and meaningless slaps, and hugs, and such that she shared with Ron.
Those were...brotherly. But she couldn’t very well tell that to the whole of Gryffindor now could
she? Not when Harry would be two seats over listening, ready to bolt when she would admit that his
touches were the most special things that she would ever experience.

"Yes, they’re different, because you love Ron," someone else put in with a very
annoying leer. She wanted to slap that leer away...if only her head stopped swimming long enough to
figure out who’d said it.

"Oh, please!" She exclaimed indignantly. But they didn’t give up, and she’d found
herself drowning in the accusations (for that’s what they felt like, she felt like she was being
accused of not loving Harry, of now showing that she loved Harry, and, to the last, she had to
admit she was guilty. For the duration of the dinner, she was unable to look at Harry, no matter
how much she wanted to. She wanted to see him, know that he didn’t believe what their so called
friends were insisting was the the truth, make sure that he believed her.

But she knew he wouldn’t. Not because he didn’t trust her, but because he knew her. He knew that
whenever she’d liked a boy, she’d never openly admitted it, or even showed it. Krum was just an
example of that. She’d kept completely secret that she would be going to the Yule Ball with him,
and she’d never breathed more than two words on their relationship to either of her friends. And it
had been that way with every boy that had followed.

And, of course, there was the fact that Harry had the lowest self-esteem of all of Hogwarts. He
was, by far, the most wonderful person that had walked those grounds, he’d saved the Wizarding (and
probably the Muggle) World time and time again, helped his friends through thick and thin, risked
his life for their own countless times, but he still believed himself to be of little importance to
anything. She knew very well that this was the reason for which their—Ron and
Hermione’s—friendships meant so much to him.

They made him feel real, and loved, and worthy of existing. Ron was poor, and she was a Muggle
born. To the higher born, they were as low as people could come, but to Harry, they were real. They
weren’t around him for his fame, or for his scar, or for his money, but simply for the fact that he
was Harry. Sweet, lovable, wonderful, selfless Harry.

The Harry she loved.

If only she could tell him that, know that she was good enough for him, maybe now she wouldn’t
be in such trouble, but, as life was, she couldn’t tell him, because she knew that he would turn
her down. And he had every right to. After all, she was definitely not worth what he was. He was an
emerald, pure, dark, and clear. She was nothing but a dark pebble.

A pebble could never belong with an emerald.

Even in all her dark thoughts, she couldn’t help but notice that in the whole exchange, Ron
looked triumphantly over in Krista Perril’s direction, while the girl answered him with looks that
would have petrified a ghost (and done far worse to who was living). Ron seemed to be reveling in
them.

What Harry might have looked like at that moment, she would never know, for she wasn’t worthy of
looking at him.

°*°

Harry sat quietly in front of the lit fireplace again, just as he had the night before, slumped
over, clutching the diary quietly in his hand, staring at the flames licking the bricks of the
hearth, seeing them, but not noticing them at all. The only difference was that tonight, he was
sitting on the corner of the overstuffed couch, his eyes even duller than they had been the
previous evening.

He’d been sitting like that for hours now, still waiting for Hermione to come back from her
round of the castle, wallowing in self pity, and nothing had been able to pull him out of it. Not
the sight of the Stalker Squad completely covered in obscene squiggles (obviously Cicciobello’s
handywork) along with Kevin, or their frightened screeches as they ran off complaining about having
been seen like that by the ‘Boy who lived’. Not the scene played by Neville as he tried to turn a
pillow into a bunny with the help of Cicciobello and only managed to get a human sized saber
toothed rabbit that had begun to chase him around the castle, closely followed by a hysterical
giggling Cicciobello. Not even the horrified screams of the first year victims yelling that the
paint had been charmed and wouldn’t come off, had been able to snap him out of his thoughts, or
even managed to get him to look away from the flames in the hearth.

The only thing that his mind kept on playing over and over for him, had been the scene at
dinner. When Lavender and Parvati had first ‘awwed’ at his two best friends, he’d only stared at
the plate, telling himself that he knew all along that they were in love. Well, when someone had
asked if he was going to be best man at their wedding, Harry had slammed his head against the hard
wooden surface of the table to justify the stinging behind his eyes. Yes, he’d always thought of
the possibility. That, of course, didn’t change the fact that, until someone had vocalized the fact
out loud, it could always have been his own impression, and he could always hope that maybe he was
wrong.

That had killed even his hoping.

As he shut his eyes he pictured himself looking on from the sidelines as his best friends looked
disgustingly happily at each other professing eternal love at their own wedding while he handed
them the rings with shaking fingers and a shattered heart. He knew it would one day come to that,
but, until nobody said anything, it could be ignored. Now, he didn’t even have that.

Ron had looked so disgustingly happy when they’d said he looked cute with her!

And Hermione...well, her persistant denial of any kind of relationship with Ron, at first, had
given him the most inappropriate glimmer of hope. Maybe she didn’t love him! Maybe she really
*did* just think of him as a friend, as she’d vehemently insisted the whole night.
Maybe...maybe...maybe she loved him.

Oh, but who was he trying to fool?! She’d sounded just like he had when Krum had confronted him
about having any feeling toward Hermione before the second trial. He’d denied, said she was just a
friend, said he was interested in someone else...and he was convinced he was. But his heart had
almost leapt out of its cage when Krum had said that she spoke constantly of him. He’d convinced
himself that he liked Cho Chang, and had insisted on thinking that all he felt toward Hermione had
been nothing but friendship, that, to him, she was nothing but a kindred spirit. But then he’d
understood that he’d just been avoiding the truth.

And that night, Hermione had sounded just like him.

She’d been denying the truth, or, simply, she hadn’t figured it out yet.

That was most likely it.

But now that someone had helped her realize it (mainly the entire Gryffindor population for
which, at the moment, he nursed the grandest sort of loathing), it would only be a matter of time
before she came to realize it too. And then it would be wedding bells, and best man, and wedding
rings, and shattered heart for Harry.

Well, he just needed to get used to the idea. Then, he would be able to put up the happy front
until they went off on their honeymoon. Oh, god, *honeymoon!* Well, during *those* weeks
in which they would be gone, he could lock himself up somewhere isolated and try to tape the shards
of his heart back together with Spell-o-tape. He was sure he wouldn’t manage much, but it would
give him time to get used to the idea. And, if he prepared himself for it now, well, then, it
probably wouldn’t hurt as much when they would make the announcement.

And then, the portrait hole opened and let in the object of his turmoils and affections.
Hermione Granger.

"Oh, good, you’re still here," she called out cheerfully, but even to her own ears it
sounded forced. In all honesty, she was worried. What if he believed what the other Gryffindors had
said at dinner? And, worse yet, what if he didn’t care? But...he was *there*! He’d waited for
her all this time! That had to mean *something*! *No stupid,* she chided herself, *he’s
just been waiting for you so you could read the diary to him*! Yet, she was truly glad that he’d
waited so late into the night for her return, and she couldn’t help but nourish a little hope that
he might have been waiting for *her* and not her voice.

Her smile, though, faltered under his intense scrutiny. They hadn’t looked directly at each
other since she’d asked Ron if he was alright, and now, well, he seemed upset with her. He seemed
to be screaming at her that she shouldn’t have kept it secret from her. *But I didn’t!* She
screamed in her mind.

"Harry," she whispered his name, as she felt her knees go weak from the accusation
that she found in the emerald pools that were his eyes. *Please, don’t look at me like
that!*

He stared wordlessly for another second, then sighed and took his eyes away from her and looked
at the diary. It hadn’t been like he thought. She was aware that she loved Ron, she just wasn’t
ready to admit it, and this, her denial and the delay that she was putting to what should be
between her and Ron, would kill him. *The sooner they get together, the better*. And with that
thought in mind, he spoke, his eyes still on the red leather binding of his mother’s diary.
"Will Ron be alright with this?"

That wasn’t what she’d been expecting. "What?" All her confusion transpired through
that one word.

"..." He stared at her for another moment, and then, "I wish you would have told
me," the words were a whisper, but the steel edge that was behind them felt like a knife in
the gut.

"What?" This time her voice cracked under the emotion. *Oh, Harry, please don’t
believe what they said*, she pleaded inwardly.

"That you’re with Ron," he stated as clearly as he could, trying to hide every bit of
pain that was behind the words that he’d spoken.

*Oh, god! He believed them!* She screamed in her mind, angry at the Gryffindors for having
said it, angry at Harry for having believed it, and angry at herself for not being able to tell him
the truth because of her fear of rejection. "I...I’m not, Harry," she finally managed to
phrase. *Please, believe ME!* "They were just kidding at dinner, you know that," she
tried to reassure with a weak smile, but they both knew that the whole of Gryffindor was convinced
of the upcoming marriage between herself and Ron Weasley.

"Maybe," he allowed her *that* at least, "but you still love him." It
was a statement, not a question, and it seemed to leave no room for buts.

And yet, she had to try and make him believe her. "Not like that, Harry," she
whispered, and her eyes were pleading with his, screaming her innocence (for it seemed a crime to
her that he was accusing her of loving anyone but him), and for a second he seemed to believe
her.

But then he said, "It’s ok, you don’t have to lie with me." Now, *that* hurt!

"I’m not," she pleaded again.

But this time, he didn’t even bother doubting it. What was the point? It would only make it more
painful when she’d come out with it. He only mumbled a not very convincing, "Sure."

Hermione knew that at this point arguing would be a lost cause. Unless she told him the truth,
the whole truth, he would never believe her. And telling him the truth didn’t seem appealing to
her. Sighing in a resignated manner, she walked over to the couch and sat next to him, not close,
but close enough for their shoulders to touch. Wordlessly, he handed her the diary, and, deflated
as she was, once she began to read the words aloud, she began to forget her own troubles, and got
lost in what was the life of one Lily Evans. Turns out that her life had been interesting (much
like their own had) from the very first day. At Hogwarts, of course.

*September 1,*

*Today, I started my journey as a witch. And what a journey this is promising to be! Just
King’s Cross was an adventure! Once we got there we started asking around for tranck 9 and ¾ (that
was what was written on the ticket that was in the letter!), and, after having been called
pranksters, idiots, and all around insane we were almost about to give up. And then, dad leaned
against the inside of one of the arches of the train station to rest a little, and...passed right
through it! He disappeared into it! Petunia was screaming her head off. Again.*

*Then, off to the side, I heard a girl about my age say, "Muggles", like if it was
something bad. I had already heard that word in the Leaky Cauldron.*

*"What does that mean?" I asked her. Nobody had told me yet. She looked at me (she
was sizing me up, I could tell), and looked at my cart, with the couldrons, books, Rajah (agitated
in her cage), and then at the wand that was sticking out of my pocket.*

*"You’re going to Hogwarts, too, right?" She asked. When I nodded she smiled. I
started to like her right away. "Muggle means someone who’s not magic," she explained.
"And don’t worry about your dad," she reassured me. "He’s already on track 9 and
¾."*

*It took me a second to understand what she meant.*

*"The track is on the other side?!" This...was rather insane. But...she nodded. The
track was REALLY on the other side of the bricks! Petunia looked ready to faint. I looked toward
mom. She’s always been the kind to believe that nobody’s truly bad, and therefore, didn’t believe
that this girl was pulling our legs. I didn’t think she was either, she seemed really nice. So mom
walked up to the wall and lifted her hand as if to touch it.*

*"My parents told me that the first time is easier if we run through," she
explained, and I noticed she was nervous. It must have been her first time, too.*

*Mom did as she was told. She ran through and ended up on the other side leaving the spot
empty. Knowing that if I went before Petunia, she would have never budged from her spot, I pulled
her in front of the bricks (where she started to shake) and pushed her through. I know it’s mean to
say this, but...it was kind of funny hearing her scream the way she did.*

*The girl next to me looked at me as if to say: "What’s wrong with her?" But she was
nice enough not to ask.*

*She went before me, pushing her cart in front of her. I gave her a few seconds, not knowing
if I was going to end up slamming into her if I went to soon, and then followed.*

*I said goodbye to mom and dad quickly since the train was about to leave already, and I even
hugged Petunia. Even though we don’t get along at all, she’s still my sister, and I won’t see her
until Christmas break comes around. I gave my things over to someone who helped me store it away,
and followed the girl up into one of the empty cabins.*

*Then I stuck my head out of the window for the last goodbyes. Actually, I did it more to
really look at the track then anything else (since we’d been in such a hurry, I didn’t get a very
good look at it). I like that place. It’s just like Diagon Alley, full of people with weird
clothes, a few of them see through (in ‘Hogwarts: A History’ I read that there are ghosts, so I’m
guessing they were like that), and it smelt of magic everywhere. Well, I don’t know if magic has a
smell, but to me it feels like it.*

*Anyway, I became friends with my fellow witch (whose name is Jenna Hannisons, by the way)
almost on the spot, and we started talking about everything. Turns out her parents had been at
Hogwarts, too, and they’d made her go on her own the first time because they thought it was better
that way. I could sense from her that she had been scared, but she was brave, and she hid it well.
Besides, as scared as we were, we were both almost too exited to notice. And the fact that we’d
found a good friend right away only made it better.*

*I felt so comfortable with her that I even told her about Petunia, and I generally don’t do
that. I told her that my sister was scared of me because of my powers, and that she hated anything
that WASN’T normal (which, of course, I personified), and that my detachment from her was a form of
self defence. My sister and I were, and are, far too capable of hurting each other.*

*Jenna doesn’t have brothers and sisters, so she told me that she couldn’t really understand
what it feels like, but she said that being an only child with working parents made her feel lonely
a lot. But I don’t think either one of us is going to feel lonely at Hogwarts, and I told her as
much. I actually told her of my premonitions, too. I still can’t believe I did that.*

*I never told anyone but my parents in my whole life, and, not even half an hour after I met
her, I told her. But I knew I could trust her. She was surprised, but not disgusted. She said that
not many people, especially among the Muggle born (that’s what she said I was), had this ability.
She also told me that I’m probably strong in them, because I’m so young, and I can already be sure
of so much. She said I shouldn’t tell too many people, because it could be used against me, and
she’s right. I know that already.*

*Anyway, while we were talking about our parents jobs two boys came in our cabin. They were
both good looking, good natured, and fun spirited (well, that’s what my instinct said). One had
longish black hair, pale skin, and dark eyes, the other, slightly thin, and smaller, had REALLY
messy black hair, glasses, and brown eyes. They both had the cheekiest smiles I’ve ever
seen.*

*They are going to be fun to be around, I’m sure.*

*"Hello," the one with the glasses said, "you haven’t by any chance see an
insanely rude baby doll by the name of Cicciobello flying around, have you?" The question
sounded insane, and Jenna thought they were making fun of her, but I knew they were
serious.*

*"I don’t know what a Cicciobello looks like, but we haven’t seen any flying dolls,
sorry," I told them. The boy with the black hair turned toward the outside of the cabin and
started yelling: "Ciccio! Come back to us!" He seemed desperate.*

*"Don’t mind him, he just really likes that doll," the boy with the glasses said. It
seemed rather strange that a ten year old boy should be so attached to a DOLL, but then again, I’m
not all that familiar with the magical world. Maybe here it’s normal. However, the look on Jenna’s
face didn’t seem to agree.*

*Then I saw someone else coming up to us, holding what looked like a baby blue blanket, all
struggling and shaking in his hands, keeping it as far away from his person as he could. "Is
this what you’re looking for?" He asked, and then I noticed that he had a big brown stain on
his shirt that looked like earth’s biggest cow had left its droppings there. I’d guessed that the
cow must have been that crazy blanket he was holding.*

*Then the guy that had been calling out ‘Ciccio!’ threw his arms wide and called, again,
"Ciccio!"*

*And the blanket called, "Papi!" and threw itself at him.*

*This...was definitely very strange.*

*Anyway, it turns out that the two boys that had come into the cabin (James Potter, the one
with the glasses, and Sirius Black—what kind of a name is ‘Sirius’—the doll lover) were the owners
of the doll (it turns out that it wasn’t a blanket, but a doll, a pretty one two that looks just
like a human, six-month old baby). Actually, the owner of the doll was James’s sister, who’d gotten
it from Muggle Italy during their summer vacation, and the boys had decided to experiment some
spells on it once they found out they were going to Hogwarts. Well, their experimenting had been
the birth of Cicciobello.*

*James had said that his sister had given it to him to bring to Hogwarts so that he would have
something of hers while he was away, but I figured that the kid only gave it to him to get rid of
it.*

*This became a certainty when Cicciobello took a dump on Jenna, the other boy (who was blond,
pale, slight sickly looking and went by the name of Remus Lupin), and myself. Remus had been dumped
on twice since he got on the train, and I don’t think he likes the doll much.*

*Thankfully, after having brought the doll to life, James and Sirius had learned several good
spells that got rid of any trace of the dumping we received (and it’s a good thing they did, or I
would have gotten very mad at them).*

*The boys sat with us throughout the ride, and we hit it off quite well. Actually, by the time
the train reached its destination, Cicciobello became quite attached to the rest of us and promised
not to dump on us anymore.*

*For some reason, I think everyone in school will hate us for this.*

*Anyhow, the school...is a CASTLE! It’s HUGE! It’s got a lake (with a GIANT SQUID in it!), a
forest (that the headmaster said was forbidden), and MOVING STAIRS! Of course, I read about this
already (and of the talking paintings, and the ghosts, and the magic ceiling of the Great Hall
that’s been enchanted to look like a starry sky), but seeing it with my own eyes was something
else.*

*Of course, I already knew all this from reading ‘Hogwarts: A History’ (and, to tell the
truth, I actually played a bit the know-it-all by telling others about things I knew), but, when I
read the book, I thought most of it was fiction! And, instead, it was ALL real!*

*I’m already in love with this place.*

*First, McGonagall, whose vice-principal and one of the teacher (Tranfiguration, they said...I
think I’ll find out what that is eventually), told us that we were all to sit on the stool and put
a REALLY old, kind of gross looking hat on our heads and IT would call out the house that we would
be in. Yes, because the school has four houses that the students get put into. Gryffindor, who is
supposedly very brave, Ravenclaw, smart, Hufflepuff, loyal, and Slytherin, ambitious...actually to
me it sounds more evil than anything (and looking at their table I was pretty sure of it). I really
hope I don’t get stuck there.*

*I think I almost had a stroke when McGonagall read my name off the list. Sirius had been
already sorted into Gryffindor, and I was hoping I would end there, too. I felt really warm when I
looked at that table. When the hat was on my head it felt...weird. For one thing...it moved, while
ON TOP of my head! And it whispered strange things in my ear. "Ah, a seer!" It would say.
"How many qualities I see here, yes. Courage, strength, loyalty. Very good, a sharp mind, yes,
ah...yes," and with that it went quiet.*

*I thought my heart was going to thunder out of its cage. And then...*

*"GRYFFINDOR!"*

*Oh, god, yes, thank you!*

*And I ran over to the table that I had wanted to be in since the beginning.*

*Jenna, Remus, and James, also were sorted into Gryffindor. I think my stay here will be even
more enjoyable thanks to them. Right after James, another boy, Peter Pettigrew, was sorted into
Gryffindor as well, he was shy, and quiet, and he idolized both James and Sirius (Jenna had told me
that not only do they both come from very important wizarding families, but they’re also very
famous pranksters, and that’s saying a lot considering that they’re only eleven). Before the feast
(and I DO mean FEAST!) was over, he was already part of the group.*

*The only thing that worried me though, was another boy, Severus Snape, pale with greasy
looking black hair, that got sorted into Slytherin. I don’t know what it is. Even from my seat I
could feel the indecision in the sorting hat, and I’m afraid it made a terrible mistake. That boy’s
future is very unstable, he could turn toward the light the same way he could turn to the shadows,
and I really do feel that Slytherin was not the right choice for him.*

*But as it is, I really can’t do anything about that.*

*Now, I’m sitting in my dorm room (that I share with Jenna, and I’m really glad of it, and two
other girls, Arabella Figg, and Mandella Williams), and I really like it in here. We all have our
very own four poster bed, and it’s all decorated with the Gryffindor colors (gold and red), like
the common room (which is going to become my favorite part of the Gryffindor tower).*

*Lessons don’t start for a few days, so I have all the time in the world to explore this and
report everything calmly, and I honestly can’t wait.*

*Still, that Severus Snape worries me.*

*Goodnight*

*Lily*

Hermione knew that she should have gone on to the next page, but decided against it. Instead,
she turned to Harry, and told him, "Your mother must have been a very powerful witch, you know
that Harry?"

He looked surprised for a second. He hadn’t expected her to comment on anything until they were
further into his mother’s life. "What do you mean?"

"Well," she began, "for one thing, there are her premonitions. I think she’s a
seer, even the sorting hat said something like that," she explained.

"I thought you didn’t believe in seers," he said confused.

"I don’t believe in Trelawny being a seer," she corrected. "I can’t deny that
what your mother felt and saw in her dreams was real. I mean, even at this point, like what she
said about Snape, it’s already too much proof for me to deny," she replied in her, always,
logical tone. Harry nodded in understanding. "Besides, it takes a great deal of power to
control this diary, and she could do it perfectly already from the first time she used it at the
age of ten," she added.

"What do you mean? What’s so special abou this diary?" and as he asked those questions
he scooted closer to her so that their whole sides were molded together and he was leaning over the
book as though trying to figure out its secrets with a glance. He ignored the warmth that seeped
through where their bodies met, and scolded himself, telling his mind that she loved someone
else.

*Calm down!* Hermione yelled at her heart, that was beating far too fast. *Don’t get your
hopes up!* It took her a second, but she was sure that her voice wouldn’t crack and so, flipping
to the page where Lily had written her name pointed out to him. "See this seal?" She
pointed to a celtic looking design inside a red perfect circle (with the diameter of about 2cm)
that he’d manage to perfectly ignore until that moment. He nodded. "Well, to write in this
kind of diary," she continued, "you don’t write out every word like we do for our
assignments or letters and such. You place your quill here, and...just think of what you want to
put in the diary. Your thoughts and feelings automatically write themselves out," she
explained.

"To be able to control it the way Lily did, you have to have absolute certainty in your
feelings of everything that you’re thinking about, and a clarity in your thought that most ten year
olds just don’t have," at Harry’s knit eyebrows she clarified this concept more. "You
have to think exclusively of what you want to write about or the sentences are jumbled. For
example, you can’t write about the difficulty you have with a potion if, at the same time, your
worried about turning in your Transfiguration homework. The sentence wouldn’t make sense," she
exclaimed.

"I get it," Harry reassured, allowing her to go on.

"You see, Harry, your mom didn’t only keep her train of thought like no ten year old could,
but she also managed to write her thoughts in perfectly structured english sentences! That takes a
*lot* of control! I don’t know, maybe it’s her seer ability, but...she has amazing control.
And confidence! Without that, the quill hardly moves at all!" She finished.

Harry nodded again. "Do you have one?" He asked. Hermione always knew about
everything, but she seemed to know a particularly hefty amount of information on this particular
topic.

*Damn him for being so sharp!* She cursed to herself. *Okay, Hermione, deep
breaths...* "I do..." she confessed. "But I don’t use it."

Harry knit his eyebrows at this. "Why not?"

She simply looked at him. "Because...I’m not ready to face what my heart writes. See,
Harry, it’s your heart that spells the words out for you, that tells your mind what you *want*
to write about. Even if your mind wanders and it can be hard to control it, it’s your heart that
leads, and my mind wasn’t ready to admit to what the heart kept on trying to write," she told
him enigmatically.

"What do you mean?" He was truly confused.

"When I was with Viktor..." should she continue this and tell him? "It wrote
about someone else," she finished.

Harry had a feeling he knew who it would write about. "And now?" He asked, knowing
full well that it was like turning the knife in the open wound, and, just for safety, spilling salt
on it, too. *Maybe I have masochistic tendancies*, he thought to himself.

*Tell him, stupid!* She screamed at herself. She opened her mouth to tell him, but only
heard herself saying: "It’s time to keep reading." *No! You stupid git! You had your
chance!*

But Harry was an understanding fellow. Even too much for his own good. He let the matter drop
knowing that she was uncomfortable with it.

And so Hermione didn’t try to redeem her possibility, and went on to read the entire month of
September.

Ron, who’d been the whole time eavesdropping (he seemed to be trying to get a degree in it) from
one of the steps that couldn’t be seen from the sofa, didn’t feel like listening anymore. He’d
heard enough. Quietly, as to not make his presence known, he made his way to his dorm room, and,
with a blank expression on his face, tried to fall asleep, to little avail.

He didn’t know what to think anymore.

To be continued.



4. Chapter 3: Jealousy
----------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t
know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and himself…or
did she?

**Everybody’s fool:** Thank you ever so much for reviewing here too!
**Harry&Hermione4ever:** I’m really glad you like it, although since this *is* in the
angst category, it will take H/Hr a really long time to get together. Anyway, I hope you all like.
By the way, the confrontation between Snape and Cicciobello is…well, crappy. I just warned you.

Disclaimer: I’m just borrowing characters and situations for entertainment purposes, personal
and non, and am making no money out of it. And all I own beside the plot are: the Diggorinta (which
won’t appear anymore until the epilogue), the Stalker Mob (which is very annoying to own because
they keep on bugging me about putting snogging scenes between themselves and Harry), Kevin Creevy
(which is really scary to have around), the time capsule, and what’s in it, including Lily’s diary.
Cicciobello is owned by the Italian toy company, Giochi Preziosi, but I own his personality. Don’t
sue, it ain’t worth it.

Angst coming up, and now, on with the fic:

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Chapter 3: Jealousy

*Why?* Hermione asked herself as she tossed once again in her large four poster bed, the
sheets askew, the pillow beaten to a pulp, her hair a mottled mess, and her eyes puffy from lack of
sleep. The question had been repeating itself in her head from the night before, when she’d been
reading Lily’s diary to Harry. *Why didn’t I tell him?*

When she’d said that her diary wrote of someone else while she’d been with Viktor, she thought
she’d seen a flicker of hope in his deep green eyes. And when he’d asked, "Who?"…well,
he’d definitely sounded hopeful then. And she’d felt her heart swell. Maybe he did feel some kind
of attraction toward her! Maybe he did feel something in return! Maybe, just maybe, he even loved
her back! But the words wouldn’t budge past her lips. She couldn’t tell him that she’d loved him
for years.

She knew he needed to hear the words.

Ever since the Triwizard tournament had been over, Harry…well, Harry hadn’t been the same. He’d
always been modest. Far too modest even. To him, the amazing feats that he’d gone through had
been…kind of like homework. Ok, that was putting it very mildly, but, in a way, it was true. They
had been chores. Dictated by duty. As though he knew that it was his job to do it, and he did it
simply because of that. He never even pondered whether or not he had a choice in the matter. He
never seemed to notice that he could have just ignored the things that nobody else seemed to
notice.

He knew nobody else would do it, and so he did it because of duty towards his friends, whom he
tried to protect, and towards his parents, in respect of their sacrifice for him.

Yes, he’d always been far too modest…but now…now it was different.

He was still modest, and did everything in his power to fight his battle against the dark
forces, but…he’d…well, he’d become insecure.

She’d already seen it the night of the last task, when she’d seen him lie awake in that hospital
bed after Dumbledore and minister Fudge had argued. His resolve to win against the Dark Lord had
steeled. She could read in his eyes that he had no doubt of winning over him. That wasn’t what he
was so insecure about.

He was afraid, not of the battle, but of what would be lost because of it. Cedric Diggory had
died that night. And Harry held himself responsible. He thought that if he had been selfish (and
she knew he couldn’t have lived with that), Cedric would not have been involved. He never thought
back to remember that Cedric had agreed to it. He’d never thought that, if Cedric had been a little
more selfish himself and had gone ahead to get the Cup alone, he would have still died.

He didn’t realised that in most of the other ways that the night could have gone the outcome
would have been the same.

That insecurity, the one that made him afraid of losing everyone, had slowly begun to eat at
him.

She had almost not recognised him at all when he’d come back to his fifth year at Hogwarts,
malnourished, pale, ashy skinned, with absolutely no light in his eyes. She knew he must have been
having nightmares (and still had them very often now) for not only were his eyes shadow cast, they
were also dull, and surrounded by the tell tale dark circles of his bottom lids that told of sleep
deprivation.

His confidence of everything had, little by little, deteriorated.

He felt unloved, she knew that, even though she and Ron did show him very much their friendly
affection.

But friendly affection wasn’t enough.

He needed to be held.

She knew very well, that, if she’d told him what she felt—even without him returning her
feelings—would have brought his spark of confidence back.

But maybe, that was exactly the reason for her silence.

Or maybe it was just selfishness.

She didn’t want to tell her feelings without the certainty that they were returned. Yes, that
was pure selfishness. She was quite sure that he didn’t love her—for who could love a bushy haired,
boring bookworm?—and she didn’t want his rejection.

Thinking about it he might not have rejected her. Maybe, rejoicing in the fact that someone DID
love him—and *how* she loved him!—he would have taken it, no matter the form, shape, size, and
person, so long as he could have it.

And she didn’t want that.

She wanted something real.

And if she couldn’t have that, she would settle for his friendship, for that was the best thing
she had in the world.

But now, the sun was up, she had slept none at all, and she had to get dressed to go to
breakfast. After all, today was the first day of actual schooling, and the Gryffindors had Potions
first thing. Not a great way to start the day…or the term, for that matter.

Descending the crowded stairways to the Great Hall, the lack of sleep and her depressed state of
mind didn’t manage to keep her from noticing the utter lack of Gryffindor first year girls among
the students. She had to remind herself to thank Cicciobello at least for that sole consolation
that tried to give her peace of mind.

As she rounded the corner she felt herself forcefully being pulled into the shadows, and almost
let out a shriek of surprise—and fright—but managed to stop herself upon realizing that it was only
Ron.

She heaved a sigh of relief.

"Ron, you startled me," she told him, and made to go to the Great Hall, but he pulled
her back again, and this time she noticed that he had The Look. The one that told that he was
upset. The one that told that he was angry. The one that told that he was about to sprout
absolutely absurd reasons for being so.

"Why didn’t you tell him?" His voice was sharp steel, his grip far too tight on her
arm, his facial features chiselled into a mask of anger. His question, though, was what scared her.
She’d been asking herself that all night and managed to keep herself from sleep in the while, but
how could Ron know?

"What are you talking about?" She asked, realizing that her voice had taken a sharp
edge as well. If Ron had done what she thought he’d done…ooh! He would be in for it.

He didn’t answer. At least not directly.

"Come on, Hermione!" He exclaimed. "the both of you are suffering!" Why the
sneaky little weasel! He’d been eavesdropping! He could see her anger. He read it in her gritted
teeth, in her stiff shoulders, and in the pure loathing that he saw in her eyes. But he also saw
her despair. Her anguish. It was right there, right next to the anger, in her knitted eyebrows, and
in the tears that she was trying to hold back. "Why didn’t you tell him?" He repeated,
this time with a softer tone, almost caring, his grip loosening on her.

His question had been quiet, but her release wasn’t. She’d tortured herself all night. The past
nights. Of the last few years. And now it burst out of her. In one loud, booming erupting
release—like a volcano finally giving into the strength of the lava—she shouted three simple words
that took him by surprise. "I’M TOO SCARED!" and she threw herself at him with all the
strength in her small body, sobbing the tears that she’d been holding back for too long.

It had been like being hit by a tornado.

That had been his confirmation.

She loved him. Krista had told him so, or at least hinted at it, and he’d accepted it over the
night—somewhat—but *this*! He had no idea that there was this intensity…this longing…this
need. And yet she was scared. Of losing his friendship? Of breaking the balance of their trio? Of
being rejected? He didn’t know.

He didn’t even realise that he was holding her now, in the same way he used to hold Ginny when
Fred and George had played a dirty trick on her as a child, instinctively touching her hair in a
soothing manner. Her sobs wracking through his body as well.

They were torturing each other.

He knew Harry believed the other Gryffindors that said he and Hermione loved each other, he’d
seen it on his face the night before, and heard it in Harry’s voice as he spoke bitter words to
Hermione before the fire.

But how could Hermione do this to herself? Didn’t she see that Harry loved her? Didn’t she see
that she *was* destroying their balance like this? Didn’t she see that she could never lose
Harry?

And, as though summoned—well, maybe he *had* been summoned by the sound of her sobs—Harry
came around the corner, his face a mask of worry as he looked down at the girl he loved.

"Hermione," he whispered. His voice cracked as he spoke her name. He reached a hand
out to her shoulder, but his touch made her sob all the harder.

"You better go, Harry," Ron told him, and watched Harry’s mask turn, from one of worry
for the girl, to anguish. Ron had conflicting feelings at having caused this. On one side, he felt
like the lowest of pond scum, for having denied his friend the chance to comfort Hermione. On the
other, he felt invigorated—and he *knew* he was the lowest of pond scum—for making Harry feel
like he would have been of absolutely no use, and would have, instead, hindered the situation with
his presence. Ron knew that he only felt that because it was, too him, like being more important
than the Boy Who Lived. Yet, he couldn’t help but relish in that.

In the midst of her sobs, Hermione still managed to ask a question. "Why did you do
that?" Her voice was horse from the strain she had put it through.

"To make him jealous," he answered truthfully. That *had* been the original
intention. And, of course, it had worked.

"Why?" She asked again, but to that, he replied by enveloping her more in his arms and
smiling a, rather disarming, smile.

Krista—God! He hated her!—had been right.

He *was* the selfish one.

°*°

"Five points taken from Gryffindor for Miss Granger and Mr. Weasley’s incapability of
finding the classroom on time," several collective eye rolls and groans were uttered at this,
and, in response, Snape gave them an, even more, intimidating look than earlier. Ron and Hermione,
who had walked in together, the young girl still red faced and sniffling, separated and sat at
different available Gryffindor tables. "Our Head Girl should try to set a better example than
this, Miss Granger," he told her maliciously, but, knowing full well that he gloated in their
misery, had been expecting it, and simply acknowledged him with a nod, letting him know that he
hadn’t fazed her at all.

And it was true.

Snape couldn’t harm her when she was already so devastated.

And, of course, this angered him.

As he spoke the next words his knuckles had turned white gripping the edge of his black cloak
over his folded arms, and his lips had thinned into a thin stern line of pure loathing. "I
expect you believed me mad enough to let you all choose for yourselves your lab partners, but you
are wrong." He relished seeing most of the Gryffindors tremble as they stole furtive glances
at the Slytherins. "You will all now stand," in a manner that spoke resignation, they did
so. "I have prepared a potion that, taken by one of you, will work into your subconscious
mind, looking at your faults," this was said at Harry, "and your, few, rights," this
at the Slytherins, "and you, yourselves, will call out your partner. Oh, and don’t bother
smirking for you, yourselves, have absolutely no choice in who you will be paired with," he
seemed far too excited at that prospect. If he wasn’t careful he might have cracked a smile.

He began reading off names in alphabetical order. Lavander had been paired with Neville, and
Millicent Bullstrode had called out Malfoy’s name (the last didn’t seem too thrilled though), lots
of Slytherins with their own kind, as well as Gryffindors, and, to the displeasure of both, several
mixed pairings. When Hermione’s name had been called, she gave a glance at the remaining students.
Since her last name started with G, she still had a lot of good shots, and most of the *truly*
horrible ones had been already called out.

Still slightly sniffling, she walked up to the professor as he poured the foul smelling, thick,
lumpy, blue-gray concoction that he, the sadist, had brewed. Standing as tall as she could, as to
not give Snape the satisfaction of seeing her cringe at the mere sight of the God awful promising
‘drink’. Accepting the cup she took it to her lips, and, without hesitation, threw it all back into
her throat and swallowed it all at once to have as little taste as possible lingering on her
tongue.

Dimly, she was aware that Snape was not pleased with this.

But she didn’t have time to ponder this. Yes, the little taste that she’d sensed was enough to
make her face contort in what was probably the worst expression of her entire life, but even that
was pushed to the very back of her mind as she felt it’s effects taking place. It wasn’t painful,
it was dulling and numbing. Yes, her mind had felt completely numb, and it seemed like an unknown
force was searching through every bit of her being, heart, mind, and soul, for something, or
someone. It felt like she was losing herself in the haze of gray-white mists, and her ragged
heartbeat thundered in her mind.

In the haze, she hadn’t even realised, until she saw Snape’s rather displeased demeanor, that
she must have called out a name. A name that the man hadn’t liked at all.

Well, *that* particular man hadn’t liked many of the names remaining, and her mind refused
to tell her who she had called out. She stared stupidly (or so she thought) at the teacher, waiting
for him to give her a hint, any hint, to whom it might be, but he simply stared back.

Neither would have let out if Hermione hadn’t been pulled out of her daze by the slight pressure
of a gentle hand on her shoulder. Light as it was, it seemed to slap the potion induced stupor out
of her. Her eyes grew wide as they met a pair of troubled emerald green pools. "Come on,
Hermione, let’s go to our seats," he said quietly.

*Harry*, she called out Harry’s name. Oh, was her mind trying to make things as painful as
possible for her? And that look in his eyes? That troubled, troubled look? Wasn’t he happy he would
be with his brainiac friend that would help him with the potions that Snape was sure to make hell
for him? *No, of course not*, her mind told her as she slumped into her seat. *Not after you
had the chance to tell him and didn’t*.

She knew Harry was understanding. But sometimes that was his problem, for, in his attempt not to
bother and pry people, he neglected his own needs for information, knowledge, and care. Her change
of subject the night before had stung him, but he’d hidden it. Still, it must have gnawed at him.
Even if he didn’t love her. Simply because they were friends and he cared.

Oh, God, she was going to cry again.

Then, as though sent from Heaven, a voice came from above intent only on keeping her from
shedding tears.

Of course, she knew full well that Cicciobello’s voice came from the ceiling, and not from
Heaven, and he was only intent on mischief, and not her comfort…still. He was…comforting. Most of
the time. … Well, this time.

"Pee-eeves, wheeere aaaare youuu," he called out in a singsong voice, and from
somewhere within Snape’s robes, shuddering whimpers could be heard. Neither Hermione, nor Ron (who
was still being sorted out) and Harry missed the terrified thrill that raced along the dark man’s
spine. For the first time in their lives, they saw Severus Snape scared, *truly scared*, and
of a *doll*! Of course, they knew full well that Cicciobello *was* a very scary doll, but
that still didn’t manage to diminish their gleeful wonder of the discovery that they now held
*power* over the man.

And then they saw Cicciobello’s blue (plastic) eyes meet Snape’s black ones. Oh, that would be a
moment etched into their minds forever! "Severus," he shrilled, and, pulling down his
pants, sat on top of Snape’s oily hair, and, with the most retched sounding noice of anyone’s life,
he released a mountain of foul-stenching, brown…well, crap. Snape’s pale complection and dark robes
couldn’t be seen anywhere beneath the pile, but Peeves flew out crying like an infant who was
swimming in his own droppings while calling out, "Filch! Filch! Help me!"

That Peeves would be calling out to FILCH, of all people, was enough to let them know that very
few people in the castle appreciated Cicciobello’s presence.

The students, of course, in no mood at all to stand being around an already foul teacher now
completely submerged in…droppings, ran out covering their faces with shouts of
"Ewwwwww…"

Cicciobello was outside the dungeon door waiting for Harry, Ron, and Hermione to come by. When
he finally spotted them he began to giggle madly. "Ah, daddy and papi would have been
proud!" He exclaimed. No doubt that Cicciobello was proud, he kept on hovering around the trio
trying to pry a compliment out of them.

Finally, Harry managed to wheeze, after a certain amount of trying, "What did you eat?
Horse manure?!" It certainly smelled so. And Cicciobello beamed.

"Nah…that’s too mild. I run on Centaur…and Dragon if I find them, but that’s only
sometimes," he tried to sound modest, failing rather miserably.

Ron, opposed to his mates, was enthusiastic. He walked off with Cicciobello, trying to bend the
scary toy to his will.

"*That* is scary!" Hermione vocalised the thought that had been crossing both of
their minds for several minutes. She saw Harry nod, and, though lightened by the sight of Snape
buried under a pile of Centaur escrements, felt all her previous worries returning. She knew that
Harry’s had too, for his eyes had clouded over again.

°*°

"I’m scared of Ron now that he’s met Cicciobello," Hermione said as she walked through
the portrait hole, seeing Harry alone on the floor before the hearth again. She saw him nod, but
her attempt at a lighter mood had failed miserably.

Certainly, her silence over the fact that she loved him could not still be affecting her. It
couldn’t! After all, one only worried that much if he…did he…? Could he…? Should she…?

But the incomplete questions in her mind were thrust aside by an alien voice from the staircase
saying, "Mind if I join in?"

Her face, along with the rest of her, stiffened.

Ron.

Oh, if looks could kill Ron would have been wishing for Avada Kedavras to put him out of his
misery. *So eavesdropping is not enough anymore, huh?* She was about to snap at him, but Harry
agreed to letting him stay. Well, he was his best friend, and she couldn’t deny him that, even
though she’d started to think that the Diary was something special just between the two of
them.

Of course, Harry had felt the same, but if Hermione really did love Ron—and he was certain she
did—then she might like to have him there with them. Sure, Harry loved Ron’s company, but he really
didn’t want to see Ron bending over Hermione’s shoulder while she read out loud, not just to him
anymore, but to the both of them. Completely missing the daggers that Hermione had just released
from her eyes at Ron, Harry settled in to absorb her voice better, and soon, found himself
conscious only of her soft, lilting whisper that washed over him, hypnotising him, and of the words
that, so long before, had been penned by his mother.

Dimly he realised that it was somewhere around midnight, and they’d read all the way through the
first half of Lily’s term.

*Since the year started, I’ve been having a recurring dream. It’s not the first time I’ve had
the same dream over and over, but even though it felt like something important from the very first
night, I ignored it, because it’s meanings eluded me. But tonight it was different. Tonight I woke
right after the dream was over, and wrote everything down before my mind let it slip away.
Generally, it takes a very long time for me to figure out these dreams, and I’m nowhere near the
solution of this one, but finally I managed to capture the images, if not the meaning.*

*The setting is always limited. A dark sky, a full moon, actually, a gigantic full moon, a
big, shaggy blond wolf, howling, despaired, solitary at it. Asking for company, asking for
friendship, asking for love. But he shies away from the ones around him.*

*That I’ve had this dream at least once a month, I can understand, but I don’t understand
what’s changed.*

*Something has to have changed tonight, or I wouldn’t be conscious of those images.*

*I think the wolf’s call has been answered. I’m glad for him, but I want to know who that wolf
is, because I know he, and the one, or ones, that answered him, need me. They’re calling to me,
too, but I don’t know how—or even who—to answer.*

*But I’ll find out.*

*That’s a promise.*

*Lily*

Quiet fell over the trio.

"That must have been the night in which the Marauders were formed," Hermione explained
in an awed whisper.

And silence fell again.

Which, Ron, of course, had to disturb by saying something totally inappropriate. "That’s
all nice and dandy, but where’s You-Know-Who? She still didn’t say anything about him."

*Great Ron!* Hermione thought in her mind. *Don’t wait for the news to sink into Harry’s
mind, no, let him think about the insane wizard who’s been trying to* KILL HIM *for the past
sixteen years instead.* God, she wanted to thwap him upside the head!

"Not that it has anything to do with this, Ron," she began, letting him know exactly
what she felt of his ‘joining in’. But as she continued, her voice softened, if only for Harry’s
sake. "It’s not something close to her heart. The Marauders, and James, are," she
explained, and, seeing Harry smile, she added, "and at this point You-Know-Who hadn’t really
made much of a noticeable move yet, besides, at this point, she’s just a girl who’s living out her
years at Hogwarts," she finished as she put a bookmark to the page, and delicately closed the
book shut. "Anyway, it’s bedtime," and with this made to get up.

Harry rose as well, but Ron stayed seated. Looking at Hermione he told her, "I need to talk
to you," and with that Hermione’s anger at him swelled again in her chest. She watched in near
anguish as she saw Harry’s face covered in an expression that told of how he felt left out and
unloved while he trudged up the stairs alone calling out a distant sounding goodnight.

Not even had he clicked his door shut that she began to yell at Ron. "What the *hell*
are you getting at, Ron? What are you trying to do? Do you think you have the *right* to
prance in here with a ‘Mind if I join you’ after you’ve *eavesdropped* on something that
hadn’t been any of your business? Do you think you have any right to treat Harry like…like…"
she couldn’t find the words to describe what Ron was doing to Harry (incredible that Hermione
Granger would be struck speechless, but anger blurred her mind to words). Not knowing what to say
she began a thick stream of curses that Ron had no idea she had any knowledge of (but then, again
she knew everything) at the redhead that soon had his ears the same vermilion as his hair.

And, while she was still halfway through one of her insults, he shouted at her, angrier than
he’d ever been, "YOU just didn’t want ME butting in you HARRY TIME!" And, after his
eruption, ran up the stairs like a bat out of hell.

The both of them went to sleep seething and picturing ways of extricating revenge on the
other.

*At least*, Hermione thought sourly, *now I won’t keep myself awake thinking of
Harry*.

But she was wrong. Very wrong.

°*°

Ron noticed that morning, of course, that Harry had been avoiding Hermione, which suited his
purposes quite well considering that, for the moment, it served as a good revenge toward the girl,
and, also, made it easier for him to avoid the both of them.

Of course, avoiding Krista Perril was nowhere near that easy, he realised as he turned a corner
and unceremoniously banged into her, knocking them both on the hard ground. He was about to
apologise till he saw who she was. "Oh, you! Great!" He mumbled bitterly as he got
himself off the floor, without bothering to help her up (which he knew was wrong, but at the moment
he still hated her too much), and began to dust himself off.

Even from her, rather undignified, position, she managed to look superior by piercing him with
her glare below her nose. How could she, from her sitting position, look up at a man who stood over
204 cm from down her nose without looking ridiculous, but rather quite fascinating?

"Are you upset because you think you love her," and her voice was a shill oomph as she
said this, "or because you feel left out?" And how could she make such sharp, cutting
remarks (for it hadn’t been a question at all), first thing in the morning, after a strong tumble
on the floor, and while his own thoughts were in a jumble?

He chose silence as his answer. Let her figure things out on her own.

Without bothering to get up, and still managing to look menacing and imposing, she added in a
softer volume, but with a steel edge, "I don’t think you love her."

He snapped his neck to look at her so quickly that she feared he might have broken it in the
process. "Why?" he spat at her, and she noticed that his head was still well held onto
his neck, so she cursed herself for worrying.

How could she think to know him so well? How could she say things like that with such a
certainty? How could she pretend to know more of what he felt than he, himself, did?

And, still on the ground, as though getting up would be an insult to herself, she fixed him with
her most pregnant stare. "Because you touch her the same way you touch Ginny."

°*°

As Hermione, finally, managed to catch up to Harry, she saw in his expression that something was
wrong, and he confirmed it by saying, "I feel like I’m in your way."

He didn’t need to specify, for Hermione, after resisting more taunts about being with Ron,
understood perfectly well what he meant to say. And so did she. "Harry, you mean more to me
than anyone else in the world!" She exclaimed, and she’d never said anything in her life that
she believed more. Nothing truer.

And Harry smiled. A sad smile. One that almost seemed a farewell. *Farewell to my heart*,
he thought to himself, and told her simply, "Well, that’s a lie, Hermione, but thanks
anyway," and he walked away before he could give her time to deny the falsity he had said, and
before she could find the strength for the truth.

To be continued.

Author’s notes: As always comments are welcome at Robbygal@hotmail.com, as well as any kind of reviews. Flame if
you feel like it. I’ll just have a BBQ

Thanks

Pearl



5. Chapter 4: Kisses and Visions
--------------------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t
know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and himself…or
did she?

Disclaimer: I own nothing. You know it, I know it, so why bother denying it.

Thank yous: First to J Choo, who’s been reading and proof-reading my story without ever having
been asked. ALL my reviewers, you guys really make my day! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Oh,
yeah, and anon, yes, all the Italian words were spelled right (^_^) and Midknight: I’m sorry, but
this is going to be a VERY mushy chapter.

Warning: Like I already said this is a seriously mushy chapter with a good of TWO couples
kissing and neither of them getting together! Oh, I’m evil. But, like I said, this is meant to be
angsty. Anyway, prepare for a load of crappy, fluffy mush and not much comic relief. Another thing.
I kind of fast forwarded a whole year and a half of Lily’s diary, hope you guys don’t mind. You’ve
been warned.

And now: On with the fic.

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Chapter 4: Kisses and visions

"Ron! Settle down and study already!" Hermione chastised after said boy snapped his
third quill in half an hour.

"Easy for you to say," he replied bitterly. Harry and Hermione exchanged exasperated
glances, as they’d been doing for over a month and a half now. They knew very well that whatever it
was that was bothering him had to do with a certain Ravenclaw by the name of Krista Perril. The two
had been at each other’s throats since the day after they returned to Hogwarts, and now they were
already halfway through the month of November.

Ron knew very well that his friends were weary of his…rather awkward rivalry with the short
blond girl that he’d been trying to avoid—quite unsuccessfully—for such a long time now. That girl
seemed to know exactly where to be at precisely the right time, with the most intimidating and
realistic taunt, that always felt like a sounding slap to the cheek. It was really beginning to get
too much. No matter how many tricks he pulled on her, the pranks, the taunts, the jokes…they were
useless.

Because she knew him.

And that was scary.

Because he didn’t know her nearly half as well as she knew him. He didn’t know how she knew what
she knew, how she could put it to use so well, how she always seemed aware of his every thought and
move, or how just one of her looks could send his mind in turmoil.

And this was for different reasons.

Sometimes, she would look at him with pure undisguised venom in her eyes, which would, of
course, set his blood boiling and, therefore, instigate disasters such as the huge
Ravenclaw/Gryffindor tornado food fight on Halloween, which, by the way, had been a load of fun,
but had resulted in even more hostility on both parties.

Some other times, though…he didn’t know for sure, but he would catch a glimpse of her staring at
him in near anguish. And that hurt. As much as she seemed to be trying to ruin his life and his
resolve that he *didn’t* want Harry to have the perfect life with Hermione, he never wanted to
hurt her.

Never.

And this situation was making him edgy. And that was *not* good because Ron had always been
too edgy for his own good, and adding to it was not a good idea.

