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HARRY POTTER 
Harry Potter/Severus Snape
Soulmate!AU 

Cow-T #14, week 4, m2 - La maschera 




II - The Ministry falls, Death Eaters storm Bill and Fleur’s wedding and Harry can’t do anything but run. 

 

 

The wedding guests are panicking and Harry does’t see Ron anywhere. There are people running from every direction and Harry grabs Hermione’s hand so that he won’t lose her, but her skin is slippery under his palm, and she gets swallowed by the crowd. 

“Hermione!” Harry yells but she’s gone, and everywhere Harry turns there are people running, and he doesn’t recognise anyone. Where are his friends? Where is Bill, or Ginny, or Fred and George? Harry moves frantic through the scared mob, he crash into a woman, and she pushes him back, sending him spinning and with him spins the room. 

Where is he? 

Suddenly there are screams and masked figures in dark cloaks apparate in the pavilion. Harry raises his wand, but he doesn’t have that anymore and he clutches at the air, as one Death Eater turns toward him and Harry realises that the Polyjuice potion has worn off and now he’s showing his own face. 

Harry tries to run but his foots are anchored to the ground, he can’t move and the Death Eater is coming for him, raising his wand as the crowd parts for him. 

Harry is going to die, he’s so sure of that. 

And then someone grabs his wrist and pulls him back and then Harry’s running.  His soulmate doesn’t look back to him, he just keeps running until they are outside the tent, until they are outside the Burrow and the landscape changes to the quiet place the boy was dreaming about the first time they met. 

“Thank you,” Harry tells him when they stop. He’s not breathing hard, he was not really running, but still he feels out of breath. 

“That was quite the nightmare,” the boy shrugs. It’s the first time they talk, and Harry feels giddy and excited, despite everything that just happened. 

“I’m sorry, it’s just...” He ponders if he should tell him. But he’s his soulmate, he’ll have access to a bigger part of his mind than his dreams as their bond progresses, so Harry doesn’t really think hiding something could do him any good. Beside, his soulmate is on his side, by definition, isn’t him? 

“It’s what happened today.”

“You were attacked?” The boy asks, but he doesn’t look particularly surprised. 

“Yes, Death Eaters came to my friends’ wedding. We managed to escape and there were no casualties, thankfully.” 

The boy nods, thoughtful. “Your subconscious needed to elaborate that. If it’s something that happened today it probably won’t become a recurring nightmare...” 

“Do you have much experience in recurring nightmares?” Harry asks, because he still doesn’t know anything about the mysterious soulmate. 

The boy looks at him, almost as if he couldn’t believe he was stupid enough to ask - and there’s something in the way he looks at Harry, something familiar that Harry recognizes, even if he can’t put a name on it. But it’s fleeting, because the boy scolds his features into something impassible and looks away. 

“Sometimes,” he replies at last, “But don’t worry, I made sure you won’t have to partake in them.”
“What?” Harry tilts his head confused, “How?” 

The boy bites his lower lip, “I sealed them away. I prefer happy memories, when I dream.”

“Who doesn’t,” Harry nods, “If I could, I would dream nothing but flying on a broom, probably.” 

The boy doesn’t reply, and Harry would like nothing better than ask him what are his happy memories then, but he doesn’t think they are there, yet. He doesn’t even know who he is, after all. 

Harry puts his hand in his pockets and looks at the same distant point the boy is observing, trying to understand if he’s seeing something Harry doesn’t. 

“So what’s your name?” He asks at last, because that’s the least. 

The boy turns to look at him, eyebrows raised in a way that Harry has already seen. Now if only he could place it... 

“What’s in a name?” The boy asks back with a smug grin and doesn’t answer his question. 

“Well I’d like to know who you are since you already know who I am.” 

“Do I?” The boy keeps moving in circles around his question and Harry is loosing his patience. He had never thought a soulmate was supposed to be someone that got under his skin, and yet here they are. 

“Well, the girl you dreamed about surely did,” Harry points out, “so if she knows, you must too.” 

