The Half-Blood Prince Read online

Page 21


  Really stumped this time, Harry found nothing else to say. There did not seem to be any way Malfoy could have brought a dangerous or Dark object into the school. He looked hopefully at Ron, who was sitting with his arms folded, staring over at Lavender Brown.

  ‘Can you think of any way Malfoy –?’

  ‘Oh, drop it, Harry,’ said Ron.

  ‘Listen, it’s not my fault Slughorn invited Hermione and me to his stupid party, neither of us wanted to go, you know!’ said Harry, firing up.

  ‘Well, as I’m not invited to any parties,’ said Ron, getting to his feet again, ‘I think I’ll go to bed.’

  He stomped off towards the door to the boys’ dormitories, leaving Harry and Hermione staring after him.

  ‘Harry?’ said the new Chaser, Demelza Robins, appearing suddenly at his shoulder. ‘I’ve got a message for you.’

  ‘From Professor Slughorn?’ asked Harry, sitting up hopefully.

  ‘No … from Professor Snape,’ said Demelza. Harry’s heart sank. ‘He says you’re to come to his office at half past eight tonight to do your detention – er – no matter how many party invitations you’ve received. And he wanted you to know you’ll be sorting out rotten Flobberworms from good ones, to use in Potions, and – and he says there’s no need to bring protective gloves.’

  ‘Right,’ said Harry grimly. ‘Thanks a lot, Demelza.’

  — CHAPTER TWELVE —

  Silver and Opals

  Where was Dumbledore, and what was he doing? Harry caught sight of the Headmaster only twice over the next few weeks. He rarely appeared at meals any more, and Harry was sure Hermione was right in thinking that he was leaving the school for days at a time. Had Dumbledore forgotten the lessons he was supposed to be giving Harry? Dumbledore had said that the lessons were leading to something to do with the prophecy; Harry had felt bolstered, comforted, and now he felt slightly abandoned.

  Halfway through October came their first trip of the term to Hogsmeade. Harry had wondered whether these trips would still be allowed, given the increasingly tight security measures around the school, but was pleased to know that they were going ahead; it was always good to get out of the castle grounds for a few hours.

  Harry woke early on the morning of the trip, which was proving stormy, and whiled away the time until breakfast by reading his copy of Advanced Potion-Making. He did not usually lie in bed reading his textbooks; that sort of behaviour, as Ron rightly said, was indecent in anybody except Hermione, who was simply weird that way. Harry felt, however, that the Half-Blood Prince’s copy of Advanced Potion-Making hardly qualified as a textbook. The more Harry pored over the book, the more he realised how much was in there, not only the handy hints and short cuts on potions that were earning him such a glowing reputation with Slughorn, but also the imaginative little jinxes and hexes scribbled in the margins which Harry was sure, judging by the crossings-out and revisions, that the Prince had invented himself.

  Harry had already attempted a few of the Prince’s self-invented spells. There had been a hex that caused toenails to grow alarmingly fast (he had tried this on Crabbe in the corridor, with very entertaining results); a jinx that glued the tongue to the roof of the mouth (which he had twice used, to general applause, on an unsuspecting Argus Filch); and, perhaps most useful of all, Muffliato, a spell that filled the ears of anyone nearby with an unidentifiable buzzing, so that lengthy conversations could be held in class without being overheard. The only person who did not find these charms amusing was Hermione, who maintained a rigidly disapproving expression throughout and refused to talk at all if Harry had used the Muffliato spell on anyone in the vicinity.

  Sitting up in bed, Harry turned the book sideways so as to examine more closely the scribbled instructions for a spell that seemed to have caused the Prince some trouble. There were many crossings-out and alterations, but finally, crammed into a corner of the page, the scribble:

  Levicorpus (n-vbl)

  While the wind and sleet pounded relentlessly on the windows and Neville snored loudly, Harry stared at the letters in brackets. N-vbl … that had to mean non-verbal. Harry rather doubted he would be able to bring off this particular spell; he was still having difficulty with non-verbal spells, something Snape had been quick to comment on in every DADA class. On the other hand, the Prince had proved a much more effective teacher than Snape so far.

  Pointing his wand at nothing in particular, he gave it an upward flick and said Levicorpus! inside his head.

  ‘Aaaaaaaargh!’