So, since this train of thought was bringing him to a dark tunnel, he veered his mind onto
something else. "Did you guys think of anything to put in the Memory Case?" Yep, that’s
good, think of that. Never mind that Gryffindors came up with enough ideas to fill dozens of
capsules, it was always good to have a few extra things.

"Ah, there you are, Weasel," came a new, rather cold (more like freezing) female
voice, and at the sound of it, the Trio stiffened.

"What do *you* want?" Ron spat. He didn’t even notice that he’d just snapped the
new quill that he picked up.

She seemed to soften a little, and her hands left her hips. "Just a private conference with
you," she told, and her eyes spoke volumes of what she thought of his cursing tone, for they’d
just turned dull.

Of course, Ron noticed this, but they were at war, and one must never pity the enemy. "Plan
on pulling some kind of hex on me?" He asked bitterly, not even hinting at following her. He
saw her hands fist, and her face tighten in an expression of pure rage.

"No, Ronald, I came to speak to you of something serious, but since you don’t seem intent
on listening, I won’t waste your time, or mine," and with that she crossed her arms over her
chest and made to leave.

"Alright, talk, I’m listening," Ron called after her as loudly as he dared with Madame
Pince giving him one of her ‘Quiet-this-is-a-library’ looks.

"Never mind," she told him, and this time, she sounded resigned, tired, and sad. And
she made to keep on walking, but something told Ron to hold her back, so he reached for one of her
arms and pulled her back.

"No, really, tell me," he pleaded, and he stood up while saying this so that he now
had to bend his back to be eye level with her. She stared at him, as if considering whether or not
to tell him, then lowering her eyes to the floor before glancing at Harry and Hermione who’d been
trying to follow the exchange from behind their parchments. Their guilty expressions told very
clearly that they were listening in.

"Could we go somewhere private?" She asked him quietly, "Please?" She
pleaded as well.

Ron had to bite back the urge to swallow and blush, and nodded, following her out of the
library.

Harry and Hermione both let out a simultaneous sigh of relief. They both turned to grin at each
other.

"What do you think she had to tell him?" Harry asked with knit eyebrows.

Hermione shrugged, contemplating the exchange. "I don’t know," she told, "but I
hope they’ll make up, finally," she gave him a broad smile at the thought. "Ron needs
someone like Krista, she’s probably the only one that he would listen to, even more than me,"
she explained.

Harry, on the other hand, looked shocked at her declaration. "What?"

She raised her eyebrows at him. "Oh, come on, Harry. Don’t tell me you missed they way
those two look at each other!" she exclaimed.

"Yeah, with pure hatred!"

She rolled her eyes. "Harry, that’s just a facade!" She told him exasperated.
"They’ve been playing a game of cat and mouse the whole time, I really hope today they get it
over with," she told him again, a small smile gracing her lips. *I really hope* we *get
it over with too.*

Of course, Harry *did* notice that there was a certain attraction between Ron and the
Ravenclaw—along with the rest of the school—but that Hermione would be happy for them to act out on
it, well, it really didn’t seem to fit in the picture. After all, he was sure she’d loved the
redhead for quite some time now.

Hermione must have noticed the disbelief on his face, so, rolling her eyes, she told him again
for the forth time that day, "Get off it, Harry. I’m not in love with him."

Funny that, even after all the good reasons that she gave him, and the number of times she’d
said that same exact phrase before, this would be the first time that he might start to believe
her.

°*°

She’d dragged him to the same hallway (which was practically always deserted) in which they’d
had their first argument. The one in which she’d caught him eavesdropping on Harry and Hermione
after breakfast. For some reason this made him uneasy.

"What is it, Krista?" Why was it that he didn’t manage to get one bit of hostility in
his question? She seemed encouraged by this however.

"I’m tired Ron," she told him finally.

"What?"

"I’m tired," she repeated. "I’m tired of this stupid game that we’ve been
playing, of the fights, and the taunts. I’m tired of you not excepting the truth of your feelings,
or your friends or mine," she explained.

*I have no bloody idea of what your feelings might be!* He screamed in his mind. And it was
true. This girl—more than any other—was a true mystery to him. A puzzle that he couldn’t put
together. An enigma that he couldn’t solve. A chess game in which he didn’t know how to move. Of
course, that could have been because she kept herself safely sheltered from him. Ron, instead,
always made sure everyone knew if he was happy, or miserable, or whatever else.

"Most of all, Ron," she continued. "I’m…I’m tired of always being mad, and upset,
and depressed at you," she finished.

It took the tall redhead a while to register what that *might* mean. Nah, it couldn’t be
possible. Well, maybe he should ask. So he did. "What do you mean?"

She stared at him. For a long time. Willing herself to say, yet at the same time, screaming at
herself not to do so. *He’s not ready yet. Let it all sink in first.* She instructed herself.
"I want a truce, Ron. If you don’t want to except the truth, fine! I’m washing my hands clean
of this. Keep on destroying yourself and your friends for a lie, I won’t stop you, but this…what
we’ve been doing…it’s got to stop. It’s a situation that is making me very uneasy," she told
him.

He blinked. "But you were the one who started it all. You stepped into this. You never had
to." Ron protested.

She nodded. "You’re right," she agreed. "I just thought that Harry and Hermione
suffer enough already, and you adding onto it isn’t fair. They’re miserable, and so are you,"
she concluded.

"What made you change your mind?" he asked, a lump forming in his throat without
reason. In truth their little bickering had become a constant part of his school life lately, and
he would probably miss it now that she’d called a truce.

"Because I’m miserable too now, and I’m only contributing to your stubbornness. Maybe if I
back off, you’ll come to terms with things yourself," she replied.

Ron nodded, and, after a moment of thought, actually chuckled.

"What?" She asked with knit eyebrows.

"It’s just that…" he began, but how do you explain that he actually did come to term
with things? "Well, you really did help me out a lot, even if not in the best of ways. I just
wanted to ignore what you were trying to tell me. Probably because saying you were right would have
been like saying I lost," he blushed and chuckled again.

She shook her head. "No," she contradicted. "We both lost." He didn’t have
time to ask her what she meant by that, that she was already turning her back on him to leave.

Again he reached his hand out to hold her arm and spin her around. "Would you bloody stop
running away from me?" He yelled in anger. She’d been doing that since their first meeting,
and he was really getting sick of it. "Why do you always get the say in when the conversation
is over or not? It’s really infuriating, you know that?" He hissed lowering himself to her eye
level.

She lowered her eyes and mumbled an apology.

This shocked Ron into letting go of her. She was saying she was sorry? What the bloody hell was
going on? "What’s got into you?" He asked bewildered.

And this time she was upset. "Oh, hell, Ron! Why does everybody have to answer to you, huh?
Why do you ask things that are always already obvious and painful to say? You know, if you just
thought about it a little bit you might just get to the answers yourself, sparing both of us a load
of pain and embarrassment! And I’m sick of it!" She yelled, stepping on her tip toes in a
futile attempt to reach his height. "I’m sick of it," she repeated. And, terrified, she
realised that her vision was blurring, and that her eyes were beginning to water.

Frozen under her watery unwavering gaze, and the anger that he’d caused her he could only mumble
a poor sounding, shocked, "Sorry…"

This seemed to deflate her. He didn’t know. He didn’t realise. And she’d just scared him off.
"Yeah, I’m sorry, too," she whispered lowering her gaze to the floor and making to turn
around.

"Wait!" Ron called to her. She stopped with her back to him, her face turned so that
he knew he had her attention, but still not letting him look at her face.

"Yes?"

"Uh…uhm…well…" *come on Ron, spill it!* He yelled at himself. "Do…do you
mind…if we can still be friends?" He stuttered, a thick blush spreading across his cheeks.
God, he sounded like a bloody grade schooler!

But she turned so that their eyes could meet, and, with a small smile taunted, "Do you
think you can manage being my friend?"

Ah, there was the Krista that he’d known before they’d begun arguing. There was the
sarcastically funny girl that he’d met when he’d bloodied her ex-boyfriend’s nose. "I think I
can handle it," he responded confidently with a lopsided goofy grin, his freckles dancing
merrily on his cheeks.

"Well, then I’ll see you around," she said as she began to walk away again, this time
without him stopping her, but before she turned the corner, she faced him again and added a simple
word that nearly melted him into mush. "Friend."

That was as good a place as any to start, right?

°*°

Not too late that night, probably only around 10:30 p.m., in the Gryffindor common room, empty
because everyone (including Ron) had gone to their beds to dream (and get some rest for Hogsmeade
weekend), Harry and Hermione were sitting by the hearth, with a crackling fire warming them, as
Hermione’s voice washed over them both, pouring out the words that had been penned by Lily Marianne
Evans.

They had reached the Christmas of her second year, and were reading of her mirth of the
holidays, of her giddy state as she met her family after the long months of separation, and of
worries. Worries, that, this time were brought on by visions of betrayal.

*I saw the dark future of one of us. I don’t know who it could be, because, if he were to make
the right choices in life, he won’t come to it. Yet, as it is, I fear it is a strong possibility.
It was hazy, so I don’t know the details, but he’ll turn away from us. I can’t think of who it
could be, but he wore blood stained Gryffindor colours, and I fear him.*

*There is a dark shadow on the rise. A wizard. Powerful. And dark. I don’t know his name yet,
but I’m sure I will soon enough. The betrayer will turn away from us and to this wizard’s shadow,
and if it happens, someone else must face him and stop him.*

*I didn’t know this shadow, either, even if it reminded me very much of James. He was just a
shadow, but the outline of his hair was black, and he had bright, brave green eyes, and on his
forehead (or where I guessed his forehead would be) a bright, glowing red…squiggle. It must have
been some type of scar. It pulsated in pain when the Dark Lord neared him. It was thin, blinding,
it looked like a fire bolt, and it weighed heavy on his shoulders.*

*The boy must face them both, and then, all I know is that he’ll have to protect his light, or
perish.*

"Light? I’ve heard of something like that! I’ll have to remember to check into it and do
some research," Hermione said out loud, mostly speaking with herself. For a while she kept
mumbling the way she usually did when concentrating on remembering something.

Watching her, Harry realised that he didn’t want this reading session to end today.
"Uhm…Hermione?" He called to her quietly. She snapped out of her thoughts to look
inquisitively at Harry. "Uhm…listen, since tomorrow we don’t have classes or anything, and
since the Duelling Club with Dumbledore and Snape is in the late afternoon, do you think we
could…keep reading longer tonight?" He asked apprehensively.

She smiled at how small and childish he looked while asking this. The Dursleys had never given
him anything, and now, even though he knew his friends loved him, he was still afraid of being
refused. And rejected. "Sure, Harry," she reassured him, "I’ll read till we drop
from sleep deprivation." And with that she turned back to diary, finishing the passage that
she’d been on earlier, reading several more.

*My visions lately have been getting very jumbled, and more involved as well. The betrayer has
left my dreams, but the wolf has returned, probably because it’s full moon time again. This time,
though, there’s more detail, and more confusion, and it’s far clearer than I’ve ever seen it. And
what scares me is that there are people in it. People for whom I care deeply.*

*I saw the four of them, looking as mischievous as always, yet sad, quiet before the Whomping
Willow, in front of the full moon. There was Remus, face shamed and downcast sitting on a knot of
the Whomping Willow, the same wolf I always dream of, next to him, comforting him, it would seem,
but truly haunting him. On Remus’s left, Peter, quiet, and scared, trembling, with a small mouse
sitting on his shoulder looking just as terrified as he. On Remus’s right, Sirius, sitting in his
taunting, superior manner, trying to calm down a terrified, great, big, dark, long haired dog,
cowering at the idea of something.*

*And then, in front of them all, as always in the part of the fearless leader, stood James,
smiling at his companions, but ashen, his hand resting on the strong back of a big, beautiful stag,
edgy but fearless.*

*All of them turned to look at me with a small, sad smile on their faces, waving at me, and
disappearing into the tree.*

*I can’t figure out what it could mean, there are too many pieces of the puzzle missing, but I
do know one thing. That smile, and that wave at the end, felt very much like a farewell. A goodbye.
It felt final.*

*And I’m scared.*

As they kept on reading, they found out of the Marauders (they’d started calling themselves that
after coming back from Christmas) constantly disappearing, of how they’d put distance between
themselves and Lily and Jenna, of Lily’s ever clearing visions, of how after the visions kept
getting stronger she decided to go talk to Dumbledore.

It turned out that the ancient wizard could help, for he, himself, was a Seer. This surprise
Harry and Hermione not in small amount.

They’d read through their adventures of the Duelling Club during second year, learned of her
summer spent with Jenna where she confessed all of her visions, and of their return to Hogwarts for
third.

They found out of how Voldemort started to make his name known towards the middle of third year,
and of how Lily had always known that it had been Tom Riddle.

*I was cleaning the trophy cases, helping out the caretaker (who is a freak by the way) so
that he would go easy on James during his detention, and as I passed one of the cases I saw one
that had been awarded to a boy named Tom Marvolo Riddle. I felt his hate for his Muggle born
father, for all Muggles, for his orphanage, and then I saw his Dark shadow reflected in the glass
of the casing.*

*Next to those visions of the wolf and the Marauders, it was the scariest thing I’d ever seen.
I was sweating cold just looking at it, and I was glad the caretaker didn’t make me open the case
and clean it or I might have fainted.*

*But I know he’s Voldemort (I don’t know why people started calling him You-Know-Who).*

*He’s sent attacks on the families of Muggleborns, and now, many Muggleborn students have left
school to go home where they think it’s safer. Fools, I say. There is no safer place than Hogwarts,
under the care of Dumbledore. After all, Tom Riddle always feared him.*

*Slytherins however, with their distaste for us Muggleborn, have taken to tormenting us. I
seem to be one of their favourite targets, not only because I’m Muggle and a Gryffindor, but also
because I best most of them in nearly every subject, and because I’m close to the Marauders, to
which all of them have fallen, at least once, victims.*

Most of her entries throughout her third year were of that like. They spoke of the attacks on
the Muggleborn families, of the Slytherins’ harassment towards her, of the Marauders pranks, and of
her regular life.

The only difference was that nearly at the end of the year she had begun dating a Gryffindor one
year ahead by the name of Jonathan, also a Muggleborn.

Harry had been bothered by this, but he could understand the fact that she wouldn’t be sharing
her first kiss with his father, much in the same way he hadn’t shared any of his firsts with
Hermione, though he wished he had.

That summer she’d spent with Jonathan.

In forth, the harassment from the Slytherins had begun to become violent. Near to Christmas
break she’d been sitting by the lake with Jonathan when eight of them all came at once to make fun
of the Mugblood couple. Jonathan, apparently, had tried to put up a fight, but soon ended up
whimpering and telling Lily that it might have been better to be seeing other people (many an
insults were spit out of both Harry and Hermione’s mouths at this) while running off to save his
own hide.

She’d been cornered by the eight big leering Slytherins, ready to pull out her wand and hex them
all, when Cicciobello had come to her rescue. Or rather, James had come to her rescue on his return
from Quidditch practice.

The Slytherins had taunted James by saying that he was only big and brave when in the company of
the Murder Doll, so James had dismissed the bundle of trouble, pulled out his wand, and shot out
the most colourful hexes Lily had ever heard of before they could even say
"Mugblood".

*It was then, in that precise moment today, that I realised that things are different. That
James is different. And that what I’ve felt and feel for him have always been different.*

*He’s dear to me. More than myself.*

Hermione had chosen not to stop and comment this with Harry, and rushed on through the rest of
the year, which had, obviously, been very stressful for Lily. She’d said that her new found
feelings for James had brought her closer to him, but yet, at the same time, she felt immensely
distant from him because of all the secrets he was keeping from her. She knew very well that her
visions were a big chunk of his secrets, but she couldn’t quite decipher them yet, for she didn’t
have the knowledge, despite the intense researches.

By the time they’d reached the end of forth year, and Lily was describing her ride home it had
been 3:30 am, yet neither Harry nor Hermione seemed to mind.

*Today, I have a lot to say. I just got home from King’s Cross, and Petunia is already on my
back, but I don’t care. Yesterday, I did something completely outrageous that I thought I would
never have the courage to do. Then again, I wasn’t sorted into Gryffindor for nothing, now did
I?*

*After the Leaving Feast (and I didn’t write this right away because I wasn’t sure if I could
have handled my powers in the state I was in) I got my guts together, walked over to James before
he went off with the rest of the Marauders and told him that I had to talk to him. He followed me
right away, probably afraid that some other Slytherin needed a good butt kicking. Once we reached a
dark hallway that always seems to be completely empty I turned around and…stared at him. I didn’t
know what to say!*

*He was obviously getting worried under my intense scrutiny of him, and I’m sure he couldn’t
figure out what the thoughts running through my head might have been like. After all, even during
these past six months since I realised what he meant, and still means, to me, I’m pretty sure I
didn’t let it on much, and the only one to know is Jenna, and that is only because I told
her.*

*"Lily are you feeling well?" He asked me. God! How am I not supposed to love him
the way I do when he looks at me from behind his glasses, all worried and caring and wonderful, and
with that deep, deep voice that never fails in its attempt to turn me into a big puddle of
quivering mush? He has such a beautiful speaking voice, always clear and cheerfully lilting (even
when he’s not joking) and I love that in him, just as I love the rest of him, the good and the
bad.*

*"Lily?" Oh, he was really worried by that point and I was screaming to myself:
‘Answer him! Answer him, you dolt!’*

*"I—" I started, but my voice was quivering. After clearing my throat I tried again.
"I…never thanked you…properly…for helping me with those Slytherins at Christmas…or for all the
other times that you helped me out…with anything. I guess I kind of always took you for
granted," Jeez, it sounded like I was apologising for all my sins. And I was lying. Even
though I had not realised my feelings sooner, I had always appreciated his constant presence. And
I’d been stuttering, too. God! Was I obvious!*

*But he was blushing! I couldn’t believe it. James Potter, known by the female Gryffindor
population as "Mr. Suave", was blushing at my feeble attempts at thanking him. His hand
found the back of his head the way it always did when he was nervous.*

*I heard him clear his throat and, after what looked like a thorough selection of his words,
said, "I’ve never felt as though I was taken from granted, Lily, by you most of all," if
he’d heard the incessant squealing that was going on in my mind he would have probably asked how a
Banshee found its way into Hogwarts. Well, even though he couldn’t hear the sound that my mind was
producing, disturbing even to myself, I’m sure he didn’t miss the smile that had found its way onto
my face and couldn’t seem to get lost. I’m sure it counted a minimum of sixty-seven teeth.*

*"Really?" I know it sounded stupid but I couldn’t help but ask as I stepped closer
to him. Dimly I realised that we were so close our toes were touching. He didn’t say anything, but
he nodded stiffly. I don’t know if it was the fact that I was standing so close to him, or if it
was the fact that, despite his way of speaking with the ladies was as smooth as it was, he’d never
really had much of a romantic female contact with anyone before. Either way, I prayed that he
wasn’t afraid of me.*

*"Still," I heard myself say. When the heck did I start sounding so confident? Oh,
what a load of codswallop was I dumping onto myself! "I feel like I still need to properly
thank you," and then I really don’t know what possessed me, but I stepped up on my tiptoes and
put my lips on his. At first he was shocked, and only kept his lips stiffly closed. I didn’t move
until he responded.*

*I honestly thought he would push me away. I expected to hear him say that he only thought of
me as a good friend and nothing more, and I was already prepared for the worst, for his rejection.
And then, his lips softened and started to massage mine. I felt his arms circling my waist, holding
me closer to him, and then it was all a blur and I was nothing but a bundle of crazy, impossible
emotions.*

*I don’t know if James felt that when I kissed him, but I’d never felt that kind of bonding
before. Jonathan had been my first boyfriend, but I’d had a couple of experiences with kisses
before him, and they had honestly never felt like this. Maybe it was because we knew each other so
well, and were so comfortable around each other, or maybe it was simply because I loved him, and
love him all the more now.*

*We met perfectly at every shift of our lips, clashing of tongues (I’m blushing just penning
the words), beat of our hearts, and when we both, at the same time, parted for air, breathing
heavily, I wished it had lasted longer, although in itself it had felt like an eternity. It had all
been so perfect, that now that it was over, I was afraid. Scared to death.*

*What if he’d only gone along with me? What if this feeling of perfection and deep connection
was one sided? What if I looked in his eyes and saw confusion, fear…disgust even? No, I couldn’t
look in his eyes. I disentangled my hands from his hair (when had they found their way there
anyway?), and was about to step away from him.*

*"Lily?" There it was again, that concerned voice. Jeez, I blew it! I ruined
everything that our friendship stood for. "Lily," this time a statement, a bidding for me
to look into his eyes, and I could never refuse him anything. I looked up.*

*Yes, he was confused, and worried for me. He was always worried for me. And suddenly it
didn’t matter anymore. It didn’t matter if he’d just kissed me back because he didn’t know what
else to do, it didn’t matter if he didn’t love me, and, strangely enough, it didn’t matter if our
friendship would change. He would always be James Potter, prankster and all around general good guy
who stood by his friends no matter how many stupid things they did.*

*He would always be James Potter, and I would always love him, and if he didn’t love me, I
would at least have the memory of this perfect kiss we just shared.*

*I don’t know how or why, but I smiled at him, and said "Thank you," one more time
before walking away. And that was the last time I saw him. I’m sure Jenna noticed this, for today
she helped me avoid the Marauders. We sat in our own cabin on the Express, and I told her what
happened. She’s convinced I should have spoken to him, but my mind tells me that I have to give him
time to figure this all out, so I’ll give it to him. I’ll give him a whole summer. And no matter
what will happen when we come back to September, I’ll stand by him, and he by me.*

*That much I’m certain of.*

*Love*

*Lily*

The tension in the Common Room was so palpable it could have been cut by a knife. The
description of the kiss itself told little, but a fourteen year old in love usually didn’t have a
clear enough mind to describe much of anything. Still, the intensity with which Lily loved James
had been so strong, so…unwavering over the course of the year that it had been very hard for both
Harry and Hermione to believe that she actually had been only fourteen at the time.

*Then again, when I realised everything I felt much the same way,* Hermione reminded
herself. The difference was that Lily had excepted it and welcomed it, while she had denied it and
turned her back on it for far too long, and now there was hardly any chance for her.

She felt the heat from Harry’s body, sitting next to hers, seeping into her flesh, making her
aware of him in every way. His breath, his heartbeat (it was so quiet now she could even hear
that), his presence. She didn’t know why, but she needed to look at him, guess what he was
thinking.

Her heart nearly burst out of its cage when she found him staring at her with an unreadable
expression on his face. His gaze was so full on confusion and longing that she felt a vice
tightening around her heart. Oh, she wished so much that the longing was for her, and not for his
parents!

She turned to face him better and found her face mere centimetres from his. Her heart was now in
her throat, making her breathing difficult. "Harry…"she managed to mumble, but even she
didn’t hear her own voice, for how quietly it had escaped her lips. She wanted to be comforting to
him, but all she managed to do was stare at him like some love sick puppy, wishing for him to kiss
the same way his parents had kissed in the pages just read.

She chastised herself for those thoughts, and closing her eyes she licked her lips before biting
down on the lower one. *Stop it, Hermione! You’re his best friend! Nothing more!* But she
still kept on hoping.

Harry, seeing her bite that lovely full lower lip of hers had to suppress the urge to kiss her
senseless. *Stop staring at her! You’re scaring the living magic out of her! Look, she can’t even
look you in the eye now!* He was screaming all sort of things at himself, but a small part of
his mind kept on pointing out that the way she’d read Lily’s words had seemed far too real,
involved, as though she’d felt something all the like for a long time now, and some part of his
heart kept rejoicing at the hope that he might have been the one to cause that. After all, she’d
begun to convince him that Ron was nothing but a good friend to her, and it couldn’t have been Krum
for she’d said that when dating him she thought of someone else. Was it horrible to hope that she’d
been thinking about him? Oh, but she looked ever so inviting facing him with her eyes shut, her
eyelashes fluttering against her cheeks, her teeth working her lower lip…and then she opened her
eyes and looked at him.

And they were both lost.

Neither was sure who had initiated it, but sure enough, they found their mouths locking with
each other, their lips slightly parted as they pressed gently against each other. It was a soft
kiss, almost as though they were afraid of breaking each other, or waking up from the dream that
they’d suddenly found themselves in.

They’d stayed locked in that chaste kiss for a long time, but soon found the need to feel more
of each other, make sure it was real.

Hermione lifted her arms to touch his strong shoulders, the muscles tense beneath her finger,
his large hands encircling her waist and holding her closer to him. Their mouths opened
simultaneously and the kiss became deeper without losing any of its gentleness.

Her head was swimming as Harry’s mouth made her lose any conscious thought, and all she was
aware of was the fact that they were kissing, and it couldn’t have possibly been a dream for it was
far too good and real. She could feel the warmth of his hands through her shirt, the silky strands
of his messy hair tangling in her fingers, his tongue and lips meeting hers perfectly. No, dreams
didn’t feel as good as this.

Harry wasn’t aware of anything but Hermione. That must have been the reason why, after she
moaned quietly into her mouth, he found the strength to break away from her. This was wrong. She
was his best friend. And he was sure the only reason for which she’d kissed him back must have been
the atmosphere that had created itself with his mother’s words. "Hermione, I…" how was he
supposed to apologise? She looked so hurt at the moment. *God, I’m such a stupid git!* He
screamed. *I should have never kissed her*, he was sure that she’d been hurt by his kiss. He’d
taken advantage of a moment full of yearning, and he hoped she didn’t hate him. "I shouldn’t
have done that. Sorry. I…I better go. I have…practice in three hours," he stumbled out, and
got up to leave mumbling a good night without turning back to look at her. If he did, he might have
just tried to kiss her pain away. And that would not have been a good thing to do.

Hermione watched him go as she sat along by the dying fire, tears forming in her eyes as she
clutched Lily’s diary to her heart. Their kiss had felt as perfect as theirs, so why was it that
Harry had run away from her saying that it was a mistake.

*Because he thinks it was.*

°*°

As Harry made his way down the dormitory stairs in full Quidditch gear a whole hour earlier than
he was supposed to, he thought of good ways of avoiding Hermione throughout the day, unfortunately,
that day they all had Duelling Training for most of the day with Dumbledore and Snape (he still
couldn’t believe Dumbledore had been their Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher for the past two
years), so they would be training all day in the same room for hours, but maybe avoiding her
wouldn’t be too hard for everybody from fourth year and up would be there as well.

*God, I’m such a prat!*

In the common room there was enough light to see by since the sun had begun to rise already, but
he didn’t expect to see Hermione fast asleep in the same spot he left her. And most of all he
didn’t expect to see her clutching the diary to herself while the dim sunlight glinted off the wet
tracks that tears had left on her cheeks.

Ok, he was officially the biggest prat ever to walk the Hogwarts’ halls, and the guiltiest one
at that.

In her troubled sleep Hermione mumbled a word, or better a name. "Harry," was the soft
whisper. Okay, *now* he was the guiltiest prat on the face of the planet.

He couldn’t leave her there for the Gryffindor Quidditch team to come down and see her in her
misery. Kneeling in front of her, he brought his lips close to her ear, and whispered, "Wake
up, Hermione," but she didn’t rouse. He tried several more times, but she’d obviously cried
herself to sleep and that must have exhausted her. Looking around to see if anybody might have seen
him, he bent down, putting his arms under her waist and knees and hefted her light weight up,
carrying up the stairs in the way Muggle man carry their new wives across the threshold. Of course,
this would probably be the only time he would ever be able to do this with Hermione.

All too soon he reached the portrait that led to her Head Girl’s room, and whispered the
password. The portrait swung open and he entered the lovely room that had been Hermione’s new home
since the year had started. Walking towards the bed, he gently lowered her onto the mattress, took
off her shoes and cloak, and draped a warm blanket over her body to keep her warm.

He should have left right away, he knew that, but he found himself unable to walk away from her
sleeping form. Soon, he found himself caressing her hair away from her tearstained cheeks. He
sighed deeply, and began to whisper to her what he knew he should have had the courage to say while
she was awake. "I’m sorry, Hermione," he started, "I shouldn’t have done that, I
ruined everything. I really hope you don’t hate me too much," he sighed again, and began to
rub his thumb over her cheek, wiping away the trace of salty tears. "Kissing you…well, it was
the worst thing I’ve ever done…but…I don’t know, it never felt so good…or right…to do the wrong
thing," and then he leaned over to place a feather light kiss on her forehead, one on each of
her eyes, drying her wet lashes, and then, almost not touching at all, he ever so gently placed his
lips over hers.

"I hope I didn’t lose you," his voice was catching in his throat now. "You and
Ron are the most important things in my life. I love you," he finished in the faintest of
whispers. Leaning over, he kissed her lips once more, just as lightly as before, and, after
memorising her sleeping face, walked back out of the bedroom, into the Common Room to retrieve his
Firebolt from where he left it, and headed out to the Gryffindor Memory Garden to work off the
emotional stress that he’d manage to work himself into.

Meanwhile, in the Head Girl’s room, fresh tears managed to work their way down Hermione’s
cheeks.

To be continued.

Coming next chapter:

-Krista asks Ron to Hogsmeade

-Coming back to 5th Lily finds out about her visions being true

-Harry and Hermione talk about her past relationship with Krum and her insecurities

Author’s notes: Well, like I said that was a load of crappy, fluffy mush, but I really enjoyed
writing it, and I hoped you liked reading it, and even if you didn’t remember to leave a review or
email me at Robbygal@hotmail.com. Flames excepted. Go
ahead, I like BBQs.

Pearl Drop Angel



6. Chapter 5: Lily
------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t
know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and himself…or
did she?

Disclaimer: I own nothing. You know it, I know it, so let’s just get over it.

And now: on with the fic

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Chapter 5: Lily’s Promise

Harry was making his way to the Great Hall completely absorbed in his thoughts. That morning,
after having brought Hermione back to her own room, he had managed to avoid her rather
magnificently, but that was just because she didn’t seek him out. Whether to be glad or upset over
this, he didn’t know, so he held a mixture of both.

He’d spent the entire morning, from 5:30 on, in the Gryffindor’s Forever Remember garden, flying
on his trusty Firebolt to get his poor, emotionally abused mind off the girl that haunted his every
waking moment. Of course, to no avail. He kept on seeing her face, her swollen lips, the look of
absolute pain and *fright*—for Merlin’s sake! Fright! —that painted her features after he’d
managed to break away from the spell that her mouth had cast on him.

Yep, avoiding her would have been the best thing to do for a while. Even she seemed to agree
with that thought, for she hadn’t searched for his company all morning even when—he was sure—she
knew perfectly well that he would be perched atop his broom the entire time.

And now, freshly showered and dressed, he was making his way to the end of the Gryffindor table
just as the usual feasting amount of food appeared on the platters. He didn’t need to look to know
exactly where Hermione would be sitting, along with Ron, so he searched an empty place next to
anyone that wouldn’t have found suspicious his sudden need to sit next to them.

The Stalker Mob cleared a lot of seats upon seeing him nearing, but he completely avoided
*that* section of the table and looked on. The Creevy brothers were all sitting together,
Kevin’s thug look completely clashing with his brothers’, and shuddered at the thought of having to
sit with them. They, too, made room for him, and, Harry thought, if worst came to worst, he would
have to settle for them.

Thankfully, however, he found that a seat next to Dean, across from Seamus, was unoccupied. That
would be a good arrangement, nothing wrong with sitting with two roommates, and their seats were
close enough to Ron and Hermione’s so that nothing would seem out of place, but far enough to be
out of immediate hearing range, which was perfect because it would allow him the relief of not
having to acknowledge the two friends that he couldn’t bear to sit next to that precise
morning.

Of course, Ron would have none of that.

Just as Harry was saluting his roommates, the redhead shouted—unnecessarily, for he was only a
few seats away—allowing the entire Great Hall to hear him. "Hey Harry, come over here, we
saved you a seat."

*No, Ron*, he pointed out to himself as he looked over at the pair, *you saved me a
seat*. It was painful, but true. Hermione had stiffened at hearing Ron call his name, and stared
at her plate completely avoiding eye contact with the Boy Who Lived. What was even worse was the
way Ron leaned comfortably with his whole back against Hermione’s side, in complete physical trust
of each other, at ease in one another’s contact.

He understood they didn’t love each other now, but it was like a knife turning in the open wound
at the thought that he would never be able to touch her the same way Ron did, as much as he would
have liked. To Harry, every touch, caress, or any kind of physical contact with her was so special
that he treasured it in small amounts. Greed, like what had taken over him in the earliest hours of
the morning, would destroy any kind of relationship he had and would ever have with her. And,
honestly, it was like an overdose of a very powerful drug.

Hermione was addictive, but so strong that he had to take her in small amounts or suffer the
consequences. Now that he’d tasted her lips, he would suffer withdrawal every moment he was away
from her, but seeking her out would only make it worse. However, he had no choice since fate seemed
not to favour his plan of avoiding her.

"What’s wrong, mate?" Ron asked, his eyebrows knit in serious concern for his
friend.

Harry snapped out of his thoughts. He must have had a look on his face that said: I’m to be
pitied. Well, he didn’t want to be pitied. "Nothing," he replied quickly, and sat in the
seat across from his friend, picking at his plate of food in much the same manner Hermione had been
doing.

Strangely, Harry noticed, Ron seemed to be unawares of his friends’ discomfort and the thick
tension that hung over their heads. He also seemed unaware of the fact that there was food in front
of him, and that he should have been hungrier than usual because of the extremely tiring practice
that he’d endured that morning (at his own hand).

Now, that Ron would be unaware of food, was, to Harry and anyone else who knew the youngest
Weasley male, a clear neon-blinking beacon to worry. Ron was always aware of food.

He was about to ask what was wrong with Ron, when Hermione finally spoke up, her annoyance clear
in her voice. "Instead of staring at her, why don’t you go over and ask her to go to Hogsmeade
with you tomorrow?" It was then that Harry noticed that Ron had been staring at something—or
rather, someone—over at the Ravenclaw table.

Ron was indignant. "Just like that? No way!" And with a humph he turned back in the
direction of the Ravenclaws when his eyes grew wide in horror.

Hermione smirked. "Well, she’s coming over here, at least ask her to sit with us," she
suggested cheekily. If she couldn’t have a happily ever after fairy tale kind of relationship, at
least let her friend have one.

Ron disagreed. "No bloody way!"

But Krista Perril was already at their table, looking, they all noticed, even lovelier than
usual. Obviously, she was trying to catch a certain male’s attention. "Hello, Ron," she
called with a sincere smile, and then as an after thought, "Hermione. Harry." The two had
to bite back the urge to snicker. She was obviously not very aware of their presence, and it seemed
as though she really cared little.

"Hi," Ron called, rather loudly, the way he did when he was nervous or talking to a
particularly pretty girl. At the moment he was both, so his friends weren’t surprised, yet Krista
seemed pleased.

Hermione, managing to stay composed despite the fact that Ron’s uneasiness amused her to no end,
smiled at the girl and cheerfully offered, "Krista, why don’t you sit with us?"

She sat down with a smile and said, "I just finished eating, I won’t stay long, thanks
anyway. Actually I just came to ask Ron something," she admitted, her cheeks flushed a light
pink.

Ron perked up at this and sat up, relieving Hermione of his body’s bulk. When she sighed
heavily, Harry couldn’t help but smile at her. In return she blushed, and looked back down at her
plate, a pretty smile gracing her lips. *Not all hope is lost*, they both thought.

"What?" Ron asked eagerly, sitting at the edge of his seat. Oh, yeah, Harry and
Hermione had forgotten about him and Krista and their little exchange.

"Would you come to Hogsmeade with me tomorrow?" Ron was shocked at this, and didn’t
bother to hide it as he opened and closed his mouth in a rather convincing imitation of a
goldfish.

"Huh?" He very intelligently and eloquently put.

"I need your help with something," she replied shyly, but they all understood that the
only way Ron would be providing her with anything useful would have been for him to give her a
lovely day as her company.

"Okay," he mumbled, as he gained back some semblance of speech and rational
thinking.

"Great!" She exclaimed as her smile became radiantly blinding. "I’ll see you in
Training in a few hours then," she saluted, getting up and walking toward the Great Hall
door.

Watching her, mesmerized, "I’ve got a date with Krista," he whispered whimsically.
This was a dream. It was far too good to be true. Things that wonderful didn’t happen to Ron
Weasley. They happened to everyone else, but not Ron Weasley. He silently prayed for a sign that
would tell him this was true.

"It’s a miracle!" Hermione exclaimed jovially as she gave Ron’s shoulder a slight
shove all the while giving him a proud smile. Oh, Merlin! It was true! In dreams Hermione didn’t
make fun of him the way she just did, and the shove felt real, so this must have been reality!

"When did this happen?" Harry asked confused. He remembered the encounter the two had
in the library the day before, but when did things change that much?

Ron seemed as confused as he while giving him a shrug. "I don’t know," he started,
"it just kind of clicked," he replied.

Again Hermione gave him a playful shove. "Are you planning on leaving your lady alone up
until tomorrow?" She asked in a way that much resembled Mrs. Weasley’s.

"Uh…" Ron put in again.

"Go take her for a walk or something, you git!" She hissed loudly, pushing him out of
his seat and towards the door, where he saw Krista making her way toward the great front door of
the castle, probably with the intention of taking a walk, as Hermione had said. Well, he wasn’t
going to let the know-it-all tell him twice. Without second thought to his friends or his uneaten
lunch he raced after the blonde, calling her name.

"Yes, Ron?" She asked, confused, and worried he might have already thought against
going on a date with her.

"Um…" he began loquaciously. His hand rubbed the back of his head as his freckles
stood out against his blushing cheeks. "Do you…want to take a walk around the lake with me or
something?" He stuttered nervously.

Again, that pretty, sunny smile of hers graced her lips. "I’d love to," and so without
a word they made their way outside. They were quiet until they reached the water bank of the lake
and started to walk its perimeter and Krista spoke. "How’s it going with those two?" She
asked curiously.

Ron blinked. It took him a second to realize that she’d just asked of Harry and Hermione. He was
too intent on pondering his luck. "Oh," he mumbled, his elation dropping a notch. "I
don’t know, today they’re weird. I think something happened last night," he concluded,
speaking more to himself, than to the girl beside him.

"Why do you think that?" Krista asked with knit eyebrows. Having always paid attention
to all three members of the Trio, she was usually pretty aware of any change in their mood or
behavior just by looking at them, but that morning she’d been more preoccupied in getting her guts
together to ask Ron to Hogsmeade.

"Well, this morning, I went down to the garden, to warm up for Quidditch practice. Being
Captain I usually make sure I’m the first one there, but this morning I wasn’t. Harry was already
there doing all kinds of crazy stunts. I mean, he’s usually pretty reckless, so it wasn’t
surprising that he was doing those sort of things, and I’m glad because if he didn’t he wouldn’t be
the machine that he is, but usually, he saves the real moves for the games, and only practices a
couple a day," he explained.

"And today?" She encouraged him.

"He was just…going all out! I mean, he wasn’t holding anything back! And he was covered in
sweat all the way through his robes, so I’m guessing he’d been there for at least an hour.
Something happened," he told her. "He only does that when he wants to let out some
frustration," he explained. "And today…today he was a monster! He caught the Snitch seven
times in two hours! That’s got to be like a world record or something! And he wouldn’t stop! All
through practice he wouldn’t take a break, and even when we finished practice, he wouldn’t leave
the garden. When he came down to lunch just now his hair was wet," he mused, demonstrating
that, even though he ignored his food, he didn’t ignore his friends. He just made it look like he
ignored them. "That probably means that he just finished taking a quick shower before running
down to lunch, and what’s worse it that he didn’t eat anything at all, even after all those hours
of flying," he finished, now seriously starting to worry that his friends were ruining
themselves in the stupid game of ‘I’m not going to admit I love him/her.’

Krista had to admire him for that. One of the reasons for which Harry and Hermione had been so
miserable the last couple of years had been Ron, but he cared for his friends, and now that he knew
he only thought of Hermione as a sister, he was completely aware of the pain he’d caused and was
ready to make amends by helping them. He was truly worried, so she took his hand, giving it a
gentle squeeze in support. "And what of Hermione?"

He took a deep sigh. Before answering he thought for a second. "When I got back from
practice I wanted to ask her if Harry’s behavior had something to do with his Mum’s diary, but I
couldn’t find her anywhere. She wasn’t in the Memory Garden to watch us practice, which isn’t
really that weird since she only comes and watches us every once in a while, for the important
games and stuff, and she wasn’t in the common room or in the library, or any of her other usual
spots. I even checked Moaning Myrtle’s bathroom," he told her exasperated.

She quirked an eyebrow at this. "Moaning Myrtle’s bathroom?" She asked both confused
and amused at once.

Remembering she didn’t know the story he brushed it aside, "Oh, I’ll tell you that some
other time, it’s a really long story," and he continued on to his friends’ actions.
"Anyway, since I didn’t know where to look I checked her room, and she was there, still
asleep. She was clutching that bloody diary and she was crying," he told her.

She gasped at hearing this. "She was crying in her sleep?" And, as she saw Ron’s nod,
she remembered Hermione’s exhausted eyes and tired demeanor, despite her cheery attitude toward
her.

Ron went on. "Anyway, I woke her up, but then she started acting weird. She wouldn’t talk
to me; she shoved me out of the room saying she needed to get ready for lunch, even if lunch was
pretty far off. I think she wanted to just eat as fast as she could and run off without meeting
Harry, since he’s usually always kind of late to lunch anyway. Might have worked, too, if the elves
hadn’t served so late today," he explained. "You should have seen her stiffen up when I
called to Harry to come and sit with us. Neither of them ate anything, and they wouldn’t look at
each other for anything," he finished.

Krista now wished she hadn’t asked to begin with. She knew that Ron felt guilty over the fact
that he’d caused so much distress to his own friends, and she knew that, now, he wanted to help
them along. But she, as well as he, knew that there was something holding them back. Something that
scared them. She also knew that the previous night something must have happened to enhance those
fears in one or the other, or maybe even both of the two.

"I hope they straighten things out," she whispered out loud.

"Yeah, me too," Ron mumbled.

She looked up at him. He was miserable. "Don’t worry," she reassured him, placing her
arms around his lean waist, marveling at how sharp and chiseled he was. "If they can’t work
things out for themselves, we’ll help them along, now won’t we?" She asked him rhetorically, a
cheeky grin on her face.

She was contagious. He grinned, too, lowering his face to her level as to place his forehead
against hers, leaning his arms on her shoulder, "I don’t think you’re leaving me much of a
choice, here, now are you?" He joked.

She gave a pretty little shrug, "Maybe," she replied, and her grin broadened,
"but would you refuse me even if you did?"

She definitely knew him far too well.

Without waiting for his response she brought her lips to meet his for the first time. *I
couldn’t refuse you if I tried*, Ron answered mentally.

°*°

Though it would be expected that Ron’s sudden departure would leave behind eerie and
uncomfortable silence, this was not the case. As a matter of fact, the Great Hall was in a complete
state of chaos as it was discovered that the delay in the delivery of everyone’s meal had been a
lovely little blue bundle of trouble known as Cicciobello.

After he’d drawn a rather fantastic imitation of the Venus de Milo on Snape’s chest (many did
not appreciate having to watch the doll forcefully undressing the living mozzarella that was their
Potions professor) despite the greasy man’s desperate attempts at evasion, he was now performing
the most unlikely striptease for McGonagall and Trelawney while Dumbledore looked on amused. Turned
out the ancient headmaster was quite fond of the devil that possessed the plastic doll.

Even Harry and Hermione, who had been, up until a few moments earlier, wallowing in their own
self-pity, had to laugh at what was going on. Professor McGonagall seemed particularly shocked at
what was taking place as she couldn’t take her eyes off the Cicciobello, which was dancing a rather
unusual sort of slow bump and grind to Joe Cocker’s "You can leave your hat on." Nobody
knew where the music was coming from, and only the Muggle raised knew the tune, but nobody really
cared.

Harry found himself giving Hermione a wide grin, which she returned shyly. Yes, The Kiss had
strained what they’d had quite a bit, but it could still be mended, and Hermione was the first to
try. "Do you want to read some more?" she asked, referring to the diary.

"Common room’s going to be full until the Training starts," he answered
reasonably.

She thought for a second. "We could go to my room," she said boldly, hoping that Harry
wouldn’t take this the wrong way. *Which is the wrong way, anyway?*

Harry seemed surprised at first, but then, standing up and nodding, he mumbled an
"Okay" and they made their way to the Gryffindor tower.

Hermione’s room was warm and welcoming, but there weren’t many places where two people could sit
close enough to read a diary together. There was only one chair, which she kept at her study desk,
and her window seat could only fit one person. That only left her bed, which was big enough to hold
an army troop, but was she ready to sit on that bed alone with Harry? Oh, Merlin, was she thinking
like a fool! She’d been on a bed with Harry countless times in their friendship, why would now be
any different? Because she was in love with him? Bloody hell! She’d always been in love with him,
so what was different now? Absolutely nothing.

With this resolve, she sat at the head of her bed with her legs crossed Indian style, leaving
quite a bit of space on her side so that Harry could sit close to her, but not dangerously so. He
did so, laying down with his head on one of her fluffy pillows, his body stretched out and his legs
crossed at the ankle.

There, same as always, they both thought, trying to ignore the physical tension.

Shaking her head, Hermione began to read.

*September 1*

*Today, I came back to Hogwarts for my fifth year, but my excitement was considerably dampened
today. Not only because of what happened with James last year (I still can’t believe I actually
KISSED HIM!), but my worry still lies with him.*

*I’ve had visions this summer. Of course, the werewolf, and the Marauders with the animals
were still there, but this summer a new one haunted me, full of pain and despair. And it was eerily
clear. I think my vision came as the event was happening, if it was happening.*

*And it was a vision I had while I was awake, therefore stronger than others. It sent me into
a trance for quite a long time, worrying my parents to death.*

*It showed me James, despairing, howling in pain, crying out to people as an estate burned in
front of him. He called out to his parents, to his sister, telling them that he would avenge them,
telling them that he wouldn’t let them down. Sirius was there, holding him back from possibly
running head first into the flames, as he angrily shouted at the Black Mark that glowed above,
brighter then the flames, his mouth releasing threats and curses and angered shouts. And he cried,
horrible, thick, desperate tears that couldn’t be held back and couldn’t sooth him or appease him
in any way.*

*And I felt it all. His anger, his despair, the sorrow for the little girl that would never
live to see Hogwarts, or buy her first wand, or receive her first kiss. The mourning for his
parents and all those of his kin.*

*I don’t know how he made it out, but he was the only one left.*

*I didn’t see James on the Hogwarts Express, or heading toward the horse-less carriages, but I
saw him at the Sorting Ceremony. He was there, with the rest of the Marauders, saluting the new
Gryffindors, talking, joking, eating, and laughing. But when he turned and saw me…I don’t know what
he must have thought, but he became sad, and then angry (at himself I think) and turned away from
me. But his eyes were empty, and they had been so even before his sudden change of mood. I’m afraid
my vision was true. His family is gone. Dead.*

*We didn’t speak at all tonight.*

They read of how, for days, James avoided her, of how, the day after their return, she tried to
speak to him, and he ran off with weak excuses.

*I had another vision of James and their animals, this time different. Instead of being at the
Whomping Willow, they were in front of the Shrieking Shack in Hogsmeade. Remus, Sirius, and Peter
weren’t there anymore, but the wolf, the dog, and the mouse were, and they were all looking at
James expectantly.*

*He turned to me, and gave me the saddest of smiles, then, he turned back to his deer, next to
him as always, and melted into the creature until there was no more James, he’d bonded with the
deer that was now looking at me the same way James had been. And then the deer stood on its hind
legs, turning up to scream at the full moon, before running off in Hogsmeade followed by the rest
of animals.*

*I can’t be sure of its meaning, but it scares me, most of all because, when I woke up in the
middle of the night, a full moon watched me sympathetically from outside the window.*

James’s avoidance of her had lasted now a whole of five weeks, and Lily was becoming dangerously
worried. Finally, one day, she managed to get him alone after classes and before lunch, set on
confronting him.

*He looked upset, but I wasn’t going to let this stupid game play on until we became total
strangers. "Are you upset with me because I kissed you?" I didn’t think that was the
case, but I wanted to know about that, too.*

*He shook his head slowly and said in a quiet monotone, "No." I’d never heard James
speak like that before. So empty of life and vitality. So unlike him, who shone as brightly as the
sun with the vivacity of someone who blessed every breath his life permitted him to take.*

*But I shook my head to clear my mind. "Why are you avoiding me?" Oh, Merlin! Why
did I have to say it with such a depressed, beaten voice? Okay, yes, his avoidance of me was
driving me mad, but he didn’t need to acknowledge it any more than he already certainly
did.*

*He stared at me for a long time, and I was afraid I might have offended him in some
way.*

*"Because," he finally spoke, "I hate it that when you look at me I don’t feel
so mad and angry anymore," and that was all he had to say.*

*Maybe it was because I always defended him, and helped him when he was in need, but I was a
soothing presence in his life, and that hindered his chance at hating whatever had—now I was
certain—killed his family and left him an orphan full of hatred.*

*I couldn’t say anything after that, because the words to sooth him hadn’t been invented yet,
so I wrapped my arms around his tall lanky frame and held him close to me. He wouldn’t hold me in
return, at least not right away, but soon I felt him shaking in my embrace, and as he began crying,
he held onto me so tightly that it felt as though I was his only link to his sanity, and he began
to sob. The loud, uncontainable sobs of someone who has nothing left in the world but this and his
wish to bring peace to his family who was gone.*

*And as I held him, I made a promise to myself, that I am now leaving in this diary in proof
of my determination. I’m going to make him live again. I’m going to bring the light back into his
eyes and let him know that he’s not alone, and that, even if he doesn’t love me, even if he had a
girlfriend now, I’ll always love him, and I’ll always be there for him to bring that life loving
smile of his back to his face.*

*But as I held him, I had the horrible sense of foreboding that sometimes washed over me, and
it was telling me that we, both of us, and probably together, would die at the hands of Voldemort,
the Dark Lord.*

*But, even if that is the case, I don’t care. As short as our lives will be (hopefully not
that short) I promise onto everything that is holy and important in my life that I will make him
live the life that most would not achieve in thousands of years.*

*I promise.*

Harry and Hermione were quiet for a long time, marveling at the selfless love she had for James,
at how she wished for him to be happy no matter what, despite the fact that he already had someone
to love him (although, to Harry and Hermione, it felt as though he’d become Kiana’s boyfriend
simply to avoid Lily).