The boy takes a moment to ponder his reply, and Harry feels the need to shake him. It’s so unfair for him not to know him.
“Being the soulmate to the great Harry Potter has some downfalls at the moment, don’t you think?” The boy tilts his head, “If it’s the same for you, I’d like to keep my name to myself.” 

It feels like a blow - of course, knowing Harry is a danger at the moment, and yet he had thought that somehow his soulmate would be someone that would look past it, that, somehow, if the universe had destined them together, his soulmate would be able to take it - his role in the war, his fame, his prophetized future. 

Harry takes a step forward, challenging, “And if it’s not the same for me?” 

“Well then, you can’t always get what you want, Potter.” 

Merlin, it’s so uncanny, so familiar... but Harry can’t remember who this boy resembles so much. 

“I have to call you something...” 

“Then figure something out,” the boy tells him with a smirk, “because I won’t tell you.”

And before Harry can protest, he’s gone. 

 

 

Harry doesn’t tell his friends about his soulmate. They have more important things to figure out, such as where is Mundungus Fletcher and how could they have been so stupid as to not realize they had had a piece of Voldemort’s soul in their hands and they had thrown it away. 

Besides, his soulmate has been very clear he’s not willing to associate with Harry at the moment, and Harry, honestly, can’t fault him. The war is raging outside the protective walls of Grimmauld Place and Voldemort is evidently having the upper hand. 

Harry might have wished for a soulmate ready to sacrifice everything for him, he might have dreamed of a desperate love that knew no bounds, of someone that would fight alongside him despite the odds... but what it got instead was a stubborn boy who refused to show himself (his soulmate had to be at least seventeen, which meant that he was choosing to present himself in that form) and refused to tell him his name, and refused to share a dream with him for more than a few minutes at a time. 

Harry shouldn’t complain. At least he isn’t Voldemort. 

So when Hermione and Ron asks, Harry shakes his head. Better for them to believe he doesn’t have a soulmate than to add another mystery to the pile of unsolved ones. 

 

 

“You can’t tell me you don’t have happy memories after the age of ten.” 

Harry doesn’t mean to sound so mean, but he’s getting tired of seeing his soulmate as a child. They are in the same clearing of their first shared dream - under the canopy of threes the small river is calmly flowing at their shoulders, and Harry understands why the boy has chosen this place for meeting him. It’s peaceful, it’s calm... it’s way too silent. 

“Believe what you want,” the boy says, not even shifting his gaze to look at Harry. He’s laying on the ground, watching the clouds go by. “This are my happiest moments, you don’t want my nightmares.” 

Harry sits next to him, hugging his knees and looking at the river. “Where is this place?” 

The boy hesitates, maybe thinking that giving up a location will help Harry figuring out his name. Harry wants to tell him that he didn’t even know Dumbledore was from Godric’s Hollow, so there’s little chance of him figuring out anything just from a place, but before he can say anything the boy decides for himself. 

“Cokeworth,” he says at last. 

It doesn’t ring any bell and Harry shakes his head. “Never heard of it.” 

“You wouldn’t have, no.” The boy doesn’t sound too surprised. “I spent so many years here, and I never went back to this place, except in my dreams.”

Harry knew his soulmate was older than him, but it could have been a day or a decade. His tone now seems to implicate the latter more than the former.
“Why?” He asks, instead, prying for more informations and careful to not sound too eager. 

“It doesn’t matter,” the boy shakes his head, but Harry doesn’t give up.
“It has something to do with the red head girl you were dreaming about?” 

The boy chuckles, a mirthless and bitter laughter, “Something like that, yes.” 

“What happened, was she angry you weren’t her soulmate?” 

The boy still has a twisted grin on his face, and Harry feels stupid, feels as if he’s onto a big joke that he can’t see and the boy is laughing at him. 

“No, nothing of the sort. If anything, she found out who her soulmate was long before I did. But she’s dead now.” 