  There was a flash of light and the room was full of voices: everyone had woken up as Ron had let out a yell. Harry sent Advanced Potion-Making flying in panic; Ron was dangling upside-down in midair as though an invisible hook had hoisted him up by the ankle.

  ‘Sorry!’ yelled Harry, as Dean and Seamus roared with laughter and Neville picked himself up from the floor, having fallen out of bed. ‘Hang on – I’ll let you down –’

  He groped for the potion book and riffled through it in a panic, trying to find the right page; at last he located it and deciphered one cramped word underneath the spell: praying that this was the counter-jinx, Harry thought Liberacorpus! with all his might.

  There was another flash of light and Ron fell in a heap on to his mattress.

  ‘Sorry,’ repeated Harry weakly, while Dean and Seamus continued to roar with laughter.

  ‘Tomorrow,’ said Ron in a muffled voice, ‘I’d rather you set the alarm clock.’

  By the time they had got dressed, padding themselves out with several of Mrs Weasley’s hand-knitted sweaters and carrying cloaks, scarves and gloves, Ron’s shock had subsided and he had decided that Harry’s new spell was highly amusing; so amusing, in fact, that he lost no time in regaling Hermione with the story as they sat down for breakfast.

  ‘… and then there was another flash of light and I landed on the bed again!’ grinned Ron, helping himself to sausages.

  Hermione had not cracked a smile during this anecdote, and now turned an expression of wintry disapproval upon Harry.

  ‘Was this spell, by any chance, another one from that potion book of yours?’ she asked.

  Harry frowned at her.

  ‘Always jump to the worst conclusion, don’t you?’

  ‘Was it?’

  ‘Well … yeah, it was, but so what?’

  ‘So you just decided to try out an unknown, handwritten incantation and see what would happen?’

  ‘Why does it matter if it’s handwritten?’ said Harry, preferring not to answer the rest of the question.

  ‘Because it’s probably not Ministry of Magic-approved,’ said Hermione. ‘And also,’ she added, as Harry and Ron rolled their eyes, ‘because I’m starting to think this Prince character was a bit dodgy.’

  Both Harry and Ron shouted her down at once.

  ‘It was a laugh!’ said Ron, up-ending a ketchup bottle over his sausages. ‘Just a laugh, Hermione, that’s all!’

  ‘Dangling people upside-down by the ankle?’ said Hermione. ‘Who puts their time and energy into making up spells like that?’

  ‘Fred and George,’ said Ron, shrugging, ‘it’s their kind of thing. And, er –’

  ‘My dad,’ said Harry. He had only just remembered.

  ‘What?’ said Ron and Hermione together.

  ‘My dad used this spell,’ said Harry. ‘I – Lupin told me.’

  This last part was not true; in fact, Harry had seen his father use the spell on Snape, but he had never told Ron and Hermione about that particular excursion into the Pensieve. Now, however, a wonderful possibility occurred to him. Could the Half-Blood Prince possibly be –?

  ‘Maybe your dad did use it, Harry,’ said Hermione, ‘but he’s not the only one. We’ve seen a whole bunch of people use it, in case you’ve forgotten. Dangling people in the air. Making them float along, asleep, helpless.’

  Harry stared at her. With a sinking feeling he, too, remembered the behaviour of the Death Eaters at the Quidditch World Cup.
Ron came to his aid.

  ‘That was different,’ he said robustly. ‘They were abusing it. Harry and his dad were just having a laugh. You don’t like the Prince, Hermione,’ he added, pointing a sausage at her sternly, ‘because he’s better than you at Potions –’

  ‘It’s got nothing to do with that!’ said Hermione, her cheeks reddening. ‘I just think it’s very irresponsible to start performing spells when you don’t even know what they’re for, and stop talking about “the Prince” as if it’s his title, I bet it’s just a stupid nickname and it doesn’t seem as though he was a very nice person to me!’

  ‘I don’t see where you get that from,’ said Harry heatedly, ‘if he’d been a budding Death Eater he wouldn’t have been boasting about being “Half-Blood”, would he?’

  Even as he said it, Harry remembered that his father had been pure-blood, but he pushed the thought out of his mind; he would worry about that later …

  ‘The Death Eaters can’t all be pure-blood, there aren’t enough pure-blood wizards left,’ said Hermione stubbornly. ‘I expect most of them are half-bloods pretending to be pure. It’s only Muggle-borns they hate, they’d be quite happy to let you and Ron join up.’