And in the thoughtful silence the SLAM of Ron opening the portrait hole while pushing it open
hard enough to make it bang and nearly crack against the wall almost produced the couple residing
the room a good stroke.

Sauntering in, he made his way to the bed and threw himself down with a contented sigh.

"And why are you here?" Hermione asked icily in a way of greeting. She was really
getting annoyed at how Ron always barged in at the most inopportune time, interrupting cathartic
moments that she wished she could treasure without the memory of him yelling, or banging doors, or
sighing deeply while looking like the love sick puppy he was.

Her question brought Ron, slightly, back to his senses. "Training’s going to start
soon," he told them in reply.

Oh. Harry and Hermione had practically forgotten about that. Not that they didn’t enjoy watching
Dumbledore as he taught them how to ward off Death Eater spells and counter curses and the like
while using Snape as a demonstration dummy. They were just wrapped up in other things to
remember.

Neither of the two was really listening to the entire enthralling retailing of Ron’s first kiss
with Krista, but when he moved on to the second, third, fourth, fifth, and on, Harry started to get
a little annoyed. He grabbed the pillow behind his head and whacked Ron’s freckled nose with it.
The red head sputtered an indignant "Hey!", and reached for two pillows, one which he
used for Harry, the other for Hermione.

Needless to say, this instigated an all out pillow fight. Laughs, giggles, and harmless taunts
were thrown around amongst the feathers ripping out of the cushions, as the threesome enjoyed
their, now, fully mended friendship.

A particularly strong whacking from Harry’s pillow threw Ron off balance, and he fell on top of
Hermione, while she laughed and punched him and called him a pervert. Harry fell back on the bed
laughing next to her, and Ron jumped at the opportunity that had presented itself to him.

"Wrong guy, Mione, I’m already taken," he called out laughing, and pulling himself up,
grabbed Harry and pushed him on top of her.

The couple stopped laughing instantly, and, despite the fact that Harry seemed to be frozen to
the spot, their eyes wondered everywhere, but tried desperately not to stray onto each other’s
faces.

Harry was glad for Ron’s presence, because his barely restrained giggles gave him enough sense
to push off and say, "Let’s go to training."

And this stopped even Ron’s laughter.

Yep, he realized, something definitely had passed on between the two the previous night. But
what? Neither of them seemed ready to speak yet, and they probably wouldn’t for a very long time
either.

He walked the halls several paces ahead of them, trying to give them the privacy they needed,
but he was pretty sure it was to no avail.

Behind him, their silence was deafening, to the two of them most of all. Hermione kept on
fidgeting, trying to gather the courage to take his hand for the length of the walk, but never
managing to. She kept on chastening herself, saying that she’d held his hands plenty of times, but
the look on Harry’s face as he was sprawled on top of her, and the pain, etched into his feature
after he’d torn his lips away from hers a few hours prior kept on haunting her.

"Why did you break it off with Krum?" Harry asked suddenly out of the blue. In front
of them, Ron accidentally jammed his toe against one of the steps as his step faltered at Harry’s
question. That subject had been taboo since Hermione had first announced her break up, and made it
perfectly clear that neither of them was to bring up the subject again.

Ron noted, however, that she hadn’t seemed offended. After a moment’s silence she spoke. "I
already told you Harry, that my diary wrote of someone else at that time. I couldn’t stay with him,
when I was in love with another," she replied.

Harry had guessed she’d say something like that, but the question had burst out of him in the
midst of his jumbled thoughts. "Who?" Doh! He was mentally jamming his head against a
wall the second he’d said that. Argh! His thoughts needed to calm down. Each time a stray mental
question passed his mind, his mouth got away from him.

She was surprised that he asked. She opened her mouth to speak, but closed it when no sound came
out. She tried again, but the result didn’t change. Why couldn’t she just say it? Why couldn’t she
tell him that she was in love with him? Maybe this just wasn’t the right time, she thought as she
looked at Ron ahead of her.

Finally, she spoke. "I’m…not ready to say it…yet," she concluded.

Harry knit his eyebrows but nodded in understanding. "Okay," he mumbled. "I’m
sorry," he apologized for prying.

She felt the compelling need to explain herself. "I’m afraid I’m not good enough for
him."

Harry looked at her in surprise. "Hermione," he started, "you’re the best."
He told her. "Whoever he is, you’re too good for *him*. And if he doesn’t realize that
he’s a prat," he told her.

She didn’t say anything, only turned her gaze to the floor and kept walking behind Ron. *I
know that you’re too good for me*, he told her with his mind, but she didn’t hear him.

To be continued.

Author’s note: I received a lot of complaints about Ron being evil in my story. I’m sorry, it
was not my intention to make him seem so. I tried to write him off as bitter of what Harry and
Hermione were developing, and scared of ending up to be the third wheel, but apparently I failed.
I’m sorry, but I hope he’s redeeming himself in your eyes now.

Any comments, constructive criticism, or flames welcome at Robbygal@hotmail.com, or simply leave
a review at ff.net. Go ahead, I’ll just have a BBQ.

Thank you

Pearl



7. Chapter 6: Truths and confrontations
---------------------------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans
didn't know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and
himself.or did she?

I truly, seriously believe this chapter's absolute crap Thank you. And thanks to the wonderful
reviewers. ^_^

Disclaimer: I own nothing, well no, not true. I own a lot in this…I just don’t feel like listing
it. Since that's over with: on with the fic:

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Chapter 6: Truths and confrontations

Harry and Hermione were completely absorbed in a rather lovely study session in the library in
sight of their not-so-far-off N.E.W.T.s during that grey windy mid December day when they noticed
Ron sauntering in the way he'd been wont to do after one of his hallway run-ins with Krista.
They both did notice, however, when they looked up at his beaming freckled face, that he seemed
even more pleased than usual.

Knowing fully well what was coming, they both placed their quills down after finishing the
sentence, crossed their arms over the study desk's hard surface and waited for the redhead to
announce whatever new romantic revelation had hit him. They watched in silence as he sat down
across from them without bothering to get his school things out, crossed his arms in front of him,
and simply beamed at them.

This must have been a particularly good revelation, if he was so itching to say out loud, but
excited enough to make his friends guess.

Not that his friends cared all that much for Krista Perril's exciting everyday conversation
(the word-for-word retelling interesting them even less) but they'd long ago learned to humor
the most temperamental third of their group.

Finally, after much staring (and after Hermione was sure that Ron's cheek muscles must have
frozen in place from all that incessant grinning) she spoke up, annoyed. "Are we going to sit
like this all day, or are you finally going to let us get back to our studying after your
wonderfully loquacious recounting of Krista Perril's romantic phrasings?"

At this Ron grinned even wider. "I'm going to be away this Christmas. I'm taking part
of an important Chess tournament in Diagon Alley," he pronounced finally.

Both Harry and Hermione blinked confused. They had already been told of this, and that particular
topic hadn't reached the list of expected ramblings.

After more blinking Hermione decided to incite him, "And?"

If Ron kept grinning like that his face was going to split in two. "And Krista's coming
with me," he told them enthusiastically, completely ignoring Madame Pince's reprimanding
shush.

Oh, now it made sense. "Glad to hear it Ron, but what will your parents say?"

Ron shrugged. "Ginny agreed to tell them that Krista's coming with her as a friend,"
he shrugged again. "Don't care so long as she comes," he decided finally and his
friends went back to congratulating him a little more, and, after concluding that Ron had been
adulated enough, simultaneously picked up their quills to go back to their essays.

The redhead watched the pair, thinking that the two had been spending way to much time together. By
now they were probably sharing brains—which, for Harry, would be a good thing when the N.E.W.T.s
rolled around—but they didn't seem too happy to only be studying together in the moments in
which they weren't glued to Lily's diary (both he and Hermione had taken to using her first
name). "What are you doing for Christmas?" He asked, not wanting to get into study mode
yet (not that he ever would be in actual study mode). The question might have seemed directed at
both, but since it was common knowledge that Harry wouldn't go back to the Dursleys unless he
had absolutely no choice (and after meeting them on their way to King's Cross he finally
understood why), it was an understatement that Hermione was the only one in need to answer.

She looked at him, and then at Harry, wondering if she should tell them what she was about to, but,
figuring that they would find out anyhow, she decided to tell them. "Well, my parents are
going to an orthodontists' convention in Hawaii," Ron gawked at her at this point,
"but I decided to stay here instead, you know, give them a good vacation of their own,"
she finished offhandedly with every intention of going back to her essay.

Ron had other plans however. "WHAT?!" He screeched loudly, getting another reprimand from
Madam Pince and just about the rest of the Hogwarts population littering the library. He didn't
acknowledge them, yet lowered his volume to a decent tone anyway. "But it's Hawaii!"
He exclaimed. She shrugged, and his mouth dropped open in shock. "You have a chance to get
away from this icy hell and get your arse tanned in bloody HAWAII, and you're staying
HERE?!" His screeches were at least whispered this time.

She shrugged again. "So, I'll have plenty of chances to go there on my own after I
graduate," she shrugged yet another time.

"But it's Hawaii!" Ron repeated his whispered screech.

This time Hermione chose to ignore him and focus on her essay. She found it rather hard, however,
when Harry was looking at her confused, and, maybe, even a little dismayed.

°*°

Harry was sitting alone in the common room after hours, waiting for Hermione to be back from her
inspection rounds completely set in the decision of clearing out what had transpired in the
library, so when she stepped through the portrait hole and saluted her he stated: "You knew
about him leaving for Christmas," in way of greeting. He'd said it matter- of-factly, as a
statement, rather than as a question.

She stood looking at him quietly for a while, wondering what he could possibly think of the truth
he'd just spoken. "Yes," she replied uncertainly.

"And you stayed so I wouldn't be alone," he stated again. His voice was cold and
expressionless, and it made her lose the certainty that she was doing the right thing in staying.
Her nod was small, guilty, and even a little scared, but it communicated her determination against
the idea of leaving.

Harry took a deep breath, trying to think of the best way to convince her to change her mind. The
feat was already desperate when the matter at hand was of a lesser cause, but this was practically
condemned to begin with. Still, he had to try. "Don't sacrifice a fun Christmas for me,
Hermione. Just knowing that you care is more than enough for me," he told her, his eyes set on
her, and he'd spoken the truth, it meant the world to him to know that she cared.

Hermione's eyebrows knit in determination. "It's not sacrifice, Harry," she told
him, "I want to stay." In explanation she offered, "Next year I won't be here
anymore."

"Yeah," Harry mumbled, looking away from her and into the crackling fire. The following
year, Hogwarts wouldn't be his home anymore. What would happen then?

She made her way next to him on the couch in deep thought. "What do you plan to do?" She
asked, probably on the same train of thought he'd been on.

"Find a place away from the Dursleys and start Auror training, I guess," he replied
offhandedly. They were both already discussed topics. What was Hermione going to do, though?
She'd never said much about the future.

"I've been accepted for training, too," she told him quietly.

He was about to reply, 'Oh, that's nice', when the words settled in his numb mind.
"WHAT?!" He shouted much like Ron had done previously that day. He wasn't worried
about people hearing him. Nobody would make a fuss if Harry Potter decided to become an Auror,
after all, his destiny had been to fight against evil practically since he was born. Hermione
Granger, smartest witch on the face of the planet, lovely Muggle born, and love of his life,
however, was a different matter all together.

She shrugged, hoping to assuage Harry out of his angry stupor. "I asked to enter their
research team, but I have to pass the physical training as well for it, as a precaution," she
explained quietly, desperately hoping that Harry would understand. And he did.

He just wouldn't accept it.

He'd shot tons of reasons at her for changing her mind. There were other fields in which she
could adapt well and make a better living for herself. There were safer situations. There were
causes that needed her attention more than the Aurors.

"It's too dangerous Hermione!" He yelled finally. During his listing of better
positions his voice had risen in a continuous crescendo as she kept on giving counter-reasons to
back up her decision until it had been punctuated by that last shout that set her blood a
boil.

Her nose and her lips were swollen, her complexion red and blotchy, a muscle in her cheek twitching
in anger. Harry saw it, but chose to ignore it. "Now, listen to me, Harry Potter, and listen
well, for I will only say it once, and I will not go back on my decision," her voice had
started out low and with an angry quiver, but rose with every word she spoke. "I have been
with you every. Bloody. Step. Of the way. I will NOT stop now. Do you understand that,
Harry?!"

Her loud statement of the truth had only released the real reason for why Harry did not wish for
her to go. "I don't want TO LOSE YOU!"

"YOU CAN'T!" Her final shout had been so loud that her voice had echoed off the walls
of the empty room, giving a finality to her statement that couldn't be ignored and left no room
for words. Only a thick, uncomfortable tension that ran between the two, leaving them with uneven
breaths and disheveled thoughts.

Harry tried several times to reply as his mouth opened and closed continuously, making him seem a
fish out of water. He cleared his throat, tried again, and failed again. He tore his gaze from her.
In the midst of their arguing they'd stood up in front of each other so close together that
their toes were touching. It might have been intimidating while shouting. Now, it was unsettling.
He finally spoke, but his eyes didn't turn to her. "Look, Hermione," he began
threading his fingers with hers. "I'm sorry. I know you could defeat Voldemort and all the
Death Eaters on your own if you wished to, and the Bureau needs you, but I don't know what
I'd do if something were to happen to you," he admitted finally, terrified to realize that
his voice was now raspy and as shaky as the fingers that held hers, a thick lump in his throat
making his breathing difficult.

Her vision blurred as the truth that she already knew was revealed, but she had to make him see.
"Harry," her voice quivered even more than his, "I risk just as much, if not more,
just sitting and waiting for a Death Eater to come and get me. I'm Mudblood," she reminded
him. It hurt to say the obscenity, but it was true. Harry deserved better.

"You're the best witch alive, Hermione," he told her, giving her hand a gentle
squeeze, making her look at him. "Your blood has nothing to do with it. It's all mind and
heart," and the sentence was just as final as Hermione's previous shout.

They didn't know how, but they ended up kissing again. It wasn't passionate or mind blowing
or ground shaking, or at least it wasn't meant to. It was meant to be reassuring from one to
the other and back, yet the ground shook just a little, and their mind had been only slightly
winded, or so they told themselves. It was long lingering and sweet, and both of them treasured the
moment because they knew, as though it were a mutual agreement, that they would both ignored it had
ever happened.

As they parted with a gentle goodnight and reached their beds they both understood that they had
needed that kiss just as much-if not, more-than the one that had anticipated it, but neither was
ready to face what it could bring, for as things were at the moment, they were safe, and there was
already so much change ahead of them. They didn't need to change what they had just yet.

And, with those lies they had taught themselves over the last few months they warred the night for
sleep, losing their battle and hours of rest.

°*°

As Harry and Hermione expected, they had been the only two Gryffindors left in Hogwarts for the
holidays. There were reasons for this, of course. The students didn't feel safe knowing that
the infestation of the Quidditch field might be growing with the help of Cicciobello. Many wanted a
rest from the aforementioned satanic doll. Others, mostly Muggle born students, didn't wish to
stay among the wizarding folk during that period of the year. And there was, of course, the matter
that destiny was desperately trying to push them in a direction that, they'd both realized,
they weren't ready to undertake quite yet. Too many things were stopping them.

So that left the two of them, with other thirteen peers, sharing the same table for the holiday
meals. Three Ravenclaws, four Hufflepuffs, and six Slytherins. One of those just happened to be
Malfoy, even if it seemed that his missing lackeys hadn't followed their boss quite as much in
the school term as they might have earlier years.

In all honesty, they didn't give a bloody who was there. They'd managed to not spend too
much time one with the other (not that they were openly ignoring each other, no), but what now,
when there would be only the two of them in the common room or on any other Gryffindor ground?
Spending the holiday as hermits didn't seem like a great idea to either of the two, so they
just went on with things as usual, acting as though things had never changed. How was it that so
far only Krista and Ron had caught on? Must have been just one of life's mysteries, they
guessed.

In any case, they were now seated at the table, two brave lonely Gryffindors, being squared by six
Slytherins who so hated the both of them.

This was prospecting to be a wonderful Christmas.

Thankfully, one of the Ravenclaws, and a Hufflepuff, were Quidditch players, so, involving both
Harry, and, when possible, Malfoy-hostile as he might have been-they managed to get a pretty
civilized conversation going, centered around the aforementioned sport.

One of the Hufflepuffs, at a certain point, managed to steer the conversation onto Ginny Weasley,
since Harry and Hermione were both so close to her. "She was going out with one of my mates,
but she up and broke with him right before leaving for holiday and now he's into one of those
'I hate all women' crisis," he explained. He was obviously going to ask for advice, or
at least their opinion, but he was interrupted by a sneering voice.

"Serves him right for shagging a Weasley," there was no need to clarify who the sneer
might have belonged to. Malfoy.

"Actually, she wouldn't shag him," the Hufflepuff countered.

"What a prude!" Was Malfoy's huffed reply.

Another annoyed voice joined the conversation. "She happens to be in love with someone
else," Hermione spit at him.

He huffed. "Right," he mumbled sarcastically. Hermione, however, detected the jealousy
and uncertainty in his voice.

"He's a Slytherin," she decided to explain, "she tries to forget him with other
boys, but when things get deep she feels guilty and turns back," she finished sadly. She
herself had done much the same thing when she'd discovered her true feelings for Harry.

Malfoy's face became an ugly purple sneer. "She should!" He snapped, referring to
Ginny Weasley's attempt at forgetting the Mystery Slytherin. "No Slytherin would ever get
with a Gryffindor. Much less that one," there was so much venom in his voice that Hermione
felt a quiver of fear overrun her spine. But she knew better. She guessed that was just his way of
dealing with such matters.

Crossing her arms over her chest and wearing a mask of defiance she let him know exactly what she
thought of his childish behavior, and it didn't take much at all to do that. "If I
didn't know you better," she began, "I'd say you were jealous,
Malfoy."

He didn't reply, but she noticed that his left eyebrow was twitching in anger. He just stood
and left without a word or a look back. The rest of the Slytherins looked ready to pounce on
Hermione for what she'd said, so Harry took her wrist and half dragged her towards the library
with an unnecessary, "Lets go."

They reached the library a short time later and went to the secluded table where they had left
their studying supplies, along with Lily's diary, before heading to lunch. Hermione had a tall
stack of books piled up, most of them-strangely enough-seemed to be about Divination. Walking
around the table to sit next to the Leaning Tower of Books she pushed the diary toward Harry.
"You read for now, Harry," she commended, "I have something I want to check
into," she explained. It had been a while that one of Lily's premonitions had been tugging
at the back of her mind. It was the one about the boy with the lightning shaped squiggle on his
forehead-Harry, there was no doubt of that-and his light. It just sounded so familiar, and she knew
it was of great importance, but she just couldn't remember where else she might have read
something of the sort.

Harry wasn't too happy of the idea of reading the diary himself, he'd gotten so used to
Hermione's voice retelling his mother's thoughts that it would seem strange to him
otherwise. However, he shrugged. He knew very well that when she began a research nothing was to
get in her way. Least of all: him.

One of the very first entries that he read was another one of "Lightning Boy" as
she'd playfully begun to call him, and, immediately, Hermione dropped her quill and gave Harry
her full attention, hoping for something more, some other clue to indicate where she had to take
her research, but to no avail. This vision had even less details than the ones before it. Maybe it
was because it regarded the future, and not the present or past-as most of the others seemed to-but
her visions of Harry were not very clear at all.

Many of the other entries were regarding Jenna and the help that she was lending Lily in the
dealing of James and his jealous girlfriend Kiana (who had figured out almost instantly that she
wasn't the first in James's heart). Hermione listened only half heartedly as she was
pouring over the tomes discussing a topic she cared absolutely nothing about. She was thankful that
Lily, despite her powers, had not taken Divination as one of her subjects. Maybe her "Inner
Eye" told her ahead of time what a crock that course actually was.

An interesting retelling came up after a Prefects' Meeting in which Lily had an argument over
James Potter with one Severus Snape. Recently, he'd been popping up a lot more in her
diary.

*I don't know, exactly, why Severus is so set against James, but today he spoke things that
made me doubt someone that I thought I would never doubt. I know what he said is not true, but I
can't help but wonder.

It all started right after the meeting was over and we were heading back to our Common Rooms. Even
if the are on opposite sides of the school, strangely enough we had a long path to walk together,
and so we filled up the time with distant cold conversation. We are of opposite houses, after
all.

When he steered the conversation onto James, I knew he was going to say something horrible about
him, he always does, but when he called him a criminal I saw red.

I yelled at him there, in the middle of the hall, uncaring if it was deserted or not (thank God it
was), and I gave him quite the piece of my mind of what I thought of James and of him. I told him
he didn't know anything about James, what he was like or what he thought or even who he was.
All he knew was the prankster that liked to torture Slytherins for fun. Like they didn't do the
same to us.

I think I was yelling, but I couldn't be sure, all I know is that when I was done (quite a
while later) my throat was hoarse and he looked unscathed. I'm sure he's aware of what I
feel for James (he even said he saw me the night I kissed him, and the time he cried in my arms
over the loss of his family) and he probably thinks that I'm blinded because of them.

For a while he didn't say anything. Then, "I wonder if your trust in him is so well
placed."

I don't know how, but my voice was hard and icy when I replied him. "Oh, believe me,
Severus. It is."

"Do you, by any chance, know where he disappears every month with the rest of his
followers?"

That stopped me in my tracks. My visions had given me indications of where he might be, or even
what he might be doing, but their meaning was still eluding me, probably because I'm not ready
to face it. I know James isn't a criminal, but I can't prove it to Snape. I shook my head
no.

He repeated that maybe my trust was badly placed and walked off, leaving me with these doubts that
are plaguing me. Where is it that James goes, and what does he do? Why can't he tell me? And
why, for the love of him, does he come back with scratches and bruises?

I wish I knew.*
Harry and Hermione were quiet for a few seconds, and then Hermione spoke. "As scary as the
thought may be, Harry," she ventured, "Snape sounds interested in your mom."

A visible shudder coursed through Harry's body. "That is scary!" He exclaimed, but
then knit his eyebrows in thought. "But it can't be," he said mostly to himself.
"I don't think he'd hate me so much if he did."

"Think about it, Harry," Hermione tried to reason. "You're your father's
portrait. What if he didn't hate your father because of what happened at the Shrieking Shack,
but because your mom loved him regardless?" She asked in thought. Why did she always have to
make such sound assumptions?

Harry desperately tried to find a fault in her reasoning. "You don't think that's
possible, right?" He asked, knowing that she wouldn't have brought it up if she hadn't
thought it a probability.

"I don't know, it's plausible," she mumbled, "but why would he have turned
Death Eater if he fancied a Muggle Born? It doesn't make sense under that aspect."

Harry's face lit up at that. "Good!" He exclaimed. "I don't like that
idea."

A new voice broke in. "How can you know Snape's a Death Eater?" They turned to see
Draco Malfoy looking at them curiously. How long had he been standing there?

"He WAS," Hermione corrected, "but we're not sure if he still is," she
explained.

"I don't think he does either," he replied.

"Why?" Harry asked.

"He can still be saved," Malfoy said enigmatically, "unlike others."

"Are you talking about your parents, or yourself?" Hermione asked, interest seriously
piqued by the argument.

"Does it make a difference?" He'd sounded almost hopeless when he'd asked
that.

"It does if you write to Ginny," Hermione replied. Harry looked at her askance, and
Malfoy left wordlessly for the second time in only a few hours. She hoped he would write that
letter.

To be continued.

Author's note: Haha, thought I'd forgotten about D/G, huh? Anyway, I don't think I
have any particular ramblings this time, so I'll just tell you that in the next chap Draco does
write that letter, Lily's sixth year and a ball, and Harry and Hermione actually say WHY
they're so afraid to get together. Will they do anything about it? Read and find out. Anyway,
liked it, hated it, wanna flame me? Go ahead, I'll have a BBQ. Just let me know what you think
at Robbygal@hotmail.com or simply leave a review.

Thanks

Love,

Pearl



8. Chapter 7: Letters, memories, and fears
------------------------------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t
know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and himself…or
did she?

Disclaimer: Pfui! Haven’t you memorized it yet?

Anyway, this is another sappy, tearjerker, crappy chapter from your truly.

And now: on with the fic.

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Chapter 7: Letters, memories, and fears

Draco Malfoy laid sprawled on his oversize green and silver bed in the Slytherin dormitories,
his hands behind his head cradling it, his feet crossed at the ankles and a thoughtful look upon
his face. He gave a cursory glance to the expensive parchment that lay to his side completely
blank, a quill in hand and inkbottle nearby and open, but put safely enough to avoid any possible
spills. His dorm mates were all either still in the common room exchanging banter, or in the Great
Hall stuffing their faces. In any case, it suited his situation perfectly, for he needed to be
alone to figure out what to write and didn’t wish to be interrogated by any stupid bloke that might
want to do just that.

When Granger, earlier that day, had said that writing to Ginny might have been able to save
him…well, she made it seem a lot easier that what it actually was. First of all, he had absolutely
not the faintest idea of what to speak to her about, after all, they were of different houses,
different years, different social circles and statuses, different hair colours, different
heights…what the bloody was he going on about in his mind? True, they did lead very different
lives, but it wasn’t as though they had never exchanged an actual conversation.

No, the problem was of a different order.

Now…how was he supposed to put the *heading* of the blasted thing?

It wasn’t like he could start with "Dear Ginny"! For one, it was totally uncalled for,
since they only had a passable acquaintance to one another, which brought him—for the nth time that
night—to the question: ‘Why was he even bothering?’ But he soon dispelled the thought.
Their…encounters had not been hostile since his fifth year, but ‘Dear’ was just never going to
appear on one of his letters, to her or anyone else for that matter! It just wasn’t his style! Not
only was he a Malfoy, he was a Slytherin as well! ‘Dear’ was definitely not the term.

So then what else to use?

He tried to wrack his brain, searching through the memories of the different times they spoke to
one another, trying to remember if he’d ever—even by chance---called her with any kind of
non-offensive nickname, or if she’d ever given him any indication of having one, and, somehow, he
ended up having a full blown flashback of the time they had first argued for something that hadn’t
been petty and had managed to get him thinking.

*It had been the first session in Duel Training, back in his fifth year. Every one from fourth
year and up had to participate, and it had been the same way since. Dumbledore, who taught the
‘class’ with the help of the head of Slytherin house, Severus Snape, had tried pairing up students
for the first few sessions since the sheer amount of pupils created an unimaginable amount of
chaos, and, by some crazy twist of fate, Draco Malfoy had been paired up with Ginny
Weasley.*

*Draco took it as an insult, and gave one to the redhead before him, who retaliated more than
happily, thing which he had not been expecting. She always looked so sweet and cheerful around her
friends, that hearing such language spewing forth from her mouth like water out of a broken pipe
had totally taken him by surprise. Yes, she was a Weasley, and therefore, grew up with six older
males to teach her all their knowledge (most of which probably came from Fred and George), but the
sheer amount of such knowledge was rather astonishing.*

*But of course, in a Battle of Barbs, Draco Malfoy was not one to pull back, and so he spewed
in much the same manner she did, and they went so for a good half hour. The only difference between
the two had been that she had whispered in a hiss all her taunts and comebacks—which was even*
more *annoying—while he was shouting them to the four winds.*

*Therefore, Snape and Dumbledore only heard Malfoy’s half of the interview between the two,
and it hadn’t sounded good. He had gotten a proper ear washing from the both of them in front of
more than half the school, and it had lasted more than anyone would have wished it to.*

*When he turned away from the mentors (that had finished embarrassing him to death) and to
Ginny, he found her with a thoughtful expression that he felt was worse than a Cheshire
smirk.*

*"What now, Weasley?" He spat the question at her.*

*She was quiet for a moment, looking as though she was pitying him. "You know?" she
started. "Your jealousy of Harry and your father’s position with the Death Eaters aren’t good
reasons to become one yourself," maybe she’d figured out that half of his barbs had been laced
with terms associated with the Dark Lord.*

*Still, he was dazed. "What?" He spat again.*

*She shrugged. "If that’s not reason enough for you," she began taking an
intimidating step toward him, "my brother Percy did a very thorough research of your family
tree," he raised his eyebrows in sceptical questioning, "your maternal grandfather was
born from an affair between a Wizard and a Muggleborn. Your blood is not as pure as you always
thought it to be. Isn’t it a bit stupid to hate those that are in ways like yourself?"*

After that Draco didn’t remember much at all about that training session, only that their
arguing had stopped there and they had actually started practising what Dumbledore was teaching.
Startlingly enough, he found his hand moving of its own volition (after having skipped the
heading), retelling the flashback that he’d just had, and the conversation with Potter and Granger
only a few hours prior.

Then in closing, before his name, he wrote: "Do you think I can be saved?" Then went
back to the heading and started it as: "Hey, Weasel Jr," which, he knew, she would
not—probably—find offensive (at least not after everything else he wrote).

Ginny recieved the letter quite some time later, but when she did, many thoughts ran through her
mind, most of which were memories of their encounter since that faithful one he had described in
his parchment. She found herself smiling at the closing statement.

In reply she wrote:

"Hey, ferret head,

if you’re asking yourself that, than you’re already half way to salvation.

The rest is up to you.

Ginny

Her, rather brief, message reached him within the same night, and reading it, he smirked.
"No," his smirked grew into a full blown grin. "It’s up to you."

°*°

Harry sat in the common room next to Hermione, trying to breach the subject after an
unaccountable amount of trials, he gave up and decided to ask her outright.

"What was that thing with Malfoy and Ginny the other day? How did you know that writing to
Ginny would ‘save’ him?"

Hermione seemed a bit surprised, as his question just seemed to pop out of the blue, but she
answered nonetheless. "She and I are in similar situations, so it’s only natural that we
confide in each other," she replied, the sides of her lips quirking up in a failed attempt at
a reassuring smile.

Harry didn’t process that right, though. "You’re in love with a Slytherin?" He nearly
screeched. Whoever he was he would kill him!

Hermione laughed outright in surprise. She’d expected him to get it after all the time they’d
spent skirting around each other. "No," she sobered, "but loving him would ruin
everything," and that was true.

Harry stared at her. "Who is he?" He hadn’t realised he’d spoken till he saw her
eyebrows knit.

She simply stared at him.

"Sorry," he apologised, realising he was making her uncomfortable, "I shouldn’t
pry."

"No!" Hermione nearly shouted. "No," she blushed quietly, catching herself,
"you have every right…but I’m…afraid of your reaction," she explained.

He could relate to that. "It’s ok," he told her. "You don’t have to tell me until
you’re ready."

She smiled that smile at him. The smile that seemed to grow on her face on its own volition, the
one that seemed to light her from the inside out, the smile that made him realise he was in love
with her what seemed like an eternity ago. "Thanks," she replied quietly, and, realising
the conversation was over, opened Lily’s diary to the point that they had left off at and began to
read out loud.

Since it was vacation and there was nobody there, they were moving rather speedily across Lily’s
past. They had already read of Lily’s excitement at the idea of the Solar Crowning Ball (to
celebrate the eclipse that Hogwarts would see the day of the ball, an important event for Wizards),
and of Snape asking her to be his date (which Harry found rather repulsive). He’d asked her as they
had stepped out of a Prefects’ meeting and right in front of one of the portraits known only for
its hunger for gossip. Soon enough the whole school had found out, James included.

Before that, he and Lily had already had a pretty horrible fight about his girlfriend Kiana, who
was making life hell for Lily, which had ended up in James telling her that he loved Lily and then
running off before awaiting an answer. The following day he’d apologised, saying that he was
nervous and taking it all back. She’d been hurt, but hadn’t countered it with any of her feelings
for him, because, honestly, they scared her.

Now, they were reading to know how James would react to the news of Severus Snape, his worst
enemy, trying to put the moves on Lily Evans, the girl that he did not wish to admit he loved.

*I was making my rounds when I ran into James, who had obviously been looking for me because
he would never be caught unaware out of bed after hours. I’m sure he was heading to the Whomping
Willow.*

*He was angry because of Snape’s proposal to take me to the Ball, like everyone else, as a
matter of fact.*

*We ended up arguing.*

*"You can’t go with him!" He shouted after a long yelling session.*

*I was so angry with him at the time that I found myself screaming at him. "WHY
NOT?"*

*Then his voice dropped to a hissing whisper. "Because I know you." His eyes were so
intense in that one singular moment, that I felt like breaking down in tears. I could read
everything he felt and thought while he looked at me, and I don’t think I was ready for that yet.
And then, there was always the thought of Kiana that screamed at me.*

*She hated me, and I don’t care at all for her, but she loves James. It was the thought of her
that made me deny James’s statement, despite the fact that nothing truer had every been spoken.
"NO!" My shout sounded more like a sob, and I found myself against the wall, his arms on
either side of me, almost supporting me, and an expression of defiance marking his
features.*

*"Yes," he contradicted me, still with that hissing whisper, although at the moment,
it sounded like a wounded sob. "Because you’re like me," he added. Oh, God! How was I
supposed to retaliate to that.*

*As much as I wanted to admit it, I denied it. "No, I’m not," but I found myself
staring at a statue off to the side.*

*He was quiet for a long time, and I wanted to look at him, to read him, to know what he was
thinking and feeling, but I refused to. I felt his hand under my chin, turning me to face him. I
was terrified. "If you want me to believe that," he started, this time whispering without
the hiss, "tell it to my face."*

*I tried several times. A bunch of choked "I—I…" escaped my mouth but nothing else,
and I found myself crying. "I can’t," I told him truthfully.*

*"Because you love me," Oh, God! He was so sure of it!*

*"How would you know that?" I should have spat at him, spoken the words in self
righteous anger, because I should have felt as though his statement was nothing but arrogant, but
it wasn’t, and I didn’t, I spoke softly and with absolutely no malice. It was true, and James
wouldn’t ever shove it back into my face just for personal satisfaction.*

*"Because I know you," he stated again. His fingers were tracing my face so gently,
as though I was something precious, and more tears came to my eyes. "I know you. You’re like
me. You love me." He repeated. "And I love you."*

*I think that time, I was the one who kissed. I did it because he was so close, and I felt so
safe in his arms, and so desired, and so loved. And because I loved him, and I loved the love that
he had for me and for my feelings. I love James Potter, and so I kissed him. I had forgotten about
Kiana. Staying with James would only hurt her more for his heart was already mine, but I pulled
away when I remember where I thought he was heading.*

*"I do love you," I admitted, and he looked so happy that I just wanted to forget
everything wrong in my life and go back to kissing him, but I couldn’t. "But I can’t trust
you, James. You’re keeping too many secrets from me," telling him hurt like nothing else, but
I had to say it or gradually shred my sanity to bits.*

*He looked stricken. I think he’d wanted to tell me, for a while now maybe, but I don’t think
he thought it right. "I’d give them to you," his words were hushed, meaningful, but I
already knew what he was going to say, and found myself boiling over with self righteousness.
"But they aren’t mine to give out."*

*I knew that was coming, but still… "Oh, right! The Marauders," I’d said the last
words like it was something vile and disgusting even though I knew it was wrong. They were his
friends, his links to sanity since the loss of his family, but I felt that my love should have
meant enough for him to tell me, even if, now, I know it couldn’t be any other way.*

*He was hurt by my tone, but he understood my point of view, so he pushed himself away from
me, disentangling his limbs from mine, and spoke the words as though the were atrocious.
"Yes," he confirmed, "I have to go now."*

*"Fine," I spat, still boiling in anger, "go to your date with the Whomping
Willow." He looked back at me in shock and surprise, and I could see the gears in his head
working to figure out if he’d done anything to give it away. Maybe I shouldn’t have, but the anger
was clouding my mind, so I told him about the dreams I’d been having, all of the dreams that had to
do with the Marauders and the Wolf and the full moon and the Whomping Willow and the Shrieking
Shack. I shouldn’t have told him, because now I have no secret, and I should have feared his
reaction, but he wasn’t scared of me, and didn’t shun me.*

*"You already know all my secrets," then my dreams were actually visions which
represented a truth that, I’m afraid, I’m beginning to come to.*

*Still, I lost some of my anger, and spoke a little more softly. "I want you to tell me,
though," it was true, if he thought I already knew, I’d rather hear the words out of his
mouth, not only to get everything straight, but to know that he trusts me as much as I trust
him.*

*I think he knew what I was feeling, because this time, he was the one who started a kiss, and
it was such a kiss that when he sat me back down to my feet (he’d lifted me up and held me around
the waist so that our faces were level) I fell to my knees in a pile of mush that couldn’t put two
sentences together.*

*And then, I still can’t believe it, Severus just appeared out of Merlin knows where and took
off points from both of us for snogging in the halls and being out after hours. "Ah, and thank
you kindly for that Whomping Willow tip, Evans," oh, Merlin, he was making me sound like an
accomplice. James didn’t take it that way, thankfully.*

*His expression hardened though. "Look all you want, you won’t see
anything."*

*I hoped he was right, either way, I told Severus that I wouldn’t be his date for the ball,
and James and I walked away from him and back toward the Common Room. When we turned a corner,
however, he was gone, and I felt myself smiling like a beaten dog.*

*Since he still has a girlfriend, he couldn’t ask me to the Ball, even if I sensed he wanted
to.*

When Hermione finished reading the entry from the diary Harry spoke, sounding as though it was a
personal comment, and not an observation that he was sharing with her. "Must be
wonderful."

She was confused. "What?" She asked baffled.

He looked at her as though speaking from somewhere outside of himself. "Having the
certainty that the one you love feels the same way about you," he replied sadly.

Hermione stared at him for a long while, battling within and against herself on whether or not
to speak. "Harry," she whispered, getting his attention.

"Hmm?"

"It’s you," she supplied enigmatically.

For a second, he seemed confused, than his look changed to one of pure shock, and then to one of
hope. "What?" he tried to instigate from her.

But Hermione found herself backing out. "Never mind," she answered, asking herself why
the bloody hell the sorting hat ever thought of putting her in Gryffindor.

"Sure," he reassured her, but he was definitely deflated.

"But he was certain of her feelings only because they were so much alike," she tried
to cheer him up with a sharp observation.

"What?" He asked again intelligently.

"Well," she began again, "he knew how she felt because he knew how he felt,"
she explained.

"I don’t know how she feels," he told her truthfully.

"You’re not like each other?" She asked with knit eyebrows.

He seemed thoughtful for a second. "I thought so," he started, changing position on
the couch so that he was facing her better, "but I think we’re actually more alike than we
both know," he supplied. "She cares for me," he continued, "this much is
obvious, but I don’t know if she loves me."

"Harry," Hermione spoke his name with the sweetest of smiles painting her features,
"any girl who cares about you can’t help but love you," she told him. "I see it in
the way they look at you," she explained. "There’s a lot more than adoration behind
it."

"I don’t care about them," he spat quickly, "I just want her."

"Then what do you see in her eyes when you look at her?" She asked, the words barely
able to get through the huge lump that she felt at her throat.

He looked at her, looked so long and hard that she was absolutely sure he could read ever
thought, every emotion, every bad thought, and every dream she’d had of him. "She does have
feeling for me," he concluded finally, albeit not taking his unwavering gaze away from
her.

This time she had to swallow several times before being able to reply. "Then she’d
yours."

"But she’s scared," he burst suddenly, propelling his face close to hers. "And I
am, too," he admitted.

"Of what?" she questioned, utterly surprised by what he’d just said.

"Of my scar," he shot back quietly, as though the matter was obvious but painful,
"and what I represent. Everybody expects something of me and it scares us both. It’s either
kill or die against Voldemort, and loving me means fighting him and risking becoming bate," he
spat the last word and she gasped, throwing her hands over her mouth. "Yeah, because he’s not
above using those I love to get to me," he went on in explanation after hearing her gasp.
"And despite how much I want her to know," Harry whispered, "I can’t put her through
that."

Hermione found herself taking deep even breaths in the attempt of keeping herself from crying
albeit unsuccessfully. *How can he be so sure?* She asked herself. *How can he know all
that? How?* But she answered herself. *Because it’s true. I really am scared of all that.*
Then a thought struck her and she managed to speak past the sobs that wanted to escape. "But
when it comes down to it, are you ready to face possible death knowing you never told her?"
She asked, her voice so broken and shaky that even she could barely figure out the words.

He shook his head, a sad smile on his lips. "No," he answered. "I’d be happier
knowing I never told her. If I die," Hermione gasped again at this, although she knew
perfectly well it was a strong possibility, "she could move on without regret," he
finished.

The tears couldn’t be held anymore, and she threw herself in his arms, wishing to feel his
presence comforting her, letting her know that he would be there always, no matter what. She didn’t
care if it was nothing but an illusion created by his warmth. She needed it.

He started to help her to her feet. "Come on, lets go to bed," he said, moving her in
the direction of the dormitories.

"No," she denied, planting her feet in the spot where they were standing, hiccups
escaping her at regular intervals. "No," she repeated, "I want to stay with you and
read a little longer," she expressed, sniffling and hiccuping all the more, her eyes pleading
him to stay and grant her that wish.

He agreed, and, after they’d sat back down and she’d regained her composure, she began to read.
And reading she kept doing until they lost track of time and just lost themselves in the lives of
two people in love who, at the time, couldn’t be together. Snape was hot on the Marauders’ tails
yet wasn’t getting anywhere, James had broken up with Kiana though she was still not giving up her
torture of Lily, and they had come to the night before the ball for which neither of the two had a
companion.

*This morning at breakfast, before I sat next to Jenna, James stopped me in the spot where he
regularly sits with the rest of the Marauders, always a little far off from the rest when they are
planning something. He told me that tonight he would tell me their secret, and, when I looked at
the rest of them, they all nodded in agreement, though they did look like they were all
apprehensive of the matter.*

*Tonight was a full moon.*

*When I went back to my room, earlier than the rest of the students, I left my door open like
James had instructed, and waited. The more time passed, the more anxious I got, and, when,
suddenly, I felt something drop over my head I nearly screamed, but a gentle hand on my mouth
prevented me from it.*

*It was James, and Peter was with him. It turned out that what he’d thrown over my head was in
invisibility cloak. That’s how he always managed to sneak around so much without getting caught.
Rather quickly, we managed to make our way outside and to the Whomping Willow. There, right before
my eyes, I saw Peter shrink and turn into the mouse from my visions. He’s an animagus.*

*While Peter was busy hitting a knot on the base of the Whomping Willow, and opening a passage
for us, James told me that he and Sirius were animagi as well, and that the passage led to the
Shrieking Shack. He also told me that he, along with his friends, had made a map, a very particular
one, that showed every passage that the boys had discovered in their time here and the names of the
important people (of the situation) and their movements.*

*It was a very uncomfortable walk, cramped, damp, dark, and dirty, but at least at that point
we didn’t need the cape anymore. Finally after a very long time, we reached a door at the end of
the stony tunnel. There we stopped.*

*He turned to face me, and I knew that what he’d tell me would not be pleasant. It turned out
that my visions were actually rather clear.*

*Remus is a werewolf. He was bitten when he was only a small child, and has had to hide from
others every time it was close to full moon. James and the others had found out about it in second
year, and had decided to become animagi to be able to keep Remus under check in his beastly form.
In fifth year, they finally managed to make it.*

*He explained how Remus had recieved permission to use the tunnel from Dumbledore so that he
wouldn’t hurt others, but when alone, his need for blood drove him to hurt himself. All the scary
sounds that the Shack is famous for were actually his howls of pain.*

*James also said that when he and the others were animals, Remus didn’t feel like that at all.
He was actually rather happy and carefree. He gave me thousands more details that I can’t possible
list now, that my mind is so jumbled, but I finally felt that he trusted me, and that nothing could
stand between us.*

*All my questions were answered, and, on the other side of the door, the wolf had smelled us
and was becoming restless, we could hear him. I watched as James changed while in front of me. He
became the most beautiful deer that I had ever seen in my life. I couldn’t help it. I touched him,
even if I knew that we didn’t have time. I wanted to stay that way forever, but I couldn’t, so,
with the cape, I ran all the way back while I heard James holding back the door until I was clear
and far away.*

*Now I don’t know what’s going on, but I do know one thing. He still didn’t ask me to the
dance.*

*Anyway, I charmed this diary so that only people who know about this secret can read it, so I
feel safe that my writing it out won’t endanger them.*

Hermione went on to read the next day.

*I hadn’t slept all night from worry of what might have happened to James and the rest. They
weren’t at breakfast, either, and, by the time I was heading for my first class, I was so jumpy
that if anyone crossed my past I might have had a stroke. Still, I couldn’t tell anybody, and
that’s what made it worse.*

*I was so absorbed in thought that when I passed the statue of the one eyed witch I didn’t
even notice who was standing behind it. I did notice though, when I felt myself being pulled into
shadows from behind and tried to scream, only to find the same gentle hand over my mouth that I’d
felt the night before.*

*James.*

*I hugged him so hard I think I broke his ribs.*

*He explained that the statue was actually the entrance to another passage that ended in the
storeroom of Honeydukes. He gave even more details than he did last night, and when he was
finished, he looked beaten. "If you don’t want anything else to do with me I understand,"
he told me. He thought that what he was doing for Remus might have scared me away. Well, it did
scare me, but it made me love him even more.*

*Not knowing how to reply to that, I kissed him. I think I kissed him pretty senseless, too.
The look of happy confusion on his face when we pulled away was too adorable for words. He was also
rather speechless.*

*I decided that this was a perfect opportunity. "Since you seem set in your decision to
drive me mad," I started, watching as he knit his eyebrows in confusion, "I’ll be the one
to ask: James Potter…do you want to go to the ball with me?" I still can’t believe I actually
asked him that! Talk about Gryffindor bravery.*

*He nodded, probably still speechless. "Great!" I exclaimed and walked off to
class.*

*The look on his face was the most priceless of my life.*

So now Lily and James had finally stopped beating the bush and got their act straight, but how
was this going to affect Harry and Hermione’s reading? Staring into the fire the two pondered the
situation, without even noticing that sleep was slowly claiming them. A short time later, the two
were sitting, entwined, on the couch, fast asleep, and dreaming of each other.

To be continued.

Coming up next chapter: Ron comes back from vacation, D&G exchange...unusual X-mas presents,
Harry, Ron, and Hermione receive an order from Dumbledore, and Lily has a vision of Snape at the
Solar Crowning Ball.

Author’s note: Well, I can’t seem too help it. These kind of chapters just sort of write
themselves out. Anyway, there you have it, the real reason why H&Hr aren’t getting together.
They’re scared. Anyway, just to let you know, this story has eighteen chapters (eleven more to go)
and an epilogue. I’m currently planning my next story.

Thank you

Pearl



9. Chapter 8: Haunting Kisses
-----------------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t
know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and himself…or
did she?

Disclaimer: Oh, you know it better than I do anyway.

I’m sorry I didn’t post this earlier, but my life got in the way (even if I already finished
writing it).

I hope you enjoy, and don’t flame me too bad because it’s starting to leave the OotP plot,
k?

And now, on with the fic.

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Chapter 8: Haunting kisses

As Ginny Weasley made her way to through the school searching for two of the most famous
students presently frequenting Hogwarts—otherwise known as Harry Potter and Hermione Granger—she
took an exaggerated amount of enjoyment out of taunting her brother Ronald with embarrassing bits
and close calls of their Christmas vacation. Most of them were of a rather non innocent nature, and
Ginny kept repeating that the only reason for why he, along with his girlfriend Krista, had not
been caught had been simply because she liked Krista and had gone out of her way to keep her out of
trouble. As for her brother, she had enough material to threaten him into exile for embarrassment
or shame if she so wished to.

Since it seemed that neither Harry nor Hermione were anywhere in sight, though, even the ‘Make
Fun of Ron Till He Passes Out from too Much Blood to the Head’ game was getting tiresome. They had
already checked everywhere. Now the only two places missing were the Head Girl’s room and the
Quidditch Pitch. They had absolutely no intention of going anywhere *near* the latter! That
infestation was too sick and scary even for Harry to go near to. The former, however, seemed out of
the question as well, considering that both of the missing parties were the worst early birds in
Gryffindor, and the sun was far too high in the sky for either of them to still be occupying a room
with a bed. And neither was forthcoming enough to use said bed for other activities so early in the
day, quite yet.

Still, that was just about their only option, so they headed there anyway.

They arrived quickly, and Ron spoke the password ("Hogwarts: A History") to which
Ginny snickered. They weren’t expecting to find anything, so they were in for quite a shock when
they saw, not only Hermione, quietly sleeping on her bed with Lily’s diary clutched to her heart,
but Harry, sprawled next to her with an arm over her waist.

"Don’t they make a lovely picture?" Ginny pointed out to her brother. As a matter of
fact, not only were they both rather attractive people, but they seemed to be made to look good
together, and, even from the outside, they radiated an aura of complete love for each other (she’d
been filled in by Ron and Krista over holiday).

"They’d make a better one if they were naked," he replied sourly. His sister gasped,
he simply shrugged it off. Looking at them, he knew that they had stepped no further into each
other’s arms than they would off a cliff. At least they could have taken off their cloaks! But no,
there was absolutely no real physical evidence of romance between the two, they might as well have
been brother and sister. "Come on, let’s wake them up," he instructed, and, soon enough
the sleeping couple was fully awake and rather embarrassed at having been found in such a
compromising situation—from their point of view.

After discussing vacations for a short while Ron spoke up at the mention of Dumbledore’s name in
an attempt to make the exchange of information casual—and failing rather miserably. "Oh,
speaking of Dumbledore," he began, his voice rather squeaky and too high pitched, "I ran
into him while I was looking for you," his breath seemed to be coming out a bit short. He was
definitely one to count on for subtle hints.

"Oh, you did?" Harry asked, prompting him to continue as nonchalantly as he could.

"Yeah, he said he wants both of you in his office tonight, after dinner," Ron squeaked
and heaved a sigh of relief. He didn’t want his sister to know that the three of them were Shadow
Members of the Order.

"What about you?" Hermione asked with raised eyebrows.

"Oh, he already told me what he had to," he replied quickly, "and he said there
was something personal, too," at first Ron had been offended by this, but he couldn’t go
against Dumbledore’s wishes, even if it meant being left out. Besides, Harry and Hermione would
tell him what he’d say anyway. At least he hoped.