“Oh,” Harry feels stupid now. He doesn’t know who his soulmate is, he doesn’t know the red-headed girl, and everything he says seems to be the wrong thing. “I’m sorry.” 

“As I said, it doesn’t matter.” 

They keep silent, then. Harry doesn’t know what else to say, the boy didn’t look like he wanted to talk in the first place. 

 

 

Severus keeps waking up with a need for destruction. He reign himself in, anger flaring in his vein and burning his skin. He was stupid, he tells himself, he shouldn’t have talked with Potter about his mother, he shouldn’t have opened himself up - what was he expecting to gain by telling Potter where he had grown up? What was even the purpose of conversation, when anything they said to each other couldn’t be of any significance. 

Severus has sacrificed everything on the altar of the Dark Lord’s downfall - his whole life, his reputation... he has killed Albus, the only person who had ever had faith in him, and he has done everything to avenge Lily’s death. He can’t risk Potter figuring out who he is, spilling his role to the Dark Lord and ruining everything. 

He would kill Severus, surely. Or worse, he would force Severus to prove his loyalty once more:  use your bond to bring Potter to me. It was too big a risk. 

But Severus could control his dreams only up to a point - dreams are the reign of the subconscious and Severus doesn’t have on himself the same hold he has while awake. Dreams don’t make sense, dreams shift and change and don’t stay still, they’re like water: constricted into a vial too small it will spill over. 

And the more walls Severus builds in his head, the smaller the vial gets. 

 

 

“Why are we dreaming this awful woman?” The boy asks, as Harry studies the hideous pink plates depicting meowing cats that adorn the pink walls of Umbridge’s office at Hogwarts. Harry hates this place, he would like nothing better than to burn it down. 

“She has something I need,” Harry tells him as Professor Umbridge explains them how useless learning is, how they’ll never need a wand and honestly, they would probably be better off living as Muggles.  

She’s teaching from her office, the room morphing half-way into a classroom, with desks, all empty, except for Harry and his soulmate - and it doesn’t make much sense, but what really does in a dream? 

She has something you need?” 

Harry turns to look at the boy, “Wait a second... you know her?” 

“I...” The boy must realize his mistake, but Harry doesn’t give him time to come up with an excuse.
“You do!”
It’s not much, but it’s something, and now Harry knows that his soulmate was at Hogwarts during his fifth year. 

The boy looks unsettled now, ready to bolt and Harry grabs him by the wrist. 

“So, you know me, you are older than me, and you were at Hogwarts when she was a teacher,” he lists. The boy squirms, tries to get his hand back, but Harry holds on. He knows the boy can’t leave if he’s anchoring him there. 

“I didn’t meet her at Hogwarts. She works at the Ministry, Potter, I’ve seen her there.” 

True. Harry hadn’t thought of it. There are many ways the boy could have met Dolores Umbridge and being at Hogwarts while she was a teacher isn’t the most likely one, - but there was something in his explanation, an edge of panic in his voice that Harry had almost missed. 

“No, you didn’t,” Harry’s sure of that, “You were at Hogwarts. Which means, that you must have been a sixth year, maybe seventh?” Harry looks at him, tries to recognize his face, to understand how his boyish features might have grown into adulthood, but he doesn’t recognize one of his classmates in him.
Truth be told, Harry hasn’t exactly interacted with many students if they were out of his year or out of his House. If his soulmate wasn’t part of a Quidditch Team, Harry doesn’t think he could place him as a Ravenclaw or an Hufflepuff.

But the boy looks so familiar... 

“Can I have my arm back, or are you planning to stare at me for the rest of the night?” The boy asks, curt, and Harry is about to let go, when another thought strikes him. 

The boy had a friend, a red-headed girl. She’s dead now, but she was old enough to have found out her soulmate, so she was a witch and she had reached seventeen. Harry doesn’t know of any red-headed witch who died when he was at school. Damn, he doesn’t remember any red-headed girl, except Ginny at Hogwarts. 