  ‘There is no way they’d let me be a Death Eater!’ said Ron indignantly, a bit of sausage flying off the fork he was now brandishing at Hermione and hitting Ernie Macmillan on the head. ‘My whole family are blood traitors! That’s as bad as Muggle-borns to Death Eaters!’

  ‘And they’d love to have me,’ said Harry sarcastically. ‘We’d be best pals if they didn’t keep trying to do me in.’

  This made Ron laugh; even Hermione gave a grudging smile, and a distraction arrived in the shape of Ginny.

  ‘Hey, Harry, I’m supposed to give you this.’

  It was a scroll of parchment with Harry’s name written upon it in familiar thin, slanting writing.

  ‘Thanks, Ginny … it’s Dumbledore’s next lesson!’ Harry told Ron and Hermione, pulling open the parchment and quickly reading its contents. ‘Monday evening!’ He felt suddenly light and happy. ‘Want to join us in Hogsmeade, Ginny?’ he asked.

  ‘I’m going with Dean – might see you there,’ she replied, waving at them as she left.

  Filch was standing at the oak front doors as usual, checking off the names of people who had permission to go into Hogsmeade. The process took even longer than normal as Filch was triple-checking everybody with his Secrecy Sensor.

  ‘What does it matter if we’re smuggling Dark stuff OUT?’ demanded Ron, eyeing the long thin Secrecy Sensor with apprehension. ‘Surely you ought to be checking what we bring back IN?’

  His cheek earned him a few extra jabs with the Sensor, and he was still wincing as they stepped out into the wind and sleet.

  The walk into Hogsmeade was not enjoyable. Harry wrapped his scarf over his lower face; the exposed part soon felt both raw and numb. The road to the village was full of students bent double against the bitter wind. More than once Harry wondered whether they might not have had a better time in the warm common room, and when they finally reached Hogsmeade and saw that Zonko’s Joke Shop had been boarded up, Harry took it as confirmation that this trip was not destined to be fun. Ron pointed with a thickly gloved hand towards Honeydukes, which was mercifully open, and Harry and Hermione staggered in his wake into the crowded shop.

  ‘Thank God,’ shivered Ron as they were enveloped by warm, toffee-scented air. ‘Let’s stay here all afternoon.’

  ‘Harry, m’boy!’ said a booming voice from behind them.

  ‘Oh, no,’ muttered Harry. The three of them turned to see Professor Slughorn, who was wearing an enormous furry hat and overcoat with matching fur collar, clutching a large bag of crystallised pineapple and occupying at least a quarter of the shop.

  ‘Harry, that’s three of my little suppers you’ve missed now!’ said Slughorn, poking him genially in the chest. ‘It won’t do, m’boy, I’m determined to have you! Miss Granger loves them, don’t you?’

  ‘Yes,’ said Hermione helplessly, ‘they’re really –’

  ‘So why don’t you come along, Harry?’ demanded Slughorn.

  ‘Well, I’ve had Quidditch practice, Professor,’ said Harry, who had indeed been scheduling practices every time Slughorn had sent him a little violet-ribbon-adorned invitation. This strategy meant that Ron was not left out and they usually had a laugh with Ginny imagining Hermione shut up with McLaggen and Zabini.

  ‘Well, I certainly expect you to win your first match after all this hard work!’ said Slughorn. ‘But a little recreation never hurt anybody. Now, how about Monday night, you can’t possibly want to practise in this weather …’

  ‘I can’t, Professor, I’ve got – er – an appointment with Professor Dumbledore that evening.’

  ‘Unlucky again!’ cried Slughorn dramatically. ‘Ah, well … you can’t evade me for ever, Harry!’

  And with a regal wave, he waddled out of the shop, taking as little notice of Ron as though he had been a display of Cockroach Cluster.

  ‘I can’t believe you’ve wriggled out of another one,’ said Hermione, shaking her head. ‘They’re not that bad, you know … they’re even quite fun sometimes …’ But then she caught sight of Ron’s expression. ‘Oh, look – they’ve got Deluxe Sugar Quills – those would last hours!’

  Glad that Hermione had changed the subject, Harry showed much more interest in the new extra-large Sugar Quills than he would normally have done, but Ron continued to look moody and merely shrugged when Hermione asked him where he wanted to go next.

  ‘Let’s go to the Three Broomsticks,’ said Harry. ‘It’ll be warm.’