The two just nodded in acceptance and quiet fell over the room as Ginny watched the Trio as
though they’d all gone mad. What were they talking about? Ron was sure acting weird.

It had become so quiet as they all sat there absorbed in their own thoughts, that when a light
tapping came from outside the window they all nearly jumped out of their skin.

There, in the deadly sting of winter’s biting wind storms was an eagle carrying a letter, and
trying desperately to get their attention so that they would pull him out of the frozen hell
through which he was attempting to keep flight. Ginny went over and opened the window, allowing the
beautiful dark predator inside. She took the letter from its mouth, and wondered out loud why
anyone would send her an owl (eagle?) there when she noticed that it was addressed to her.

"Maybe someone saw you coming up here," Hermione supplied tartly.

Opening the letter she found out that it had been Draco Malfoy who’d written her (he must have
heard her destination when she’d passed the Slytherin dungeons) and he’d bid her to meet him in the
library after the evening meal.

"Hermione, do you mind if I borrow a quill quickly?" She asked her friend. The Head
Girl nodded, and, taking a quill off her desk and dipping it in ink, she quickly scribbled on the
back of the parchment that she would be there, placed the letter back in the envelope, and gave it
back to the eagle, who took it. When she’d told him to take that back to his master he looked
outside the window with reluctance, but went out anyway to complete his job.

What would Draco Malfoy wish to speak to her about?

°*°

At dinner Ginny nearly jumped out of her skin when she saw Malfoy get up from his seat and head
for the doors while looking nonchalantly over at the Gryffindor table. Their eyes locked for a
brief second before he turned to corner, and then, he was out of her line of sight.

*Oh, Merlin, what do I do? Do I go now, or wait a little so nobody gets suspicious? I don’t
know.* She ranted off in her head, completely forgetting that she had already had a couple of
rendezvous in her life and that this wasn’t unknown territory to her. Well, actually, anything that
was Draco Malfoy was unknown territory to her.

As she was lost in her thoughts Kevin Creevy placed a rough hand on her shoulder a little too
heavily, causing her to fall from her seat. "You ‘kay?" He asked her, kneeling down in an
attempt to help her, but only managing to get the metal spikes covering the knee of his pants a
little too close to Ginny’s eyes for comfort.

"Ack!" She screamed, noticing the sharp metal points aiming at her eyeballs.

Kevin didn’t seem to notice, and only brought his knee closer trying to inspect Ginny’s face
better. "You ‘kay?" He repeated. "You dun look too good," he said trying to be
sympathetic.

Maybe it was the spiky hair, or the gothic necklaces, or the black eyeliner, or possibly the
metal spikes, but, in any case, Ginny didn’t feel much sympathy coming from him. Backing up as much
as she could away from his knee, she stood up, slightly sweaty and a complete mess from her fall.
"No, actually, I don’t feel too well," she informed him, "I think I’ll go now,"
and with that she practically flew out of the Great Hall doors.

Once she reached the hallway, she slowed to a quick marching step as she made her way to the
library chanting under her breath. "Not that scary, we were not that scary, we were so not
that scary," she hadn’t even noticed that she entered the library. There wasn’t anybody there
yet. Maybe it had been a hoax. Walking over to a window, the image of Kevin’s knee spikes kept on
showing in her mind. "No, we were definitely not that scary at their age," she finalised
out loud.

"Not as scary as who?" A cold chuckling voice called from behind her, his breath
brushing her ear, making her jump a two clear feet in the air with a small screech. Thankfully,
Madame Pince seemed to be elsewhere at the moment (so she *did* leave the library sometime!).
Whipping around quickly she realised that: no, it hadn’t been her imagination, and; yes, that had
been Malfoy’s breath she felt at her ear. He was standing a little too close for her comfort. Not
that she minded, but the ease with which he invaded her private space was a bit unsettling.

"Uh…nothing!" She answered quickly, pressing her back against the window she’d been
facing. Regaining her composure she asked, "What was it that you wanted to speak to me
about?" This seemed to make him uncomfortable, as she noticed his superior smirk dim quite a
bit. She raised her eyebrows. "Well?" She encouraged him. He still didn’t say anything.
"What is it, Malfoy?" Her tone was starting to become concerned.

"Well, I…" he began, and then drifted off, trying to find the best way to put this. He
cleared his throat. "I noticed that your family owls don’t seem very reliable," he began.
She snorted. Well, that was an understatement. Errol was holding himself up only thanks to
Spellotape, and Pig was too busy trying to keep his balance to remember actually delivering his
errand.

"And…" she encouraged, trying to get him to finish.

"And I figured I should give you this, since it was Christmas and all…" he told her.
She raised her eyebrows. Give her what? She didn’t see anything. And then he whistled and a large,
regal, tawny owl swooped down from one of the bookshelves and landed on Draco’s outstretched arm
(which was equipped to hold him, she noticed sharply). Her eyebrows shot up at this, and he felt
the need to explain. "He used to be mine, but I can’t take care of him now that I’ve got Ator,
my eagle," he told her. "He’s a good owl, but he wants too much attention, and I don’t
have enough to around," he finished.

She found her hand reach for the owl’s feathers of it’s own volition. "He’s
beautiful," she heard herself say. "What’s his name?" She asked.

"Sir."

She grinned. "How appropriate," she mumbled, stroking the feathers gently. Sir nipped
at her fingers affectionately. "I think he likes me," she smiled up at the blond.

He blushed. "He warms easily to girls," he informed her.

"Thank you," she didn’t know what else to say. "I wasn’t expecting this,"
she confessed. He shrugged. "I have something for you, too," she told him. His head
snapped to look at her. She found herself flushing as red as her hair. "Well, it’s not as
grand as Sir, here," she began, "but it might come in handy," she offered, pulling a
rolled up piece of parchment from her robes and handing it to him. He took it and unrolled it. It
was blank. He seemed offended. "Don’t think bad!" She yelled. "I put a lot of work
into charming that, you know?" One of his eyebrows raised in question. "For one
thing," she started, "it can only be read by the person you wish it to. If anybody else
reads it, it’s just a bunch of doodles," he seemed impressed. "Also, once it’s been read,
the ink will be absorbed by the parchment, but if you wish to read a particular message again, you
just have to think of it, and the words will be drawn back out," he was definitely impressed
now. "And it’s charmed so that either you or I could use it," Merlin, was she embarrassed
at having to say that! "But if you want someone else to use it, just tell me, and I’ll change
the charm," she added hastily in conclusion.

He rolled the parchment back up, and bonked her lightly in the head with it before placing it in
his robes. "Thanks," he mumbled and she found herself blushing again. "Come
on," he exclaimed suddenly, breaking the silence, "I’ll show you where he’s kept in the
owlery," he said, raising the arm that was carrying Sir and heading for the tower where the
messengers were kept.

°*°

Harry and Hermione, meanwhile hadn’t left her bedroom since they’d come back from training that
afternoon, and had been so engrossed in reading Lily’s diary that they hadn’t noticed they’d
skipped dinner.

They were now reading about the Solar Crowning Ball when they came to a point of interest.

*The dance was wonderful, I don’t think I’ve ever enjoyed myself quite as much at a social
gathering, but that could just be because I’d attended the dance with James, and that, itself, made
it special. So often I hear of girls dreaming up the perfect date before actually going to one,
yet, once it’s over and done with, have nothing but complaints because it didn’t live up to their
expectations.*

*Honestly, I didn’t have any particular hopes for the night but to be able to snake a couple
of dances from James and have a few laughs with my friends, but I got so much more out of it, and
James, even though he’s only had one day to get ready for it, has gone so much out of his way to
make me happy, that each time I looked at him I either felt like smiling like a bloke or start
crying. Usually it was one of the two anyhow.*

*As for Snape, well, he managed to find a date on time (he is a Prefect, after all), but I
found that most of the night he spent glaring at James. That of course, was of no use to him, since
Sirius had already received the spill from James and had ordered Cicciobello to keep an eye on the
Slytherin the whole night. Each time Severus got too close to either of us, Cicciobello would
attack, and I must say, he was loving each second of it. I think Jenna fused her photomaker with
all the embarrassing moving pictures she was taking of him.*

*I think they’ll all make Gryffindor history.*

*There was, however, a very low note of the night, and it has to do with the very same
Severus. While I was dancing with James, I just happened to look in his direction, and I was hit
full on by a vision. I’m glad James was holding me so close, or I would have fallen to my
knees.*

*It was a rather brutal vision. It showed Voldemort (it couldn’t have been anyone else even
though I only saw the back of his robes and his hand) chanting a spell and pressing his wand onto
Severus’ arm. Quickly, like ink spilling out of a bottle, Severus’ arm was covered in a permanent
image of the Dark Mark.*

*The vision was strong and clear, meaning it was either close to its realization, or past
it.*

*Then it changed, and it showed me Voldemort falling at the end of a baby that in the process
was marked with a Lighting shaped scar on his forehead, the same from my previous visions. It’s the
first time I see how he will actually receive it. After the fall of the Dark Lord, Severus will be
forced to make a choice.*

*I hope the Boy of Lightning will help him onto the right path.*

*After that, James was at my side the whole night, making sure I was ok, and his care made me
forget those visions, but this morning they came back, and I went to see Dumbledore about them. I
hadn’t spoken to him of my visions since my fifth year, when I realised that the visions about the
Marauders should have been kept to myself.*

*I told him everything from what I saw of Severus, to the boy with the scar.*

*He was calm however, and told me that he has complete trust in Snape.*

*I know Severus isn’t evil, even though he’s not quite charming or great company, but I don’t
think that we should simply step aside and let him choose the wrong path. However, I realise the
Headmaster’s right. He’s already chosen his path for now, and we won’t be able to change it at
least for a long while.*

*We can only watch and pray, just like Dumbledore told me.*

Suddenly Hermione cried out, throwing her hands over her mouth, her eyes wide in
realization.

"What? What’s wrong?" Harry jumped in surprise, looking around to see if there was
anything out of place that might have set her off so.

"DUMBLEDORE!" She cried out, her eyes telling Harry that he should know what she was
talking about. He didn’t. "We were supposed to go see him tonight!" Realisation dawned on
him as well, and, as though thinking the same thing, they both bolted out of the dormitories and
out of Gryffindor tower. They couldn’t run because there would be Prefects about, but they did walk
rather quickly.

One they reached the statue they both yelled the password at once, "Sugar Quills!",
and made their way up the stairs as though they had Dementors at their heels. They stopped in front
of Fawkes red faced and out of breath. Behind his desk, the mad Headmaster did seem rather amused.
Standing behind him were Professor McGonagall, who didn’t look quite as stern as usual, and a big,
black dog. Snuffles!

Just as they thought that he was no longer Snuffles, but a rather healthy looking Sirius Black.
He seemed as though he’d been hanging around the house elves for a couple of days.

"Glad to see you two could make it," he mumbled, a jovial grin spreading on his face
at the sight of the two that he’d come to think of as his children. Harry and Hermione welcomed him
with matching warm grins.

"Very well," Dumbledore began, "as shadow members of the Order of the
Phoenix," Fawkes gave a cry at this, "we have decided that for your own protection it
would be best that you start a particular kind of training, for you are both students with a high
profile," that must have been the reason why Ron wasn’t there. He would hate to do anything
because someone felt he needed to be protected.

Harry and Hermione nodded in agreement, not bothering to ask which kind of training they would
undertake, though Hermione did have a guess. After all, there was only one thing that she could
think of that Sirius and McGonagall had in common and they could teach together.

"It had been decided that you will start animagus training," Dumbledore confirmed
Hermione’s suspicions, "and they shall be your tutors," she’d been expecting that as
well.

"We deem it much safer for you, if you were ever to be associated with us, if you were able
to leave a situation unnoticed, or, at least, in different forms," the both nodded in
agreement. "It could also be helpful in case we need someone to scout for us," that
actually made a lot of sense. "Any questions?"

Hermione spoke, "When will we start?"

Dumbledore’s eyes twinkled as he saw past her cool behaviour, and into the excited child that
could never learn enough or too soon. "Your training will start tomorrow with Mr. Weasley as
your only other companion."

Again they nodded. "Yes, sir."

Then, he leaned forward and indicated them to do the same. "This shall be kept
secret," he stated quietly behind his half moon spectacles, "for your own sake."

Then they were dismissed with a smile, "Go to the kitchens and have something to eat,"
it was just like Dumbledore to notice that they’d been absent at dinner.

It was useless to say, the prospect excited them both, so excited, as a matter of fact, that,
once they’d reached the kitchen and had their fills, they, somehow, ended up having a food fight
with the entire house elf population. Ah, they had no idea how the whole fight had started, they
were both too giddy at the moment to try and remember, but they were quite enjoying it. Even the
house elves, that thrived on work, were having a blast because it meant more work later.

At a certain point, Hermione slipped on some creme caramel that had splotched onto the floor,
and fell backwards, grabbing hold of Harry’s robes in an attempt to keep herself up, yet only
managing to bring him down on top of her in a fit of giggles from the both of them.

The house elves, seeing that the fight was over (after all the instigators had disappeared…under
the table), stopped playing around and went to enjoy themselves in their job, completely oblivious
to the tense atmosphere at their feet (or maybe under the table it was just too dark for them to
see). Within minutes, they had finished, and left to work somewhere else.

All Harry and Hermione knew was that they were now alone, their bodies pressed together so
wonderfully that it made them dizzy, still giddy from the food fight, and desperately in need for a
kiss, to which, almost instantly the both gave in.

At first it was tentative, with the lingering taste of sweets and pumpkin juice, but soon, they
were entwined so desperately that the need for each other was practically palpable. They clung to
each other like a drug addict to the first fix after a withdrawal. They’d needed to kiss each
other, feel each other physically as they’d wanted to do for far too long, know that there was the
possibility of something more than the shadow of friendship that would dissolve if it didn’t turn
into something more soon.

Their lips met, danced, caressed each other, then parted slightly to accommodate the other’s
better, and went back to their job of sweetly torturing the other. If Dobby hadn’t come looking for
them to say good night…well, they didn’t know what could have happened, or how the other would have
felt once it might have been over.

Slowly and reluctantly they pulled away from each other, pulled themselves out from under the
table, and, after saying good night to Dobby, left the kitchens and headed for Gryffindors tower in
the most unnerving and uncomfortable silence they’d known in their long years of friendship, both
wondering what the other thought of what had just transpired between them.

Finally, Hermione felt the need to speak.

"Harry," she began, and saw him jump out of his skin at the sound of her voice
interrupting his thoughts. She cleared her throat. "Harry, listen," she began, but he
interrupted her.

"No, it’s ok," he reassured her.

"What?" She snapped surprised. *Huh? What? What’s ok?*

"I understand," he stated with a shrug, not once turning to look at her.

"Huh?" She mumbled intelligently. Ok, she was supposed to be the most clever witch in
Hogwarts, but she was having a mighty difficult time deciphering Harry’s out-of-the-blue
sentences.

"I know you didn’t mean to kiss me," he told her, finally looking into her eyes, his
own dark, hard, and unreadable. "Ever," he added quietly.

"What?" She asked surprised. "Harry," his name came out as a whisper as her
mind fumbled for the words that would convince him otherwise.

"No, Hermione, don’t worry," he ordered her, making her look at him with her eyebrows
furrowed. "I don’t want this to ruin us just because we got carried away by the
atmosphere," he told quietly.

Now her look was dubious. "What are you saying?"

He raked a hand through his ever messy hair, making it even more disarrayed. "We should
just forget about this," he told her, the words sounding more like a sigh that needed to be
forced out rather than like a conviction.

"Forget about it?" She asked numbly.

"Yes," he told her. "Starting from now," he specified.

"So," Hermione began, taking a step closer to him, "as of now we’re just going to
act like nothing was?" She asked, trying to see if she’d got him straight.

"Yes," he assured her with an emphasised nod of the head.

She looked as though she was pondering the situation, then, she looked up at him. "In that
case," she started and stepped up to him, putting her hands around his neck and choosing to
act rather than finish the sentence with words. She kissed him so passionately that the world began
to spin far too quickly for the both of them.

When the two thought they would pass out either from lack of air to the brain, or from sheer
need of each other, Hermione pulled away, and a dazed Harry looked at her with glazed eyes and
mumbled a strangled, "What--?"

She smiled sadly at him. "Just wanted to have one that I could remember," she told him
quietly, and turned to walk up to the Gryffindor tower, Harry staying behind, trying to decipher
what she’d said.

In her room, Hermione laid in bed awake at night, thoughts of Harry running through her mind.
She remembered Christmas morning, and the look on Harry’s face when she’d given him her present. It
wasn’t much, and she’d enjoyed doing it for him, but the look of sheer joy that he gave her when he
began to flip through the pages of his photo album, then one he’d had since first, and that she’d
filled with thousands of recent pictures of everyone that he’d loved in the years she’d known
him…well, it was a feeling that she wished she could give him every holiday season. And when he’d
pulled out the present for her…she looked at the necklace that sat on her night dresser. During the
day she never took it off. It was a simple golden chain, with a small sapphire onto it with
beautiful celtic carvings. He’d told her that it was made for research. Whenever she was on the
right track while searching for something, the carvings would glow white.

And then her thoughts drifted back to the two kisses they’d shared that night, and the ones that
had anticipated them. His words echoed in her mind. *We should just forget about them.* They’d
stung, just like the tears threatening to spill over her eyes, but she knew that, at least for the
time being, it was the only thing to do. But there were two things that she was certain of. For
one, she would never be able to forget those kisses, as he’d asked her to. And two, those kisses
would haunt her until she couldn’t have another.

In his room, Harry thought the same thing.

To be continued

Author’s ramblings: I guess I forgot to tell you that I wrote this in a real hurry, but I did,
and so I’m afraid this lacked a lot of the descriptive flourishes I always try to exaggerate with,
so I apologise. And, whoo, two kisses between H/Hr! Too bad they weren’t very descriptive,
sorry.

Anyhow, if you have any comments, constructive critique, flames, anything, please let me know at
Robbygal@hotmail.com, or simply leave a review.

Thank you,

Pearl



10. Chapter 9: Training and detention
-------------------------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t
know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and himself…or
did she?

Disclaimer: I own nothing but Cicciobello, Kevin Creevy, the Stalker Mob, Lily’s diary, Krista,
and the plot. Oh, yeah, and the Diggorinta too! You know it, I know it, so let’s move on.

I’m sorry with the whole delay with this, but as it is I’m having a LOT of trouble with my
computer, and I haven’t even been able to log on since the last time I updated (how long ago was
that?). By the way, did you know that Italy had a total black out a while back? That kinda held me
back too. A really big sorry to sassywitch15 who’s been emailing and reviewing repeatedly for this.
Sorry, Jess, I love you ^_^.

A couple of notes, Peevesdude23: I’m sorry if you took it that way, because I’m actually a punk,
too. I guess I didn’t write Kevin very well, but with him I’d meant to have one of those fake punk
that either end up looking ridiculous or scary, I meant no offence. Josherz18: Yes, I love teasing!
VWChika: Are you serious? I love your writing! I already have two betas, but neither will be
working on this story, so if you’re serious, please drop me a line in my inbox, thanks. Enough of
my ramblings.

And now: on with the fic

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Chapter 9: Training and detention

Sitting in the nearly empty Transfiguration classroom—sealed with a locking spell to keep
Sirius’s presence hidden from the rest of the students—three seventh years listened with varying
degree of attention as Professor Minerva McGonagall droned on the explanation of the inner workings
of tranfiguring into Animagi.

Sirius sat snoring at her desk.

Harry and Hermione sat taking notes, both rather interested in anything that had to do with
transforming themselves into animals, while Ron fumed and glared at the teacher’s back each time
she turned. Why did they have to do these special lessons on Hogsmeade weekends? Of course, Krista
was understanding, she knew that with friends like Harry Potter and Hermione Granger came some
responsibility. She was even nice enough not to ask what it was, but that didn’t mean that he had
to be as understanding as she.

Nope, he was rather mad. Sure, he’d been exited that he would learn to become an Animagus, but
he did NOT wish to learn to do so on his personal time! They should have thought to do it after
classes, in the tutoring hours, or something like that. Besides, they had the N.E.W.T.s that year
(for which he still hadn’t started studying), and with that on top of it, they had better give them
all extra credit!

Finally, when he thought he might self combust from all the fire glares he was giving
McGonagall, said teacher turned from the board announcing that they would start small practices in
the next lesson, and that, for the moment they were dismissed. Ron practically jumped from his
seat, McGonagall gave him one of her stern looks, and then she began to work on the tough task that
was awakening Sirius, who was very much sleeping like a log.

Once he’d woken, and transformed into ‘Snuffles’, they removed the locking charm and left the
classroom. Ron noticed, however, that nobody had yet returned from Hogsmeade, including Krista, and
there was still a long time to come before it became dinner time. "Alright, let’s go read the
diary," he mumbled, stretching his arms over his head and netting his fingers at his nape.

"Isn’t it nice how he comes to us only when he knows Krista’s not around?" Hermione
mumbled, rolling her eyes and giving Harry a pregnant look, he laughed at her, giving her an
affectionate pat on the shoulder.

"Hey, I resent that," Ron yelled back, sending the two into more giggles, and
eventually ending up laughing himself. Well, he had to admit, he hadn’t been very close to the two
of them, especially now that they seemed to need him the most. There was a void growing between the
two, and he wasn’t doing a thing to stop it. Even Krista was admonishing him because of it. Well,
he’d try to work on it now.

Since the common room was full of the younger students that weren’t allowed to go to Hogsmeade
yet, including the Stalker Mob, Kevin Creevy, and Cicciobello who was terrorising the lot of them,
they made a mad dash for the dormitiories, and managed to reach Hermione’s room before anyone took
notice of them. Because of the Stalkers, Madam Malkins had been forced to always keep Harry’s
measurements nearby in case that he might need an emergency set of robes.

In all honesty, Harry, though he’d been attentive to the lesson at first glance, was lost in his
own self pitying thoughts. Hermione must have thought him a thick-skulled retard when he’d told her
to forget the more than memorable kisses they’d shared. He really hadn’t had a choice, though.

If she’d known what was going on she would have put a stop to it herself. Maybe that was the
reason for why he still hadn’t told her, or even Ron. Ron would be worried for about three minutes,
and then it would get pushed to the back of his mind because of more impending things in his life,
such as Krista.

Hermione would go ballistic. She’d start naming any faculty member from Dumbledore, who was the
only one to know besides Harry himself, Madame Pomfrey, all the way to Madame Pince, the librarian.
What was the point of consulting the librarian, he had no idea, but Hermione seemed to have her and
the library as her constant last resort.

No, he couldn’t tell them that his scar had started to bother him again, in ever increasing
amounts as well. Every day, the itch would grow just slightly until it became a constant crawl
under his skin, and then a throb. Trouble was not too far behind them, but he’d decided—with
Dumbledore’s advice—to not mention anything until they would complete their Animagus training. That
way, they would have at least that one more weapon against them.

Harry shook himself of the thoughts. They weren’t the right things to think about while the two
people he wished to protect were right there to notice his dark composure. Turning to Hermione he
gave her all his attention as she began to read Lily’s diary.

Lily had started her seventh year at Hogwarts as Head Girl, a very surprised Head Girl, since,
for some unfathomable reason, James had been made Head Boy. Every one had been a little put off by
the fact that a well known prankster, the Prefects’ nightmare, and not even one himself, had made
the position of Head Boy. Still, soon everyone realised that Dumbledore probably couldn’t have made
a better choice because James took the job seriously right away, and did it exceptionally well.

The only one who didn’t seem too happy about the whole prospect had been Severus Snape.

But that was of secondary importance to Lily. In those days, she hardly wrote of anything or
anyone but James. Since the two were sharing their own common room it was inevitable that they’d
spend a considerable amount of extra time together, despite both of their responsibilities, and,
just as inevitably, they’d ended up getting closer and closer still, until, rather early in their
year, Harry and Ron found themselves listening to Hermione’s voice reading the description that
Lily had penned of her first lovemaking experience with James.

*If anyone asked me for details, or how it started, or what was actually going on, I wouldn’t
be able to tell them. When I was in his arms, I was nothing but a creature of feeling, drinking in
everything that was James. All I could see was his face, hovering over mine, looking like the
pleasure he was feeling was almost torture to him. He refused to take off his glasses. He said he
wanted to see me and see me well, and, as far as I remember, he never took his eyes off mine, and I
love him for that, because, looking at him I found myself completely ignorant of everything that
was going on around me. It gave me an anchor.*

*Besides that, all I really remember was that it was slow, loving but passionate, that he
handled me with the greatest care, and that it was the most magical thing that I ever experienced
in my life. I felt complete and whole because the missing part of me had finally joined the rest.
Everything he did, was for me, and me alone.*

*I don’t think I could ever feel as loved.*

*But the most beautiful thing, the most beautiful of all…well, that was this morning, when I
woke up and found him fast asleep, clutching me as though I was an anchor, his glasses askew on his
face because he hadn’t taken them off, our bodies entwined, both safely nestled in my bed.*

*It felt like coming home. Like I had finally found my home.*

*Whenever I’m with him, I feel like my existence has a meaning.*

*And what we did last night proved it, because it was the most meaningful thing that I could
ever experience. I spent most of the morning watching him sleep, and when he woke, we spent the
rest of the day together, kissing, talking, and making sweet love.*

There was a pause, and then Ron spoke a little too loudly, a little too suddenly. "I didn’t
feel like that the first time I did it," he told them openly.

Hermione’s head shot up, red faced and upset because he’d ruined the perfect atmosphere that had
created itself at Lily’s description. In her opinion, it was perfect, it wasn’t vulgar, and it was
pure emotion. Ron had just crushed all that. "WHAT?!" She screeched at him in
challenge.

"Well, see, when we first did it, we completely lost control, we were like two animals.
Like we didn’t get to eat for weeks and we were each other’s food," he explained, and didn’t
bother to stop there. His description went on, in full detail, and Hermione found herself
listening, her mind boggled, as one of her best friends described sexual acts from a male point of
view that she had never dreamed—or wanted—to hear. Especially from Ron’s vulgar mouth.

"Okay," she interrupted him, her voice squeaky in disbelieving, embarrassed anger,
"go away," she ordered. "Now."

Ron swallowed, suddenly afraid that she might let her anger loose, and made himself small on the
bed. "Let’s get back to reading," he mumbled quietly. Hermione glared at him, but turned
back to the diary anyhow and began to read again.

*My visions of Lightning Bolt keep getting clearer and clearer. I don’t think it’s safe for me
anymore to write them in this diary, and I don’t wish to put too many charms on it, or it might
confuse it’s powers, so I decided that I’m going to record them in a journal.*

*Eventually, when I think my visions are clear, and I’ve figured out their meanings, I’ll give
the journal in custody to someone I trust, and hope that, whoever I choose to give it to, will know
what to do with it when the time comes.*

"Who could she have given it to?" Ron asked out loud. "Do you think she even
finished it?"

Hermione shrugged. "I’m sure she finished it, because she was already getting to something
at this point, but I’m not sure who she would have given it to," she told him.
"Definitely none of the Marauders, though," she finished with certainty.

Harry agreed with her. "Maybe it was Jenna," he supplied helpfully.

"Yeah, you’re probably right," she told him. "Should we go talk to
Dumbledore?" She inquired. Maybe the ancient mad wizard would know if she had it, and where
she was now.

"Maybe it’s best," Harry replied, and, without another word, headed for the door,
followed by Ron and Hermione. He had no idea how they all three managed to escape the insane
stalkers, or Kevin’s insane attempts at being a bodyguard, but, sooner than they expected, they
found themselves in Dumbledore’s office, asking him if he knew anything at all about a journal that
Lily wrote.

"Yes," he answered. "I believe she finished it right before graduation. She
offered to give it to me, but I refused," he told them, and in explanation added, "a Seer
should never know what another Seer sees."

"So who has it?" Harry asked. Somehow, he was certain that he would know.

"The only person who knew everything about her visions," he replied truthfully. All
three knew who he was talking about, but only Hermione dared speak the name.

"Jenna."

"Yes," Dumbledore confirmed.

"Where is she?" Harry inquired again, certain once more that the headmaster had the
answer to that to.

"In Hogsmeade," he told them simply. "She works in the small library off the main
road, I believe Miss Granger is familiar with it," he said, his eyes twinkling at
Hermione.

She nodded, and, a short time later, they exited the office, and stopped in front of the statue
of the Griffin.

"This is strange," Hermione pointed out loud, "I know everybody in that
library," neither of the boys doubted that, "but I’ve never spoken to anyone called
Jenna," she told them. "She must have changed her name."

Harry placed a comforting hand on her shoulder. "Don’t worry about it, next week we’ll go
check it out," he told her quietly, when they noticed that several of the students out in
Hogsmeade were now coming back.

They didn’t know what divinity was against them, but when they saw Ginny walking and talking
civilly with Draco Malfoy, they had to petrify Ron to keep him from slaughtering the blond.

The two spoke shortly, and, right before Malfoy turned around to go to the Slytherin dungeons,
they saw him pull out a rolled parchment from his robes and hand it to Ginny. Hermione recognised
that parchment immediately. Levitating Ron so that they could get him easily back to the Common
Room, Hermione went to Ginny.

"Is it working?" She asked in way of greeting. Ginny looked back at her, clutching the
parchment between her hands as tightly as she dared, while being careful of not ruining it.

She gave Hermione a nervous smile and looked down at the paper in her hands. "I don’t
know," she answered truthfully, "but I’ll find out when I’ve read," she finished
with a wide grin.

Hermione smiled at her, and placed a hand on her shoulder, "Let me know," she said
simply as they quietly headed back to the Gryffindor tower. Once there, Ginny dashed up the stairs
for the sixth year girl’s dormitory with only a passing word of salutation to her friends, and,
once there, threw herself on her bed, still clutching the paper as though it were her anchor to
life.

Carefully, she unrolled the parchment, and quickly read the short missive. Jumping out of bed
she ran to her desk and squiggled her reply as quickly as she could, and dashed right back out of
her dorm room, making a wild run for the lake.

Malfoy was there waiting for her, as he’d said in his brief letter. The note, though at first
glance, to anyone might have seemed like an unimportant question, she knew very well that it
wasn’t. He’d asked her if she thought that the family that he’d come from, its name, and its power,
would haunt him forever. She handed the letter over with a simple, "Here."

Now, as she watched him unroll the parchment right there before her eyes, she had a strange
feeling of deja-vu when her heart began to thump so loudly in its cage she thought he could hear
it. It was just like when she’d given him her letter on the Hogwarts Express, when she thought he
wouldn’t take it, yet in the end he did. Now her heart was doing the same mad *tu-thumping* it
did back that day.

She watched speechless as he read the single sentence that replied his inquisition. Maybe it had
been stupid of her to answer so simply, it might have seemed as though she thought his question
might have been stupid to begin with. And maybe she shouldn’t have rushed out the way she did, but
let him think that she’d given this question a lot of thought, but instead she’d done everything by
impulse, and now, she couldn’t help but regret it.

He kept on staring at the paper as though trying to memorise the simple seven words. He read
them over and over again. *Only if you let them haunt you.* That had been her reply. To her,
everything was a question of will. Nothing would ever be able to bother her, if she didn’t let it,
but…could he be the same?

Wordlessly, he began to head back to the castle.

*Oh, no, he’s leaving, I made him mad! Come on, Ginny! Stop him! Say something! Anything!*
But all she managed to get out was a desperate cry of "Malfoy!"

He stopped in his track turning halfway so that she could see his profile. "The name’s
Draco," he corrected her, and continued on his way.

Ginny watched him go, an inevitable happy grin beginning to spread on her face. Maybe letting
her instincts drive her hadn’t been such a bad idea after all.

°*°

Harry and Hermione worked amongst themselves in their Potions assignment inside Snape’s
classroom, since Ron had dragged his assigned partner away from them and taken station next to
Malfoy as to be able to threaten him away from his sister. His best friends kept sending him
imploring glances, asking him to forget about it and leave the Slytherin alone, but, as always, Ron
was a thick pig headed prat.

In any case, they both found it a lot easier to work without the redhead, as there was a lot
less goofing off. They were actually the first ones to finish the assignment, and had done it all
perfectly. However, Snape being Snape, he couldn’t accept this from Harry.

"You shall serve detention with me today, Potter, for making your partner do everything in
your place," he commended haughtily.

"You can’t do that," Harry hissed back, saying that he’d done just as much as
Hermione.

"That’s right, sir, Harry and I worked on this in equal parts," Hermione put in trying
to sound objective, and not like she was trying to protect her friend.

"If you wish to cover for him, Miss Granger, you may serve detention with him as
well," he answered sharply, letting her, and everyone else, know that she really didn’t have a
choice in the matter.

Just that moment Dumbledore made his presence known by clearing his throat. The Potions master
seemed startled and put off by this, instantly taking a defensive stance. "May I speak with
you for a moment, Severus?" He asked quietly, and Snape followed him wordlessly into his own
office. He sat in his own desk, which should have made him feel superior, but it did not. Even
though Dumbledore was taking up the seat that was usually filled by troublesome students that Snape
liked to eat for breakfast, he felt at a definite disadvantage.

"I’m very disappointed with you, Severus," Dumbledore began. That already didn’t sound
good. "What you just did to Mr. Potter and Miss Granger was very wrong, and a very definite
abuse of power on your part," he expressed quietly.

Snape being Snape, he kept a cool head. "I don’t see why, Albus," he started,
condescendingly. "Potter can’t boil water, much less obtain a perfect potion like what he had
before him. I think it was rather obvious that Granger did all the work there," he finished in
a monotone.

"Do you have proof?" The older man asked simply, and Snape stayed quiet. Dumbledore
only looked at him, his eyes dim, missing their usual twinkle. Finally, he stood to leave, and
Snape followed suit. "Watch yourself, Severus," he warned as he reached for the doorknob.
"Abusing your powers will take you to very dark paths."

And with that he left, leaving Snape to stare at the spot he’d occupied seconds earlier.

°*°

That evening, in detention, Snape had given Harry and Hermione separate potions to brew, placed
them at opposite sides of the classroom, and watched both with a critical eye as to make sure that
they wouldn’t communicate with the other. They didn’t. And both potions were brewed well.
Hermione’s was perfect, as always, but, this time, Harry’s went quite close.

Having finished their assignment, and still at opposite ends of the classroom, both Gryffindors
watched the head of Slytherin house, waiting for him to dismiss them. Stepping in the middle of an
isle between them he gestured with his hands for them to leave, wordlessly. Just as wordlessly they
gathered their things and moved toward each other. As Hermione was about to pass by him, she bumped
shoulders with Snape, and dropped her books in surprise.

Oh, no! She still had Lily’s diary with her! Dropping down to the floor to pick her things up
like a criminal who spilled the loot on the street during an escape she gave Snape every indication
for him to butt in.

"Show your books, Miss Granger," he ordered simply. She turned to look at Harry, who
seemed just as horrified as she was, but handed all her books to him anyway. She hoped against hope
that he’d get bored of all her tomes before reaching the diary. Unfortunately, he didn’t, and
actually went straight for it. Opening to the first page, they found that he’d been trying to hold
back the surprise at reading the name written on it. He then went to the page that Hermione had
marked. He read the date out loud, and, out loud as well, he actually began to read the entry.

"Voldemort’s attacks are getting worse. Several Muggleborns were attacked all over the
world, and he’s getting more followers. Again, my worries lie with Severus," he paused at
this, interrupting his flat monotone, maybe trying to get over the shock that she’d written of him.
"At lunch, when I looked over at the Slytherin section I had another one of my visions. The
same one I’d had at the ball. It was of the recent past, and so strong that I nearly passed out
because of it. James looked like he was about pass out himself with worry for me. I think he’s
still afraid that my visions would hurt me somehow," Snape went on. Lily had visions? He’d
heard the Marauders say something of the sort, but he’d never believed any of their crap.

"What I saw was horrible, and even worse was the knowledge that Severus had put himself
through it just a short time prior. I saw him, kneeling before the Dark Lord, screaming in pain as
Voldemort placed his wand on his arm, and, with an incantation, made black, bloody ink ooze into
his arm to form the Dark Mark. The only difference between today and last year’s ball was that now
I was certain that it had already happened. It was a horrible sight, and even worse was the fact
that I could feel everything that he was feeling. The pain, the anguish, but most of all the
jealousy and bitterness that pushed him to do it," he read. With a loud sudden snap, he closed
the diary.

"How did you get this?" He asked bitterly. He was full of self righteous anger, for
which he didn’t have a motive or a right to feel, but felt nonetheless.

Harry was the one to answer. "It was in the time capsule that the Diggorinta pulled out in
our Remember Garden."

"McGonagall said that Harry’s the only one with the right to read it," Hermione added,
hoping that it would probe the teacher into handing back the thick leather bound book.

"Then why was it in your hands?" He spat back sharply.

"Harry asked me to read it for him," she replied quickly. "A girl’s words should
be read by a girl’s mouth."

"If you can be called a girl," he taunted.

Hermione just looked at him, not offended by his worthless insult. "I hope that woman’s
faith was well placed when she wrote those words," she told him quietly, her voice soft.

Snape’s eyes widened at this. What else had Lily written of him? "What words?" He
asked, maybe a little too quickly, a little too sharply.

Hermione was just as quick to answer. "The ones where she spoke her complete trust in
you," she began. "That you would choose your sides with wisdom," she told him
finally.

Snape didn’t want to hear any of it anymore. He told them to leave with a single, grave, steel
word. "Dismissed."

She wasn’t intimidated in the least. "The diary, please," she held her hand out for
him to place the tome in.

"Dismissed," he repeated, his tone as sharp as before, giving no indication of having
the intention to return it.

"The diary," Hermione repeated, her voice rising slightly in anger. He threw it at her
face, but she’d been expecting it, and blocked accordingly.

"Dismissed!" He shouted one last time, and, finally, without any need of further
prodding, they walked silently out of the cold, empty classroom, leaving the man by himself, alone
with thoughts of the past.

To be continued.

Author’s ramblings: All in all, I’m not too happy about this chapter, but I’m not really
disappointed either, it’s one of those so and so chapters, if you will. Reading it now I realize
that it’s pretty weird because I wrote it before reading book 5. Anyway, if you have any comments,
constructive critique, flames, contact me at Robbygal@hotmail.com. Go ahead, I’ll have a BBQ. Or
you could just leave a review.

Thank you for reading

Pearl

Aka Roberta



11. Chapter 10: Jenna
---------------------

Uhm…okay…I don’t even remember how long it’s been since I updated on Portkey, but I don’t think
I need to tell you that life can get in the way (ie: I moved three times, started a new business,
went insane remaking the work of three years in three weeks because my thesis and collection got
lost in the move, had my exam—I graduated top of my class, if you care to know—and will be starting
a new job on Monday!) but mine went seriously haywire in the last while. In any case, to make it
up, I’m posting three chapters at once.

I also have a new fic in the works called Harry Potter and the Bite of No Mortibus, which will
be posted as soon as my lazy betas decide to send back the first four chapters I’ve already sent
them.

Hope you enjoy.

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Chapter 10: Jenna

Harry and Hermione were again sitting by themselves in the common room, enveloped by the quiet
of the night as the rest of the house slept while they sat in front of that warm, magical,
crackling fire. Hermione’s voice wrapped around him like a warm blanket as she spoke his mother’s
words. Lily had been worried for the past several weeks. James, it seemed, had been taking far too
much interest in the Death Eaters’ movements, and, in particular, of the attacks against the
muggle-born. She feared it might have meant that he had a thought in mind to stop them.

She didn’t want to lose him.

That was why she went to him, one day, after overhearing a conversation between James and
someone of their house that was closely connected to the Ministry of Magic where the two were
exchanging information.

*I couldn’t keep quite anymore. He’s been deliberately hiding this from me (probably because
he knows I’d be against it), and I can’t stand it anymore. I can’t just stay back and watch as he
gets himself neck deep into troubles that he shouldn’t feel are his own. I know that he’s doing
this because of his family. Because Voldemort took them. I know he still feels all that hatred
inside of him.*

*And I also know that, to some small extent, he’s doing this because of me.*

*And I won’t let him.*

*As soon as his "informant" walked off, I walked in, and we instantly fell into a
fight. He accused me of eavesdropping. Well, what else was I supposed to do when he wasn’t talking
to me.*

*It was probably the longest fight we’ve had in a long time. Usually, we just bicker. This was
all out shouting in the middle of the hall, two centimetres from each other’s faces, accusing the
other of keeping secrets.*

*That’s when I blew. When he said I was keeping secrets. I practically spit in his face that
he nearly knew my entire life from the day I was born till now, while he…well, he didn’t even tell
me about his parents … "And now, you’re trying to keep secrets from me! You think I can’t see
you sneaking around, getting your precious information on the Death Eaters, chasing your own grave,
and for what?" I yelled at his face.*

*He slammed his fists against the wall, that until then, I hadn’t even noticed was behind my
shoulder. He’d cornered me, or maybe I’d cornered myself. Either way, the yelling stopped then, and
he just looked at me with the most loving, enraged, tempestuous expression he’s ever worn in front
of me.*

*We didn’t speak for a long time. Then…*

*"I can’t just watch while they kill Muggle-borns and worrying, thinking, and sometimes,
knowing that you could be next."*

*How was I supposed to argue with that? Voldemort had taken everything away from him.
Everything. All he had now was here in this school. The Marauders, his vital friends, and myself.
We’re all that he has left, and he wants to protect us.*

*He went on to tell me that there are other people, both within and outside of the school,
that would give us support, that they might be able to prevent at least some of those deaths, but
it was useless of him trying to convince me by that point. He’d already won me over.*

*I just wrapped my arms around him, and we drew comfort from each other, even if we both knew
that it might eventually bring to our deaths.*

After that they established a circle, formed of about twenty-five people between Hogwarts
students and outsiders, which consisted mainly in searching for possible victims and warned them of
the possible attack.

Still in the middle of reading an entry, they were scared out of their wits as the portrait hole
swung open to let Ron—clad in the Invisibility Cloak, back from one of his frequent visits to the
Astronomy Tower in the company of Krista Perril—who sauntered in with the biggest, goofiest grin of
his life spreading from one of his ears to the other. He looked disgustingly happy to both Harry
and Hermione, who’d been envying him for his flourishing relationship with the Ravenclaw for quite
a duration of time.

They didn’t bother asking what made him so happy, they cared very little as a matter of fact,
but he told them anyway. "She loves me," he exclaimed. "SHE LOVES ME!" He
repeated, this time trying to wake up the whole house to let them know. However he quieted down
almost instantly and immersed himself in a very fast and lengthy description of exactly what had
happened to bring his spirits to such high skies. Both of them ignored him, but let him finish just
to humour him.

"Good for you, Ron," Hermione cut in before he could go into a second, more detailed
retelling of the evening, rather annoyed at him, "now, listen to this," she told him, and
dived into a much more interesting and entertaining description of what Lily had revealed.

"Wait," paused Ron after hearing the whole story. "That sounds sort of like the
Order of the Phoenix," he pointed out. "Keep reading, we’ll see if we can find out
anything else," he indulged.

Indeed, reading on they did find some other rather shocking revelations. Two were the most
amazing. One, Wormtail was actually the one that found out most of the information. He’d sneak in
the Slytherin dungeons, hide in some convenient dark spot, and listen in on the conversation of
some of the most influential pupils (which he knew were Death Eaters, or at least were close to
some). The other, was that Dumbledore found them out almost instantly. All the students involved
had been called into his office for a very confidential meeting.

They were all terrified that they might get expelled for what they were doing, but found
instead, that the ancient Headmaster supported them, and was actually willing to lend a helping
hand—or as many as he could find. He would support them in shadow and cover for them when the need
came.

Another thing that made the Trio a bit sick was the fact that Dumbledore kept on telling both
James and Lily to be careful of the ones around them. Lily feared what he said, because the visions
she had of one close to them turning to the Dark Side kept haunting her, but James was confident
that not one of the members of the circle—the only people he was closely contacting with on regular
basis at the time—would ever betray him or his cause.

Oh, had he been wrong!

Harry was the one to speak, but he only voiced what the other two had already decided was
necessary. "First chance tomorrow we’ll go talk to Dumbledore."

°*°

The next day, after classes were over, the Trio found themselves sitting before the Headmaster,
after having told him with awkward words what they’d found out, and were, presently, even more
awkwardly waiting for him to say something.

He just stared at them. It was as though he was trying to read each one of them, to know what
they all thought of what they found out, and what would come of it from each of them.

"Yes," he finally answered in his usual quiet manner, but they all noticed that the
twinkle in his eyes was quite dimmed at the moment, though there nonetheless. "The members of
that circle are now all part of the Order of the Phoenix," he explained simply, which didn’t
actually answer any of their questions, but was a start anyhow.

"Oh," Harry mumbled as he shifted uncomfortably in his seat.

Dumbledore looked at him long and hard before telling him, "They saved a lot of
lives," it wasn’t missed by any that he was referring to Lily and James.

"And lost their own," Harry replied, surprising calm and steady, though his lack of
expression was almost eerie.

"Yes," Dumbledore confirmed.

"Yes," Harry echoed.

Swiftly, the old wizard changed subject. "Professor McGonagall tells me your Animagi
training is going quite well," he voiced quietly.

"Yes," Harry mumbled, steady and quiet.

"Tomorrow you will try to morph," it wasn’t a question.

"Yes," Harry answered anyway, just as expressionless as before.

Get some rest in light of that," Dumbledore dismissed them.

Wordlessly the three left the office, and Ron and Hermione left Harry alone with his thoughts,
knowing that talking to him before he figured any of it out would only make things worse.

Harry spent the remainder of the day trying to leave his thoughts behind as he attempted to
outrun them on his trusty Firebolt, but they were too quick, even for him. They always caught up
with him. He finally slumped in his bed with question about The Circle, his parents, and Severus
Snape. His last thought before he lost consciouness was, "What if he became Death Eater just
to oppose my father?"

°*°

"Very good," announced Professor Minerva McGonagall as she dismissed her three soon to
be Animagi students. "We will try a full transfiguration next time," she announced
proudly.

Well, none of them had managed to reach their full form, nor was anyone expecting them too, but
the results were, in any case, very fruitful. Ron had whiskers, and Hermione had sprouted a
beautifully unusual golden tail, which had gone at the moment. Harry had, at one moment, been
covered head to toe in feathers, which had been rather a funny sight, and he still didn’t
understand how he managed it from the lack of sleep the previous night. He’d only managed to doze
off somewhere near sunrise, and had to wake less then an hour later.

In any case, when Ron suggested they go read the diary again (since Krista was busy with her
friends for the evening) he didn’t protest, and soon they were all sitting in the nearly empty
common room.

They had reached a particularly interesting point of Lily’s Hogwarts life. The day that Sirius
Black spilled the beans about the Whomping Willow.

*We should have known Sirius would lose it like that after Snape said that about James’
family. James himself doesn’t think much of Snape, he says he’s only a pile of human meat with only
envy and maliciousness resting inside of him, so Severus didn’t faze James in the least. But
Sirius’ temper is so different.*

*He loved James’ family dearly, as much as his own, and I thought it was actually very
disturbing when all he did when Severus spoke the words was look at him crossly and walk
off.*

*For hours, I felt his hatred boiling as though it were a deadly potion simmering over a low
flame until it came to boiling point.*

*And come to boiling point it did.*

*Right after dinner, as I was making my way to the Head Boy and Girl dormitories (without
James because it’s a full moon) I felt it. I was living it the very moment it was playing. Sirius,
with still some time left over before having to go meet Remus, waited for Severus. When he came…it
was awful.*

*I saw his face, full of a rage that I’d never have thought possible in him, he spat at him if
he was serious in his pursue of them, since he still hadn’t figured out how to get past the blasted
tree.*

*Severus didn’t answer. He stayed expressionless, the way he always does when he’s offended.
And Sirius smiled. The ugliest smile I’d ever see on his face.*

*"It’s easy to get past the Willow," his tone was so malicious, so unlike him, that
I was trying to convince myself that it wasn’t him. But it was. Oh, it was! And he’d just told
Severus of the knot to immobilise the tree.*

*Dazed as I was from all the hate and spitefulness of the vision, I didn’t have time to waste.
I ran as fast as I could, crossing the entire length of the school as quickly as I could get my
legs to carry me, out on the courtyard, and down the passage of the tree. Ahead of me, I could hear
Severus. He didn’t have a great lead, but he was nearly at the door. I could hear Remus, fully
transformed, and excited. He’d smelled the blood of an enemy, and it was enticing the predator that
ruled in these nights. I’d never be able to make it on time, and if I did, there was very little
chance that I might live past a werewolf’s hunger for blood.*

*He was howling and scratching at the door, and I could hear the sounds of a dog (Sirius, who
was now seriously regretting what he’d done) trying to hold him back, and a deer, I could hear
James. He was pushing Remus back, and winning. James was the strongest out of all of them, but when
I reached the end of the tunnel, and saw Severus’ hand going to open the door, I never thought I
could feel that much fear. Especially when Severus was knocked down on the floor by a gigantic
creature.*

*Severus lost his consciousness, which was a good thing. It wasn’t Remus, it was James in his
Animagus form. He’d managed to push Remus back enough to allow himself the time and space to go
through the opening and close it again. He transfigured back into himself, and we both did quick
work sending all the locking and strengthening spells we could remember at the door. To keep Remus
back until his blood thirst dissipated.*

*James asked me what happened, and I told him everything as he put a levitating charm on
Severus to get him back safely to the Hospital Wing. We didn’t know what excuse we’d use once back
in school, and even less when Severus might wake up, but we found that the latter was unnecessary.
He’d been awake and listening to my retelling.*

*I hadn’t said anything about James’ or the others’ Animagi forms, but I did say that Remus
was a werewolf, and he probably would have figured it out on his own, since he said he’d seen the
creature inside the walls of the Shrieking Shack.*

*The rest of the night was so full of distraught emotions as we sat before Madame Pomfrey and
Professor McGonagall and Dumbledore, trying to come up with something that didn’t sound completely
horrible, that I really don’t recall anything that was said at all.*

*I remember Severus repeated continuously that Sirius, along with Remus, should have been
expelled, and James, too. There was arguing. And then, somehow, Dumbledore managed to get Severus
to understand that now, he was in life debt to James.*

*I don’t think Sirius will be expelled, because Severus, in an attempt to hide the fact that
he’d actually been trying to find out what was going on, hadn’t given very strong reasons for
Sirius to leave the school, but Severus is very bitter, and Sirius is in a sea of guilt at the
moment. I could feel it all the way in the Hospital Wing, even if he was in Hogsmeade.*

*I do know that James felt very betrayed, and Remus will too, when he finds out. I know the
three of them will get past this moment, but there will be another one in the future that will take
a very long time to mend.*

*As for Severus, he’s just passed the point of no return.*

*He can’t be saved anymore. At least not now.*

*Maybe in the future, but I can’t help him anymore.*

*Someone else will have to bring him to us.*

The trio was quiet again. They knew that when Sirius was provoked, and had time to think about
the provocation (if it was a serious one) he could become scary and vengeful, but they would have
never believed that he would just tell Snape how to get killed. True, he probably didn’t think it
would kill him. When mad, Sirius thought very little. He probably thought that he would only get
really scared and leave them alone from then on, but it was exactly that irresponsible behaviour
that probably got Remus to believe that his friend had betrayed the Potters. Hadn’t that incident
happened, there could have been a possibility in which Sirius might have been believed in.