Unless she has died recently, this summer... 

“Potter? Give me my arm back right this instant!” 

But no, the boy was talking about that with too detachment for it to be a fresh wound. Harry is sure it had happened years ago. But that would make the boy much older and why would he be at Hogwarts, then... 

“Potter, let go,” the boy’s seething, full of anger, and Harry can’t really blame him, but he’s so close to get something... “Now!” 

“Yes, sir,” Harry, cornered, replies without thinking about it, and lets go of his wrist almost immediately.
Then what he has just said, sinks in. 

He raises his head to meet the boy’s eyes, and - 

Fuck.” 

Of course, it’s him, how Harry hadn’t recognized him sooner is the real question. Harry takes a step back and then another. It’s not Voldemort, but it’s not much better either. And Harry has just told Severus Snape a pivotal part of their plan. 

“Of all the times I tried to get you to show me some respect, this is the moment you choose,” the boy - no, Snape shakes his head.
Harry doesn’t have time to figure what Snape’s tone implies. It’s too much. Harry is facing Snape for the first time since Dumbledore’s death and he can’t curse him, he can’t hex him, he can’t do anything of significance. 

Severus Snape is in front of him and Harry can’t do anything but stare. 

And then it hits him, because Severus Snape is a Death Eater, he’s a killer, he’s Voldemort’s right hand. And he’s also Harry’s soulmate. 

For the first time since this charade has started, it’s Harry the one that runs away. 

 

 

 

danzanelfuoco: (Default)

HARRY POTTER

Harry Potter/Severus Snape 
Soulmate!AU 

Cow-T #14, week 2, m2 - prompt - Destino 







I - It takes Harry a week to realise who is in his dreams. 



The night he’s supposed to turn seventeen, Harry doesn’t sleep. 

It’s not that he doesn’t want to - oh, he’s tired and he would like nothing better than to lay down his head and completely pass out, waking the next morning without a though. But tonight is the night he turns seventeen and he will start sharing dreams with his soulmate. 

If he even has one.  Which, honestly, is not even the scariest part. 

Harry dreaming of nothing, Harry waking up without remembering his dreams, would actually be a blessing at the moment. It doesn’t even mean Harry will never have one - maybe they’re still unborn, or too young to form a proper connection and while that’s not exactly optimal, Harry would prefer it to the alternative. 

Because Harry has already shared dreams and mind and thoughts with someone. And it scares him to think that - even if that was before he was seventeen so, of course, it’s not him - in fact it might have been Voldemort all along. 

So Harry doesn’t sleep the night he turns seventeen - he lays in bed, tossing and turning and nodding off, never quite reaching the REM phase of sleep that would allow him to dream.  

The morning after Ron is the first one to corner him, “So, did you see her?” 

They’re sitting in the kitchen of the Burrow, it’s Harry’s birthday and Mrs Weasley is baking a cake for him even in the chaos that is organizing a wedding for the next day. 

Harry shakes his head. “I couldn’t sleep. I was too worried.” 

Ron nods, emphatically, as if he could understand. He can’t. Ron had been so eager to find out who his soulmate was that he had taken a sleeping potion that night, just to knock himself out sooner. There was no stress for him, only eagerness, and when he had found out - when the morning after he had woke up, he had looked at Harry with a flabbergast expression and had said, “Damn, I’m an idiot, no wonder Hermione was so damn angry at me,” - the biggest problem he had faced was apologising to her. No wonder Hermione had sent a storm of bird after him, when she had just spent the last six months after her birthday knowing to almost certainty that Ron was her soulmate, while watching him being in a relationship with Lavander Brown - because you start dreaming about your soulmate as soon as you turn seventeen, but your soulmate doesn’t dream about you until they turn seventeen and it’s only then, when the both of you are mature enough, that the bond actually forms and you get in each other’s mind. 

But Harry knows, deep down, that for him it won’t be as easy - when does something ever works as it should for him? 