  They bundled their scarves back over their faces and left the sweet shop. The bitter wind was like knives on their faces after the sugary warmth of Honeydukes. The street was not very busy; nobody was lingering to chat, just hurrying towards their destinations. The exceptions were two men a little ahead of them, standing just outside the Three Broomsticks. One was very tall and thin; squinting through his rain-washed glasses Harry recognised the barman who worked in the other Hogsmeade pub, the Hog’s Head. As Harry, Ron and Hermione drew closer, the barman drew his cloak more tightly around his neck and walked away, leaving the shorter man to fumble with something in his arms. They were barely feet from him when Harry realised who the man was.

  ‘Mundungus!’

  The squat, bandy-legged man with long straggly ginger hair jumped and dropped an ancient suitcase, which burst open, releasing what looked like the entire contents of a junk shop window.

  ‘Oh, ’ello, ’Arry,’ said Mundungus Fletcher, with a most unconvincing stab at airiness. ‘Well, don’t let me keep ya.’

  And he began scrabbling on the ground to retrieve the contents of his suitcase with every appearance of a man eager to be gone.

  ‘Are you selling this stuff?’ asked Harry, watching Mundungus grabbing an assortment of grubby-looking objects from the ground.

  ‘Oh, well, gotta scrape a living,’ said Mundungus. ‘Gimme that!’

  Ron had stooped down and picked up something silver.

  ‘Hang on,’ Ron said slowly. ‘This looks familiar –’

  ‘Thank you!’ said Mundungus, snatching the goblet out of Ron’s hand and stuffing it back into the case. ‘Well, I’ll see you all – OUCH!’

  Harry had pinned Mundungus against the wall of the pub by the throat. Holding him fast with one hand, he pulled out his wand.

  ‘Harry!’ squealed Hermione.

  ‘You took that from Sirius’s house,’ said Harry, who was almost nose-to-nose with Mundungus and was breathing in an unpleasant smell of old tobacco and spirits. ‘That had the Black family crest on it.’

  ‘I – no – what –?’ spluttered Mundungus, who was turning slowly purple.

  ‘What did you do, go back the night he died and strip the place?’ snarled Harry.

  ‘I – no –’

  ‘Give it to me!’

  ‘Harry, you mustn’t!’ shrieked He
rmione, as Mundungus started to turn blue.

  There was a bang and Harry felt his hands fly off Mundungus’s throat. Gasping and spluttering, Mundungus seized his fallen case, then – CRACK – he Disapparated.

  Harry swore at the top of his voice, spinning on the spot to see where Mundungus had gone.

  ‘COME BACK, YOU THIEVING –!’

  ‘There’s no point, Harry.’

  Tonks had appeared out of nowhere, her mousy hair wet with sleet.

  ‘Mundungus will probably be in London by now. There’s no point yelling.’

  ‘He’s nicked Sirius’s stuff! Nicked it!’

  ‘Yes, but still,’ said Tonks, who seemed perfectly untroubled by this piece of information, ‘you should get out of the cold.’

  She watched them through the door of the Three Broomsticks. The moment he was inside, Harry burst out, ‘He was nicking Sirius’s stuff!’

  ‘I know, Harry, but please don’t shout, people are staring,’ whispered Hermione. ‘Go and sit down, I’ll get you a drink.’

  Harry was still fuming when Hermione returned to their table a few minutes later holding three bottles of Butterbeer.

  ‘Can’t the Order control Mundungus?’ Harry demanded of the other two in a furious whisper. ‘Can’t they at least stop him stealing everything that’s not fixed down when he’s at Headquarters?’

  ‘Shh!’ said Hermione desperately, looking around to make sure nobody was listening; there were a couple of warlocks sitting close by who were staring at Harry with great interest, and Zabini was lolling against a pillar not far away. ‘Harry, I’d be annoyed too, I know it’s your things he’s stealing –’

  Harry gagged on his Butterbeer; he had momentarily forgotten that he owned number twelve, Grimmauld Place.

  ‘Yeah, it’s my stuff!’ he said. ‘No wonder he wasn’t pleased to see me! Well, I’m going to tell Dumbledore what’s going on, he’s the only one who scares Mundungus.’

  ‘Good idea,’ whispered Hermione, clearly pleased that Harry was calming down. ‘Ron, what are you staring at?’

 

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