None of them, however, chose to speak of it.

"It’s late," Harry said suddenly, "and tomorrow we’re going to Hogsmeade,"
he informed. He stood suddenly, his face pulled in what was a mixture of disbelief, anger, and
hurt. "I’m going to sleep," he finished suddenly, and the two only watched as he made his
way up to his dormitory.

°*°

The following day, they were making their way into the alleyway that hid the small library.
Hermione said that, if she ever wanted a light reading that didn’t have to do with research, that
was the place to go…at least for her light reading, but she still hadn’t figured out who Jenna
could have been out of them. The only people working there were three women, but they were all
within Lily’s age range. It was obvious that Jenna had changed her name. The question was why?

The library was very tiny, and nearly completely impossible to find. Hermione had stumbled into
one of the workers one day when a shipment of books had come in back in forth year. If it hadn’t
been for that, she might have never found it.

Walking in, she was pleased to see Jeanine, her favourite out of the three ladies working there,
was the only one working at that time. Jeanine gave Hermione one of her usual smiles, but blanched
upon noticing Harry’s tall head come in behind hers.

She looked ready to pass out.

They all knew, they had just found Jenna.

She didn’t say hello, or give them any notice that she wanted them to speak either. She just
stared, and then, without a word, she went to the back of the shop. Harry was afraid that his
presence might have offended her, that looking at him had brought her painful memories of a past
that couldn’t be salvaged, but, just when he was about to call Ron and Hermione out of the shop,
Jenna came back, carrying a book similar to Lily’s diary. Red, leather bound, thick, and heavy. And
it was written in Lily’s hand.

"I knew you’d come for this sometime this year," she spoke more to herself, referring
to the diary that had been kept in the time capsule, "I just didn’t think it would be this
soon." She mumbled, almost apologetically.

She placed the book directly in Harry’s hands, and his fingers automatically clutched at it.
Thoughts, not very pleasant thoughts, began to formulate in his mind as he held it securely in his
palms. What if she had known? What if she’d given her life for his on purpose? What if she’d
sacrificed herself long before the day came? What if he’d been the one to push her to an early
death before he was even a person? What if she’d already known she wouldn’t have a choice?

Jenna seemed to read his mind.

"Lily…" her voice had started out shaky, quivering. She cleared her throat. "She
knew a long time ago that she would only live a short time," Harry’s face darkened.
"Because she chose it so," that had not, at all, been expected on Harry’s part, and his
surprise and shock was evident on his face. "Her visions always had two outcomes. I know, she
used to tell me everything. And I’ve read this journal. Here, she only writes of one of them,
because even then, she’d chosen to give her life for yours," she offered in explanation, but
she’d felt it hadn’t been enough. "She chose to give her life for yours, Harry, and she’s
happy with her choice," her voice was strong, and sad as she spoke this, but more convincing
than anyone might have expected. "I don’t know what happened that night exactly," she
began again, and it was clear that the lack of knowledge of what happened tore at her, "but
I’m sure James is happy you’re here, too. I think, with him being so close to Lily and all, he knew
that it would either be you or him," as she finished speaking this, she knew it wouldn’t be of
great comfort, but she knew it to be the truth.

"He knew," Harry said suddenly, but with a certainty that was almost eerie.
"He…went first. To give us time to run." His words were short, quiet, like they had been
when he’d spoken to Dumbledore. "And then she gave her life," he concluded with
finality.

Hermione’s surprised voice gave away all her concern when she softly spoke his name in worry.
"Harry…"

"I still hear them sometimes," he explained. "Especially when I’m around
Dementors. I hear that night, I see green, then pain…and then nothing…just Voldemort
laughing," Hermione’s eyes were brimming with tears just watching Harry’s back turned to hers,
looking down at the journal, his voice hushed.

"I’ve read the prophecies, Harry," Jenna repeated. "In all of them, Lily spoke of
herself as not there, because she’d already chosen," she told him again. "You see, she
knew that she and James would…perish together." She made that point painstakingly clear.
"He was her light," she continued quietly, "and you became one too once you were
born. She always told me that she would give herself gladly to keep the light from dimming,"
she said, one of her hands going to touch his messy hair. She felt connected to him, maybe because
he had Lily’s eyes, maybe because he looked so much like James…maybe both. Harry didn’t move away
from her. "I see you have a light, too," she said to him, and his eyes snapped up at her
in shock, waiting for her to explain herself. She didn’t. "Keep your light from dimming, and
both you and your parents will be happy," she’d made it clear that it was to be the end of
their conversation. Quietly, the Trio left the library, with the extra weight of the journal, and
Jenna’s words, on their hearts.

Ron dismissed himself quickly saying he had to meet Krista, and Harry and Hermione were left
alone with the thick journal, each drowning in their own thoughts. Hermione was the first to speak,
albeit uncertainly. "Harry…" she began, "what you said…about
remembering…and…hearing…that night…"

"It’s all true," he confirmed with an edge to his tone.

"Since when?" Her eyes were glued to the cobbles beneath their feet as she asked. She
had only heard of this once, right before their fight broke out on Christmas day, back in third
year. But it hadn’t been like this. He’d been angry then, angry at Sirius, because he thought that
his godfather had betrayed his parents. It wasn’t the cold sadness that he now had while speaking
of it.

He sighed. Deeply. "A lot in third, and then on and off since then," he replied, his
voice devoid of expression.

So, even then, it had been like that, but his anger had been stronger than the pain. A thought
struck Hermione. "If we weren’t so…mad…at each other, back in third…" she began again,
"would you have told me?" She asked nervously. She felt as though she was the only one
left out. Ron hadn’t seemed shocked at all when Harry confessed what he did. Did Harry tell him? Or
had Ron heard him speak in his sleep?

Harry knew that what she was asking was different from that time before their fight over the
Firebolt. It was different for him, too. He answered her with another question. "Why should I
burden you like that?"

Her reply was sharp and quick. "Because you shouldn’t burden yourself!"

Harry didn’t get a chance to answer, because they both heard Jenna calling his name from behind
them. He turned to her. "Yes?" He asked, inciting her to tell him whatever it was that
had made her come out of her shop and look for him.

"I just wanted to tell you this," she began, and her tone promised nothing good.
"Even though you were your parents light, at this moment, if you didn’t turn to your light and
take it, you will dim," there was no denying the absolute certainty in her voice.

He knew all too well what she was talking about, but he couldn’t do what she was telling him to.
"I can’t take that light."

"Why?" Her question was almost indignant.

"Because she fears what the darkness in me could bring," he told her, almost
enigmatically.

She understood, however. "The light, Harry, will always overpower the darkness, and yours
is so strong," she said this with a proud smile.

"But it still fears me," was his quick reply.

"She doesn’t need to, though. The scar will protect you," she sounded crazy when she
said that.

"The scar bonds me to Voldemort," he spit back sharply.

"Yes," she confirmed. "But it’s even more strongly bonded to Lily," there
was no denying the tone of her voice.

Not knowing what to say, he asked a question. "How do you know my light?"

She smiled at him, like a proud aunt would to her favourite nephew. "I’ve been watching
you, Harry, ever since fourth year, when you started coming so much to Hogsmeade," she told
him. "Your eyes, when you look at her…you have the same look that Lily had when she watched
James," she explained.

"It’s a very beautiful thing, Harry," she complimented him. "Don’t let it pass
you by. Don’t let it slip away from you." Her words influenced so much that he was almost
compelled to take her advice.

Almost.

To be continued.

Next chapter is just a click away. Sorry, but I didn’t put much effort in reading back though
this.



12. Chapter 11: Code name: Marauders
------------------------------------

Second chapter of the day here for you.

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Pearl Drop Angel

Chapter 11: Code name: Marauders

It was an unseasonably warm, sunny afternoon of March, and, after having decided that he didn’t
wish for the company of his incredibly tedious House mates—which he used to enjoy very much, and
for some unknown reason suddenly started finding annoying—Draco Malfoy sat with his back against a
tree trunk facing the lake, in one of its most secluded spots, with none other than Ginny Weasley.
He didn’t know why lately he felt compelled to spend more time with her, but on that particular
day, he’d felt the need to speak with her, and had sent his hawk to give her The Parchment, telling
her that he wished to see her in that spot.

So there they were, watching the giant squid lazily tracing his tentacles on the lake’s surface,
not speaking a word. Not that it was uncomfortable, on the contrary, but there was something that
had been nagging at the back of his mind for a while—maybe because soon IT would happen, and he
didn’t know whether to put a stop to it or not—and he felt the need to speak.

His voice seemed to become a part of the quiet, lazy day. "Do you remember the letter that
I sent to you on Christmas? What I asked you?" He inquired in a whisper, his eyebrows knit in
thought.

She looked at him calmly, as though she’d expected that the question would come sooner or later.
"Yes," her tone was just as hushed as his, "but tell me again," it was almost a
plea.

"Do you…" he started, but trailed off, almost scared to actually say the words out
loud. He cleared his throat. "Do you still think I can be saved?" He saw a small smile
borne on her lips.

"More than ever," she told him, her smile becoming a grin, yet her expression clouded
over with a thought. "But do you…want to be…saved?" If he didn’t wish to change his life,
than it was a lost cause.

He didn’t answer. Instead, he stood and began to leave with a quick, "I better
go."

Worry began to claim her. "Draco!" She called to him urgently.

He stopped, and half turned to look at her, his expression pleading. "Don’t make me answer
that," he begged. "Answering…it would be betraying my family," and with that he
walked off.

Ginny took that as a positive reply.

°*°

"Harry," Hermione said, her tone not very pleasant at all.

He flinched. For the past couple of months she’d taken that tone with him often, and he’d never
given in to her, but he knew her to be very stubborn. He knew he couldn’t avoid it forever, but he
tried.

"Let’s go finish the diary," his suggestion sounded actually far more like a quiet but
firm command.

She, however, deliberately tried to disobey. "Harry," she began with a tone of
reprimand, "we’ve had our ups and downs, you know that. But I wish you would have told me
exactly what was going on."

There it was again. Still upset with him because he didn’t want her to get worked up over the
fact that he heard his parents die when he was around dementors, and, very often, in his sleep. He
had told her, back in third year, yet he understood that when he’d confessed it back in those days,
he hadn’t quite made it out to be what it was. "What’s the point?" He asked bitterly.
"It would have only made you worry."

"No, Harry," she contradicted with a sad shake of the head. "It would have taken
the burden off of you."

"You would have worried," he knew she would have.

"Yes," she relented. "But in our relationship, from the beginning, my job was to
worry for you, because you never worried enough," there was a slight smile in her tone when
she spoke that, and it reflected itself in her warm topaz eyes even if her expression remained one
of reprimand.

He didn’t want to argue anymore. "Let’s just read."

"Alright," she gave in, knowing very well that she would have thousands of chances to
pick the argument back up, like she’d been doing for a long time now. Finally, she was starting to
break through his ‘hero-trying-to-protect-friends’ routine.

They hadn’t even begun to read about the antagonism between James and Snape, when the portrait
hole swung open so fast it nearly got thrown off of its hinges, letting in the twenty some crazy
first years whose minds were filled with the one intent of ripping Harry’s clothes to shreds.
"There he is! I told you he would be here!" Shouted Mary Collins, a tall, thick, flat
faced girl that had self nominated her person ‘President of the
Harry-Potter-Boy-Who-Lived-Quidditch-Star-and-all-around-totally-hot-guy-Fanclub’, otherwise known
as ‘Potter’s a babe’.

Harry gave one look at the portrait hole, blocked by the Stalker Mob, the windows—after having
contemplated summoning the Firebolt to dash out into the afternoon sky—the stairs leading to the
dormitories, and finally Hermione, all within a time span of two seconds. Noticing that the
Stalkers were starting to move in on him, he shouted to Hermione, "Wait for me," while
jumping over the couch and running up the stairs as quickly as he could. Considering that the
staircase wasn’t very wide, and that the obsessed pre-teens following him would be trying to deter
the others ascent toward him, he should have enough time to duck into one of the younger wizards’
dormitories unseen.

He dashed into his old second year dorm room, hid behind a particularly large trunk, and waited
for the sounds of multiple heavy footsteps and panting breaths to pass. He heard them outside the
door asking each other where he could be. Someone opened said door, glanced quickly inside—while he
made himself small behind his hiding spot—told the others that nobody was in there, and followed
the others in their stampede to the upper lever of the dorm.

The footsteps sounded far away enough for him to peek out. It looked as though the way was
clear. Throwing the door open and dashing down to the Common Room, he reached Hermione within
seconds.

"He’s down here!" Shouted one of the smaller members of the ‘Potter’s a babe’ Fanclub,
who’d obviously been there as a watch guard, and soon they heard the sound of rampaging
over-hormonal adolescence making their boisterous descent of the stairs as loudly as they
could.

Harry and Hermione exchanged fearful glances, looked at the portrait hole—still open, and this
time clear of senile young girls—and made their dash out of it before the others could reach the
last landing. They ran down the stairs, Hermione clutching the diary to her, in hopes that they
wouldn’t ruin it in case they caught them, the Stalkers hot on their heels.

They were moving their feet as quickly as they could, and soon they found themselves in the
dungeons, the Pursuers had fallen a little bit behind them. Harry had no intention of letting this
opportunity pass him by. Grabbing Hermione by the wrist, taking her with him around the corner, he
pulled into the first open classroom in sight, slammed the door behind him, and started placing
every locking charm he’d ever learned from Hermione onto the thick wooden entrance of the room,
Hermione adding a few more while she was at it.

They put their ears to the door, and heard them rampage pass the door and all the way down the
hallway, to turn into another one without so much as a thought of them hiding in there. They both
heaved a heavy sigh, placed their backs against the door, and slid down till they were sitting
against the cold marble of the floor, flooded in relief.

They were so relieved, as a matter of fact, that they didn’t even realize they’d locked
themselves in the classroom adjacent to Snape’s office. It seemed, however, that said office must
have been unoccupied, because the acid professor didn’t come to take advantage of the excellent
opportunity to take point off from their house.

They sat there, heaving heavy breaths, grins wide on their faces from the successful escape,
clothes torn from the various attempts on the Fanclub’s part to hold them back, trying to regain
their composure.

Hermione turned to give Harry one of her more radiant ‘I-know-something-you-don’t-know’ smiles.
He grinned back. "What?" He asked laughing, even though he had an idea of what she might
say.

"We," she started, pointing a finger at his face, "were definitely NOT that scary
when we were their age," she finished, poking her finger against his nose.

His grin grew, and, after having pulled himself up off the floor, held out his hand for her to
stand as well. She took it, and a moment later the two were sitting in their usual Potions desk,
where they usually took class.

Soon, they were engrossed in Lily’s seventh year life. They were nearly finished with the diary,
there were a couple of weeks left till her graduation. They read of her exams, of the antagonism
between Snape and the Marauders, which seemed to be increasing daily, and the graduation fuss, and,
of course, of the Grad Ball. Basically, if was the Hogwarts prom.

Lily described her time there with James as one of the happiest days of her life, yet it was
very melancholy, because it meant that she was to leave a place that had become home for her. The
place that had made her a witch. The place that had given her James. Her home.

Yet, there was something else that she wrote of regarding that Ball. She wrote of Snape.

*I felt very sorry for Severus at the dance. He was there, with the Slytherins, and he looked
angrier and more upset than ever. And he was sad. I could feel it radiating off of him so strongly,
it was as though I could see it. Even though I know that I could never bring myself to love him, I
couldn’t stop myself from wondering if, during last, my going with him to the Solar Crowning Ball
would have made a difference, if it would have pushed him to make different choices, and, conceited
as it may sound, I think it would have. But, in all honesty, I couldn’t have gone with him knowing
what James and I had been mutually feeling toward each other for so long.*

*I loved James, and I love him more with every passing day, and dancing with Severus, knowing
that I could have been with James, would have, to put it simply, killed me.*

*Not having James is like not having the best part of myself.*

Silence ensued.

Hermione sniffed lightly, but with the quiet that had befallen them it was unmistakable, and
Harry couldn’t help but ask. "Did you ever feel that way?"

She looked at him, honesty openly revealed in her eyes. "Every day since my life here at
Hogwarts started," she’d never spoken anything truer.

Harry asked another question. "Do you think it’s possible to fall in love at
eleven?"

She smirked. "I’m sure your fan club would agree," she told him mirthfully, trying to
lighten the heavy mood.

He remained serious. His eyes honest, open, and searching hers. "Do you?"

She looked down at the diary in her hands, searching in Lily’s words, hoping they would give her
an answer, but it was already within her. "Yes," she stated firmly. "I’m sure people
can fall in love at age eleven," a small smile graced her face. "It just takes them a
while to realize it."

Another pause, and then Harry spoke again. "I should have told you," he said
enigmatically.

Hermione’s heart jumped in her throat. "What?" She asked, hope swelling in her
heart.

"That, sometimes, I still hear my parents dying," Harry replied quietly, but she was
glad that he was finally letting her in on this, even if he seemed reluctant.

"Yes, you should have," she told him with a desperate sigh, "but I understand why
you didn’t."

He couldn’t keep the smile from growing. "Dinner’s over by now," he told her suddenly.
"Want to go to the kitchens before heading back?"

"Yes," she replied, a smile borne on her face as well, "but we ought to hurry to
bed. Tomorrow we have training," she reminded him.

"Well," he told her impishly, "maybe it’ll be the last time," he sounded
hopeful.

She smiled at him. "May be."

And with that they proceeded to take off all the locking charms they’d placed on the door so
they could leave. The task was hard and tedious, but the two were laughing and joking with the
other, and once opened, they walked out the door with companionable giggles.

If they had looked back, their laughter would have died, because they would have seen professor
Snape—who had been listening since they first entered, hoping to catch them doing something worthy
of punishment—stone faced and angry as always, watching the now empty doorways with his arms
crossed over his chest, and knit eyebrows.

°*°

"Mr Weasley," McGonagall reprimaned the redhead, voice stern and angry, lips thin,
"I will not let you leave this classroom or move onto you fellow students until I see a full
transformation from you," she finished in a huff.

"Oh, come on, Minerva," Sirius stepped in, trying to get her to go easy on the boy who
looked ready to break down in a terrible crisis. He’d been using her first name since he’d come
back to the castle. "It took us Marauders three years to do it!" He reminded her.

It seemed to anger her, though. "Yes, Mr Black," she snapped at him, letting him know
that one more word would get him in trouble, thanks to the use of his last name. "But if I’m
well informed, you were without mentoring and with a handicap like Pettigrew to slow you
down." She humphed.

"Ah, well…" Sirius didn’t have an excuse for that.

She wasn’t done, however. "They have two mentors," she reminded him, "and will,
therefore, transfigure fully before they leave this class." Her tone was final.

"Which may be never," Sirius informed her tartly.

She gave another humph, and turned to Ron again, looking more menacing than she’d ever looked
before. Mr Weasley!" Her shout nearly made him faint. "Again!" She ordered, and for
the world of her, she looked like a traded slave driver with whip in hand and in position.

Ron, not liking the idea of being whipped, even if it was only imaginary, decided to appease
her, or at least try to. Finally, after five hours of incessant training with McGonagall on his
back, he felt the world becoming bigger around him. He felt his mouth and nose lengthening, his
torso becoming longer, his limbs becoming short and stubby, his clothes turning into fur. He kept
his eyes closed for a long time after the transformation, when Sirius, Harry, and Hermione’s
giggles couldn’t be contained anymore.

"What?" He asked confused, yet not sure that they heard him since he seemed to make an
unusual animalistic sound, rather than form a word.

"Malfoy would love this!" Harry exclaimed, and, with that, picked up a hand mirror off
the teacher’s desk, and snooped down, since Ron was almost at floor level, placing it in front of
his eyes so that he could se what he had turned into.

Ron was horrified. He was truly horrified. Out of all the creatures that walked the wizarding
and muggle worlds, he had to turn into this! Something must have been absolutely wrong. Maybe
McGonagall forgot to tell him something vital…maybe he had just seen wrong, maybe the world was
coming to an end, but for the life of him, WHY did he have to turn into a WEASEL! Anything!
Anything! But not a WEASEL! And a RED WEASEL to top it off!

Malfoy had better never find out about this or else.

"Very well, Mr Weasel," McGonagall punned, "you may transfigure back," she
told him. Turning to Hermione, she told her to try morphing.

Ron, now back in his ‘Weasley’ form, was rather upset with her, not only did Hermione make in on
her first try, as was her usual, she outdid his weasel by several long…long miles.

"Oh, good Heavens!" They heard McGonagall exclaim in shocked surprise.

Hermione did not expect that reaction out of her. It wasn’t usually easy to surprise the
Transfiguration teacher. She took to examining herself in an attempt to figure out what she might
have been. Her mouth and nose had lengthened, and to her, looked almost canine, yet she couldn’t be
sure. Looking down, she noticed she must have been a rather large animal, thin, elegant and
graceful, with a long neck, and lush golden fur. That was nice, but it didn’t help her into
figuring out what she was. And then she noticed them. The four long, plush golden tails with
unusual black markings on the tip.

*Oh, Merlin!* She thought to herself. She couldn’t see her own face, but she knew that if
she were standing in front of a mirror she would have seen herself as a fox-wolf, with the irises
of her topaz eyes fading to a nearly blind white around the pupil, her ears, shaped like the Elves,
would be sleeked against the side of her head, and in between her eyebrows, with the same markings
as her tail, she would see, small, and placed in the shape of a four-sided-star the symbols of the
four elements.

She was a Volpegea! The magical creature capable of reading human thought and with the power
embedded in her tail to control the elements—wind above all. Almost as though needing to try out
her transfigured powers, she whipped one of her tails, making the locked room hiss with a strong,
powerful gust of wind.

There was no doubt. She was a Volpegea.

McGonagall told her to transfigure back into herself, and she did so effortlessly. Her mind was
blown. She was a Volpegea. She looked to Harry, who was proud and surprised with her amazing
transfiguration. If she had turned into something that powerful, what would Harry be turning into?
Oh, but a Volpegea! In all her studying, she had found out that nobody had ever managed to
transform into such a powerful animal. At least, nobody who was registered. *Oh, Harry, what will
you turn into?*

Still dazed, Hermione barely heard McGonagall issuing Harry the command to transfigure, but when
she saw him concentrate, her attention was centred on him. For a second he seemed to struggle,
unable to find the right amount of concentration, and then, like magic, his clothes turned into
feathers, his hair following suit, his face and hands covering with them as well, his mouth and
nose turning into a sleek, black beak, his legs became bird like, growing talons, his arms and back
turning into gigantic wings.

He looked like a black hawk, except that he’d stayed his own size. He was still over two meters
tall. There were white feathers drawing a circle around his eyes, looking very much like the round
spectacles he’d worn before. His eyes themselves were a beautifully eerie, iridescent green, so
bright Hermione thought they might blind her.

Since he’d stayed the same size, he was almost afraid he hadn’t transfigured at all, but when he
tried to raise his arms to look at himself, he found sleek, ebony, feather-covered wings extending
more than twice his eight on both sides of him. They were so wide that, in the small classroom, he
couldn’t open them more than halfway.

"What am I?" He wondered out loud, not expecting anyone to understand him, since
usually birds could only squaw and things. Yet they all heard him.

"A Wingadeus," McGonagall whispered, stiff as a board, falling backwards until she hit
the floor with a loud and not at all graceful *thump*. She had fainted.

"A what?" Harry mumbled, or tried to without moving his beak, completely surprised
that he’d received an answer.

"A Wingadeus," Hermione repeated, coming close to pet one of his wings, which were
soft perfect and under her touch. "It’s a magical creature believed to be extinct for several
centuries now," she told him. "They’re invisible in flight, even during day light, and
they speak every language that was ever spoken on the planet, including animal. They’re also
telekinetic, and some people thought they could influence the weather," she wasn’t sure about
the last one, but everything else was absolutely true.

"Very good, Miss Granger," they heard Dumbledore’s voice coming from one of the
portraits in the room. It must have been connected to his office. "I couldn’t have said it
better myself," and, walking over to place a comforting hand on Hermione’s shoulder he told
her, "I believe the Volpegea’s power will be of great use to him."

How long had he been there? How did he know she was a Volpegea?

Sirius still seemed to be in shock as he brought McGonagall back to her senses by squeezing
Cicciobello’s stomach over her face so that the doll released the largest, most vile smelling
amount of bodily gas they had ever smelt, right over the professor’s nose. He’d been hiding the
doll under his robes, waiting all day to be able to pull that one off on the teacher. McGonagall
awoke instantly, trying to choke her way past the smell.

Harry transfigured back to his original form, noticing that his transfiguration teacher kept on
looking dizzy whenever she looked at him. Dumbledore began to speak to them.

"As of right now, whenever referring to your animal counterparts, you shall use specific
names. Mr Weasley," Ron stood straighter, "you are Whiskers," the redhead deflated
instantly. "Miss Granger; your name will be Tailwinds," Hermione beamed. "Mr Potter,
you are Falcospeak," Harry nodded.

"Professor Dumbledore," Hermione began to ask, "there was a precise reason for
which we’ve undergone this training, isn’t there?" It didn’t really sound like a question at
all, but rather like a statement.

"Precisely, Miss Granger," Dumbledore nodded. "You are to be…spies, so to speak.
You will keep watch of the grounds when I ask you to, and, sometimes, investigate anything you can,
taking advantage of your new possibilities. Is that clear, Marauders?"

"Marauders?!" The trio exclaimed in unison.

"That is to be your code name," he told them, his eyes twinkling.

Sirius couldn’t keep the smile off his face.

To be continued.

Hope you liked. It’s one of my fave chappies.



13. Chapter 12: Foreboding
--------------------------



And here is the third of the day that I promised you. Some of my ff.net readers were rather
enthusiastic about this one. Hope you will be as well.

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

By Pearl Drop Angel

Chapter 12: Foreboding

Strange things kept on happening in Riddle home. Strangely clothed people had been going in and
out for the past two years or so, unusual displays of eerie light, the disappearance of the
caretaker…the villagers were scared. Which was exactly why they simply stayed clear of the property
and acted as though nothing out of the usual was happening at all.

And He Who Must Not Be Named rather liked it that way. Those stupid Muggles were so worried
about their own self preservation they didn't even have the courage to come see what
destruction this home would bring, so that when it would strike, it would fall upon them like a
thunder shower, and all they warning the would have would be the big black clouds forming quickly
on the horizon. Even the forces of order didn't dare step near the house, the fact that nobody
had openly reported any unusual activity as their excuse.

The time for their breach was near, though Wormtail, his snivelling servant, didn't seem to
agree. The coward.

"They have eyes everywhere," he sniffed, rubbing his hands together nervously, his
silver one gleaming a cold white in light of the fireplace.

Stupid mouse. "We shan't be seen," the voice that spoke was cold, hissing, smooth,
and the purest form of evil, coming from a hooded figure, standing before the fire, a gigantic
snake huddled at its feel.

It wasn't enough reassurance for the balding, short, plump man. There were people there who
wanted nothing but his head. "How?"

"I have thought of it," was the elusive answer.

"But what of Malfoy?" The pale man asked. Lucius Malfoy had been quite a source of
worry in the past couple of years. The Ministry was watching him far too closely.

"He has eluded questioning thrice. He will last till the attack," another bewildering
answer, but it was all he would give.

Still, the nervous man wasn't satisfied. "What of his son?" That had been a true
source of worry to their entire line. "He's been teetering."

"He's of little use now." Was he though? Could he be of use to their targets?

"How will we breach?" The man snivelled again.

"We are nearly ready for the attack." That wasn't an answer, but it made Wormtail
swallow in an in vane attempt at clearing a lump of fear out of his throat.

Â°*Â°

"Harry, what's wrong?"

Harry took his eyes off of Cicciobello, who was having a grand time telling the Great Hall of
how Snape's first kiss had to spit on the floor all the amount of saliva he'd left in her
mouth, and turned his attention to Hermione, who had issued the question. It was better not to
worry her. "Huh?" He tried to sound nonchalant. "Nothing."

"Don't lie to me," she commended annoyed. "You've been edgy for
months."

What was the point of hiding anything from her? "I've been…having…feelings…" he
ventured.

Ron perked up at this enough to ask, with his mouth full of stuffed chicken, "Like?"
Harry's tone wasn't really leading him into believing that Harry was about to confess his
undying love to their best friend, so it must have been something else worthy of almost as much
interest.

"My scar…" not a good beginning, "it crawls…all the time."

"Oh!" Ron mumbled, his mouth gaping open, letting the chicken tumble out.

"Now it's humming," Harry added.

"That doesn't sound good," Ron replied, his mouth now devoid of food.

"It isn't," Harry's reply was quick and clear.

"Did you tell Dumbledore?" Hermione asked worried.

"Yes," this time the answer was slow, thoughtful, and almost unwilling, as though he
didn't wish to tell them.

"What did he say?" A pox on cleverly curious women!

"They're…preparing an attack," he mumbled, almost inaudibly, yet they both heard
clearly enough.

"What?" Ron's high pitched squeal made the entire table's eardrums ring from
abuse.

"Oh, honestly Ron!" Hermione huffed. "It was obvious! Otherwise, why the Duel
Training?"

"Because it should always be good to know how to defend yourself," he replied quickly.
That's what the teacher had been telling everyone, anyhow.

"Especially when war's about to start," Hermione's open answer was almost
brutal for Ron. He practically felt a physical blow.

"But they don't have enough followers yet!" Ron was certain of this. His
father's ties in the Ministry were still strong.

"No, they don't," a swell of hope bubbled within the redhead, "but they have
enough to make a complete breach of the school. Once they do that, and the get Dumbledore out of
the way, recruiting more people will be so easy for them they'd have an army in less than a
month," the bubble of hope burst before it was even born.

Harry agreed with her. "Yeah, and they'll attack soon."

Ron swallowed. "How soon?"

"Easter at the latest," he answered. "It's a good thing we manage to finish
our transfiguration so soon."

"What do you mean?" The redhead was lost.

"Don't you get it?" Hermione asked exasperated. "We trained so we could
survey Hogwarts!"

"You mean, watch guard?" Ron asked confused.

"Yes. I'm sure they've thought of a way to breach, tough they haven't gone
through it yet. Hogwarts has a lot of wards and charms protecting it. To breach they'd need a
lot of people. It's not easy getting such a crowd around here without drawing attention to it.
They have to be patient, and when the time comes, they'll be quiet," Hermione explained.
"If we keep watch we have time to warn the castle, and organize a defence."

"Dumbledore didn't tell me anything, but I'm sure he's got something planned
already," Harry put in.

"Oh," Ron didn't seem to be cheered by this in the least.

Â°*Â°

Turning over on the blanket covering the Astronomy Tower's cold floor that they were laying
on, Krista draped her arm over Ron's unusually stiff form. Something was bothering him badly.
Sometime around lunch he began seriously worrying about something, but he didn't seem to want
to tell her. Maybe it was something important. Harry and Hermione had seemed very worried lately,
and very edgy as well. Maybe they'd told him what they knew. Dragging her body up along his so
that they were at eye level she asked. "What's bothering you?"

He seemed surprised that she noticed his state of mind. He shouldn't have been. Krista had
been observing him and his friends for so long that she could guess what they were feeling with
just a simple glance. "Nothing," he tried to sound truthful.

"Is it something with…You-Know-Who?" She asked, her eyebrows raised with worry.

His own shot up in surprise. "How'd you know?"

She shrugged. "I noticed Harry's been touching his scar a lot," she replied matter
of factly. "Every time that happened you usually all ended up in the hospital wing," she
told him with a small laugh.

He chuckled, too, but sobered very quickly. Too quickly for Ron. "Don't tell
anybody," he didn't sound menacing. He sounded truly worried. Something big was bound to
happen soon. The three of them looked like they were afraid it would all fall on them within
moments, and they weren't sure whether or not they could keep it from crushing them.

She wasn't upset that he asked her that. She knew he did only to be absolutely certain that
the news wouldn't spread past the two of them, and the other couple. "I won't,"
she reassured him, "but are you okay with it?"

Ron didn't answer right away. "I'm scared," that much was obvious, "but I
don't risk too much," and it was true. In fact, he could almost be considered an outsider
to all this compared to his friends. Like always. "I don't risk like Harry," he
finished.

A mask of confusion crossed her face. "What do you mean?"

"Soon…maybe too soon, Harry's going to have to face him," Ron was truly worried
for his friend.

Krista held him even more tightly to her body. "Don't worry," she reassured him,
"Hermione will make him live," she sounded like she knew the deepest secret of the world,
yet, for the life of her, Ron knew she wasn't going to tell him.

It didn't matter.

She'd never been wrong before. He trusted her to be right this time as well.

Â°*Â°

Ginny was worried. Malfoy had been acting stranger than usual. She'd been watching him at
the Slytherin table for the past few days, more than she usually did. He ate by himself. Little by
little he'd alienated himself from the members of his house, including Crabbe and Goyle, and
now that his mates were starting to notice it, they were getting angry. She could see them all
conspiring against him, only a few seats down from his own.

He was completely aware of it, of course, yet he chose not to acknowledge it, which irritated
the rest of the Slytherins even further.

He was avoiding her, too.

For quite the duration of the week, he never spoke to her, he didn't write to her, he
didn't even look like he knew she existed. And it hurt. Had she done something wrong? Something
to upset him? Well, if that was the case, she wanted to know what it was. She wasn't going to
let him alienate her without a good reason.

The second she saw him stand up and leave the Hall, she shot out of there like a bat out of
hell, hot on his heels. Thankfully, the halls were deserted.

He was waiting for her around a corner.

"If you want to follow someone you should try to be less obvious," it wasn't one
of his sharp taunts. He actually sounded resigned.

"Why have you been avoiding me?" She was upset with him. One day they were confidants,
the next they were strangers. She didn't want it to be like that.

"Because," he said the word as though it were the solution to every inquisition the
world would ever see.

Not enough for her. "Because," she probed him on.

"Because when I'm around you I feel like everything that we worked for in the last
years is worthless," he replied. She'd never heard him so depressed. So full of
self-loathing. And who was we?

She was confused, and a little scared at what that might have meant. "What do you mean,
Draco?" The use of his first name seemed to depress him even more.

"If you knew that someone important to you," he began, stepping closer to her,
"was about to do something that you used to want, that you helped to get, but that now you
think is wrong…" should he continue? "What would you do?"

She was a little intimidated by the desperation of his voice, and the anguish that she'd
never thought she'd see on his face. "Depends," she replied breathlessly.

"On what?"

"On how important that person is for me, and how wrong I think that act might be," her
response was quick, and he guessed it came from the knowledge of what her twin brothers used to
pull on people. He suspected quite a few times that they planned dangerous pranks and she spoke
them out of them. "And on how much I love that person," she added.

"I don't love that person," he told her quickly. "But I can't defy him
either."

He was scared. "I can't tell you what to do, Draco," she whispered, understanding
that he was asking her just that, "and either way, you are going to regret the choice you
make," how did she know that? "I can only tell you to choose the one that you'll
regret the least. If you do that, maybe one day you'll be happy with your choice."

Now all he had to choose was the lesser of the two evils.

Easier said than done.

Â°*Â°

When Ron came back from the Astronomy tower he saw Harry, thrashing in the midst of a nightmare.
They'd been frequent lately. It probably had to do with his scar twitching. As he laid down on
his bed, he wondered what could possibly be haunting his dreams, but sleep claimed him almost
instantly.

Harry kept on twitching though, and it was getting worse. He didn't know how it started, all
he knew was that he was in the middle of it.

A battle field. No, the Hogwarts courtyard! The castle was at his back, the entrance only a few
yards away from him. A storm was forming quickly. Too quickly, it moved so fast over them that it
looked like those documentaries where they displayed the growth of a flower in fast forwarded
motion. Just like the flower's petals, dark, dangerous black clouds formed atop their heads,
quicker than his breath.

He welcomed it, though. He knew it was benevolent toward him.

Bodies were falling at his feet. Some were friends, others were enemies. He was calling out
spells, waving his wand, but he didn't know what charms he was using. He couldn't even hear
his own voice.

There were students, Death Eaters, Giants.

Teacher defending their pupils, children and teenagers defending bothers, sisters, lovers,
friends.

It was a true battle.

And then he heard a laugh.

An all familiar laugh that he wished he would never hear again ringing, carried by the rain,
rather than being dampened by it.

He was holding her. Voldemort was holding her. He was holding Hermione.

He was laughing, taunting Harry's hurt and stupefied expression at seeing Hermione's
frightened face begging him for help, Voldemort holding his wand against her throat. She would
never be able to dodge the spell, and he would never reach her on time. He was too far away.

She was barely able to speak the words. "Harry, the lightning! The lightning, Harry!"
and then Voldemort's voice was the only one filling the courtyard, filling it with the sounds
of the killing curse, green light, and then nothing but black.

Harry woke up in a cold sweat, his teeth hurt from all the clenching of his jaws, his nails had
drawn blood from his palms, yet he ignored that pain. All he felt was his heart beating and echoing
in his ears, his ragged breathing, making him feel like he'd truly lived the battle, and not
only dreamt it, Hermione's scream as the green light erupted from Voldemort's wand.

Hermione's terrified expression haunted him for the rest of the night.

To be continued.



14. Chapter 13: The first Missions
----------------------------------

Okay, I felt particularly magnanimous today, so I’m giving you an extra chapter! This one is
probably the one that was best acclaimed from my other posts.

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

By Pearl Drop Angel

Chapter 13: The first missions

That morning, Harry looked awful. He looked like he hadn’t slept in ages, and he looked thinner
as well. Of course, that could have been because of the inhumane Quidditch practice that he placed
himself through everyday, in ever increasing amounts, yet Ron had a feeling that it was a little
more than that.

For one thing, Harry wasn’t eating. Though Harry was not school famous because of his appetite,
like himself, he did, however know how to heartily eat a heavenly house elf prepared breakfast
right before practice. The only times Harry turned down food were when he was nervous, such as
before a Quidditch match, and Ron knew very well that there weren’t any planned for quite a long
while. Wistfully he looked out the windows to see the Quidditch Pitch, a little cleaner than it had
been before, but still infested with the carnivorous beetlesquash. He gave a sigh.

Nope, Quidditch wasn’t what had kept his friend from sleep the previous night. It had to be that
dream he’d been having. The one that had him tumbling in the sheets, gasping like a drowning man,
sweating with the horrible images his mind must have been sending him. Ron was sure he had a pretty
good idea of what the nightmare concerned, though not in detail.

Harry had been stealing glances at the female third of their trio the entire morning—who was
completely unawares with her nose shoved between the pages of the Visions’ Journal that Jenna had
given them a while back. Harry’s eyes were clouded, sad and desperate whenever they fell on her. He
must have been worried that whatever he dreamt had a chance to become true. And, thinking about it,
maybe it did. After all, Harry’s mother had been a strong Seer, and, rather often, Harry had told
them about strange dreams whose outcomes very often had turned out to be valid.

SLAM!

The two were snapped out of their thoughts by the shocking, loud sound of Hermione shutting the
journal a little too quickly and strongly. They looked at her to see that childishly happy
expression that crossed her face whenever she’d run into an argument that required deep,
challenging research.

"I have to go to the library," she said giddily, leaving the pair to watch her dash
out before they could even reply, her food untouched.

This was definitely the strangest couple he’d ever seen, Ron decided after a moment of
contemplation, before going back to his breakfast, therefore allowing Harry to go back to his
brooding.

°*°

As Harry pulled up from his deathly dive to catch the Snitch, he noticed Headmaster Dumbledore
sitting on the outskirts of the Forever Remember Garden, waiting for him to catch the elusive
little ball so that they could pause their practice. He pulled his broom down to stand before him,
Ron lending next to him.

"Hello, professor," saluted the two boys simultaneously.

Dumbledore gave them one of his twinkly eyed smiles. "Do you enjoy your improvised practice
field?" He asked.

They both doubted that he came all the way over to the Garden simply to ask that, but they
humoured him. "Uhm…yeah!" Started Harry. "It’s good practice. The mist makes the
Snitch harder to see."

"Yeah, and it slows down the brooms so the team’s forced to push them harder. Off this
field they’re really fast," and Ron was about to go on as to what a wonderful training ground
that happened to be, when he caught Harry’s look and decided to let the Headmaster speak.

Dumbledore turned to Harry. "I’m afraid we have a problem, Harry," before the boy
could even get worried, the old wizard reassured him. "Nothing horrible. Just that one of our
regular patrollers from the village is very sick, and I need you to fill in for him," Harry
relaxed. "I had already decided to ask you to scout the skies a few nights a month, it’s a
good opportunity to test your new abilities."

Harry nodded. "When do I have to do it?"

"Tonight will be your first watch," Dumbledore informed him. "I’ll space your
watches far apart as to not burden you too much in your studying. You won’t have another one for a
couple of weeks to come."

Harry nodded, and Dumbledore walked off to leave them to their practicing.

Hours later, walking up the stairs to reach the Gryffindor tower, sweaty, sore, and all around
beat, Ron did what he did best in those moments. He whined. "I wanted to keep first
watch," he lamented.

Out of nowhere a voice replied from behind. "I don’t think you’ll ever keep
watch."

"Hermione!" Ron jumped, startled by her sudden appearance. Then he caught on to what
she’d said. "What? Why?" He sputtered indignantly.

She shrugged. "Harry and I have powerful forms," she began, "he can even fly
without being seen at any hour of the day. We could be able to fight if case asked for it. You
wouldn’t ever be able to hold against a breach," seeing his disappointed face she added,
"you’re more adapt at spying."

He perked up at hearing that. "Huh?"

Hermione sighed. "You’re small enough that you can move in and out of places quickly
without being seen. You could even walk into secret enemy meetings by walking in under someone’s
cloak. It would be easy for you to sit in a dark spot and listen in on an important conversation.
It would be very helpful," she explained. Ron beamed.

"So did you find what you were looking for in the library?" Harry asked, hoping to
spend some time with her. Since his nightmare the previous night, he’d been edgy, and had wanted to
stay close to her just to see if anything out of the ordinary happened.

"Maybe," she replied, her expression thoughtful, "the pendant you gave me at
Christmas was giving a little bit of glow under my blouse while I read, so I think I’m on the right
track, I just don’t know where to go precisely," she told him. "See you later," she
said as she turned a corner in a hallway divergent from theirs.

"Where are you going?" Harry called behind her.

"To see Trelawny," she shouted back as she ran the long way to the Divination
Tower.

Ron and Harry looked at each other. "You reckon they’ll try to poison each other?" Ron
joked, referring to the two women’s distaste for each other. Harry just shrugged as he watched
Hermione’s retreating figure.

°*°

Panting slightly, Hermione opened the door to the Divination classroom as she walked up the
stairs, knowing full well that at the time, Trelawny had no lessons and was probably alone. Walking
into the room, the suffocating smell that she clearly remembered from her third year—along with the
even more suffocating fire—reached her at dizzying speed. Trying to fight back a sneeze while
clearing her throat she called out to the teacher that she despised most—even more than
Snape—"Professor Trelawny?"

And from behind a veiled curtain she heard the tinkling sound of her exaggerated bracelets, and
her veiled voice grating on her nerves already. "Ah, yes, our deserter," Trelawny
taunted, giving her a venomous smirk, "my inner eye told me I would see you soon," she
announced.

Hermione turned away so the teacher wouldn’t notice her rolling her eyes. *What a load of
codswallop!* "I just needed to ask you something as cross reference for an essay I’m
writing," Hermione felt the need to specify. There was no way on this magic Earth that would
bring her back to this classroom willingly without a good reason.

"And how, exactly, should my fine art help *you* in one of your essays?" She
asked sharply.

Hermione had the strongest urge to say, *Well, you’re the Seer, shouldn’t you know
already?* But she bit her tongue, and explained. "I need to know a few things about Vatis
Divinus. Since his writings are considered heretic even to other Seers I thought you might know a
little more about them. The library has almost nothing on him."

Trelawny stiffened. "I do not speak that heretician’s name, nor do I repeat his
falsehoods," she sniffed. "Now, leave."

Hermione didn’t need to be told twice. Trelawny had just confirmed what she suspected.

Vatis Divinus, once a very important prophet and Seer, had been marked as heretic when he
predicted the rise of the darkest wizard the past few centuries had ever seen. That hadn’t been
surprising, many had already prophesised that, yet, his predictions differed entirely from the
rest. In fact, this man had said that the dark wizard would lose his powers to a child, and that,
after years of waiting, he would come back to claim revenge. (AN: in book 5 it had been Trelawny
who’d made that prediction—I would have never seen that coming, but this was written before reading
book 5, and I refused to change it for narrative reasons).

So Trelawney’s reaction told Hermione that she was definitely on the right track.

Now all she needed to do was find those heretic writings of his to know how to keep the wizards
revenge from destroying Harry, but how would she do that?

°*°

Harry was amazed.

It was a widely known fact that there was nothing that Harry enjoyed more than flying on his
broomstick. Well, tonight he’d been proved wrong. Flying as a bird was by far bloody better than a
broomstick. It wasn’t like riding his Firebolt, which was such a good broom it practically flew
well enough to let someone like Neville on and lead him to the Quidditch finals without him having
to do anything. No, flying as a bird was nothing but pure personal talent. It was his body, the
width and length of his wings, along with their position, the angle at which he bent his head, the
way he held his talons. It was absolutely electrifying, and it had no limits.

Plus, it gave him a whole new view of Hogwarts and the grounds around them. A broom couldn’t
usually be taken too far up, in this form he could go high enough to kiss the sky, and it gave him
a whole new fix on things.

Flying over Hogsmeade he saw hundreds of new allyways and shortcuts that he’d never seen or
dreamt before, things that probably not even the Marauders knew about. And the castle! There were
some towers and outer staircases that weren’t even mentioned in the Marauders’ Map, and there was
nothing that he wanted more than to fetch Ron and Hermione to go and explore them to find out what
they held.

Yet, the most surprising of all was the forest and the lake. The latter had an unnatural glow
during the night, and he could see all the way down to where the mermaids were, there where he’d
first seem them during the second task of the Triwizard tournament. While the forest was eerie as
always from above, but he realized that with his strongly enhanced vision, he could see through the
thick foliage to almost any dark depth. For example, there where Aragog and his family stood, he
could distinctly tell apart each of their hairy legs from the branches of the trees they stood on,
saw each one of their insect eyes reflecting oh, so slightly, the glow from that eyelash of moon
above him. He could see creatures he’d never dreamed of, small and deadly, huge and frightened,
predator and prey.

It was horrible and petrifying, yet beautiful and hypnotizing all at once.

He would have stared at it till dawn, if a slight movement from the edge of the forest hadn’t
caught his sharp glowing, phosphorescent green, hawkish eyes. It was the door to Hagrid’s hut,
opening to let the half giant out, along with Fang, his trusty weapon, and a lantern. When Hagrid
looked up to the skies, Harry was afraid that he might see him, but it wasn’t so, and Hermione’s
words played back in his mind. *A Wingadeus can’t be seen in flight, not even in full
daylight*. If he didn’t have a sharp, black beak—which seemed to be made out of some metal—he
would have sighed in relief. Not that he didn’t want to speak to Hagrid, he just didn’t know how
the scruffy half giant would have reacted to seeing a gigantic magical hawk supposed to be extinct.
Harry didn’t really wish to be kept where the hippogriffs once were.

Wondering what it *was* exactly that Hagrid did in the Forbidden Forest, Harry decided to
tail him. He watched as the big man walked right past a thick, seemingly impenetrable, wall of tall
bush shrubs as though they weren’t even there. Harry realized they probably weren’t, especially
once he noticed that only a few paces behind those shrubs, seemed to begin a wide, easy trail,
pretty much clear of particularly dangerous creatures. Even an average third year might have been
able to cross it without much injury. Upon closer inspections, Harry also realized that it had just
been opened, probably not earlier than the previous week, and it must have been covered the whole
way with protective charms and spells.

What—or better—who had Dumbledore given this dangerous, hidden shelter to?

Leaving Hagrid, and the dim light of his lantern behind, Harry flew ahead, following the
clearing. It wasn’t hard. Not only could he clearly see the path through the foliage, but the air
above it smelled better, cleaner, purer. And it led to the exact centre of the forest, he realized
standing above it, where the trees were cluttered so thickly he almost couldn’t see through them.
Oh, wait, he could! It seemed as though the longer he stared at it, the more he could see through
the thick leaves as though they were nothing but a hologram. Of course! A masking spell!

Maybe the Wingadeus had more powers than were known to wizards, he was pretty sure that in this
form he could see through magic pretty clearly, and he was already beginning to master it within
only a couple of hours in this form.

In any case, the trees above the clearing where the trail ended were practically entirely see
through at the moment, and what he could see past them shocked him. A group of giants, maybe sixty
of them or so, were cluttered there, safe in the arms of all the magic in Dumbledore’s hands.

Of course, as a shadow member of the Order, he knew that the ancient wizard had managed to get
the giants on his side, but that he’d invited them to stay inside the forest was something
completely new to him. What were they talking about down there? He wanted to lower himself down to
a branch to listen, but would they see him? They couldn’t in flight, but could they while he just
sat there for them to gawk at him? He decided to take the risk, although he realized that if all
giants had that avid fascination with "interesting creatures" that Hagrid had, being seen
by them could be very dangerous.