The number of people asking about his dreams dwindle during the day, as Harry keeps saying that he didn’t dream of anyone. Ginny goes from lingering in the periphery of every room Harry goes into - maybe hoping to give him the opportunity to tell her he dreamed of her - to completely disappearing from the house. Harry can’t really blame her. 

By night, he’s so on edge that he thinks he’ll never sleep again. But as he lays in his bed in Ron’s room, he can’t really help closing his eyes and getting lulled to sleep by the rhythmic breathing of his best friend. 


In his dream there are two children: a redhead girl and a dark haired boy. They’re young, ten or eleven maybe, but that would be too young to form a soul connection with anyone, so Harry knows their whole appearance is part of the dream - a memory replayed maybe, or perhaps just some weird construction of the subconscious. 

They’re sitting on the ground on the banks of a small river, shoulder against shoulder, watching the stream flow by, talking to each other so low that Harry can’t make out the words. 

Harry gets closer to them, and they turn to look at him, the boy first and then the girl. 

“That’s Harry!” The girl shrieks as she jumps to her feet, and she runs toward him, throwing her arms around his neck and hugging him. 

The boy gets up too, but he stays behind, he looks at Harry with eyes way too wide, almost a deer in front of highlights, but Harry doesn’t pay him too much attention. For a brief instant he had thought the girl could be Ginny - for a brief immense instant of relief. But Harry had known Ginny at eleven and this girl it’s not her, despite the uncanny resemblance. 

“You are not my soulmate, are you?” He asks her and she laughs - and her laughter is crystalline and lovely and Harry feels so good in her arms, almost at home, but not quite. It’s not as it should feel. 

So Harry turns his face to the boy who’s looking at him with a flabbergasted expression on his face. Harry disentangles himself from the girl - a figment of the boy’s dream - and moves toward him. 

It should bother him that his soulmate is a boy, shouldn’t it? He’ll never marry Ginny, he’ll never have the kind of family you see in the movies, a lovely wife, two and a half children., a dog and a picket fence. It’s not for him. It never was. 

Somehow Harry is not distraught by the idea as much as he thought he would be. 

“It’s you, isn’t it?” 

The boy makes a strangled sound, almost panicked, and takes a step back. Falling into the water behind him.
Harry runs to him, but he’s gone before he can reach him, and then he wakes. 



Severus wakes up clutching his chest, his breath ragged, and the feeling of drowning still etched in his lungs. 

It can’t be happening. Not now. Not him

Severus has spent the past twenty years knowing he didn’t have a soulmate, knowing he was alone in the world. And now Harry bloody Potter turns seventeen and he ends up in his dreams. 

Severus hadn’t seen it coming - how hadn’t he? After all, Potter had started being a constant in his dreams as soon as he had gotten into Hogwarts. But Severus had figured it was because the bloody idiot was now his problem, he had never thought that the boy’s soul was grown enough to start reaching his dreams, he would have never thought possible, not in a million years... 

And now this. This is a bloody fucking joke. Oh, the universe is so funny. 

Severus gets up, and fights the need to throw anything at the wall. It wouldn’t do to wake his... guests. His loyalty has been proved, but that doesn’t mean that the Dark Lord won’t dispose of his house just as he disposes of any asset of his subordinates, just as if they were his own. 

So Severus restrain himself and then he spends the rest of the night building walls in his head. Potter didn’t recognise him, thankfully, but Severus knows it’s just a matter of time, so he takes precautions. He doesn’t know what Potter will do if he finds out Severus is his soulmate, but he’s sure it will be something stupid. 