However, it seemed they couldn’t, so he hid as best he could—just in case—and strained his
hawkish hearing to try and understand what they were saying. At first, most of it sounded like
gurgling. It must have been a different language, but if he strained to understand, he found that
he did. The giants’ mouths kept on forming gargles, but he clearly heard them speaking English.

None of them, however, were saying anything worth listening to. Some were contemplating on what
a nice spot Dumbledore had given them, some were saying they hoped to stay long, some others were
saying they were hungry. And it was then that Hagrid appeared in the clearing, and all the giants
seemed to be mighty happy.

Because he was bringing them food.

At first, Harry found it strange that the giants attempted to speak English with someone who
shared their blood by half, but he remembered right away that Hagrid had been raised by his father,
a human, and had almost never known the giant half of his parentage. Was his mother among them?
Harry couldn’t tell. The women—if there were any among them—did not look like Madame Maxime. In any
case, Hagrid didn’t seem to regard any of them differently from another.

Hagrid sat there with them for a good two hours, Harry watching him, talking to them about
things that weren’t really all that important. What school was like inside, the students, the rest
of the faculty, a lot of the time, Hagrid actually told them tales of Harry, which the giants
seemed to enjoy, but for the most part, his friend kept reminding them that Dumbledore was a great
wizard and that Hogwarts and probably the rest of the wizarding world would be lost without
him.

It was only when the first rays of the rising sun began to shine on the branch Harry was
occupying, did he realize how late it was. As silently as he could, he whooshed his wings above the
giants and took off toward the entrance of the castle, where, to his surprise, he found that
Dumbledore was waiting for him. Harry understood right away that Dumbledore had sent him out that
night exactly so that he could see what was going on in the forest.

"How long have they been here?" Harry asked, knowing that Dumbledore was waiting for
that question.

"The giants arrived yesterday," the wizard replied quietly, and continued anticipating
Harry’s question. "I called them because of what you told me," oh, so that was it. It had
to be because of that. Otherwise, why would he have pulled sixty valuable looking giants from the
Army that he’d secretly been preparing for the past two years?

"How long will they stay?"

Dumbledore was expecting that as well. "Till the end of our school year. If there is no
attack, they will return to their original positions."

Harry nodded in understanding, and made to go inside to recuperate on the sleep he’d lost,
feeling a little safer than he had the night before. He stopped when Dumbledore called him. "I
will speak to Mr Weasley in the morn, would you mind informing him on my behalf?" Harry
accepted, and began the long journey from the Front Hall to his bed.

°*°

Ron sleeked across the streets of Hogsmeade in his Animagus form, unclear or whether he should
be scared out of his wits, or exited enough to burst out of his skin…or fur…whatever. He still
couldn’t believe what Dumbledore had told him just the past morning.

Cornelius Fudge and Lucius Malfoy had owled to say that they would be coming to Hogwarts in the
afternoon "to inspect the safety measures of the school." Fudge *and* Malfoy both
coming to survey Hogwarts security? Both Harry and Hermione—after he’d told them—had hypothesized
that Fudge had been called by the Dark Side, and they were both terrified of the idea.

The three of them had already completely lost respect for the Minister of Magic in fourth year,
when he’d announced that he would fake being blind, shun Harry’s truth, and keep saying that
Voldemort was dead and that he could not have possibly risen to power again. If now he had been
attracted by the Death Eaters…well, it would complicate matters greatly.

Especially because Dumbledore seemed to believe he had. Why send Ron to spy on them if not?

In any case, sneaking around Hogsmeade, when it wasn’t a weekend where students were allowed to
visit, was not an easy task. The village seemed nearly deserted, and even with the red light given
from the setting sun, didn’t do much to hide his shiny red fur, forcing him to hide in dark
corners. And that was exactly what he’d been doing at the moment. He was sitting in an alleyway
across from the Three Broomsticks—where Malfoy and the Minister had ducked only minutes
prior—waiting for something that would let him slip into the tavern unnoticed. Problem was:
what?

And then he saw it…or rather him. A traveller—probably an Auror in disguise (many of them roamed
the streets of Hogsmeade, hoping to catch some Death Eaters out for either Harry or
Dumbledore)—making his way to the tavern, grasping the handle of the front door. Without a second
to think, Ron ran across the empty streets, trying to keep anyone from seeing him, and slipping
between the folds of the man’s robes.

There! He was in. Not losing any time, he ducked under the darkness of a table’s legs. Only two
tables over were Fudge and Malfoy. Waiting for the right moment when nobody would be looking his
way, he ran from his hiding spot to his destination just as Hagrid slammed the door opened and
called for a strong ale. Dumbledore had probably sent him to distract people’s attention, so that a
red weasel would go unnoticed.

For a while, the two sitting at the table were quiet, possibly suspecting the half giant of
being a spy, but when they saw the burly man sit at the bar with a large cup of ale, they turned
back to their conversation, unawares of the real spy that was lying not too comfortably between
their feet.

"We have nothing to worry about," he heard Lucius Malfoy’s snobbish monotone, "we
are nearly ready for the attack."

Fudge’s voice was nervous in reply. "That Severus Snape better choose his sides quickly, or
he’ll be blown up, just as Karkaroff was." Karkaroff! The ex-Death Eater from Durmstrang
during the Triwizard Tournament.

Malfoy’s monotone was as confident as ever. "The breaching will be successful even without
him."

To be continued

Hope you liked all this and that it slightly made up for my lack of updates.

Thank you all for reading

Love

Pearl aka Roberta



15. Chapter 14: Barriers
------------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t
know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and himself…or
did she?

Disclaimer: Do I really still have to do this? Well, since in the last chapters I updated this
wasn’t in it, I guess I’ll spare myself. I own nuthin’ you can recognize. There.

For a change I think that this chapter is really awful, and I’m not kidding. There’s just
something not at all convincing about it, and I would really appreciate it if you all gave me
suggestions on how to make it better.

And now, on with the fic:

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Chapter 14: Barriers

At breakfast, Hermione sat staring at the skies, seemingly waiting for something, and it was not
lost on her two best friends. For the past several weeks, whenever it was time for the Owl Post,
she’d be staring at the enchanted ceiling of the Great Hall, expecting "an important
package". From who or with what? They had no clue.

And both of them knew that it was the only thing keeping her from having a breakdown at the
thought that they had absolutely no idea of when the breach would be, so they kept hoping that the
package would take as long as possible to arrive. At least if the package didn’t come, for a while
she would be preoccupied with that.

Fate was against them, however, as for the very second in which they formulated that thought in
their minds, a storm of twelve owls swooped down from above in groups of three, each carrying large
carton boxes that they dropped in front of Hermione. Bloody wonderful.

Hermione began bouncing up and down on her seat, her breakfast forgotten, looking very much like
a small child on Christmas morning after the first sighting of an absurd amount of presents.
"Yes, they’re here! They’re here!" She squealed, while she tore the boxes open.

The entire Gryffindor population was suddenly attentive. "What it is, Hermione?"
Lavender Brown asked her.

Hermione gave her a secretive grin. "Can’t say here," she mumbled while managing to
hide the entire top half of her body inside the open box. From the inside of the carton cube they
could hear her mumbling, "Seventh years’ business. For the capsule. They have to find out on
their own," and things of the like.

Many a heads perked up at this. The capsule? They hadn’t done anything much but take a
ridiculous amount of moving pictures, since the only one seemingly interested in making an effort
was Ron, and most of his ideas were a little over the top, even for the Wizarding World. They had
planned to put some very interesting things, but, since nobody besides Hermione had much of
perseverance in doing anything that required work for a slightly extended period of time, most of
them had lost interest after the first few weeks.

However, Hermione had managed to pique their interest, so they shooed all the younger students
far away enough that they could find out what it was exactly that Hermione had received, and how it
would affect their time capsule, without letting the younger ones know what it was.

"It’s safe, Hermione, tell us what it is," Ron told her, exited. Always one up for
something fun, and in desperate need to get himself away from the worries of the supposedly
upcoming breach, this seemed like just what the mediwizard ordered.

Hermione pulled herself out of the box, her arms full of the strangest looking star-shaped
things any of them had ever seen. They were as big in length and height as her fist was, yet they
were only two centimetres or so in depth at the centre, their thickest point, and they tapered into
a point at the tip of each of the four points. They were also made of some incredibly magical
material for the stars seemed metallic—since they had the dull shine of metal—though they were
transparent and light as plastic when held. Inside it there was a liquid that looked like
nail-polish, since there were several different pastel shades reflected in the artificial stars. In
the very centre there was a carved hole, obviously made for the tip of a wand.

"Okay," Hermione breathed as she sat down, taking one of the stars in hand while
dropping the rest on the table. The sound of glass could be heard, but none broke.
"This," she began, holding up the star that she had in hand, "is a
Holostar."

A collective "Ooh!" greeted her.

Harry didn’t have a clue as to what it was or how it worked. "Hermione," he called her
nervously, "what, exactly, *is* a Holostar?" He felt like a fool for asking.

"Yeah, what *is* a Holostar?" Ron asked with knit eyebrows. The rest of the
seventh years joined in asking. Harry relaxed, not feeling quite as much like a fool as he had
before.

"It’s something that I helped Fred and George with," she replied smugly.

"You mean they gave this to you for free?!" Ron screeched in surprise.

"Yes," her grin was very confident, "they’re letting us test them for free since
I gave them the idea, the design, I told them what materials to use, and I actually invented the
charms needed to make it work."

Her peers gazed at her in awe.

"What do they do?" Neville asked mystified.

"They store memories," she replied quickly, "and then allow everyone to see
them."

The awe was indescribable.

"Like a Pensieve?" Harry asked, interested.

"Somewhat," she replied with a thoughtful pout, "but they only store one memory
each, and you don’t have to put your wand against your head to put it inside," she
explained.

"So…how do you store a memory?" Ron asked, trembling with the excitement of trying
them out.

"See this little round carving in the centre?" She asked, pointing to it. They all
nodded. "You place the tip of your wand firmly against it while holding it in the palm of your
hand, close your eyes, and try to remember as clearly as possible what it is that you want capture
in the Holostar. When you open your eyes and you see that the color of the nail-polish has changed,
you can view your memory by tapping the Holostar three times with your wand," she
explained.

"Sounds easy," Parvati Patil commented.

"It is," Hermione replied readily, obviously proud of her work. Her modesty couldn’t
be pushed down, however. "I would never have been able to do it if not for the Marauder’s
nail-polishes."

Ron knit his eyebrows. "What? The ones that were inside the capsule?"

She nodded with a wide grin, but sighed in annoyance when his expression revealed that he had no
idea what she meant. "Honestly! Did you ever bother to read the instructions that came with
it?" Ron shook his head in denial. She sighed again. "If you put on that nail-polish,
whenever you’re thinking of a memory, or even a fantasy, it will play on the nail-polished
surface—let’s say your fingernail—as though it were being projected on a screen," she
lectured.

"Thanks for telling me that now, Hermione!" Parvati told her sarcastically, "If
you’d have said it earlier you would have saved me heaps of embarrassment."

Hermione glared at her. "You could have read the instructions."

Harry watched her as she bickered with Parvati, and then went on to explain how she’d brewed
some extra ingredients to add to the nailpolish so that it would work as she wished it to, and then
onto other ways it could have been used. He was amazed that she was able to do something that
required so much planning without letting anybody on.

And where did she find the time? True, they hadn’t been reading the diary since they’d read of
the Grad Ball, but that didn’t really give her all that time. She was still Head Girl and spent
most of her time tutoring and controlling the school, or helping teachers with their lesson plans
or extra projects, or she was in the library studying for the NEWTs. Hermione’s classes were all
particularly advanced, so hers would be far more difficult than anyone else’s. Dumbledore had
recently told her that she was to be Valedictorian, and she had to start planning for the Grad Ball
and the Graduation ceremony. On top of that, she’d been patrolling at least two nights a week since
her first assignment as ‘Tailwinds’, one third of the Neo Marauders.

Where did she find the time to sleep? And why was it that she always looked radiantly energetic?
How could she do it all?

But than again, that was just the way Hermione was. She loved to work and study. And when
something troubled her she buried herself into whatever she might have been working on at the
moment, and she was only happier because of it. It was her way to unwind, and he admired her
tremendously for it.

"Harry," Hermione’s soft whisper snapped him out of his thoughts.

"Yes?" He asked, his mind still wondering how she could possibly be the person that
she was.

"Uhm…we still have a couple of hours before the Duel Training, and we only have a few
entries left to read of your mother’s diary," she began tentatively. "Would you like to
go and read them?"

Harry grinned at her. "Let’s go," he said standing, holding his hand out to her. She
took it, and they made to leave.

The Common Room was empty as expected, and it would be so for a while still, since it was a nice
morning with no classes. They both sat down in front of the hearth where a nice fire was blazing to
keep them warm from the chilly spring mornings, and Hermione pulled the diary out of her bag,
opening it to the last read entry. Though they had neglected its reading for the past couple of
weeks, she kept it with her always.

*I can’t believe that I just finished taking my NEWTs! I know I’ll have a rather remarkable
score for it, but that’s not what’s on my mind.*

*In a week, I’ll have to leave this place that has been my shelter and home for the past seven
years. What am I supposed to think about that? Honestly, I feel rather empty. And afraid. Because
from now on we won’t have Dumbledore or McGonagall watching over us, pulling us out of the trouble
that follows James wherever he goes.*

*Mostly, I’m afraid of what James said today, because I know that it will come true, no matter
how much or how I try to avoid it.*

*After celebrating the end of the exams with the most unimaginable pranks ever (I still can’t
believe they masked Cicciobello with the image of a beautiful woman and sent him out to seduce
Severus in front of everyone!), James and I retired to our room (my room that he’s taken over with
his smelly, messy habits!) where we made love. I didn’t think it could possibly get any sweeter
between us than it already was, but tonight he proved me wrong. He held me so tenderly that I cried
through the entire act with the most love struck smile stuck on my face. I think I must have looked
rather horrible, and James didn’t look away once, the way he usually does, but at least tonight he
didn’t insist on keeping his glasses on.*

*I’m far too vulnerable with him.*

*Anyhow, instead of making some hilariously inappropriate joke, like he usually does, he put
his glasses back on and stayed as serious as he was the first time he told me he loved me. He
wanted to tell me something important.*

*Well, since when he does that I tend to become a pile of mushy tears and we always make love
afterwards, I decided that I’d be the one to go first. I pulled out the wrapped package from my
nightstand drawer, and handed it to him. He raised his eyebrows in question. "It’s a
graduation present," I told him. I didn’t tell him that I’d been working on it since the year
had started. "Go on, open it!" He always does this when I give him a present. He stares
at it so that he can torture me without saying a word, making me all edgy and nervous, and he only
opens it when I beg him to.*

*I watched him as he tore open the paper to reveal the large, heavy, thick, leather bound
photo album. He started staring at it again, so I opened to the front page for him, where there was
a picture of him and his whole family. Sirius had told me that it was the most recent one. Taken
right before Voldemort had taken them.*

*His voice choked when he said my name. "Lily…how?" His eyes were shimmering, and I
told him that I’d been owling anyone that I thought might have a picture of his family since the
beginning of the year and that there were a lot of pictures of the Marauders, and a lot of pictures
of the two of us together, and—since I felt brave at the moment—I added, "And the more we stay
together the more pictures of us we’ll add to it."*

*He smiled. A really sad smile, and reached into his robes to pull out a small jewellery box.
"Even the pictures of our wedding?" He was nervous in asking this, and his fingers shook
when he opened the lid. I heard myself gasp when I saw what was inside. A thin, beautiful red gold
ring with in the centre a diamond magically cut in the shape of a lily.*

*I didn’t know what to say.*

*"Lily, this isn’t a real proposal, and this ring isn’t a wedding ring," he started,
still as shaky as before, but I already knew that it wasn’t. "This is just the promise that
one day, hopefully not too far away, I can put a real wedding band on your finger and make you Lily
Evans Potter," he explained, but I knew that too. "What do you say?"*

*He was sure that I would reject him, the fear was radiating off of him as though it were
physical. I kissed him. And I told him yes. But I wish he hadn’t said what he did next. "I’d
give my life for you, Lily-Love," he told me, using that nickname that he only used when we
were alone.*

*I choked a sob when I answered him. "I know, James. I know."*

"Mommy was really sad after Daddy gave her that ring," a childish voice called sadly
from somewhere above their heads. Cicciobello was leaning against one of the wooden construction
beams, hugging it as though to draw comfort from it.

Cicciobello, what…?" Harry began to ask, and the doll dejectedly began to fly down so that
he rested in much the same position as before on the back of the plush sofa they were occupying.
Neither Harry nor Hermione had ever seen Cicciobello so serious before.

"She never let Daddy know because she didn’t want him to worry, but I heard her telling
Aunt Jenna that she didn’t want him to die for her, even if she would do the same thing
herself," he explained.

"Ciccio," Hermione whispered.

"You’re a lot like her, sissy, and she would have liked you," he told Hermione, and
for the first time they watched a lone tear slide down his cheek. "Double-dee told me what
happened to them," he said, referring to Dumbledore. "At least they got to put their
wedding pictures in that album," he sniffed.

Harry tensed at this. "You mean that the photo album that I have is the same one that my
mom gave to my dad after their exams?" The doll nodded. What was Harry supposed to say to
that?

Hermione decided that it was best to keep reading, but there was only one more entry left.

*This past week I wasn’t able to hold a quill straight for the life of me. I don’t know why,
but it seemed as though I couldn’t will my hand to write. Today though, I don’t have a choice,
because tomorrow we board the Hogwarts Express for the last time, and tonight, at sunset this diary
will be buried with the time capsule.*

*Everything is already in it but this and Cicciobello.*

*I finally convinced James to let me put the doll in there. I don’t really want to. As much
trouble as he can be, I’ve come to think of him as family, but he’s more needed inside there, for
the next person to find it.*

*Cicciobello already knows it. I spoke to him already. I told him that I would put a charm on
him so that he would wake up exactly when the trunk would be reopened, so he wouldn’t be bored.
He’s got an important job to do, and I know he’ll do it well.*

*As for me, well, I’d gladly put myself in there as well so as to not leave this place. It’s
almost like a dream, wonderful and horrible at the same time, but so real that it’s become reality.
What if I leave, and realise that the dream is over?*

*I guess it doesn’t really matter either way. After all, the dream will only last a few years
more.*

*I know I shouldn’t be talking like this, but I’m leaving my home behind for an uncertain and
dangerous future. It scares me. But it doesn’t matter. Even if my life was a breath long it
wouldn’t matter, so long as that breath was with James. And my last breath will be with
him.*

*So I guess this means goodbye, farewell, and adieu.*

*Forever*

*Lily*

What were they supposed to say to something like that?

Cicciobello sniffled behind them. "You better go to Training."

And they did.

°*°

"Did everyone practice their Discerso Nubis as told?" Dumbledore asked the large group
of students that varied from fourth years to sevenths. Most of them nodded, but the Slytherins
always had something to say about the unusual spells and hexes that the Headmaster had been
teaching for the past three years.

"Yeah, we practised," said Millicent Bullstrode, "it’s not really easy to
practice summoning lightning when there isn’t a cloud in the sky."

"Yeah," stepped in Pansy Parkinson, "I barely got more than a spark."

Dumbledore gave them a look from behind his half moon spectacles. He didn’t bother saying
anything, since he’d already explained the previous lesson why they would only be practising in
good weather. If they managed to get a nice big spark when there weren’t the elements at hand, than
when they did have it, their lightning would be enough to stun a Death Eater into unconsciousness
until the Aurors arrived. Marvellously helpful during a downpour.

Snape, however, being Head of House, retold the entire reason to his snobbish House members. A
pretty worthless effort, in any case. Dumbledore cleared his through, letting the potions master
know that they were to move on.

"Today I will teach you how to erect a barrier of light around yourselves. Can anyone tell
me how this can be helpful?" Asked the Headmaster. Hermione’s hand immediately shot up, and
the Slytherins rolled their eyes, while Dumbledore’s eyes twinkled at her. "Yes, Miss
Granger?"

Hermione cleared her throat. "It’s particularly helpful when one is forced to fight in an
area where there might be a lot of casualties, Aurors often use it when they are confronting
someone in crowded streets, and it can cover whichever area the user wishes to. The size, however,
depends solely on the magical strength of the user," she answered.

"Very good, Miss Granger," Dumbledore complimented. "The first spell of this
category that we will—"

Pansy Parkinson interrupted him. "That’s stupid! If you can put up a barrier, why would you
want to fight inside of it? Just use it as a shield so you won’t get hurt!" Hermione glared
holes into Pansy’s body.

"Miss Granger, would you explain why this theory is wrong?" Dumbledore asked her.

She nodded. "A barrier can only work if there are two separate bodies within its
walls," she explained. "It takes its powers from the opposite energies of the two
parties. If two people wish to use it as a shield, they wouldn’t be able to erect it, because their
intentions would be harmonious and not opposing."

"Very good, Miss Granger, thirty points for Gryffindor," the Headmaster twinkled.
"Now, as I was saying, the first spell of this category that we will be learning is ‘Vallum
Sablatum’," as the students had been taught from the first day, they began to rhythmically
repeat the words to remember them well. "To be able to erect them, we will pair you up in
antagonistic groups, so that your wills will oppose," he explained, and began to call the
pairs. Snape must have thought them up, because all the students found themselves facing someone
they despised. Harry was facing Goyle, stupid, yes, but odious nonetheless. Hermione was paired
with Parkinson, Ginny with Bullstrode, and Ron with Malfoy (Ron started threatening the blond away
from his sister instantly). Yep, Snape must have decided the pairings. As the Gryffindors listened
intently to Dumbledore’s explanations of how to hold the wands in position they only hoped that
nothing too horrible would come out of the pairings. Dumbledore asked Harry to start.

Harry repeated the instructions in his head before executing them. Point wand down to ground
steadily, toward the spot right between yourself and your opponent, hold it confidently, think
clearly of barring yourself and your opponent in a closed quarter, and enunciate, "Vallum
Sablatum!" Immediately a shimmering wall of light erected itself around them, going as high as
to touch the insanely tall ceiling of the Duelling Chamber. More than light, it looked like it was
made of liquid, almost like the surface of a bubble, iridescent colors reflecting off of it. And it
was wide enough to fit sixty Goyles into it. They were effectively blocked in.

"Very good, Harry," Dumbledore complimented, yet next to him, Snape wore the ugliest
expression of disgusted loathing Harry had ever seen directed at him. "Now, to remove the
barrier, hold your wand straight up above your head, and while saying ‘Desilire’, guide the barrier
into the ground with your wand," Harry did as told, and instantly he and the Slytherin were
freed. Snape looked even uglier.

Right after Harry came Hermione, who did it just as quickly and perfectly as Harry, though hers
had a white and topaz glow. *Like the eyes of the Volpegea*, Harry noticed. It was fascinating
to look at. When she pulled it down, Snape couldn’t hold his snide comments back.

"The two of you just can’t help but to show off," though the comment was quiet,
everyone heard him. And everyone saw the twinkle in Dumbledore’s eye dim once more. "Go back
to practising the rest of you," he ordered, and without another word they all did so.

Harry and Hermione stood their ground, however, motionless, watching Snape and pitying him.

Snape looked at them crossly. "Your partners wish to practice as well," actually,
Pansy and Goyle were rather happy their partners weren’t returning to them, but Snape honestly
didn’t care at the moment.

Harry watched him with knit eyebrows before asking. "Why do you hate me so much?"

Snape’s expression was one contempt and surprise. "I thought your disregard for school
rules, your thirst for fame and attention, and your continuously obnoxious behaviour made that
answer rather obvious," he taunted.

Harry wasn’t insulted. "So why did you save my life so many times?"

A cynical black eyebrow touched greasy black hairline. "When would I have done
that?"

"In first, for starters," Harry replied readily, "when Quarrel was jinxing the
broom during the Quidditch game."

"I was in debt with your father," he answered stiffly.

"I don’t think that’s it." Again Snape’s eyebrow touched his hair.

"So what do you think it is?" His sneer seemed amused.

"I think you want to hate me, because I have my father’s looks, but you can’t because even
if I have my father’s face, my eyes belong to my mom," Snape looked horrified.

"And why would that be?"

"Because I don’t think you could hate anything that she created, even if it was with
someone you despised," Harry voice was confident when he spoke this, belying the fear of Snape
taking his anger out on him. But Snape didn’t move. He sat stiff and hard as a statue, looking down
on him with pure venom.

"Dismissed."

It almost looked like he hadn’t said the word at all, his lips so thinly pursed together that
they looked as though they couldn’t possibly open wide enough for him to formulate a sentence, but
Harry knew that he had spoken. "Fine," he relented, making to turn away, "but I’ll
let you know that your time is running out."

°*°

"Mr Black has informed me that many people have Apparated in the cavern that Snuffles had
used as a hiding spot in Hogsmeade, I believe you are familiar with it," Dumbledore commented
at Harry, Ron, and Hermione, sitting in the Headmaster’s office for their weekly reports.

"So the Ministry didn’t allow us to place the Apparition wards that we asked for,
professor?" Hermione asked a little worried. Hogwarts itself was the safest place on the face
of the planet, but its weak spot was exactly Hogsmeade, which turned into a turistic spot on
weekends and vacations.

"No, they did not allow the Apparition wards. Instead they allowed Portkeys as well,"
Hermione gasped. Dumbledore chuckled. "Yes, Cornelius thought it would make the school safer
because it would allow Aurors to materialize here in case of need. Or so he said on his last
inspections," Dumbledore didn’t blame him. Fudge wasn’t evil, he was just weak, and who was
weak always sought out whom he thought to be stronger, much like Wormtail had.

"He wants to make it easier on them," Ron stated. There was no denying that.

"Yes, and now they’re gathering forces where they won’t be noticed by the villagers,"
not many people ventured near the cave, since it was on the outskirts.

"How long before they have enough people for a breach?" Harry asked.

Dumbledore looked at him. "Well, they have to apparate in small groups and far apart in
time, or they’ll call attention to themselves, Harry."

Harry wasn’t distracted. "How much time?"

"Three, four days at most," was the certain reply. Harry nodded, feeling a cold
trickle of sweat on his neck.

Looking at him, Hermione wordlessly laced her fingers with his, taking a firm grasp of his
hand.

To be continued.

Author’s ramblings: Well you know that I want to be contacted at Robbygal@hotmail.com if you
have any thoughts on this whatsoever, or you can just leave reviews. And to see the real
Cicciobello (not the possessed one from my story) go check out:
www.giochipreziosi.it/cicciobello/

Thanks

Pearl



16. Chapter 15: Breach
----------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t
know, when she left her diary behind that it would help her son into knowing her and himself…or did
she?

Disclaimer: Does anybody even read these?

Oh, and just as a note of warning, this is my first attempt at writing a battle scene, and I
don’t think it’s very much (even if when I pictured the whole ordeal in my mind I thought it would
have been awesome). By the way, when you get to the end you might want to kill me or give me the
title of Queen of Cliffhangers.

And now: on with fic:

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Chapter 15: Breach

The report of Death Eater forces taking over Snuffles’ cavern had been reported an exact week
ago, Harry mused, and there was absolutely no indication that they were attacking. Their delay
could be a possible result of three things. One, they were gathering more forces than expected and
were therefore taking a more extended amount of time regrouping, two, something had gone wrong and
delayed their plans, or three, they were just waiting for Dumbledore to let his guard down.

Probably the intruders didn’t know that the cave had been controlled by Dumbledore, and were
therefore expecting a low defence from their part. That, of course, didn’t mean that they would
just waltz in expecting it to be easy. There was practically every Death Eater close to Voldemort
in that cave, and hiding in the woods near it there were Dementors. Yep, Harry had seen them when
he was inspecting the skies the same night that they had found out. He’d nearly fainted while in
the air as he hovered above them.

Harry watched the grounds around him, searching for anything out of place from his perch atop
the tallest Hogwarts tower. Dumbledore had told him to stay within school grounds after that night
with the Dementors, afraid that Voldemort might sense him. Harry knew he was hiding in that cavern,
he could feel him there, plotting. His scar throbbed constantly, and was bright at every hour of
the day behind his bangs. Even now, standing as Falcospeak, the feathers that usually covered his
scar (which was present as always) had fallen off, and the cut seemed to glow into the night,
contrasting with the absolute black of his feathers. He wondered why they, himself included, kept
on calling it a scar. It had never actually scarred over, it always looked like a fresh cut, red,
though not very deep at first glance. It didn’t matter. It was far deeper than it looked.

Around him, the night was as quiet as ever, nobody would have guessed what the grounds were
hiding. There, in the Forbidden Forest, near that path that Harry had noticed that first night,
Hagrid stood, his weapon at hand, Fang at his side. They had thought it would be best if he didn’t
stand directly behind those imaginary bushes for they couldn’t be sure that Dementors wouldn’t see
through the fake shrubs. Fifty yards into the path, the Giant Squad was waiting in position for
Hagrid’s signal. They were getting a little restless. They had been doing this same routine for the
past week, and the Giants wanted to battle. They were trained for it, after all.

Below, on the steps that led to the front doors of the school a red weasel that went by the name
of Sneak lay sleeping, curled around itself. At the signal, he was to run inside and wake the
teachers (all resting in the Great Hall) and prepare them for battle. The only faculty members not
to take part of the battle were Trelawney and Filch, for obvious reasons.

In the towers that he had discovered during the first inspection, the ones that weren’t on the
Marauders map, were occupied by members of the Order of the Phoenix, who had all been called there
a week prior. McGonagall, in her cat form, was to call them to battle at the signal as well. After
that, they would all make their way swiftly to the edge of the forest opposite of where the Giants
waited.

If the enemy left their hiding spot, Fawkes, who was guarding the cavern and the surrounding
woods, would fly ahead and give the signal to reach positions. Sirius, instead, hid in the alleyway
facing the Shrieking Shack, disguised as Padfoot. If Wormtail was with them, he would probably lead
them into the school through the Whomping Willow passage, since any other way was blocked by
thousands of wards.

"Harry," came a feminine hiss from beside him. "You were supposed to trade watch
with me hours ago," Hermione reprimanded, transforming into Tailwinds before his eyes. Even in
her fox form, her topaz and white eyes blazed at him. He and Hermione had been told to keep watch
from their perch on the tower of their surroundings (much to the chagrin of her fear of heights),
but he had failed to wake Hermione so that she could take his place.

He shrugged, or tried to in his current form. "I wanted to let you sleep."

"Harry," her tone was lecturing. "You need your rest, if they breach tonight and
you’re too tired to fight—" he didn’t allow her to finish the sentence.

"I couldn’t sleep if I tried," he told her gruffly. "Besides, with all the
watches you’ve been keeping I thought I should let you catch up on your sleep," his voice, or
mental voice as he was using his thoughts to speak, held a smile. "I need the smartest witch
in school to be fresh and sober when they breach."

In his mind he heard her sigh. It really was strange to speak with her through thought.
"Thank you," she answered resigned.

Watching her, Harry brought up a subject that had been bothering him for the past week.
"Hermione," he began nervously, "the Holostars. Is there…a reason for why you
insisted that Fred and George send them in such a hurry?"

Her reply was surprised and nervous. "I just wanted to give everyone time to store a lot of
memories before the year is out," her tone belied guilt.

A pause, and then Harry asked again. "It’s not that you did it…as a…goodbye present…did
you?" Honestly, the thought had been nagging at Harry since that interview in Dumbledore’s
office. At first he’d been in awe at all the things Hermione managed to do without breaking down,
but then a question had formed in his mind. What if she thought that she wouldn’t live past the
summer?

"I won’t say I’m not scared, Harry," Hermione told him defiantly. "I won’t say
that, because I’ve never been this scared in my life. But I have no intention of giving up my life.
I won’t go without a fight."

"Then why are you storing all those memories?" He said, referring to the endless
Holostars that she kept in her robes at all times.

"Harry, I don’t want to die," she repeated, "but this is war, or its prelude,
Harry. There are risks."

Harry was about to reply, but the sound of the Whomping Willow lashing out at nothing in the
middle of the night caught his attention and held it. Especially when it suddenly stopped moving as
though it had been immobilized. "Hermione, look!" He called to her. There in the shadows
of the tree’s limbs, was a small figure scurrying about. A mouse. "Hermione, it’s him!"
He shouted in her mind. "It’s Wormtail!"

Hermione put one of her paws against his back. "You can’t go after him, Harry, you’ll give
us away," she told him, calming him. "He’s here to scout," she told him.

"Can you read his mind from here?" She nodded her head, her elf-like ears twitching as
though picking up a sound from far away.

"He’s terrified. If his master dies tonight he’s lost, but there’s nothing out of the
ordinary and Dumbledore’s too old to uphold a breach. He thinks we have no idea they’re
coming," she reported Wormtail’s thoughts. After nearly an hour of scouting the mouse headed
back to the Whomping Willow sure that they would be successful.

"Tell, everybody to start getting ready for the signal," Harry ordered, but Hermione
was already working on that.

She was contacting Sneak, below them, that very second. "Ron," she whispered in her
mind, "Ron, are you awake?" She asked. He was.

"Yeah, the Whomping Willow woke me up," he told her grumpily.

"Did you see Wormtail down there?"

"Yeah, I bloody well sure did," he replied bitterly. "I wanted to go after him,
but I figured You-Know-Who would get suspicious if his little pet didn’t come home."

Hermione let out a sigh of relief. "Good, now go tell the faculty to start getting
ready," she ordered, and Ron went right away. Only a moment later Dumbledore stood sipping a
sherbet lemon in the spot just a short time prior occupied by the weasel.

Within seconds McGonagall had warned the members, of the Order and Hagrid had told the Giants to
get ready, which they readily did. Now they were just waiting for Padfoot’s return and Fawkes’
signal.

And then Harry felt it. A growing pain above his right eye, where his scar stood, intensifying
by second, blinding him. He felt the world spinning around him. "They’re coming," he
whispered hoarsely, as his body was no longer able to maintain his hawkish form and returned him to
the shapes of a human Harry Potter. "He’s close," he told Hermione, this time speaking
through his mouth, as he clutched his hand to a spot on his forehead. "He’s coming."

Hermione placed a paw on his back, trying to keep him from hurtling down the side of the tower,
and began screaming with her telepathy for everyone to get in position.

"But Fawkes didn’t give the signal yet!" She could hear Ron protest in his mind.

"Something must have slowed her down," she replied quickly, "Harry’s having
convulsions. Professor Dumbledore, I’m bringing him down to ground level," she told the
Headmaster. In the distance a bird screeched the ugliest, most urgent sound. She looked over to see
Fawkes, carrying a beaten black dog in her talons. Someone must have attacked Sirius, probably
thinking that he was the only one that was guarding at the moment.

"Yes, Miss Granger, but first," she heard his ancient voice speaking in her mind, her
ears receiving the sound after her brain did, "make that storm come here quicker," he
ordered.

*Storm? What storm?* Hermione asked herself frantically. She’d been so preoccupied with
Harry and Wormtail that she didn’t even notice the storm forming somewhere beyond Hogsmeade. *Of
course!* She thought. *That’s why they’re attacking tonight! They must have thought that with
such an ugly storm brewing, not even Hagrid would wander out of his hut.* Hermione closed her
eyes, her paws still pinning Harry safely to the roof of the tower as he convulsed beneath her, and
concentrated. It wasn’t easy, she’d never done something so drastic with the elements. All she’d
really done till that moment had been a couple of whirlwinds, and she’d made a few plants grow
quicker. Okay, the first thing to do was make the water in those clouds condense with higher speed,
and then push it toward the school with the most powerful winds that she could conjure.

Taking a deep breath, she opened her eyes. As she willed the black clouds to grow her pupils
dilated and her entire irises turned white pushing back the topaz that had surrounded it only
seconds earlier. The clouds grew in size and darkened in color before her very eyes, and she began
to pull them toward her with all her might. Within seconds, the clouds were directly over her head.
The clouds wouldn’t release water until after the Death Eaters would arrive, but she knew that even
that was an advantage.

Turning herself back into her original form she held Harry with one hand, and reached for the
Firebolt behind her with the other. He had suggested that they use that when going to and leaving
the tower, knowing how much Hermione hated to fly, and how uncomfortable it was to hang on when a
big pair of wings flapped beneath your arse. Hermione had never been so glad to mount a broom in
her entire life. Pushing her fear aside for Harry’s sake, she guided them both to the secure ground
next to where Dumbledore stood. Her breath was heavy and she was dizzy from both handling a broom
with the added weight of an extra person and the effort of making a storm reach its destination far
sooner than it should have.

"Marvellous job, Miss Granger," the Headmaster complimented her, just as Ron, restored
to his original form, stepped out of the building.

"They’re all right here behind the door," he informed, referring to the school’s
faculty members, and then turned to look at Harry.

His convulsions had stopped, but his breath was heavy and ragged, and somehow, he’d split a lip.
And just then, Harry stood up straight and looked at the Whomping Willow with determination.

"The pain stopped suddenly," he told them. Hermione jumped at hearing him say that.
"He’s here," and the remaining three people turned to look at the same tree that Harry
had been fixing with his glare, Fawkes coming to stand at their fit, her eyes still on the Willow
as well.

The sky, that had been dark already because of lacking moonlight, was now a black blanket, not
allowing any light onto the courtyard, the only source of illumination the lanterns that were dimly
lit in the Hogwarts hallways streaming veiled light out of the window. Strong gusts of wind snapped
their robes around their feet, freezing the cold sweat that they weren’t able to hold back, making
their eyes water from its intensity.

But even in these conditions the four—five, with the phoenix—saw a fat, balding, brown mouse
scurrying out of the passage to hit the knot on the tree. One of its front legs shone an eerie
white, as though the leg was made of metal. And it was. It was made of silver.

Wormtail again.

He didn’t turn back to his natural form, and soon they found out why. What must have been more
than a thirty Dementors followed him out of the passage, and Harry felt the world spinning around,
as Hermione and Ron felt the life sucked out of them. Before he could pass out, Hermione pulled out
enough chocolate frogs to keep them strong for a while. Everyone devoured them desperately. Though
Harry couldn’t see them, he knew the Giants and the Order members were doing much the same
thing.

They were a rather horrible sight, masked with their black robes, so that nothing but maybe a
hand, dead and putrefied, was exposed to them. They were hungry, and they seemed to be pointing
Harry. They were less than what Harry had calculated when he’d flown over the woods, but they were
enough to send a man to horrid depths within few short moments.

To confirm his thoughts, out of the passage came eighty or so figures, wearing cloaks featuring
the Dark Mark. All that could be seen of them was their mouths, smudged with chocolate, their skin,
so grey and ashy that they looked like corpses, and their jaw muscles, tense and clenched after the
prolonged exposure to the Dementors.

Only when the last hooded figure stepped out did Wormtail turn back into Peter Pettigrew. This
one was different. There were no chocolate stains around its mouth, his face was squished, like a
serpent’s, his nostrils only two flat slits, his skin looked scaly, and his eyes were a glowing
blood red.

"Well, Tom," Dumbledore began, a Chocolate Frog leg in hand, "you really look
horrible."

Voldemort, once known as Tom Riddle, sneered at him. "I look like power." He
corrected. "I *am* power."

Dumbledore shrugged. "You may be, but you still look horrible."

His opponent smiled a most horrifying smile. "You know, *professor*," he spat the
word, "I came here hoping to make a…a deal with you, if you will."

Dumbledore’s eyebrows furrowed. "Oh?" He asked. "And since when is a deal made
with the aid of thirty Dementors?"

"Since they are part of the deal," the Headmaster motioned him to go on. "I will
tell these Dementors to retreat, and leave your school unharmed, at the sole condition that you
follow me where you are required to."

The old wizard popped the Chocolate Frog leg he was holding in his mouth, chewed it and
swallowed it slowly, made to look as he was thinking, and then, after a brief pause,
"No."

"No?" Voldemort echoed, his voice hushed but angry. "You wish to have the life of
seven hundred students on your conscience?" He asked, trying to lay the guilt trip on him. It
didn’t matter that he wouldn’t have had the Dementors retreat in any case, but the Headmaster was
supposed to care for them.

"You really think we’d let you and your dirty Dementors inside the school?" Harry spat
at him.

Voldemort laughed. His cruel, cold, snake like hissing laugh. "How do you plan to stop me?
With your Mudblood girlfriend?" He threw a cursory glance to Hermione. "Or with that
ridiculous bird?" Looking at Fawkes he laughed harder.

But Harry smiled. A smile that unsettled something within Voldemort. "Why don’t you show
him what you can do Fawkes?" And with that the bird let out a high-pitched, eardrum bursting
screech, giving off the final signal. Immediately, from behind the fake bushes the sixty-some
Giants rushed out forming three perfect military roes, while from the opposite side of the forest,
thirty or so Order of the Phoenix members came out, holding their wands in offensive stances,
steadily pointed at the Dementors. Among them, Harry could see Sirius, slightly beaten but
determined, Lupin, sickly looking but strong as ever, and Jenna, who looked like she wanted a piece
of the man that had killed her best friend sixteen years earlier.

Voldemort chuckled again. "You are outnumbered."

While the faculty members filtered out of the school behind him, Harry pulled his wand from his
robes and pointed it at the Dementors. Closing his eyes to gather the happiness of all those
wonderful nights spent with Hermione before the fire, reading his mother’s diary, Harry called,
"EXPECTO PATRONUM!" His Patronus took out twelve of the Dementors before anyone even
registered it. He threw a smirk Voldemort’s way. "Now we’re not," he said, accepting the
Chocolate Frog that Hermione was handing him.

It was right then that the rain started to fall. A thick, unending sheet of hard water dropping
incessantly and mercilessly on their heads heavily. Dumbledore and his followers welcomed it. His
opponents took it as a beacon to begin battle.

Spells began to run amuck from both sides, the Dementors tried to get to anyone in their reach,
enemy and non, Giants waved their weapons. Harry and Lupin were busy taking out Dementors while
faculty members duelled with Death Eaters.

Just as the last Dementor dropped, out of the school doors, that had been freed in favour of the
courtyard, students had walked out, who had been beckoned by either the sound of battle, or by the
effect of the Dementors. Most of them were Slytherins, yet there were a couple of Ravenclaws among
them.

They all raised their wands and pointed them against their own faculty. Looking at them more
closely, Harry realized that they were mostly all related to important Death Eaters. *Shit!*
He swore. He watched powerless as Snape was taken out by Millicent Bullstrode since he had his back
turned to them, not even knowing his students had filed out of their dormitories. *Now* we’re
outnumbered!

Yet, just as he thought that, several of those perpetrators were thrown into a high arch in the
air by some strong disarming spells.

Gryffindors! His roommates, his friends, almost the entire Gryffindor house from fourth year and
above stood there, wands poised. Ginny winked at him after having disarmed Goyle.

Pansy was thrown on top of a Dementor by a strong "Expelliarmus!" Krista and her
friends were there as well.

And then it all became confused. Students fighting teachers fighting Death Eaters fighting
Giants. Even Ciucciobello fought, by throwing himself in the gut of any Death Eater that he came
across. Harry was throwing hexes, yet he didn’t know which ones, the sound of the rain too loud,
the battle too confused, his robes too heavy because of the water.

"GINNY!" He thought he heard someone shout from the Front Doors. Draco Malfoy stood
there horrified after having screamed the name, as his own father, Lucius Malfoy, stood not twenty
paces from his son with one hand firmly squeezing the redhead’s neck. Harry saw the man raise his
wand, a maniacal expression covering his face, making him look mad. Oh, no! There wasn’t time!
Harry looked on in pure horror as he saw the word forming on the Death Eater’s mouth.

"AVADA…" but before he could finish giving her the Unforgivable, Malfoy, Draco Malfoy,
shouted out, "Expelliarmus!" The black, expensive wand was thrown far away, the girl
dropped from his hold slumping to the ground, and the man himself was thrown back several feet.
Before he could get back up again his son shouted, "Petrificus Totalus!" Lucius Malfoy
lay unmoving in the mud.

Draco rushed over to Ginny, helping the gasping girl to her feet, supporting her light weight
against his body as he began to petrify other Death Eaters. The next one he’d sent down was
Cornelius Fudge, the Minister of Magic, who had just had his wand split in two by Rubeus Hagrid,
the half Giant that taught Care of Magical Creatures. Hagrid looked at the young Malfoy stunned,
and then broke into a proud grin beneath his burly beard. "G’ed work, lad!" he called to
him. "G’ed work!"

"DISCERPO NUBIS!" Somewhere off to his right he heard Hermione shout, and watched as
her wand guided lightning pillars down from the clouds and onto unsuspecting opponents. She’s
already taken out seven Slytherins when Harry noticed a bony, horrid hand reaching for her throat.
Before she could even scream, Voldemort had his wand pressed against her chest menacingly.

And Harry watched with terrified stupor as his enemy, the man that had taken everything from
him, turned to face him, holding Hermione in his arms. That laugh, the laugh that Harry hated, oh,
so much, filled the entire courtyard, so much that everyone stopped to stare. He cackled madly as
Harry watched him helplessly, the rain carrying out the hissing laugh to every ear rather than
dampening the sound, like it had with everything else.

No, not her!

To be continued.

Author’s ramblings: Please don’t kill me, I’m just a little ole’ fanfic writer! Anyway, for any
comments, critisisms, or flames, always review or drop me a line at Robbygal@hotmail.com.

Love

Pearl



17. Chapter 16: Discerso Nubis
------------------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t
know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and himself…or
did she?

Disclaimer: Pfui…let’s move on.

On with the fic:

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

Chapter 16: Discerso Nubis

His heart stopped. That very second the world could have collapsed around him but it would never
be able to take his mind, heart, and eyes away from the scene before him.

That laugh, that mad laugh that was driving him crazy and making his blood boil in helpless
anger kept on ringing in his ears while Hermione glared at the monster that was currently holding a
wand to her heart, her face a mask of terrorized defiance.

And that horrid laughter never stopped. "Ah, Harry," Voldemort began, his tone
completely spiteful, "your family always did have a liking for filthy Mudbloods," he
spat, laughing. "Clever little Mudblood witches, always interfering with my plans," his
hand tightened around Hermione’s smooth white neck. "Just like that filthy Lily Potter, isn’t
she Harry?" The laugh continued. "She’s just like your pretty Mudblood mother," this
time he actually spit on her cheek. "Disgusting!" And then he grinned, turning her to
face Harry. "Have any last words to tell your boyfriend?" He asked her maliciously.

Hermione closed her eyes and gripped her wand tightly. She wouldn’t cry before this monster. So
let’s see, what could she do in this situation. She had no chance of using her wand against him.
She was in a bad position, she would have never been able to position her wand well for a good
spell, it would have been useless. Besides, the cackling megalomaniac would kill her before she
even got the word out. What else could she do? Cicciobello was looking at her expectantly from
behind Harry’s shoulder, ready to come and help her the second Voldemort was distracted, but how
could he be distracted? She didn’t have anything on her but the clothes on her back, a ridiculous
amount of Chocolate Frogs in her left pocket, and in her right she had only…of course! Well, it
wasn’t safe, and it wasn’t likely to work like she wanted it to, but it was her only chance.

"Harry," she began, her voice determined, yet her face a mask of true fear. "The
lightning. Use the lightning, Harry."

Oh, Merlin, no! It was just like his dream. He didn’t want her to die tonight. He wouldn’t let
her die tonight. But he couldn’t do what she was asking. Voldemort was holding her too tightly, and
there was too much of a chance that he might hit her instead. He knew that the spell was only made
to stun, but it would only make things worse if it stunned her.

Voldemort threw his head back and laughed again. "He won’t use that!" He laughed
again, understanding as much as Harry what she meant. "He won’t risk hitting his stupid
Mudblood slut!" Again, he threw his head back and laughed.

Harry wasn’t going to let her die. As images of the time spent with her filled his vision, so
the knowledge that he would save her filled his mind. And at each image that filled his mind, the
knowledge only became stronger. Hermione, would you read the diary out loud for me? I’d love to.
*She’s not going to die*. I should have never kissed you, but no mistake has ever felt so good
or right. *She’s not going to die*. That first kiss that they shared by the hearth while
reading the diary. *She’s not going to die.* The kiss on the cheek she’d given him at King’s
Cross after fourth year. *She’s not going to die.* The time she’d helped him save Sirius.
*She’s not going to die.* The strong sounding slap across the face that she gave Malfoy.
*She’s not going to die.* The note that she had in her hand when she’d been petrified by the
Basilisk. *She’s not going to die.* The way she’d barged into his cabin looking for Trevor the
first year. *She’s not going to die.*

And then the chant became reality. She wasn’t going to die. As Voldemort kept on laughing, his
head thrown back overconfidently, Cicciobello launched himself with all his strength against his
gut, kicking and pounding that monster’s stomach. "You killed them! You killed them! You
killed Mommy and Daddy!" He kept on shouting with each hit he dealt, surprising Voldemort out
of his laughter.

Harry watched as Hermione took advantage of the moment and pulled something out of her pocket,
aiming it at her aggressor’s heart (or where the heart should have been). He invoked his barrier,
"VALLUM SOBLATUM!" effectively trapping himself, Hermione, the enraged Cicciobello, and
Voldemort, all in the same confining cage made of shimmering liquid light. Hermione didn’t miss her
opportunity. Voldemort fought to get the enraged doll away from himself and held onto her neck with
ever increasing pressure, but she wasn’t going to let that stop her. Her weapon was already aimed,
all she needed to do was gather all the strength in her body to embed it in his chest. And before
allowing the world to blur around her, she did. She reeled her arm back with all her might and hit
him squarely in the middle of the chest.

Voldemort cried out in pain, letting Hermione go as he touched the item that had forcefully
become part of his anatomy. A strange transparent, metallic looking four tipped star had one of its
points embedded at least two inches within his chest. He laughed again, though now it sounded very
painful. "This won’t kill ME!" He shouted at them.

But the only reply that he got were Hermione and Harry’s voices shouting simultaneously,
"DISCERSO NUBIS!"

Maybe the Holostar that Hermione had used against him wouldn’t have killed him, and
Cicciobello’s weak blows hardly fazed him, but the two strong electrifying pillars of luminous
electricity that hit the Holostar and channelled through his body thanks to it did…kill him.

Hermione was the first to notice. "Harry," she whispered, her voice raspy from the
tight hold that Voldemort had on it just seconds prior. "Harry, he’s not breathing," she
croaked.

Cicciobello flew over to him. He nudged the corpse with his foot. No answer. He punched it. No
answer. He began to thrash and showered the dead snake like he had before. "You deserved it,
you deserved it, you murdered, you killed Mommy and Daddy!" Cicciobello was crying again. Not
the lone tear that they had seen earlier, but an endless river of sorrow in mourning of the family
that he’d lost so long ago without knowing.

"NO!" they head someone shout from the somewhere outside of the barrier. Nothing could
be seen across the thick wall of light, so Harry brought it down to see what was going on outside
their confinement. Sirius, enraged and desperate, was trying to hold on to a fat agitated mouse
with both hands, trying to keep him from escaping.

Yet, the mouse did.

It slipped right between Sirius’ big hands and scurried about the wet grass. Harry tried to go
after it, but the rain had made his clothes as heavy as lead, the water dripping from his messy
hair and onto his glasses and the lack of light made it impossible to see, and the popping sounds
of the Aurors apparating in were distracting. Desperately he called to them, "THE MOUSE! CATCH
THAT MOUSE!" But the Aurors couldn’t hear him, or if they did, they ignored him, deeming the
capture of Death Eaters a more pressing issue.

He felt his hopes of clearing Sirius’ name shatter upon noticing that Wormtail had nearly
reached the passage of the Whomping Willow. There he was again. Escaping much like he had almost
four years earlier. And right when he thought there was no chance, he saw a small bundle fly faster
than his Firebold toward the tree, swoop down to the ground, where it struggled.

*Come on, Cicciobello, get him!* Harry pleaded in him mind, hoping against hope that the
doll would catch the man responsible for their parents’ deaths. And just as he thought that,
Cicciobello raised himself in the air once more, holding a mouse in his hand that looked like it
had been tied with its own tail.

"I caught him!" The doll shouted. Somehow, Harry didn’t find it strange at all to hear
the pure loathing in Cicciobello’s high pitched voice, rather than his usual taunting banter. After
all Ciccio knew what had truly happened. Knew that Peter was the reason that Lily and James had not
been alive the moment that he’d come out of the time capsule once again.

But before Harry could sigh in relief, he heard Hermione shriek sharply behind him.
"HARRY!" He whirled around, his wet heavy robes hitting his legs painfully, to see
Hermione’s horrified face as she watched Voldemort’s dead body. Out of its mouth a thick, black tar
like substance was gurgling out, spilling on the wet grass like ink out of a tipped bottle.
Obviously, Voldemort had taken precautions, expecting something of the sort this night. And he
watched in pure terror as the substance began to lift itself in the air, floating like vapor cloud,
though looking like the world’s thickest wad of tar.

Instinctively, Harry raised his wand, poising it for attack. He didn’t know what he intended to
do exactly. Maybe immobilize it, though he wasn’t sure if that would work on a floating ball of
tar. Or maybe petrify it, but he had no idea if that would work either.

In any case, before he even managed to enunciate the first word of a hex or spell, he was
suddenly taken over by the most blinding pain he’d ever experienced in his entire life. He felt all
the bones in his body snap, break and shatter, his skin and muscles splitting open in several
points. His own screams were deafening him.

As he doubled over in the atrocious torment of his life possibly coming to an end, he saw
Voldemort’s tar fly high, higher than his barrier had, and disappear into the dark of night, and
then, his vision went black, the effect of three Ciciatus spells placed on him at once by enraged
Death Eaters.

In the night, even over the sound of the rain, the pained screams could be heard for miles.

°*°

Where was he? All he could see were blurry outlines and black night. Around him there were
sounds of pain and despair.

Where was he?

He was lying on something soft. Was he dead?

Next to him, he could hear someone crying. A girl. She was trying to be quiet, but it seemed
that her pain was too great. He wanted to speak to her, comfort her, make her laugh and forget her
sorrows, but his mouth wasn’t responding to his commands. He tried several times, yet his mouth
hadn’t opened at all. It felt as though it had been closed shut.

After one last try, he managed to get his lips to slit open (though he thought he’d lost at
least one layer of skin with that move) and made a strangled sound. Strangled as it may have been,
the girl next to him heard him. Her head snapped up. Quickly, moving as though she thought that if
she didn’t hurry it would disappear, she pulled out her wand and made light come out of its tip.
"Harry," he heard her whisper in fervent wonder.

As wonderful as her soft, pleading voice was to his ringing ears, he wasn’t able to suppress a
pained groan at the effect the sudden light had on his eyes. How long had he been gone? His eyes,
his voice, his body, they all felt as though they’d never been used before.

"Oh, sorry," he heard her whisper, as she lowered the intensity of the light and
dropped her wand on a nightstand next to him. "Madame Pomfrey said it would hurt," she
said apologetically. He felt her hand behind his neck. "Here," she whispered, placing
something against his lips. A glass filled with a drink. "It tastes horribly, but it will make
you feel better." Actually, his taste buds were as numb as the rest of him, mind included, but
once the thick substance made its way past his throat, he felt his senses come back to him.

Along with his memories.

The first thing he recognized, once his eyes were able to focus enough for him to see, was who
was standing before him. "Hermione," he whispered, his spirits rising far faster than
should have been possible. She had been crying, and a lot, judging by the dark color that circled
her eyes. She was also covered in bandages, the most noticeable around her neck, which brought him
to his next recognition. He was in the Hospital Wing.

And that inevitably brought him to the recognition of why they were there. The battle. It was
all so fuzzy in his mind that he wasn’t sure if it was real, or if he’d dreamed it. "What
happened?" He asked her. All he remembered was Voldemort laughing, thunder, rain, wind, Sirius
screaming, Warmtail running, and then Hermione screaming for him. After that, it was all a
blank.

"Three Death Eater hit you with Cruciatus, all at one time, right before the Aurors got to
them," she told him, after a moment’s pause. "You’re lucky you’re alive, Harry. You have
no idea what you’d looked like then. Madame Pomfrey had to completely reconstruct your spinal cord,
and the rest of your limbs, and your skin…oh, Harry, you were so lucky you didn’t get any cerebral
damage!" She was trying to hold back tears again.

"Why didn’t they use the killing curse?" That would have been a quicker way for them
to get rid of him.

"They did," Hermione whispered, and at Harry’s raised eyebrows she continued.
"Cicciobello…he threw Wormtail at me, so that he could intercept the spell before it reached
you…he took four hits."

Oh, Merlin! "How is he?"

Hermione smiled reassuringly. "A little banged up, but Professor Flitwick and Lupin are
putting him back into shape," that was a relief. He would have never thought that the doll
would help them that much. But Lily had obviously known. Otherwise she wouldn’t have placed him in
the time capsule.

"How long have I been out?" It felt like he’d slept a hundred years.

She sniffed again. "Another hour and it would have been exactly four days," another
sniffle had followed her answer.

"What about Wormtail? Did the Aurors get him? And Sirius?" If Wormtail had escaped
again, Sirius would be given the Dementor’s kiss!

"Well, at first the Aurors captured him, and they were trying to take him back to Azkaban
to give him the kiss. They thought he was a Death Eater," oh, Merlin, no! "But Dumbledore
convinced them to interrogate both Sirius and Wormtail—after they restored him to his true
form—under the effects of Veritaserum," Harry’s eyes swelled with hope. "We can’t see
them, they’re both in custody with the Ministry, but there will be a hearing in May, and there are
very good chances that Sirius’ name will be cleared.”

Harry smiled, and thought back to other parts of the battle that hadn’t been clear on him.
"Hermione, what about Snape?" He remembered that the Potions master had been sent face
first into the mud by one of his very own house members.

Her face darkened. "He’s not doing to well," she told him. "Millicent Bullstrode
hit him in the back, shattering two of his vertebrae, and he laid unconscious face down in the mud
until the Aurors came. If they’d come a second later, he would have died from lack of oxygen. His
lungs were filled with mud, and his face was already swollen when they pulled him out. Madame
Pomfrey said that he was almost as hard to save as you were."

Harry nodded. "It was better for him that way," Hermione knew what he meant. "At
least he didn’t have to choose sides this way." However, Harry didn’t think that the teacher
would have been happy about that.

"Hermione, what about Ron?" Harry had lost sight of him, nearly the same second that
the rain had begun to fall.

"Oh, he’s fine," Hermione waved him off, "though he’s still trying to impress
Krista with these completely fictional tales of what happened. It’s as though he doesn’t even
remember that she was there," she laughed. "Although now he spends most of his time
trying to keep Malfoy away from Ginny. He won’t accept the fact that Draco saved her life. Poor
Krista has to petrify him each time he sees Malfoy," it was good to hear her giggle, but a
dark thought made its way into Harry’s mind.

"What’s going to happen to the school, Hermione?" Her expression darkened
considerably.

"I’m not sure," she replied honestly. "It been since the battle that Dumbledore
had been going between Aurors for interrogations, and questionings with Ministry officials. Nobody
really knows what to do since Fudge and half of his staff were fighting with the Death Eaters, but
I’m afraid the school—" she was interrupted by an ancient, welcomed voice.

"Will have to close for a short time, I’m afraid," Dumbledore’s voice came from the
foot of Harry’s bed.

"What? Why?" Harry nearly screeched. He knew that something of the sort would have to
be done, but he would have never expected the Headmaster to allow it.

"Because at this moment the Ministry is afraid that the school is not a safe place,"
Dumbledore replied, "and we will close for no longer than a month, to give us time to take
better precautions, and strengthen our protection." His tone was final.

"Miss Granger, as you are from a Muggle family, Mr Weasley and I deemed it safer for you
and your parents to stay at the Burrow until your return," he told her. "Your parents
have already been informed, and will be waiting for you there in two days, when all the students
will be sent back to their homes," as though catching Harry’s question he added. "You,
Harry, will have to go back to your uncle’s home. They have been informed as well." And with
that he left.

He wished he’d died in the battle. But Voldemort was still out there, and Dumbledore had said
that the only safe place for him would have been with his uncles. He trusted Dumbledore, and so he
would suffer for that one month. He was glad that there had been no deaths during the battle.
Death, however, seemed a much better option than going to live with his uncles for a month.

Harry hadn’t noticed, hiding in the dark shadows of a corner, a black bubble of tar, watching
his every move, tailing him everywhere, and waiting anxiously for his night of power, to be able to
get sweet revenge. The time was near, and he would not lose Harry until it was time to kill
him.

And Harry was far too numb to feel the burning above his right brow, trying to warn him of
impending doom.

°*°

A week. It had been a week since Hermione had gone to stay with the Weasleys, and, though
enjoyable a stay as it was turning out to be—especially for her parents—she found herself becoming
more and more anxious by the day. There was something bothering her. And now, she was finally going
to find out why.

She’d been trying to look deeper into it for months, but, no matter where she looked, the
writings of Vatis Divinus had been banned from every bookstore, library, or referring index.
Coincidentally, just the previous night, when Molly Weasley asked what had been wrong, and Hermione
had explained, the woman laughed, and told her that she had one of his books from when she was
young and fixated with Divinations. The last one he’d written before he was called a heretic
prophet.

And now she understood why.

Anyone who didn’t know and love Harry Potter, and believed truly in him, would have thought that
the author of such unlikely events was a raving lunatic—well, he was, but that was besides the
point—his writing were considered purely fictional. Molly had lost interest before reaching the
fiftieth page, but Hermione read on, and the more she read, the more terrified she became.

She’d finished the tome, read over it once more, and then did a third quick read through to make
sure that she’d understood everything correctly. She had. Throughout the entire reading, the
necklace that Harry had given her as a Christmas present was glowing so brightly within its
carvings that she’d been forced to wear it inside her sweater so that it wouldn’t blind her.

What she’d read had promised nothing good, and at the moment she was frantically looking over
star charts, cross referencing between seven different charts, hoping against hope that they would
still have time.

And then it became clear. Like the morning mist giving way under the sun. Its clarity was
scary.

Suddenly she leapt to her feet, screaming at the top of her lungs, "Mr Weasley," no
answer "MR WEASLEY!"

The shocked, terrified, worried, balding man ran to her. "Yes, what is it, Hermione dear,
what happened?"

"Mr Weasley, we have to contact Dumbledore right away," she pleaded, "we need to
tell him to go to Privet Drive and meet us there!"

Arthur Weasley was confused beyond his years. "Why? What’s going on?" His voice was
becoming as panicked as hers.

"It’s Harry!" She told him urgently. "He’s in danger, and something awful will
happen to him if we don’t call Dumbledore, and we don’t go help him right away!"

He didn’t ask questions, or stall a second longer. He didn’t know how she knew, and he didn’t
care. He ran to make arrangements.

To be continued.

Author’s notes: So, did that surprise you? Did any of you guys think that I would actually kill
either Harry or Hermione? Well, you never know, I’m not done yet ^_^. I was particularly pleased
with Cicciobello’s humanity in this chapter and the last, but that could just be me. Anyway,
comment, critisisms, flames welcome at Robbygal@hotmail.com or simply leave a review.

Thanks for reading.

Pearl



18. Chapter 17: Blinding Light
------------------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t
know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son in to knowing her and himself…or
did she?

Okay, this is actually the last true chapter of the story, the next to are hopelessly sappy and
kind of terrible additions that I felt the need to put in (though the ff.net readers seemed to like
them enough). Anyway, this is the real stuff. Actually, someone pointed out that it was kind of
like the final scene in Practical Magic, though that wasn’t my intention. Oh, well, I’m kind of
proud of this, even though it doesn’t mirror what I had in mind. By the way, I loved your reviews!
Some of them were rather funny, sort of like a running commentary of each chapter. Very enjoyable,
so thank you all so much for your support! Hope you enjoy this as well.

And now, on with the fic.

Harry Potter and the knowledge of a Mother

By Pearl Drop Angel

Chapter 17: Blinding Light

*Ugh, I hate travelling by floo powder*. Hermione thought as she landed on her rump in what
she knew was Miss Figg’s home, an old lady, friend of Dumbledore, who lived down the street from
Harry (to be able to keep watch over him), and had a strange fixation for cats. Oh, her home
smelled of cabbages, too. And at the moment, she was explaining to Dumbledore that something
strange was going on in Privet Drive lately.

The old Headmaster, along with McGonagall, Snape, and Mad-eye Moody, must have either Apparated
a short time before she—with Ron and his father—had burst though the chimney, or they used a
portkey. She guessed the latter, since Dumbledore was holding a cat shaped key-chain that really
didn’t seem to suit him much.

Oh, but what was she sitting there lost in thought for? They were running out of time!

"Miss Granger," Snape called to her coldly, "would you be so kind as to explain
why we had to come to this foul smelling cat pound without notice?"

"Well, we don’t have much time, but, in substance," she squirmed to hold the three
tomes in her arms better, to pull out a thick leather bound book that both she and Snape were
already familiar with, "several months ago, Harry and I, while reading Lily’s diary, read an
interesting entry about a vision that she’d had—believe she spoke of it to Professor Dumbledore—and
since it sounded familiar I decided to look into it. A short while later I found out that it
sounded very much like what Vatis Divinus had prophesised, and we also found Lily’s journal, where
she wrote all her visions. In it, what had already interested me became clearer, but there were
several matters that were left untouched," Hermione explained.

"Does this all have a purpose, Miss Granger?" Snape’s tone was almost threatening.

She wasn’t fazed. She kept on going with her retelling, seeming as though she hadn’t even heard
him. "When I went to stay with the Weasleys I found that Mrs Weasley had a copy of the last
book that Vatis Divinus had written before being exiled and marked as heretic. Cross referencing
that with Lily’s visions I managed to get a full premonition."

"And what does it say?" Snape was sceptical.

"It said that after the return to power of the Dark Lord, he would try to attack the
Boy-Who-Lived, but would fail, and wonder about as a thick shadow—" Snape interrupted
again.

"We already knew that, Miss Granger, it already happened," he taunted her.

"Yes, but the next part didn’t!" She shouted at him. The man jumped at the unexpected
bound of brave anger on her part.

"Let the girl speak Severus," Dumbledore mumbled with a poignant look. Snape looked
petrified.

"Thank you Professor," she mumbled before going on. "The other part said that,
shortly after his second fall, the Dark Lord would get one last chance! Precisely in the moment in
which the skies would align themselves the way they had the night he perished the first time…well,
he would receive powers like none he ever had before if only he managed to possess the body of the
one that brought him down!" Oh, Merlin, she felt like crying! "And we only have a very
short time left before that happens!"

McGonagall was the first to understand. "The Wizard’s star! The comet that rotates around
the Earth and can only be seen by wizards! That had passed right over the Potter’s home when they
died!"

"Yes, and it’s about to go over Privet Drive!" Hermione shouted. Why were they still
sitting here? They had to leave now! She began to make her way to the front door.

"Hermione, wait!" Ron’s familiar, scared voice stopped her. "Did the prophecy
say…how Harry could defeat him?"

Her face crumpled, "It did…but it’s not clear. All it said was that if two lights united to
give strength to each other, than neither of them would dim, and they’d make the dark
disappear." She wasn’t a prophet, or a Seer, and she’d dropped Divination before the first
term was over. She didn’t know how to decipher that, and, judging by the other’s faces, neither did
they. Dumbledore knew, but she understood that he wouldn’t tell, and probably for good reason. So
she turned on her heels, books clutched tightly to her chest as though they were a shield, and
walked out the door to run to Privet Drive number 4. She could hear the rest all following close
behind.

As soon as she reached the door she found her hand pounding on its wooden surface desperately,
bruising her fingers. A while later the door opened to reveal Dudley, even larger than last time.
Must be hard to move with all that fat on his bones, no wonder he took so long.

"Hi, Dudley, I’m Hermione Granger, remember me?" Oh, Merlin, he was ogling her again!
Not waiting for him to reply she let herself in the door. "Where’s Harry, I have to talk to
him right away! It’s really important!"

In reply she heard a scream from somewhere under the stairs, and the voice emitting it was all
too familiar. "Harry?" she asked, worried and surprised. Another incessant shout of pain
came from the closed small door of the cupboard. "Harry!" This time her voice was
terrified. She threw herself at the door handle, calling out to his name. "Harry! Harry! Can
you hear me?" Another agonized sound answered her. There was no key in the door.

As Aunt Petunia walked in the hallway, followed closely by Vernon, to see what all the fuss was
about, Hermione shouted at her. "There’s no key! Where’s the key? Do you have it?" Dimly
she realized that she was crying more than she ever had in her life. It couldn’t be Voldemort. He
couldn’t be in there with him! It was too early! The comet had yet to pass. It couldn’t be him yet!
She hadn’t even thought that she could have used her wand to open the cupboard.

Petunia, who had the key in her pocket, was terrified and immobilized by the girl’s display.
They had locked him in there because of all the noise he was making. Hermione, irritated at her,
pulled out her wand, remembering that she had one. She didn’t care that an ex-Auror could have
reported her to the Ministry for threatening a Muggle, Harry was in danger. Yet, that very same
Auror told her to open the door, because Harry was injured and bleeding. Moody must have been able
to see through the door, and that was all that it took for Hermione. Pointing her wand at the
offensive door she called out, "Alohomora!" Her shout was so potent that it nearly tore
the door off its hinges. Harry’s shouts were even louder without that barrier. Moody removed the
door from her view, giving her, instead, one of Harry.

And it was horrible.

There he was, lying on what must have been the poorer excuse for a bed that she’d ever seen, his
body far too big for such a small space, holding his hand to his forehead as though it would be
able to dim some of his pain, his body convulsing and bending at terrifying angles, and his limbs
hitting and slamming against the walls of the cupboard because of its minimal size. There was a
trickle of blood at the corner of his mouth, his lips split and bruised from his attempts at
keeping quiet, he was sweating profusely, and, when the sudden flood of light into the crammed
space reached his eyes, Hermione saw that his hand and almost the entire right side of his face was
covered with blood, his glasses covered in it. His scar was bleeding.

"Oh, Merlin! Ron, help me pull him out of there!" She ordered. The space was so
crammed that, with all the pain he was in, he would have only injured himself further if he
attempted to make his way out alone. In any case, he made no resistance. Oh, but was he even really
there! At that terrifying thought, the second that she managed to get Harry out of the small
cupboard she turned him over to look at her, shaking him slightly. "Harry," she whispered
urgently, "Harry, look at me! Look at me, Harry! Do you recognize me, Harry? Who am
I?"

"Hermione," he whispered so quietly that she almost thought she had imagined it. But
he had spoken her name, or rather coughed it out past the blood, and when she looked into his eyes
she knew. Nobody could ever look so sweetly at her through all that pain. This was Harry.

"You’re still you," she whispered, almost laughing. As another bout of pain seized
him, she held him to her bosom, ignoring the books that she’d dropped the second that she noticed
that Harry was, as a matter of fact, locked in a cupboard. Cradling him in her embrace, trying to
dampen his pain, she turned to the rest looking on in astonishment, telling them, "It’s ok,
don’t worry, he’s still Harry. Voldemort didn’t get to him yet, but he must be close, or he
wouldn’t feel this much pain."

Dudley began laughing. Cackling. As everyone, his parents included, turned to him bewildered and
scared, Harry’s sounds of pain stopped immediately, almost as though someone had turned off his
audio button, like on a TV screen. His hand left his blood stained forehead, and the now reopened
scar was bleeding no longer. It had never been like that. It had never bled.

The two events put together were ringing alarm bells in everyone’s mind.

"He’s here," Harry whispered, from within the safety of Hermione’s arms. She looked at
him, understood that he wished to stand, and helped him in doing so. Dudley had stopped cackling,
but the glare that he was sending Harry’s way would have sent a lesser man whimpering to his
mother. "Leave him alone, you ugly parasite," he ordered, wheezing after all the strain
his screaming had put his voice through.

Again, ‘the ugly parasite’ began to cackle, this time more slowly, eerily. Out of the large
nostrils of Harry’s pig faced cousin began to ooze out a black floating tar-like substance. Dudley
passed out the second all the ooze was out of him, and he looked much thinner than he had seconds
before. Voldemort. The only difference between now and a week earlier was that now, the tar cloud
was much, much bigger, thicker, and in the midst of it the outline of a face could almost be seen.
Even if it wasn’t very defined, Harry knew that face far too well already. Voldemort. Just thinking
the name infuriated him and gave him more strength. The strength that came with the wish to protect
the things and people he loved.

"I really wouldn’t have expected this out from you, Tom," Dumbledore commented, as,
once again, he pulled out a sherbet lemon from his robes. Most people would have seemed insane
taking that out in such a crucial moment, but when the ancient professor did it, it was taunting,
teasing, and insulting to the person addressed. "Living off a Muggle’s energy," he
mumbled, taking a sip. The dark cloud that was once known as Tom Riddle was an easy pray to
this.

"Exactly the reason why it worked!" He spit back. "I don’t know and I don’t care
how you found out, though I suspect that the filthy Mudblood had something to do with it, but it’s
too late. I’ve been living off that pig since he was at the station, to pick up Harry a week ago.
And from him I’ve taken so much strength that I don’t even need my wand to wipe all of you out. He
was filthy and stupid, and he had no suspicions that there was someone living off of him. And it
was much, much fun watching the great Harry Potter, the Boy Who Lived, passing his days as a slave
to these Muggles," he spit the last word out.

So that was how he’d managed to be there. The Dursleys home was probably the most protected
place besides Hogwarts for Harry, but all its protection was good only if who was after him was
actually seeking him out. It had no effect on someone that had possessed one of the Dursleys, who
knew where Harry was and lived with him.

"And Harry never even noticed," he began to cackle again.

This time, it was Mad Eye Moody that stopped his unseemingly laughter. "Are you really so
sure about that?" He sounded much braver than he felt at the moment. "If he never noticed
why does he have his wand taped to his arm under that sweater, and all those protective wards on
himself?" He asked sharply.

"The wards were placed on him when he was in the infirmery," Voldemort replied
confidently, "and he would be stupid not to have his wand with him all the time." It was
true, even if Voldemort hadn’t come for him, Harry would have still kept his wand with him at all
times. Just in case.

"I don’t know," Moody continued. "He seemed pretty sure that someone was living
off that pig on two legs. Did you think he was here, Harry?"

Harry gave a cocky grin that he knew would enrage Voldemort. "Constant vigilance," he
replied. "I didn’t notice right away, but I was sure that he was here the day after I arrived.
By the second I knew he was with Dudley." Moody gave him an appreciative smile, contorting his
scar like face. Voldemort growled. Harry’s eyes told of nothing but challange. He was weak, he felt
it, from all the pain and the constant exposure to his presence, but he had no intention of showing
it.

The black floating substance began to circle him, and he circled as well. Harry didn’t blink as
Voldemort led him in the kitchen. The rest watched from the doorways, Vernon and Petunia terrified.
Harry did his best not to look over at them, he had no intention of letting his enemy, his parents’
murderer, know that he was worried for them.

But it was all for nought. Voldemort knew him well. "Aww, worried for your little Mudblood
friend, Potter?" Harry automatically stiffened. "Don’t worry, she’ll get what she
deserves when I’m done with you."

Impulsively, Harry ripped his wand from under his sweater, pointed it at the ground, and shouted
out, erecting a barrier. "VALLUM SOBLATUM!" At first the wall of light was small,
revealing just how weak Harry was at the moment, but the knowledge that Hermione would be safe
outside of it gave him the strength to make it grow enough to reach all the windows and doorways.
He was effectively locked in with Voldemort, much like he had been a week, prior, only that this
time Hermione wasn’t in the Dark Lord’s reach, and Cicciobello was still at Hogwarts getting fixed
up. And he didn’t know whether to be glad of it, or scared.

"Harry!" He heard Hermione’s shout from the other side of the barrier. He wouldn’t
look at her. He wouldn’t let Voldemort know exactly what she meant to him. "Harry!" She
screamed as she began to bang on the barrier, almost trying to break through it. But all that
managed to do was make a dull, muted sound, almost as though the barrier absorbed it. And if felt
cold, freezing beneath her already bruised knuckles, wet and mobile as water, but as unpenetrable
as steel. And it made her desperate enough to beg Harry to let her in. "Harry, Harry, please,
let me in, there isn’t much time left," dimly she noticed that her eyes had filled with so
many tears that she could only see blurry blotches of color through the salty water covering her
vision.

Harry was getting on edge, he didn’t know what Hermione meant by time running out, and her tears
were ripping him to shreads, while Voldemort incessantly droned of what he would do the people
Harry loved once that he would take over his body.

In the meantime, Hermione kept trying to get Harry’s attention by banging on the barrier, when
she finally looked at the miniature star chart that she kept on her wrist as a watch. It worked
much like a watch, the only difference being that instead of showing the time, or the hours, it
showed the moving of the stars overhead. She’d programmed it to warn her when the comet would be in
alignment. And, just as her eyes fell on it, a red glow began to shine out of it, warning her of
doom not too far behind.

Terrified, she looked to Harry, still circling around Voldemort, light sweat across his bloody
brow, his wand poised for either attack of defence, while the black bubble of tar kept on talking
of torture and murder. And, as though coming out a tunnel of stunned fear she shrieked to him,
"HARRY! IT’S TIME! WATCH OUT!"

Without stopping to ask questions, or even think, full of trust in Hermione, Harry shouted a
strong stunning spell that Dumbledore had tought a couple months back in Duel Training, but he was
too late. Just as the burst of red light exploded from his wand, Voldemort solidified before his
eyes, the face within the tar mists becoming more difined, and launched himself into the boy’s
chest, where his heart was, effectively disappearing into it, the tar oozing through his clothes,
skin, organs, until it reached Harry’s soul, where he would break the boy.

Hermione watched in horror as she saw Harry’s vision turn inward, his eyes wide open, his
spectacles bloody from his earlier pains, and his body collapse on the ground much like a lifeless,
boneless rag doll, his limbs bent at impossible angles, convulsions running across his entire form,
more blood trickling from his mouth.

"HARRY!?" Hermione screeched as she dropped to her knees, tears pouring from her eyes
like water from a fall. "HARRY!" Then she turned to a desperate whisper. "Harry,
please, Harry! Let me in! Let me in!"

Behind her, Ron spoke to Dumbledore. "There must be some way to break through this bloody
barrier!" He shouted, outraged, angered, and scared. He’d never, in all their adventures, felt
as useless as he did now.

"No," Hermione whispered, certain and hopeless. "No, these barriers are
impenetrable," her tone was defeated and desperate. "The only way I’d be able to cross it
would be for Harry to call me in!" She sobbed, and turned to pounding the wall of liquid
light. "Harry, let me in! Let me in!"

A comforting, soothing, wrinkled old hand rested on her shoulder, calming her, to some extent.
She looked up in the twinkling half moon spectacles of her headmaster, professor Dumbledore.
"You’ll go through soon enough."

She believed him, maybe because he was a Seer, yet she wasn’t very comforted by the thought.
"Oh, Harry, what’s going on inside of you?"

°*°

Harry felt as though he was suffocating, smothered by something greater than himself, something
that he would never be strong enough to fend off, much less defeat. Black was all around him, and
it was thick, and sticky, and heavy, and it left no room for hope. He struggled against it, tried
to regain control of his body, but he was already so weak, and each attempt to fight it seemed only
able to give more strength to his enemy, wearing him out considerably. He wouldn’t be able to hold
out much longer.

And then, almost as though hearing his thoughts, Voldemort, all around him, began to cackle, the
sound coming from everywhere and nowhere, filling him, echoing within him, giving him a sense of
foreboding that chilled him to the core. "You know what the best thing about possessing your
body will be, Potter?" He asked rethorically. "It will be breaking your little Mudlood,
that filthy Granger! How do you think she would feel looking at your face, and knowing that you’re
in there but without the power to stop me from killing her, knowing that you will never really be
there anymore? How would she react in those few seconds that she’ll have left to live?"

Harry’s entire body was wracked by horrible, terrified shudders, and, unconsciously, he called
to her.

"Hermione…"

°*°

*Hermione…*

She jumped to her feet as she heard his voice calling out to her.

"Hermione?" She heard Ron say her name in surprise as she fervently wiped away at the
tears that still filled her eyes.

She smiled at him. A smile that spoke of nothing but hope. "He’s calling me," and with
that, she placed her hand against the cold, horrible barrier, and walked confidently through it,
her body giving a impulsive shudder at the feeling of thousands of iced needles pricking her as she
did. Ignoring it, she stepped around him, cradling his head in her arms, his back resting on her
bent legs.

His eyes were still turned inward, but they weren’t the glaring white that had been before
anymore. No, there were horrible black mists swirling on them, and, upon closer inspection, she
realized that the mist was beginning to spot his skin. Fighting back the tears she held on more
tightly to him. She didn’t know what to do, but whatever it was, she knew that she would be able to
help him. She had to think that, or feel completely lost.

"Oh, Harry," she whispered, "Oh, Harry, please hold on. Please! You’re so strong
Harry, you can’t lose against him!" She told him, and watched as he seemed to breath in more
deeply, as though he was taking the breath and strength to fight back. She was incouraged by it.
"Harry, you’re strong, you can do this!" She told him confidently. "And…if you don’t
think your strength is enough…then…take mine!" She said, leaning over to him to whisper in his
ear, her nose grazing his cheek. "Take my strength, Harry," she ordered him, watching as
his eyes filled with black, and then leaned over, placing a soft kiss on his lips, trying to breath
her strength into him. It wasn’t likely to work, she knew, but, at the moment, it was all that she
could think of. After all, Harry, at the moment, was very weak and needed all the strength he could
get, while Voldemort was stronger than he’d ever been before.

But, to Hermione’s surprise, her attempt of giving him some of her power seemed successful. She
felt herself being lifted off of the ground, floating several inches above the floor, Harry, body
limp and eyes still filled with black mist, did the same. She realized that, inside of all that was
happening, he was probably completely unaware of what going on outside of it, and, in all honesty,
she was too. But whatever was going on around her, she wouldn’t mind so long as she had the
certainty that it would help him. Since the first day she’d met him, all she’d ever wanted to do
was help him.

And, as she took his hands in hers and laced their fingers together, she knew this was right.
Taking a deep breath, she closed her eyes, and whispered again, "Take my strength." And
then her mind went blank. Her sight turned inward, so that she would never know that in that one
second the mist in Harry’s eyes began to disappear. Pillars of blinding light began to shine out of
both their eyes, their mouths, their ears, their hands, their laced fingers, their skin. They began
to hover in spinning circles around each other, their speed building continuously, until, finally,
they couldn’t be seen amongst the blinding light that illuminated the room in its completion.
Strong, blinding, glaring white light was everywhere, all around them. They were pure light in that
moment.

And somewhere in the middle of that Harry began to regain his consciousness. He realized that he
could breath better than he had in months, feeling strong, powerful, free. And freedom was the most
unexpected feeling of all. The light was beginning to die down around them, and they were able to
open their eyes. The first thing they noticed was each other, and there was nothing more reassuring
than to see the one face that they loved the most smiling at the other in triumphant understanding.
They weren’t very clear on what had happened, but they knew that they had done it.

And then they felt their feet touching the ground, while over their heads a whispered wirring,
almost like a small windwhirl, could be heard. They looked above to see a cloud of black ashes
hovering over them.

"Harry," Dumbledore called his attention.

Without hesitation, the pair moved out of the ashes’ range, while Harry pointed his wand to the
top of his barrier and brought it down with a quick: "Desilire."

Before the barrier was even all the way down, Snape, tight faced and apparantly enraged, moved
over to stand close enough to the whirling ashes, but far enough that he would not be touched by it
when it would drop. And drop it did. Nearly instantly, and directly at his feet, though it seemed
to float back in the air for a second. "Resistance if futile," he muttered bitterly as he
took some lighter colored dust out of a pouch he’d been holding and spread it so that it almost
completely covered the ashes.

Confused, Ron, Harry, and Hermione, tried to step closer, to see what he was doing, but he
gruffly pushed them back. "Watch it, or you might get singed," his tone was scary enough
to make them back up till the doorway. And then, out of the folds of his robes, he took a vial
filled with glowing red liquid, stirred it within its confinement, and, after deciding that it was
ready, smashed it in the center of the pile of dust and ashes.

Immediately, the pile of dirt took fire, and out of its bright flames, the outline of an
agonized face could be seen. Voldemort’s face. A voice growled in outraged pain, cursing the maker
of the potion. Voldemort’s voice. And then the outline tried to reach Snape, but the potions master
threw more of the dust from the pouch onto the flames, making them grow in a sudden outburst.
Voldemort’s outline screeched like a Banshee, screaming his agony and his defeat.

He was dead.

And then the fire died, along with the voice and the outline. "To quote the Muggles,"
Snape mumbled haughtily, "Ashes to ashes/Dust to dust." Then he pulled his wand out,
pointed it at the burnt spot of the kitchen floor, and called out, "Evanesca!" And it was
all gone. As though nothing had ever happened. Even the floor was as perfect as it had always
been.

"My scar," Harry whispered, reaching his hand up to touch it. "It…feels
strange."

Terrified by what it could mean, Hermione spun around to face him, her hand automatically
reaching to move his bangs out of the way, but what she saw was not at all what she’d expected.
"Harry! Harry, it’s healing!" She told him exited. And it was true, before her eyes, the
opened, bloody wound began to close up, the blood disappearing from his brow, and then, the cut
that had always looked fresh, began to truly scar and turn thick, knotted, and white. It had become
a true scar.

And that could only mean one thing.

"Your bond to Voldemort died with him," Dumbledore had told him. Hermione was certain
of it.

"He’s really gone," Harry heard himself say in surprise. After seven years of battles
against him, sixteen years after their first fight, Voldemort was finally gone, never to come back
again.

"But if that’s the case, why didn’t it just disappear?" Ron asked confused.

"Because its link to Lily is indestructable," Hermione replied confidently, and, for
the first time in his life, Harry felt proud of baring a lightining bolt shaped scar on his
forehead.

And then, almost as though there was almost too much to take in that moment, he felt his
consciousness slipping away, and Hermione’s small frame keeping him from thudding on the floor. He
was too weak, and he’d just used far too much power to close the last chapter of his ongoing war
with the Dark Lord. Though he wasn’t aware at the moment, he was certain that only a few minutes
later, Hermione laid down next to him, and joined him in the land of dreams.

°*°

Harry woke up in Dudley’s second bedroom, warm and safe in the bed, a comforting presence next
to him. He opened his eyes to see Hermione’s sweet face, still asleep and as comfortable as he was,
barely an inch from his face. Reaching to tuck a strand of her bushy hair behind her ear he felt
the strongest wish to wake up this way every morning, her face the first he saw upon rising, the
last he would see before falling asleep at night. And he wanted to protect her, be protected by
her, just like what had happened before he fell asleep.

He couldn’t be sure, because at the moment he’d been in a state of trance, but he clearly heard
her telling him to take her strength, and then he’d felt her power seeping in through his mouth, as
though she’d breathed it into him. Kissed it into him. Even if he couldn’t be certain of it, it was
a wonderful, reassuring, warming thought.

Muffled voices interrupted his train of though from outside the bedroom door. He strained to
hear them.

His Uncle Vernon was easy to hear, because of his usual tendancy to shout when around those
‘magical freaks’. "We don’t know how to take care of his…illness!" He could hear him
saying, probably referring to the scar that had bled so profusely, earlier. *Codswallop*, he
thought. They just didn’t want him around anymore, and he didn’t want to be around them. He had no
intention of sticking around to listen to his Aunt Petunia complain about the destruction of her
kitchen floor, which was now completely restored.

Dumbledore’s hushed voice followed. The more Harry knew the man, the most mysterious he seemed
to him. Through Lily’s diary, he’d found out that the Headmaster was a Seer, and, apparently, a
strong one. Had he known about this from the beginning? Was that why he chose to simply let things
unfold before him, while all he did was sip lemon sherbets and taunted Tom Riddle? Possibly.

And then he heard Mr Weasley’s outraged huff. "The boy is a hero! And you treat him as
though he were nothing but a common criminal! I’ll take him with me to my home!" His tone was
final, and nobody argued with it.

Worried, Harry looked to Hermione, who was just rousing because of the muted shouts on the other
side of the door. Wordlessly he put a finger to his lips, and she nodded, understanding that
something important might have been discussed. Just then, new footsteps were heard, followed by
Severus Snape’s harsh, cold voice. "Mad Eye has gone to file his report in the Ministry and
Minerva has already told everything to the Daily Prophet. She has already returned to
Hogwarts."

"Good," Arthur Weasley replied. "As soon as those two wake up, we’ll floo back to
the Burrow," he announced.

"I would like to speak with Potter first," Snape sounded embarrassed in saying it, and
Harry and Hermione looked at each other in confusion. What did he wish to speak about? It was true
that Harry wanted to speak to his Potions master after what he’d done against Voldemort, but he’d
thought that Snape would try to avoid him till the term was over. In any case, there were no
objections from the hallway.

Whatever it was, Harry didn’t want to think about it at the moment. He looked at Hermione,
thoughtfully furrowed brow, nibbling on her bottom lip adorably before him. "How did you find
out what was going to happen tonight?" He knew that she was amazing when it came to finding
out things that nobody else would have ever guessed, but it was always wonderful to watch her face
light up with the exitement of a challanging research.

She gave him a dazzling smile and hopped quietly out of bed, reaching for Lily’s diary, which
sat right on Harry’s study desk, where she’d left it before joining Harry in their slumber.
"It started from here," she whispered, so that she couldn’t be heard outside of the room.
"Remember when we read about that first premonition where she spoke about you?" She asked
as she began flipping through the pages. He nodded. Incouraged by that, she went into a much more
detailed retelling of how her research had gone. "That pendant you gave me for Christmas was a
lifesaver, Harry! The carvings were glowing so brightly when I read that passage written by Divinus
that it almost blinded me!" And then she quieted down. "It’s a good thing I found out
about it when I did. If I hadn’t we might have been too late."

He smiled at her. "You know that could never happen."

She blushed profusely, and looked down in the quickly flipping pages to hide it. But…what was
going on? Instead of words, instead of the parchment looking blank because of the speed with which
she flipped through them, there was a face. She gasped. The diary slipping out of her hands and
landing with a soft muted thump on the bed. Lily’s face!

Harry’s eyebrow furrowed. "Hermione?"

She looked at him, her eyes wide in surprise. "Harry," she began, whispering a little
too loudly and urgently. "Harry, I saw your mother!" She told him, taking the book back
in her hands and sitting next to him to show him.

What was she talking about? And then he saw it, too. When she flipped to the first page, and let
the pages run quickly through her hands, on the parchment there was the face of Lily Evans at age
seventeen, before she became his mother, smiling proudly at him. "I love you, Harry," she
whispered, her voice sounding old, proud, but distant. "I’ll love you always."

Oh, Merlin! She’d known about him! She’d known about him far before she’d even married James!
Then, Lily’s vision turned to Hermione. "Take care of him. He needs you, Hermione. You’re his
light. Take care of each other." And only a second after she said that, the pages finished,
and the image disappeared.

Both of them stared at the back of the thick, leather bound book. Lily had known about Hermione
as well. Exactly how much had Lily known in her Hogwarts years that she hadn’t reported in either
the diary or the journal? Not knowing what to say, Hermione tried. "Harry…" she
whispered. Oh, Merlin, her voice was so fragile it broke. She cleared her throat but found that
fresh tears were coming to her eyes.

He placed his finger on her bottom lip, tracing it slightly and silencing her. "Don’t say
anything," he told her. "She already said everything for us." He was right. As she
looked into Harry’s eyes, the look of pure love he was giving her, she knew that there was nothing
to add. *Except maybe one thing*, she thought as she watched him bringing her face closer to
his. And then as though he was pulling her out of the fog of the last few months, he pulled her to
him for a kiss that even time had to stop and wait in standby for.

Hermione drank it, drowned in it, lost herself in its depths, needing it more than the air
itself. Needing it as much as a drug addict needed a fix after too long a period of withdrawal.

Suddenly a thought came to her as she pulled away. "Am I allowed to remember this one, or
will I have to forget it, too?"

Harry smiled, and, laughing, told her, "You’d better remember every kiss we share from now
on," and then pulled her in for another soul searing kiss. Thinking with a grin that there was
the promise of many kisses yet to come.

°*°

"Did you want to talk to me, Professor?" Harry asked as he stepped into the living
room that had been taken over, much to the Dursleys’ chagrin, by the gruff, greasy potions
master.

"Sit, Potter," was his monotoned reply. Harry did as told. "What you…saw me do in
there, with…’him’…" he began awkwardly, "it never happened," he concluded
finally.

Harry blinked. "What?"

"It never happened," he repeated. "I wasn’t here. The only ones who helped you
were Miss Granger and Headmaster Dumbledore."

Harry knit his eyebrows. "Why?" He asked. "You could be a hero," was he
afraid of his ex-fellow Death Eaters coming to get revenge on him for having finished off their
leader? After all, he was the one that actually *killed* Voldemort.

The reply, however, surprised him. "Because I owe it to your mother." Harry would have
never expected that. But he nodded in understanding, and to close the discussion Snape told Harry
that he was "Dismissed."

Harry stood, but, before leaving the teacher alone, he told him, "I’m sure she’s very proud
of you now." Snape seemed unaffected by it, but for some unknown reason, Harry knew that it
had been the right thing to say.

A short few minutes later, Harry made his way to Miss Figg’s behind Ron and his father, fingers
laced with Hermione’s, trying to think of all the things that had happened in such a short time,
taking strength from her warm hand. He didn’t know what to expect from school, or even *when*
to expect school, but he knew that it wasn’t over. Voldemort still had followers out there, and
they would still come after him, but he knew he could live though it all if he was with her.

Because they were stronger when they put their forces together for the purpose of protecting
each other.

To be continued (not really).

Okay, next is the final chapter that I don’t think you really need to read, but you can go ahead
anyway, and then there’s an epilogue. Anyway, as you know I want to know what you think, so contact
me at Robbygal@hotmail.com or simply leave a review

Love

Pearl



19. Chapter 18: Life beginning
------------------------------

Every parent leaves something behind for their children to remember them by. Lily Evans didn’t
know, when she left her diary behind, that it would help her son into knowing her and himself…or
did she?

Well, this is the last chapter before the epilogue, and I won’t torture you with further
ramblings…actually I might be torturing you with this. I had thought of just getting rid of this
and the epilogue, but after several death threats from readers, I thought it would be best to keep
it up. Anyway, I’ll let you get back to the fic.

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

By Pearl Drop Angel

Chapter 18: Life beginning

"Before you leave for your next course I will tell you your last assignment before your
NEWTs, next week" McGonagall announced. Ron’s voice above all was heard booing and
complaining. "I believe you all would wish to know the assignment before detesting it,"
and with that most of the Gryffindor/Slytherin (the latter greatly diminished after the battle of
Hogwarts two months earlier) quieted down, knowing that when she spoke so the assignment had a good
chance of being interesting.

"As you know the Graduation Ball will be held in a short time," that had been the main
topic of conversation, besides the Quidditch games that had finally begun, since the return from
the forced break. "Yet, none of you had robes," McGonagall pointed out.

"It wasn’t in the list of required materials at the beginning of the year," one of the
few Slytherins pointed out sourly. One of the main reasons why this Grad Ball was so argued over
was the fact that, apparantly, it was to be attended by the students wearing their school uniforms.
Not a pleasant idea.

"And for a good reason," McGonagall replied sharply. Many heads perked up. "Your
last assignment will be the tranfiguration of your formal attire for the evening, which will be in
entirely Muggle fashions," Dumbledore’s idea. "I will grade your assignment at the dance,
don’t bother trying to cheat, I have taken precautions. I advice you all to use this last week to
catch up on your lost studying before your NEWTs begin," and with that she dismissed them.

As the trio left the classroom, Ron was complaining, as usual. "How do they expect us to
take the NEWTs after all we did this year? I mean, the diary, Duel Training, Training with
McGonagall, the battle, a month of no lessons, and the Quidditch games!" While Harry told Ron
that Duel and Animagus training had already been considered into their grades (as heavy extra
credit), that the month with no lessons should have been used for studying, that Quidditch had
never stopped exams, and that he’d hardly participated in the diary’s reading, Hermione was smiling
broadly, thinking that she’d started to rub off on her boyfriend, and that she couldn’t wait for
the dance to begin.

°*°

Mr Dursley was nervous as he sat behind his office desk. Moreso than he had been for the past
two months. The worse two months that he could remember in a long time. His life had been hell
since that nephew of his had come home because his school had been closed down, and his lovely
house had been invaded by freaks, his son had been possessed by the most evil of all of them, and
the neighbors were still not satisfied with the feeble answers that he and his wife had been trying
to feed them.

He scoffed angrily. Nobody even remotely believed that the blinding surge of white glaring light
that had filled up the entire street was a result of a power shortage in the home’s illumination
circuit. And Miss Figg, who was a freak herself and had never told them, was only making it worse
by going to everybody telling them that Harry was a wonderful boy and a hero to both worlds.

Two months had passed, and still, everyday, hundreds of owls flew everywhere with letters in
their beaks, telling other freaks of what his nephew had done. That particular day there seemed to
be five times as many. Obviously those idiots were up to something. And what was worse was that
some of them knew him—how? He didn’t wish to find out—and they would come up to him to congratulate
him on what a wonderful job he’d done raising him.

Definitely the worst two months he’d passed in a long time. A knock at the door snapped him out
of his thoughts. "Come in," he called gruffly.

Meekly, Christy, or whatever her name was, announced a certain Steven Creevy, who was there on
appointment. Vernon grunted, and she let the man in, then leaving terrified. She was the third
secretery this month. Looking at his notes, Mr Dursley noticed, that this Creevy fellow was a
representor of a good company willing to heavily invest in his drills. His guest was also a little
too cheerful looking for Vernon’s tastes, but that didn’t matter. This could possibly become the
most important deal of his life. "Hello, Mr Creevy," he began, his round, red face
broadening in his most ‘friendlly’ smile. "Please have a seat! Would you like a drink?"
He began to shower the man with attentions, taking out a bottle of fine imported liquor (for
important clients only).

"Oh, please call me Steven," he began sitting down with a wide smile, "and a
drink would be wonderful." Vernon grinned, pulled out two glasses, filled them generously, and
handed a glass to his client, trying to start up a good lecture on his company’s drills. But Steven
interrupted him. "Actually, I already convinced my boss of using your drills, I came to speak
with you for another reason," he said quietly, leaning forward in a manner of conspiracy.

Vernon’s eyebrows furrowed. "Oh?" He asked as he went to put the bottle away.

"Yes, I wanted to talk about Harry Potter," Steven replied with a large, proud looking
grin. The bottle almost slipped out of Vernon’s hand. Then his grip tightened so much it was a
miracle the bottle stayed intact.

"Oh?" He repeated, his voice tight now. "Harry?" The grip around the bottle
tightened even more, almost as though it were his nephew’s neck he pictured in his hold.

"My three sons go to school with him. Gryffindors, just like him. They all like him very
much. They told me that he had a lot of problems in school because of who he was. Once a reporter
wrote all sort of scandalistic articles about him, and even made him out to seem insane! Oh, but
you must know all that already," Steven seemed to never draw breath, but as he kept speaking,
it was Vernon’s face that kept becoming red, as though there were no air reaching his brain
anymore. "He must be very strong to be able to go through something like that like he did! You
sure did a great job raising him, he’s practically the savior of the two worlds! I’m sure that, if
a Minister was at head of the Ministry now, Harry would have at least the second class Order of
Merlin! I personally don’t know anything about what it might be, but my kids say it’s very
prestigious!"

Vernon’s smile was beginning to slip. And then, something that worked magic on him managed to
work its way out of Steven’s mouth. "Has the Senator come to congratulate you yet?"

As soon as the "S" word registered in Vernon’s mind, the mouth was already forming the
question, "What Senator?"

"Oh, you’re right, he’s retired now, but his ties at Buckingham palace are still so strong
that most of us call still call him with the name of Senator," Steven answered absentmindedly.
Vernon’s eyes were shining with stars.

"Why would a Senator come to congratulate me?" Not that he cared, the prospect sounded
very proficuous.