So Severus carefully locks away most of his memories, and prepares to dream of himself as a child  - to dream of Lily and Cokeworth and nothing past her acceptance letter to Hogwarts. If he has to share dreams with him, the least he can do is giving Potter his mother, giving him the few happy moments of his childhood and the gift of ignorance about who is soulmate really is. 


danzanelfuoco: (Default)

HARRY POTTER

Severus Snape/Harry Potter
SAFE
Warnings: Omega!Verse  

COW-T #14, week 1, missione 2 - incipit 1 
wordcount: 1540


He already knew it would be a disaster. 
Not such a disaster as when he had presented as an Omega, that had been worse. And when Snape had been the only one to be able to bond with him, Harry had thought the Universe had just chosen a different and more painful way to get him killed. 
But then. 
Harry could admit that that had not been such a disaster after all. 
Snape was... different. Well, he was the same old sarcastic jerk - he hadn’t suddenly gotten a personality transplant - but he had gotten softer somehow, like his edges were no longer cutting. 
Maybe it was because the war was over, maybe because he didn’t have his role as a spy dangling over his head. Or maybe he had just seen Harry as something more than his parents’ child. 
Harry didn’t know, but he surely could enjoy it. 
But then Hermione had to get to their house and start pestering him about his lack of Newts and how he should study to get them and Snape was there silently judging him (he hadn’t said a word and he looked like he couldn’t care less, but Harry knew - he knew!)... so Harry had caved and for some unfathomable reason he had thought it was a good idea to ask his mate of all people to help him study. 
He already knew it would be a disaster, he must have had some masochist streak to go through with it. 
“I don’t get it.” Harry gave up the ladle and watched his potion critically. The Draught of Peace should have been turquoise, Harry had made sure to follow all the passages, but the shade was more aquamarine, and looking way more greenish than it should have. “I just don’t get it.” 
“How surprising,” Snape deadpanned, not looking up from the bunch of homework he was marking. “With your glorious understanding and mastering of the arts of Potions, I wonder how that could be possible.” 
“Ah ah, very funny,” Harry scowled at him, “I keep following the instruction in the book, why do I never get it right?” 
“You’re sloppy,” Snape cut him off, “imprecise. You tend to do things roughly how they have to be done and then you wonder why your potion is nearly how it should be, but not quite.” 
“Whoa, thanks.” 
“Also, you fail to grasp the basic principles of what you’re doing,” he went on unrelenting. 
 “Now, that’s unfair!” 
Severus put down his quill and turned to watch him, “Is it? You follow the instructions but you do it blindly. You don’t know why they require you to cut an ingredient with a silver knife instead of a copper one, or what are the differences if you slice it, chop it or grind it. As I said, the basic principles.”
 “And how was I supposed to know that? You never taught that in class.” 
“No, I didn’t. It’s not in the curriculum. Knowing these specificities is considered too advanced and so it’s up to the single student. Your whole classroom took for granted the instruction and nobody even thought to wonder why is it so important to stir clockwise or anticlockwise.” 
When he didn’t further his explanation, Harry really pondered if he could throw the ladle at his head. “Ok, I’ll bite. Why do we stir like this? And why isn’t it in the curricula if it’s so important?” 
“It’s a rune. You are tracing a stylized rune with the ladle. How they make Ancient Runes elective and not mandatory is beside me,” Severus scoffed but Harry just rolled his eyes.  
“You are already making all my other classes about Potions, I don’t think I need another one.”
“Excuse me? I’m doing no such thing.” 
 “Please, Herbology has practically become ‘what is this plant and how can I use it to brew?’.”
“I don’t see why else would you learn about plants if not to use them in a potion.” 
“I don’t know. Four years ago? Second task of the Triwizard Tournament? Gillyweed?” 
 “Which, might I remember you, you stole from my potion supplies?”
“I didn’t steal it!” 
“Yes, you did. And it was a potion ingredient.” 
Harry looked at him, bewildered. “No, I didn’t. Dobby stole it. And I didn’t use it in a potion, did I?” 
 “Just because you’re incompetent in the subject. You could have used it to brew a Branchia potion that would have allowed you better control of the time and would have left you the ability to speak and thus the ability to perform spells.” 
Harry looked at him as if it was the first time he had seen him, “Shit, I should have asked your help with the tasks, shouldn’t I?” 
“I wouldn’t have helped you,” Severus scoffed, returning to his markings.  
“Oh really? Because I’ve risked my life at least two times before getting to the maze and seeing how set you were on keeping me alive, I don’t think you would have refused.” 
Severus looked so thorn, he wanted to deny everything, but damn it, “Fucking dragons,” he muttered, “who even decided on fucking dragons?” 
“I bet there was a potion even for that.” 
“There isn’t,” Severus shook his head, “dragons' physiology works differently, and the effects of sedatives are known to be unpredictable, that’s why the dragon trainers use Stunning spells.”
“How do you-?” He started asking, but then it clicked in his head, “You were already studying a way to help me!” 
Sometimes it happened just like this, they would be talking about nothing really and then it would hit Harry, the enormity of what was happening between them, the enormity of what was already there between them, hidden behind layers of hatred and misconception and prejudice. Harry wondered sometimes what would have happened if he hadn’t presented if he would have continued to be James Potter’s child and nothing else if he would have kept hating Snape and thinking of him as an enemy until the end. 
“Contrary to popular belief, I don’t actually want to see my students dead,” Severus just twisted the truth, because he wouldn’t have spent days studying books on dragons if the only champion for Hogwarts had been Cedric Diggory. 
“Well, thank you,” Harry smiled, then walked around the desk to reach him. He cupped his cheeks and tilted his head up to meet his eyes, and then he kissed him. 
Severus let him press his lips against his, basking in the warmth of the contact. The need - the urges - completely gone, meant he could enjoy the familiarity of the affection without fearing his instinct and reaction. Oh, how good it was to be bonded to a mate. 
“You’re potion is perfectly Acceptable, by the way,” Snape cleared his throat and changed the topic, as soon as Harry got back to his potion, “a little more green than it should have been, but still, Acceptable.”  
“Because I don’t know why I need to chop an ingredient?” 
“Yes, because you don’t know how an ingredient behaves and how to counteract the intrinsic variability of each element. Following the recipe will usually get you a good enough potion, but you asked me why your potions aren’t as they should, and the answer is that the recipe might need to be adjusted and you don’t know how.” 
Harry seemed to consider that for a moment, “So I should have wondered how waving a wand makes me capable of performing magic, too?” 
Severus opened his mouth, a little speechless, “You... didn’t?” 
“No! It’s magic,” Harry replied as if it were the most absurd request, asking him to consider that. “I mean, the Dursleys have a tv, I never considered how it worked. It just did.” 
“Yes, but that’s a very… muggle way of thinking. For someone who lives in a magic school where you should be taught how magic works, you sure are not so curious to wonder how the universe you live in works,” Severus shook his head. “So many things make sense now. No wonder you never created a spell on your own.” 
Harry seemed to be taken aback by that, his shoulder slumping. “I didn’t know I was supposed to.” 
“I guess a later start is better than no start at all,” Severus huffed. 
As soon as the implication landed on him, Harry beamed, “You’ll teach me?” 
“What exactly have I been doing for the past seven years and counting, Potter?” 
Harry raised his eyebrows in the best imitation of him he could do, “Berating me, insulting me, and somehow always finding a fault in everything I do?” 
“Excuses,” Severus waved him off, “Details of your incompetence do not interest me,” he smirked, which made Harry groan. 
“You’re so frustrating!” 
“Yes, I’ve been told. By many people, one of which was you.” 
He was having fun, the jerk. Harry threw the ladder at him. And then he moved into his lap to kiss him. 
He already knew it would be a disaster. 
Not such a disaster as when he had presented as an Omega, that had been worse. And when Snape had been the only one to be able to bond with him, Harry had thought the Universe had just chosen a different and more painful way to get him killed. 
But then. 
Harry could admit that that had not been such a disaster after all. 