"Why, on Harry’s victory over You-Know-Who!" Peter replied as matter of factly as was
possible. Vernon’s expression must have shouted confusion. "Oh! You mean you don’t know?"
Vernon didn’t even need to ask what it was that he didn’t know. "The Senator’s daughter and
her entire family are magical! Very powerful, too. Last I heard the girl’s oldest son was getting
married to a very rich wizard who worked for the Ministry," he told Vernon.

Vernon’s mind was spinning. How did someone become Senator when he had daughter and
grandchildren in the weirdo community? He wanted to find out more about this.

Just then, he heard a tapping sound at his shoulders from outside the window. He turned around
to see one of those tawny owls waiting for him to open, an envelope in its beak. He was pretty sure
he recognized it from that first summer some years earlier when he burned over a hundred letters.
The sight didn’t really enthuse him.

"Ah!" Steven exclaimed, getting up and letting the bird in. "Must be from
Hogwarts! Probably to tell of Harry’s good deeds," the man seemed convinced that the boy could
do no wrong. And he was also very rude! He was reading Vernon’s post! "Oh, it’s the invitation
to Harry’s graduation ceremony! I imagine that it must be rather wonderful at Hogwarts. Next year
Colin, my oldest, will graduate, too. Can’t wait for the day," he blabbered while handing
Vernon the envelope, letter, and three tickets for the Hogwarts epress.

There were too many questions that Vernon wanted answered. "Steven, would you like to have
dinner in my home tonight?" If it meant getting answers this and more. Besides, just because
the man’s children were freaks, didn’t mean that *he’d* make one of Vernon’s family float
above the dinner table. Right?

Several hours later, after Vernon asked incessant questions to Steven—who had just dismissed
himself—the round man sat thinking in his living room, thoughtfully rubbing his proud mustache.

That’s it! He’d decided. "Petunia," he called as he walked in the kitchen to find his
wife washing the dishes. She looked behind her shoulder to acknowledge his presence, and went back
to wiping a plate. "We are going to that graduation!" He annouced suddenly, sounding,
scary as it may be, exited at the prospect.

The dish that was once in Petunia’s hand was heard crashing on the floor. "What? Why?"
She asked petrified.

"Well, you heard the man!" He repeated, as though it was an obvious answer to a stupid
question. "One out of eight people knows about the wizarding world. One out of twenty is in
close contact with either members of that world or that world itself. And Harry’s their
*hero!*" He was definitely too exited at the prospect. "It could be more good than
we ever thought."

At that, even Petunia seemed eerily exited.

°*°

"Harry, look at McGonagall," Hermione’s warm laughing breath tickled his ear as she
told him to do so. With difficulty he managed to concentrate on something beside the girl that he
was dancing with long enough to notice that their transfiguration teacher was making her way
between the dancing couples with a notepad in hand, writing down grades for their last
tranfiguration assignment.

He chuckled half heartedly. Honestly, the only thing that had managed to really take his
attention off his date for the night had been the earlier difficulty in keeping Ron from killing
Malfoy for having appeared in the Great Hall with Ginny hanging on his arm. At first they’d bound
him, then they’d told him that he couldn’t hurt Malfoy even if he tried because his sister was in
life debt with him, and then they’d given up and handed him to Krista.

Somehow the chaos had stopped then. Which had left Harry lost in the arms of the girl he loved,
with the thought of the hardest task of his life in front of him.

She’d truly stunned him tonight. She was always beautiful, but tonight. Tonight there were no
words. Her hair had been loosely pulled back and arranged in the shape of roses, bunched at the
nape, small white flowers placed in the center of each one and around loose curls, leaving her
perfect face unmasked. Her knee length white dress, simple, with spaghetti straps and a wide skirt,
conservative in cut, innocent in color, seductive in the fact that it left her back and calves bare
(and undeniably sexy). Coincidentally, when he’d seen her descend from the Gryffindor dormitories
he’d wanted to ask her right then and there, but thankfully, he’d managed to stop himself.

He sighed. She was so beautiful. He still could not understand how such a wonderful, loving
creature could love *him*, of all people. She was the only one that knew him for what he was,
and loved him for it. That, along with the fact that she was by far the most wonderful woman on the
face of the planet, was what made her so beautiful in his eyes. Just the fact that she was
Hermione. His Hermione.

"Harry?" Her soft, worried call brought him back to Earth once again for the enth time
that night. "Are you alright?" She asked, her eyes worried as they met his.

His eyebrows touched his hairline. "Of course, why wouldn’t I?" *After all, I’m near
you. How could I not be alright?* He asked her mentally.

She looked to the floor embarrassed, a blush tinging her cheeks, her light, slightly transucent
make-up doing nothing to hide it. "It’s just that…you seem so distracted. It doesn’t look like
you’re having much fun…is there something wrong? Am I doing something wrong?" She was still so
insecure of how he felt toward her. He told her everyday that he loved her, but she’d told herself
that he couldn’t possibly care for her as more than a friend for the past seven years. Seven years
were hard to beat.

Harry looked outraged. "Of course not, Hermione! You’re wonderful," he told her
honestly. She blushed profusely, her eyes hopeful when she looked at him. "You’re
wonderful," he repeated, "but maybe I am a little distracted," her eyebrows furrowed
at this. He seemed to be pondering something for a while. "Come outside with me?"
Confused and curious, she nodded, took his hand, and led him outside, into the courtyard. The
entire place had been filled with fairies and fireflies, and it was charmed to look as though the
very air shimmered.

Romantic as it was, strangely enough, it was desolated, probably because it was still rather
early. Which suited Harry just fine. He wanted to be alone with her. They walked in silence, Harry
concentrating on the words he was planning to tell her, until they reached the outskirts of the
lake, a lover’s bench conveniently placed there.

She sat down, patting the seat next to her. He slid down next to her and sighed heavily. He’d
never been so nervous in his life. But he knew he had to do this. Wanted to do this. He knew that
Hermione was still not confident about what they had yet, and, in truth, neither was he. For seven
years, they weren’t allowed to love each other. It was hard to forget those, even with all the love
that they shared everyday. Physically and emotionally. Every touch, caress and kiss was cherished.
But the uncertainty remained. He needed to ask the question. Know that it was real. The night that
Voldemort had finally died, they hadn’t spoken, just kissed.

And maybe that had been a mistake. Maybe they should have discussed their feelings. But in
truth, Harry had preferred it this way. He’d gotten to know Hermione as his girlfriend over the two
months, grown to love her more with each passing day, gotten to the point that he understood that
he couldn’t possibly live his life without her by his side. Even if just for the reassurement of
it, he needed to know.

"Hermione," he began finally, after the silence had stretched uncomfortable between
them, "I need to say something…important…" he stumbled, trying to swallow the lump in his
throat. Oh, Merlin, this was hard. He looked at her to see tears forming in her eyes.
"Hermione?" He asked, worried and puzzled.

"Please, Harry," she pleaded, her voice strained and hushed, "don’t say it,"
she sobbed. "Please, don’t say it," she repeated.

Okay, now he was seriously worried. "Hermione?" She stood up away from him, hugging
her arms around her.

"Please, Harry, don’t say it. I can’t look at you while you tell me that you just want to
be friends," she begged. Oh, why had she worn make-up? She should have expected this. She
should have at least charmed her mascara to be waterproof.

He watched her, shocked. "Hermione," he placed a hand on her shoulder and she cringed.
He felt like crying himself, now. "Hermione, that’s not at all what I wanted to say. You know
that," he turned her around to face him. "Going back to being just friends would kill us
both." It was only after he said it that he realized how stupid it had been.

She sobbed as she tried to turn again, but he held her. "You don’t need to specify,
Harry," she told him bitterly, looking away. "You’ve been painfully clear
already."

No! No! This was not the way it was supposed to be. "Hermione, look at me," she
refused to. He gently cupped her chin to lift her face, but she kept her eyes downcast. He could
only think of one thing to do at that moment. He slowly inched his face closer to hers, giving her
all the time to pull away. She looked like she was ready to bolt, but before she could he told her
the only thing that came to mind. "I can’t live without you," and when she froze at
hearing his words she felt his lips graze hers in the most tender, sweet, innocent kiss that they’d
shared yet. He was always tender when he touched her, and when he made love to her she felt like
she would burst from all the love that he was filling her with, but this had been different from
anything ever before.

With his gentle lips he was trying to fill her with the knowledge of the fact that he loved her
more than his own life.

"I can’t live without you," he repeated as he leaned his forehead against hers, his
eyes closed, his tongue licking his lips. "I can’t live without you," he pulled away
slightly to look at her. This time she was returning his gaze. "That’s what I wanted to tell
you tonight," istinctively, he found his hand going to his tuxedo pocket, touching the small
that box he hid there through the fabric of his slacks. It wasn’t the time to pull it out yet, but
somehow it gave him strength, perheaps because of what it signified. "Hermione, when Voldemort
possessed my body, at the Dursleys, he was making me lose myself by telling me of what he’d do to
you once I’d be gone. I thought that, until then, I’d protected you by hiding what I felt, but I
didn’t, because he knew, when he was inside me, what I really felt about you. And in the end, I
couldn’t have survived without you. And I liked knowing that we’d protected each other," he
took a deep breath before continuing.

"Everytime we make love in your room, I wake up earlier just to be able to watch you sleep.
I love you, Hermione," he told her. " And I want to be able to watch you sleep next to me
every day of my life. I want to hear your laugh, and watch your face light up when you talk about
something new that you just learned. I want to protect you and be protected by you," his voice
was choking by now. "Please, don’t even joke about going back to being friends!" He
begged. "Before we got together it was the best I could hope for…but now, I couldn’t go back
to that. I can’t live everyday with the need to hold you, knowing that I can’t!" He pleaded.
"Tonight, I wanted to tell you this. I wanted to ask you…I wanted to ask you not to take your
love away from me. Just…please, don’t leave me. Not now, not ever." It was strange making this
speech, because it had not been the one that he’d wanted to do. Or rather, it was, but the most
important thing that he’d wanted to say had been left out. But he understood that it would have to
wait for another time. They were both stll too insecure.

Hermione just stared at him, a tear escaping her eye, staining her cheek with her black mascara,
and the darkest fear clutched at his heart*. Oh, Merlin, she really doesn’t love me after
all.* Nervously, he touched the small box in his pocket again. But she would never except it.
Maybe he should just leave. And slowly, he began to back away.

As soon as Hermione realized what he was thinking she stopped him by grabbing onto his free
hand, both of hers going to envelope his, bringing his fingers to her mouth so that she could kiss
him tenderly. She kissed each knuckle as though it was sacred, another small tear escaping her eye.
"A-are you…sure, Harry?" She asked uncertainly.

He tried to swallow the lump that had formed in his throat. He nodded. "Yes," he
answered. "I love you, Hermione, and I know you love me," he knew he didn’t sound as
confident as he wanted to, but it seemed to reassure her, "so why are we still torturing each
other?" He asked.

"I’m just really scared that one day you’ll wake up and see that you could have it
better," she told honestly, her face streaking even more.

"Hermione, there is no such thing as better. And even if there was, I wouldn’t want it. I
want you. It’s always been you," he told her truthfully.

And then they kissed again.

The box in Harry’s pocket untouched but not forgotten. This just wasn’t the right moment to ask.
The time would come soon.

°*°

"Thank God the NEWTs are over!" Draco Malfoy exclaimed as he stretched out on the
grass by the lake, Ginny Weasley sitting at his side, smiling at his antics. It wasn’t often that
they managed to spend much time alone without Ron coming to break them up with a threat to Draco’s
life.

"What will you do after this?" She asked curiously. They’d never discussed the matter
before.

He shrugged. "Well, everybody expects me to take my father’s place in the Ministry,"
he replied uncertainly.

She knit her eyebrows. "So you’ll do that?"

He shrugged again. "I don’t think so," his eyebrows furrowed as well. "Maybe I’ll
further my studies of potions," he thought out loud.

"Would you like that?" He’d always been particularly fond of potions, and he seemed to
have fun with it.

He thought before answering, "Yeah…"

She grinned at his uncertainty. "Than go for it!"

He grinned as well. Her enthusiasm was always contagious to him. Then a thought struck him, and
he sobered. Noticing his change of mood she did too, and an uncomfortable silence befell over them.
It stretched on until it was almost unbearable, until he asked, "Will you wait for me?"
He’d spoken the words so softly that they seemed to have been whispered by the wind. But she knew
she’d heard them from him.

And she answered the truth, like she always had. "Always."

Wordlessly, he slid his hand across the grass to hold hers. In agreement, in mutual support, and
in love.

°*°

"Petunia, this isn’t your first time! You should know how to do it!" Vernon shouted at
his wife, who was, currently, staring at the barrier between tracks 9 and 10 as though behind it
there were the lion’s den.

"Oh, Vernon, please don’ t make me do this again, you don’t know what it’s like!" She
whined loudly, getting the negative attention from several passers-by. Dudley stared at the barrier
as though it would reveal itself to be a giant mouth out to eat him.

"Oh, look, dear, it’s the Dursleys!" A feminine voice said behind them. They both
turned around to see a couple that they’d met only once in their lives. The Grangers. They heaved a
large sigh of relief.

That was, of course, till they saw Molly and Arthur Weasley behind them, followed by five young
redheads, two of which were very familiar to the Dursleys. Fred and George.

"Hey, look, Fred! The pig in a wig grew up!" Exclaimed George.

"Yes, he’s a pale whale now!" Replied Fred.

Dudley ran through the barrier screaming.

For nought, because once they’d all crossed the barrier, they all ended up sharing a train
compartment.

And the three young redheads that the Dursleys hadn’t known before, along with Mrs Weasley, were
not any less abnormal then the twins (though they weren’t quite as evil).

°*°

"Harry!"

Harry, along with Ron and Hermione, turned around to see the source of the voice that had called
to him. A wide grin was born on the boy’s face. "Sirius!" He called back, going to hug
the man. "I knew they’d call you to come and watch the graduation!" Harry exclaimed,
thanking God that the Dursleys wouldn’t be coming. Not like they ever would anyway, unless they
were out to make his life hell, but he couldn’t picture them coming all the way to Hogwarts for
that. Then again, it was their last chance. Tomorrow he would be living in a flat in Diagon Alley
with Sirius, who had been cleared of charges two weeks earlier, after the hearing in which he and
Wormtail had been questioned under the effects of Veritaserum. Peter Pettigrew had receaved the
Dementors kiss right after the hearing had closed.

"Hermione!" The dark man called to her, inveloping her in his arms. "Why on
Merlin’s Earth are you not moving in with Harry and I?" He hadn’t understood Harry when he’d
told him that.

She shrugged, and Harry replied for her. "Because this way I get to court her. We never got
to date much here at Hogwarts," he said, enveloping her in his arms, effectively hiding her
body under his Quidditch uniform. In a way, because of the way the year had unfolded before them,
Harry and Hermione had never had a real chance to date. And even if they were practically already
engaged, they’d both mutually decided that it was something that neither wanted to miss out on.
They already knew each other inside out as friends, they wanted to know each other as lovers as
well.

Sirius sighed. "So that means that I can’t peek on Hermione in the shower until you two
decide to grow up," he mocked. Harry made him see stars with a well placed kick between the
legs. It was obvious that Cicciobello’s education had been mostly Sirius’s work.

"The day she moves in I kick you out," Harry huffed. He knew Sirius had been kidding,
but the idea was still unpleasant. Besides, Sirius was always protected against this eventuality
and had worn his ‘armor’, therefore, Harry’s kick hadn’t fazed him.

"Aw, brother’s jealous," Cicciobello cooed from above their heads. Ron was with
him.

"Ciccio!" Sirius shouted, his arms wide open.

"Papi!" Ciccio launched himself in his gut. How could Sirius take all those hits they
had no idea. It seemed, though, that he would be receiving quite a few in the future, because
they’d decided to keep the satanic doll with them in their flat. Harry’s life was prospecting to be
rather exciting.

"Ooh, look Vernon, they’re over there!" A familiar voice squealed from behind
Harry.

He wheeled around horrified. Oh, no! Even his eyes confirmed what his ears had told him.
"A—aunt Petunia?!" He didn’t know whether to scream or run for cover. Especially when she
walked over to him and began plucking imaginary pills off of his uniform.

"Oh, here is my little Harrykins;" she cooed. Harry was ready to scream. She was
dusting off his shoulders with a clothes brush, "don’t you look hansome? These colors are
wonderful on you!"

"Think she’s under the Imperius?" Ron asked disgusted.

Harry, meanwhile was trying to back away from her, bringing Sirius to act as a human shield.
"Aunt Petunia?" He asked uncertain.

"Yes, dear?" She asked, using the fake smile that she used when speaking to Mrs
Crownings, the attractive widow who had recently inherited a large amount of money and lived next
door.

This was really becoming eerie. "What are you doing here?"

"Why, we’re here to watch you graduate," wait, that wasn’t Petunia’s voice. It was
Vernon’s! And there was Dudley, too.

"Hello, Harry, dear," oh, finally! A friendly voice. Mrs Weasley came over to give him
a hug, then moving on to her own son, who complained about being greeted after Harry.

"Hey, Harry! I heard you and Hermione were going out!" Fred (or was it George?) patted
him heartily on the back. Harry wasn’t sure that he should have done that. Had Hermione even told
her parents—who were, he noticed, standing right there behind him greeting their daughter—about
their relationship?

"Yeah, good catch, Harry!" George (or was it Fred?) complimented him. "Mind if we
borrow her sometime? That Holostar idea was brilliant!"

"Oh, but why are you two wearing your Quidditch uniforms?" Mrs Weasley asked confused.
Usually the students wore graduating robes at the event, and she would know after her own ceremony
and the ones of her four already graduated sons.

"Oh, since this year started so late we rushed all the games together, but then Dumbledore
thought that it would be interesting to hold the finals before the graduation ceremony," Ron
answered. "You should see the stands! They’re four times bigger than usual."

Just then McGonagall’s voice boomed from nowhere, almost like a loudspeaker. "Students and
parents are required to reach the Quidditch field to watch the Quidditch cup finals between
Gryffindor and Slytherin houses. The graduation ceremony will be held shortly after the game. All
the non-magical people, please reach the courtyard where Head Girl Hermione Granger will be
waitiing to bring you to your assigned seats." And with that the announcement ended.

Hermione turned to Ron and Harry. "Go on, you two! You need to give your team the pep talk
before the big game," she told them, slightly shoving them in the direction of the Pitch,
which had been disinfested at about the same time the school had reopened after the battle.

Harry lingered however, "I want my good luck kiss first," and with that he pecked her
quickly, not really getting the kiss he wanted because of the ‘audience’ and their distrating, mood
disrupting sounds.

He ran away when he heard aunt Petunia say "Aww…they’re so sweet, Vernon, they remind me of
us when we were dating!" That was one heck of a scary thought.

"Hey," Ron whined, "why do you get a good luck kiss?"

Harry raised a skeptical eyebrow. "Huh?"

"Krista only kisses me if I win," he explained with a pout. "Says that way I play
better."

Harry shrugged. "Suits you." He couldn’t possibly live without Hermione’s good luck
kisses. Actually how *had* he survived till then?

°*°

The crowd cheered again as Julie Andies, a fourth year Chaser, scored against the Slytherin
Keeper. The game was tied, 110-110. And it had lasted quiet a bit. It might have actually ended
after the first two minutes, when he and Malfoy had both gone into a dive after the Snitch, had not
his aunt screeched something completely untrue and distracting (their brooms lost control!), making
both the Seekers nearly fall off their brooms. Usually a game was full of shouts, and screams, and
boos, and everything, but a horrified screech didn’t happen often, so the game was thrown off.

Since the Snitch had been lost, he looked over to see Hermione putting some kind of mouth
shutting hex on all the Dursleys, while getting an incredible amount of applause from the Muggle
parents.

After that, the Snitch had disappeared. And so had his concentration. Somehow, at the most
inappropriate moment, he’d begun to think of the little velvet box he kept in the folds of his
uniform. He suddenly felt the urge to give it to Hermione, almost as though the ring was telling
him that it was the right moment. But how could it be the right moment?! He was in the middle of a
bloody game!

*Concentrate, Harry! The sooner you catch the bloody thing, they sooner the game’s over*,
and, of course, Harry had to catch the Snitch. It was his last Quidditch game. After vacation he
would start his training as an Auror with Hermione. He wanted to close with a bang. And he wanted
to celebrate the victory with Hermione.

And then, almost as though his thoughts had summoned it, Harry saw it. The Golden Snitch. It was
hovering near the ground, just below Malfoy.

And that was a dilemma. Malfoy was closer, but he was faster, and had a better broom. Should he
risk it? There was always the chance that his movement brought Malfoy’s attention to it, but he
could always count on better speed. He smirked. Maybe he could just have a little fun.

Turning his broom sharply away from Malfoy, Harry dove to the ground, and, as expected, he could
hear Malfoy’s broom right behind him, chasing him. Flattening his body against the broom, and
holding himself in a position in which he’d be able to see the actual Snitch, he kept on
precipitating to the ground, and then, when he was sure that Malfoy was concentrating more on what
might have been beyond Harry rather than on Harry himself, he did it.

He lifted the angle of his broom by 90°, spinning his broom madly all the while for speed,
reaching the spot where the Snitch had been fluttering when he’d seen it, and then catching up to
the elusive little sphere, grabbing it while in the midst of a loop-de-loop. Just for effect.

The crowd went wild. But he cared little. He’d won. His teammates were all hugging him, crying,
and all he could think about was Hermione. And so he burst out of the clutter of dirty, sweaty
Gryffindors, and lifted himself to the Muggle section of the stands. Hermione was there, in the
front row, applauding him, tears in her eyes. He simply held his hand out to her. He knew she still
feared heights, but he also knew that she trusted him enough to ride a broom with him, no matter
how high they’d go.

She stepped onto his broom, and, wordlessly, they kissed. It wasn’t just the victory kiss.
Something must have happened in the stands. He’d sensed it only moments earlier.
"Hermione?"

She smiled sadly. "I made your aunt’s mouth disappear, along with your uncle’s and your
cousin’s," he smiled in return, he could have seen that for himself. "They…they were
talking about you as though you were some sort of prize, and I just wanted them to stop, so
I…" she trailed off.

"Thank you," he kissed her again. He rummaged through the folds of his robes and
brought out the box that had been torturing his thoughts for weeks now. "I know this isn’t the
time to ask this. I actually wanted to ask you at the Grad Ball, but it just didn’t seem like the
right time. I said that I wanted to watch you sleep everyday of my life, and I meant it. I want to
watch you fall asleep in my arms after we make love, and I want you to wake up next to me after I
kiss you goodmorning," he took a deep breath before he continued. "Hermione, I’m asking
you to marry me," she gasped, and fresh tears began to form in her eyes as she saw him opening
the small box. Inside of it stood a thick band of white gold with intricate powerful carvings, and
in the center of those celtic carvings were a sapphire and a ruby cut into each other, two halves
of a whole circle.

The ring was beautiful, and it seemed to be made especially for the two of them. Maybe it
was.

"Hermione, I love you," he told her again. "And I’m not asking you to marry me
now, but I didn’t want to give you a promise ring, like dad had given mom, because I want to look
at you and know that the ring you’ll be wearing on your finger will be there forever. That one day
it’ll sit next to a wedding band," he kissed her briefly. "I want to marry you one day. I
want to be the father of your children, and I want to grow old next to you, holding your hand,
protecting you while you protect me. Forever."

She was crying again. But she was smiling as radiantly as she had been the day Voldemort
disappeared. And then she nodded once. "Yes," she whispered quietly, and, without even
knowing it, he was slipping the ring on her finger, kissing her like there was no tomorrow,
completely unaware of the crowd cheering them on and wishing them well.

°*°

He didn’t know where the afternoon had gone by. He just knew that it was already time to board
the train (thankfully he’d be sharing the compartment with Hermione and the Weasley children), that
he’d already said goodbye to Hagrid (who had to run away to hide his tears) and that it was time to
leave everything he’d come to know and love

The Graduating Ceremony had been nothing but a blur. All he remembered were a lot of lights and
floating, and fireworks, and speeches, and giant Holostars. He didn’t remember one word that was
said the entire time. Maybe because he was concentrating entirely on the hand that was holding
Hermione’s, playing with the ring now shining on her finger. The only speech that he’d remembered
had been Hers, probably because most of it had been about them.

And about leaving Hogwarts.

It had seemed as though she’d written it especially for him. And maybe she had.

"*Coming to Hogwarts some of us were scared, because it meant that we would be starting a
new life away from the safety of our parents’ arms, a place where we were supposed to be capable of
taking care of ourselves, because, at least for eight months, we would have to stay away from
everything that we’d come to depend on.*

*"There were others though, that were exited. Coming here meant that they would finally
find a place where they would belong, because in the Muggle world their powers were something
horrible and detested.*

*"All of us have come to think of Hogwarts as our home. Here we’ve made friends that we
will never forget, learned things that we couldn’t have anywhere else, here we found a new
life.*

*"Here we found a new light to live by.*

*"And now, we’re leaving Hogwarts. It’s an unsettling thought, because now that light
won’t be there to guide us in our lives anymore. We won’t have our teachers giving us the advice
that most of us found vital. We won’t be together the way we are anymore, because all of us are
going in different directions. But most of all, we’ll have to leave our home.*

*"Honestly, I’m a little scared, but Hogwarts taught me that I can walk any path so long
as I can hold the hands of the people that I’ve come to love.*

*"After all, Hogwarts is only a castle. This wonderful castle with its enchanted
ceilings, and moving stairs, and talking paintings, and ghosts, and house elves.*

*"Wonderful as all that is, there’s more to Hogwarts than that.. Hogwarts is love. And
its that love that lit out way during our stay here.*

*"Keep that love with you always, and you’ll always have the light. That light will
always be your home, and it will always give you something, or someone, to come back
to."*

Quietly, he felt Hermione’s fingers entwining with his. She was staring at the sun setting
behind the towers of Hogwarts, just like he’d been. Then he heard her chuckle. "It’s going to
be so strange having your aunt and uncle around all the time," she sighed. They both knew full
well that they’d only come to take advantage of the situation, but that didn’t make it any
less…disturbing.

Harry sighed, knowing that Hermione understood everything he felt, and that she was trying to
cheer him up, because she felt it, too. "My life started when I came to Hogwarts," he
told her, and her hold tightened on his hand. "Now I feel like that life is coming to an
end."

"No, Harry," she said, turning him to face her. "It’s only just
beginning."

Looking at her, he knew she was right. And, hand in hand, they mounted the train, and took their
seats, letting the movement of the train on its tracks lull them into sleep as it lead them toward
the beginning of their new lives.

To be continued.

Sorry, but I suck at writing Quidditch games. Oh, and I found out that the Creevey father is
supposed to be something like a milkman after reading over the books again, but I didn’t know who I
could switch him with, so let’s just close an eye or something. You know the drill. Let me know
what you think at Robbygal@hotmail.com or leave a
review.

Love

Pearl



20. Epilogue: The Snitch Capsule
--------------------------------

And, finally, here is the end to this agonizing fic! Actually a lot of people begged me to write
a sequel, and I already have something in mind, but I won’t start working on that for a looong time
yet, since my mind is occupied by another word called Harry Potter and the Bite of No Mortibus.
It’s a sixth year fic, and, well, Hermione might just die at a point or another, but don’t let that
stop you please, especially since I think you might enjoy it (or you might completely hate it, but
I still advice you to read it) so keep an eye out for that.

Anyway, on with the fic.

Harry Potter and the Knowledge of a Mother

By Pearl Drop Angel

Epilogue: The Snitch Capsule

It had been since the years of Harry Potter and his gang that Professor McGonagall hadn’t lead
such a brilliant…and…colorful graduating class to the Gryffindor Forever Remember Garden, and
honestly, she was feeling a little nostalgic.

This gathering seemed to be the result of a clash collision between all the most memorable
groups that had ever been under her teachings. She would both bless and curse this class’s leaving.
Life would be just a bit boring after their leaving.

As she walked briskly around the side of the lake, and then veered to the right, she stole a
glance to the young woman beside her, the Hogwarts Head Girl. Looking at Marianne Potter—with her
long, dark, luscious yet slightly bushy brown curls, her fair complexion, her slightly freckled,
lovely, intelligent face—was just like watching a seventeen year old Hermione Granger, full of
excitement and thirst for knowledge. Had it not been for her vivid, iridescent green eyes and her
position as Gryffindor Seeker, she was every bit her mother’s daughter.

Marianne felt her excitement rising within her at every step they took. She had a feeling that,
whatever it was that McGonagall was going to show them, it was bound to be something wonderful. The
walk was long, but she didn’t mind, even if her fellow Gryffindors—with the exception, of course,
of the Potter Brigade (as they had been dubbed)—didn’t seem to share her enthusiasm. Finally, after
a long siding of the lake, their Head of House walked away from the mass of water, heading for a
clearing filled with unusual, amazing stones. Some were as small as her fist, some others were the
size of Hagrid, but they were all covered in a plush, sweet smelling, brownish moss. They were also
very regularly shaped, which must have meant that they must have been magical. It even smelled of
magic, and memories, adventures, heartache and life. And of dreams, she added in her mind as she
noticed the veiled white fog that circled endlessly around each stone.

"Very well," she said, stopping her fast, stern strides on the outskirts of the misty
rock garden, watching each student’s reaction to the wonderful mossy fog of the Garden, "this
is the Gryffindor Forever Remember Garden," she explained, and with that, made to take
something out of her robes. "Does anybody know what this is?" And she opened her palms to
show a very tiny creature that seemed covered in the same moss as the stones. It looked like it had
the body of a toothless seal and paddle-like oval "limbs" that were so thin that they
seemed transparent. It had large wings, several times larger than its body, that it used to lift
itself in the air, circling above the teacher’s head. The wings were just as thin as the limbs, yet
they showed a rippling of very small muscles and vessels running through the thin veil of mystical
brown transparent moss. Happily, the creature gave up a merry cry of "Dig!"

Before Marianne could hold her hand in the air to answer, one of her friends, and member of the
Potter Brigade (and largely known prankster) that went by the name of Gwen Weasley, called gaily,
"Ooh! It looks good!" McGonagall effort in suppressing a sigh was widely noticeable.

"Yeah, can we eat it?" Piped Gwen’s identical twin, Sonya. McGonagall didn’t manage to
suppress a groan as the creature fluttering behind her shoulders gave a terrified "Dig!"
Marianne hid her snigger behind her hand. Even if Gwen and Sonya’s father, Ron Weasley, wasn’t
exactly a model student, everyone in the Weasley clan had expected this set of twins to be a little
more controlled than the previous one (known as the Twin Terrors till the day), especially because
of their mother Krista, but apparently the whole family seemed to be cursed with one pair of
identical redheads with a talent for troublemaking in each generation.

"No, Miss Weasley, you may not," McGonagall told her. "Now," she repeated,
"does anybody know what this is?"

Marianne’s hand shot up immediately.

"Yes, Miss Potter?"

"It’s a Diggorinta," Marianne replied, and continued by giving a description of the
animal very much like the one her mother had given several years prior. "It’s a creature that
associates a person, or group of people’s, character, and finds the object that would be most
suitable, or most needed, and brings it to light by digging."

"Very good, Miss Potter, ten points for Gryffindor," McGonagall exclaimed as she
watched Caleb Malfoy give his best friend an encouraging pat on the shoulder, to which the girl
blushed. The Head to the Gryffindor House would have never believed that she would one day have to
host a Malfoy in her tower, but this one, despite the fact that he was the living portrait of his
Slytherin father, was every ounce his Gryffindor mother. He and the Potter girl were her pride in
this course. Proud, brilliant Gryffindors, even though they had that nonchalant rule-breaking
streak that seemed to seep in both their lines. Their more than platonic friendship had become very
amusing over the past couple of years, it was a bit like both their parents’ courtships, albeit the
previous generation had been far less blatant about it. "Now," she called their attention
to the point, "the Diggorinta, though small, is rather powerful, and it’s never wrong. Today,
we will find the stone that most suits you young Gryffindors."

Many people were confused. They never felt the need to have a stone before.

"As a matter of fact, the Forever Remember Garden, this ground, is where we keep the
history of every class that has Graduated Hogwarts till this day. The day before your graduation,
you will leave your mark here as well, but, until then, you will have a previous class’s actions to
observe," and she gave a nod to the Diggorinta, who replied to her with a very happy,
"Dig!" the fear of the Damsels of Doom dissipating before its task.

The animal looked confused before each of the students it passed, probably because each was
differently suited from the one before. Sometimes it almost seemed to reach a decision, but, facing
the next student, it would change its mind. Maybe because afraid of what Sonya and Gwen might have
been planning, the Diggorinta left the two of them and the other two members of the Potter Brigade
as the last.

Strangely, however, before them it brightened considerably, as though an epiphany had just
claimed it. It hadn’t even looked at them singularly, almost as if what would suit them best had
been written in blinking neon lights across their forehead, which, of course, left the four
slightly perplexed. Gwen and Sonya were looking at the Diggorinta in a very threatening manner,
their hands in their robe pockets, ready to pull out some new instrument of "torture" to
use in case they felt it necessary. The animal, however, seemed very sure to have reached the
perfect verdict.

With more merry cries of "Dig!" it reached a boulder near the center of the clearing,
and sat atop it. It was by far the strangest stone any of them had ever seen. First of all, it was
perfectly spherical, and it was covered in moss filled carvings. Marianne squinted at them,
adjusting her thin, framed glasses on the bridge of her nose and gasped.

"Caleb," she called to him, meeting his piercing gray eyes, "look!" He
turned to the boulder with confused, furrowed eyebrows. "Oh, honestly! You’re the Captain of
the Quidditch team, for Merlin’s beard! You should recognize a Snitch when you see one!"

He gasped at this, and looked more closely at the carvings. She was right, they looked like the
wings of the Golden Snitch, that, when closed, hugged the sphere in an intricately entwined manner.
He gave her a sheepish grin. "Well, you’re the one who’s familiar with Snitches, you’re the
Seeker. I don’t see much of them from my position at the goal posts. If it was shaped like a hoop I
would have recognized it right away," he called in his defense. She rolled her eyes at him
with a small smile playing at her lips, and turned her attention back to the Diggorinta.

At the moment, the mossy skin of the Diggorinta in contact with the bolder seemed to blend with
the moss of the stone, making them seem like one, strange looking creature made of pewter and moss.
"Dig!" It cried enthusiastically, and, with a powerful flap of its wings, lifted itself
and the stone to which it was attached in the air, lifting a good three meters in the air, leaving
it to hover them, and detached itself from it.

Flying below it, the Diggorinta used its wings to draw a line following the outside of the
indentation that the bolder had left on the wet ground, which seemed to shimmer from within. The
animal raised itself back up so that it was hovering between the soft ground it had marked, and the
bolder above its head, and, suddenly, without warning, it began to flap its paddle-like limbs
frantically, like a dog digging to hide his bone in the yard. With each of those flaps the ground
seemed to split, trembling under the students’ feet, as though something was trying to push up from
beneath. And it was!

The earth split like the sea before Moses, lifting up like lava from a volcano, and, suddenly, a
shiny, glimmering, blinding sphere that seemed to be made of pure light erupted out of the dirt,
perfectly clean, as though the muddy ground hadn’t touched it at all, turning slowly on itself mere
centimeters from their feet, as though trying to give them all a perfect view of its blinding
beauty.

"Blimey!" Gwen exclaimed. "That’s the biggest Snitch I’ve ever seen!" Sonya
simply nodded in awe.

"Humph," McGonagall mused aloud. "Must be a family thing." Caleb gave
Marianne a confused glance, which she returned, until the sphere stopped before her.

"Oh, look!" she called, pointing flabbergasted at a lock of sorts, that stared at her
right at eye level. Standing there, on the lock, giving her significant looks were carved in gold a
weasel, a big fox-wolf with four marked tails, and a man-sized hawk with a squiggle carved over its
right eye, all standing before a huge bolt of lightning, three books at their feet.

They four of them knew what that meant, having heard the tale told endlessly since the day
they’d been born. They knew that if the carvings had been painted, the weasel would have had shiny
red fur, the blonde fox-wolf’s eyes would have been a shining topaz color fading to white in the
pupil, and the hawk’s feathers and beak a metallic black, its iridescent eyes shining green in the
dark, and the three books at their feet were Lily Evans diary, her vision’s journal, and Vatis
Divinus’ last book of prophesies.

"Blimey!" The twins called simultaneously. Caleb and Marianne could only nod.

"Well, that explains the giant Snitch," muttered Sonya.

"What do you mean?" Asked Marietta, a girl that shared the twins’ dorm room.

"It’s in honor of the youngest Quidditch player of the last century," Sonya said.

"The savior of the Wizarding World twice over," Gwen piped up.

"The Boy Who Lived," they bragged pompously, since it was a widely known fact that
their Godfather was, "Harry Potter."

An awed silence fell over the Garden.

Marianne was stunned into silence. Of course, she’d been expecting it, but it seemed to put
everything in far too new a light to be taken in so quickly. Obviously, her parents deeds were
always told everywhere and everyday. There was never a time in which she could go down to Hogsmeade
in which people didn’t stop her to tell her some amazing tale of her parents’ doings. But that was
exactly what bothered her. She’d never really been able to hear the tales from her parents mouths,
because, before they could tell her of the first tasks they lived through, new ones appeared to
distract her. After all, the two most important members of the Auror Bureau were constantly in
danger.

Not that they didn’t love to reminisce on their Hogwarts days, but it always felt as though in
their retelling there were gigantic gaping voids, probably because they didn’t want to tell her of
all the rules had been broken, task that, apparently, Filch the caretaker and Snape the Potions
master both thrived on. Even so, the stories weren’t complete. And her parents school lives had
always fascinated her. It was here that they had become heroes. It was here that everything had
started. And maybe it would be here that she would find out exactly what had happened to make it
so.

She felt Caleb take her hand. She knew that her father and his had been mortal enemies for the
first several years of school. What had happened to make them the friends that they were today?
Caleb seemed even more anxious to know, perhaps because, if Harry and Draco had never ended their
animosity toward each other, she and he would have never been allowed to befriend each other, to
love each other. They might have even been taught to hate each other.

So much had happened in the seven years Harry Potter had been at Hogwarts, there must have been
something inside the giant Snitch that would tell them of it. Knowing her mother’s cleverness, her
father’s deeds, and their best friend’s Ron inventive, there was bound to be more than yearbooks
and moving pictures!

She knew very well that Lily’s diary, which was now in her home, always next to her parents’
nightstand, must have come out of a time capsule such as this.

"Hey, Rianne," Sonya snapped her out of her thoughts. "Why is it that your
parents got such cool Animagus forms, while our dad turns into a bloody red WEASEL?!" She
asked, half angry, pointing at the lock on the mega Snitch.

"Wasn’t it, obvious?" Caleb asked rhetorically. Like his father Draco, Caleb enjoyed
making fun of the twins’ father. His Animagus form, which was now registered, one of their favorite
topics to pick on.

"Finish the sentence, Malfoy," Gwen threatened, "and I’ll enjoy bouncing a white
ferret in the air, like Mad-Eye taught me last Christmas."

Caleb gave her a cheeky grin, but turned to McGonagall, who’d stepped over to the golden
floating sphere, pointed her wand at the lock and called out "Alohomora!" Nothing
happened. But McGonagall seemed spurned by this. "Ah, this time, I know what to do," she
exclaimed, sounding slightly mad. Pointing her wand at the lock again, she called out "I
solemnly swear I’m up to no good!" She sounded rather pleased at saying this.

The class burst into laughter.

And nothing happened.

McGonagall frowned, scratching her chin, trying to remember something else. Again, she pointed
her wand at her lock. "Mischief is done!" Nothing happened, and the students were in
hysterics.

"Think she’s been teaching one too many years," Gwen was heard telling Sonya.

Desperate, she began to call unlocking spells endlessly, interrupted only by the off topic word
that she thought might work, "Marauders! Dumbledore! Potter! Visions!" And on and on she
went, until she huffed and glared openly at the Snitch as though it was her last resort.

"Potter and his wife must have put hundreds of defensive charms on that thing," they
could hear somebody whisper.

"It’s going to take us days to get this thing open, if not more!"

"Do you think there’s anything dangerous in there?"

"Of course there is!"

Thoughts like these were spreading like a wildfire.

Staring at the lock in front of her eyes, the bolt of lightning behind the Animagi brought a
memory to surface, and she felt herself smiling. She had no idea, when her mother had taught her
the spell over the summer, that it would help her so quickly "out of tightly locked
situations", as she’d said. How her mother had known, she would never find out, but she’d
probably thought it obvious. "Professor?" She called with her hand in the air.

Surprised, McGonagall snapped her eyes away from the mad sphere to look at her student.

"Yes, Miss Potter?"

"May I try?" Again, a deep furrow appeared between the teacher’s eyebrows, this
reminded her far too much of a scene that had taken place in that very same garden with another
Potter some twenty years later. Not knowing what else to try, she nodded. Pulling her wand out of
her robes, she raised it over her head. There weren’t many clouds, and they were a bit thin, but
they would serve her purpose well enough. Concentrating, she invoked, "DISCERSO NUBIS!"
And guided a decent sized lightning bolt down with her wand to stop on the engraved lock before her
eyes.

Many girls screamed, scared by the sudden streak of light and its following rumble.

The lock fizzled and gave sparks as it absorbed the thin pillar of light.

After that it went quiet, and Marianne frowned, thinking that she must have done something
wrong. Maybe her Discerpo Nubis wasn’t strong enough. And then it happened.

It began to shake, spinning on itself, orbiting on itself, the rumble of the thunder resounding
in the clearing, and the faster it spun, the louder the rumbling became. Threads of electricity
began to run through the surface of the sphere, growing in number as the Snitch gained momentum,
crackling louder as it went along.

And then it stopped, the seal facing Marianne. What had looked like only the carvings of the
Snitch’s wings, spread out to reveal true, golden wings, as thin as a spiders web, which began to
flutter so fast that they were nearly invisible, only the glittering glow of the gold telling that
there was something at all moving before them.

And it began to move closer to them, out of the shadow of the boulder. They backed away from it,
giving it all the room it wanted, all too stunned to utter a single word.

And, just as the sphere spinning and the wings fluttering became strong enough to make the
Diggorinta chance a crash landing, just as the static became strong enough to get everyone’s hair
up in the air, just as the rumbling and crackling became deafening, then everything stopped.

Suddenly.

It stopped.

Everything.

No more spinning, or threads of electricity, or rumbling, or fluttering wings, which returned to
their closed position, resembling simple carvings again. The wind died down right away and the only
sound heard was the small crack of the sparks coming from the lock and from Marianne’s wand.

Looking between the tip of her wand and the lock, Marianne came to a conclusion, and,
wordlessly, she walked back up to the sphere, now blinding in full sunlight, and raised her wand,
placing its tip against the tip of the lightning carved into the lock. The sparks melted into a
single thread of electricity, which disappeared slowly, and, with a resounding click, the lock was
slowly pushed back into the sphere, and, where the thin wings were outlined as carvings, the sphere
began to open. Slowly, in front of their eyes the thin line became a crack, and then, before they
even knew it, the top part of the sphere had been thrown back, so that two perfect halves of the
whole, filled with Merlin knows what, were openly displayed.

"Wow," Caleb whispered under his breath, placing a hand around Marianne in pride.

But before any of them could step near, small golden spheres with fluttering flimsy wings began
to zoom around them. More Snitches. They were flying in trained patterns, dancing before them in
intricate ways, and Marianne was awed at the sheer amount of time and effort and charms her mother
must have put into all this.

After circling them all, the Snitches went back to flutter over the opened sphere dancing again,
and something else was lifted in the air. They looked like wooden fragments of a stick of wood,
with several snapped twigs. "Rianne," she heard Caleb, "I think that’s your dad’s
Nimbus 2000," he told her, referring to the father’s first broom, which had been destroyed by
the Whomping Willow in his third year of schooling. She nodded numbly.

The Snitches were flying so quickly that they were nothing but golden colored streaks zooming
around each other, and then, as though it were a vision, among the streaking whizzes she could see
a translucent image of her father, at age thirteen, on a broom in the middle of a horrible storm,
players on brooms around him wearing Gryffindor and Hufflepuff colors.

The longer she stared, the clearer the image became, and as she watched her father racing with a
good looking, much larger boy, she heard the muffled screams of an imaginary audience, Harry looked
down, and she could practically see his happiness being drained as he lost consciousness,
plummeting to the ground, the Nimbus 2000 losing height rapidly. And, while her father lay on the
ground knocked out, the rain poring over him restlessly, the broom was swept away by a strong gust
of wind, being thrashed directly at the Whomping Willow, being reduced to the shreds that were now
going back into the sphere, replaced by a…doll of a dragon?

Around that dragon, appeared the image of Harry Potter summoning his Firebolt, whizzing around a
mean looking dragon, performing amazing stunts to avoid serious injury, and finally getting past it
to grab a golden egg, which, like pieces of broom before it, went back into the sphere to be
replaced with the same golden egg that they'd just watched him grab.

And that showed Harry opening the aforementioned egg for the first time, a muted piercing
Banshee like scream filling the air, then the image switched to one of Harry in what Marianne
recognized as the Prefects bathroom, his head under the water along with the egg, which was singing
a song about saving precious things.

And then the egg was replaced by a transparent four pointed star filled with something strongly
resembling nail-polish, one of the tips deformed as though it had lived through a strong impact
with something even more solid than its metallic plastic. And the image around it was of a battle
scene, sloshed by heavy rain and lightning bolts, and in the midst of it a cloaked man with a
white, almost scaly face, a flat nose, skeletal fingers, and glowing red eyes; his hands clenched
under a girl’s chin, trapping her in his hold. Her mother. And looking horrified before them were
her father, along with Cicciobello. Harry erected a barrier of light around them as the cloaked
figure insulted the young woman he held fast. In a moment of distraction the doll threw itself at
the man in the same instant in which Hermione had pulled the star out of her robes, and threw it
with all the strength in her body against her capturer’s chest, embedding it there, and then,
simultaneously, Harry and Hermione called out "Discerso Nubis" making two lightning bolts
melt together, hitting their enemy with far too much force. The man fell.

And so did the Holostar.

The Snitches slowed down until they all stopped and returned to the open sphere, and silence
ensued.

Nobody dared to move.

Marianne couldn’t hear anything but her own heart thundering in its cage, feel nothing but the
light sheen of sweat that had covered her brow, taste nothing but her parched mouth.

Numbly, she realized that Caleb had just laced his fingers through hers, and she drew strength
and warmth from his hand.

"Rianne," called a wide eyed Gwen who was staring at the immobilized Snitches inside
the sphere, "your mum’s a genius." Sonya next to her, nodded, looking much like her
sister did. And, for several seconds, nobody moved, or even attempted to breath.

Caleb gave Marianne’s hand an encouraging squeeze and, trembling, she took a step toward the
sphere and stood directly between the two halves of it. In one of it stood the objects that had
just animated the air above, standing apart from the rest of the things in that half, which was
mostly made of books. Caleb stepped next to her, and bent down to pick one up. Opening to the first
page, he found many newspaper articles cut out and pasted there. The whole book was of newspaper
articles. With a grin he turned to Marianne. "These are all about your parents."

She nodded numbly.

The insides of both halves of the spheres were completely covered in moving pictures, many of
which were of Harry Potter, Hermione Granger, and Ronald Weasley.

The other half was taken up completely by more of those translucent stars. Curious she picked
one up. It was lighter than what she would have expected, but harder as well, and, in the point in
which all the points met there was an indentation that seemed to be made for the tip of a wand.
Holding the star in her left hand, she lifted her right to place the tip of her wand in the center
of the indentation.

Instantly, another image, more like a hologram, took place before her eyes. It must have been
from Ron’s point of view, and it showed her parents at age seventeen in a Muggle kitchen (far too
clean for sanity), spinning around, light coming out of their bodies and flooding everyone’s field
of vision.

The final defeat of Voldemort. She’d heard Ron tell the tale endlessly, though her parents
hardly ever spoke of it. They said it was best to live for the present, not for the past, and, to
them, Voldemort had been centuries ago.

"Oh, this must have been the first type of Holostars!" Exclaimed Gwen as she picked
one up.

"Yeah!" Said Sonya. "Hermione practically invented them all on her own. She’s the
real reason why Uncle Fred and Uncle George are so rich now!"

Within minutes the whole class had been taken over by an excited chatter as they looked into the
memories of Gryffindors who were before them, and, without knowing it, Marianne let their
excitement influence her.

They spent the biggest part of the morning looking the Holostars, Caleb the only one with a real
interest for the thick books that had been on the other side of the sphere, though several times
he’d managed to catch everyone’s attention with something amazing that the tomes that he’d been
scrutinizing.

Somewhere around lunch time, Marianne heard him hiss her name urgently. "Rianne!"

Curious she sat next to him on the bolder he was occupying, and took the heavy, well kept,
black, leather bound book he was offering. She raised her eyebrows in question. "Just open
it," he told her with concealed excitement.

She did so, and stared flabbergasted at the words written there. In a penmanship that she
recognized as her mother’s, were etched black on white before her eyes.

*The Hogwarts Chronicles of Harry Potter*

*By Hermione Lynn Granger*

She felt her fingers tremble as she held the book. Was this what she thought it was?

It had to be! And with that she turned to the next page.

*Before you go on and read this, whoever you are, I have one request.*

*I don’t know if I’ll be alive when this capsule is dug up out of the Forever Remember Garden.
And I know that I could publish this myself this very moment, only a short time after the downfall
of Voldemort, but I don’t think the world is ready for it yet. I know that when the Diggorinta will
pull out this the Garden, it will be because it knows that it’s time.*

*So this is my request.*

*Please, once you’ve finished reading this yourself, if I still live, contact me and bring it
back to me. If not, well, then I ask you to take this to a publishing house, so that the Wizarding
world, and Muggle if some of them decide to put this on their market, will know the truth about who
saved them, and how he did it.*

She knew it was foolish, but she couldn’t keep the tears from trailing hotly from her eyes.

Again, she felt Caleb take her hand, and she knew. She knew he understood.

This was her chance to know her parents the way she’d wanted to, to find out what happened.

It was her chance to feel proud of the fact that she was their daughter.

The Diggorinta gave another happy "Dig!" and made for Hagrid’s hut.

The end.

Okay, there it is, hope you liked it. Tell me what you thought at Robbygal@hotmail.com or leave a review.

I’ll love you all forever for reading this far

Pearl