Snape was... different. Well, he was the same old sarcastic jerk - he hadn’t suddenly gotten a personality transplant - but he had gotten softer somehow, like his edges were no longer cutting. 
Maybe it was because the war was over, maybe because he didn’t have his role as a spy dangling over his head. Or maybe he had just seen Harry as something more than his parents’ child. 
Harry didn’t know, but he surely could enjoy it. 
But then Hermione had to get to their house and start pestering him about his lack of Newts and how he should study to get them and Snape was there silently judging him (he hadn’t said a word and he looked like he couldn’t care less, but Harry knew - he knew!)... so Harry had caved and for some unfathomable reason he had thought it was a good idea to ask his mate of all people to help him study. 
He already knew it would be a disaster, he must have had some masochist streak to go through with it. 
“I don’t get it.” Harry gave up the ladle and watched his potion critically. The Draught of Peace should have been turquoise, Harry had made sure to follow all the passages, but the shade was more aquamarine, and looking way more greenish than it should have. “I just don’t get it.” 
“How surprising,” Snape deadpanned, not looking up from the bunch of homework he was marking. “With your glorious understanding and mastering of the arts of Potions, I wonder how that could be possible.” 
“Ah ah, very funny,” Harry scowled at him, “I keep following the instruction in the book, why do I never get it right?” 
“You’re sloppy,” Snape cut him off, “imprecise. You tend to do things roughly how they have to be done and then you wonder why your potion is nearly how it should be, but not quite.” 
“Whoa, thanks.” 
“Also, you fail to grasp the basic principles of what you’re doing,” he went on unrelenting. 
 “Now, that’s unfair!” 
Severus put down his quill and turned to watch him, “Is it? You follow the instructions but you do it blindly. You don’t know why they require you to cut an ingredient with a silver knife instead of a copper one, or what are the differences if you slice it, chop it or grind it. As I said, the basic principles.”
 “And how was I supposed to know that? You never taught that in class.” 
“No, I didn’t. It’s not in the curriculum. Knowing these specificities is considered too advanced and so it’s up to the single student. Your whole classroom took for granted the instruction and nobody even thought to wonder why is it so important to stir clockwise or anticlockwise.” 
When he didn’t further his explanation, Harry really pondered if he could throw the ladle at his head. “Ok, I’ll bite. Why do we stir like this? And why isn’t it in the curricula if it’s so important?” 
“It’s a rune. You are tracing a stylized rune with the ladle. How they make Ancient Runes elective and not mandatory is beside me,” Severus scoffed but Harry just rolled his eyes.  
“You are already making all my other classes about Potions, I don’t think I need another one.”
“Excuse me? I’m doing no such thing.” 
 “Please, Herbology has practically become ‘what is this plant and how can I use it to brew?’.”
“I don’t see why else would you learn about plants if not to use them in a potion.” 
“I don’t know. Four years ago? Second task of the Triwizard Tournament? Gillyweed?” 
 “Which, might I remember you, you stole from my potion supplies?”
“I didn’t steal it!” 
“Yes, you did. And it was a potion ingredient.” 
Harry looked at him, bewildered. “No, I didn’t. Dobby stole it. And I didn’t use it in a potion, did I?” 
 “Just because you’re incompetent in the subject. You could have used it to brew a Branchia potion that would have allowed you better control of the time and would have left you the ability to speak and thus the ability to perform spells.” 
Harry looked at him as if it was the first time he had seen him, “Shit, I should have asked your help with the tasks, shouldn’t I?” 
“I wouldn’t have helped you,” Severus scoffed, returning to his markings.  
“Oh really? Because I’ve risked my life at least two times before getting to the maze and seeing how set you were on keeping me alive, I don’t think you would have refused.” 
Severus looked so thorn, he wanted to deny everything, but damn it, “Fucking dragons,” he muttered, “who even decided on fucking dragons?” 
“I bet there was a potion even for that.” 
“There isn’t,” Severus shook his head, “dragons' physiology works differently, and the effects of sedatives are known to be unpredictable, that’s why the dragon trainers use Stunning spells.”
“How do you-?” He started asking, but then it clicked in his head, “You were already studying a way to help me!” 
Sometimes it happened just like this, they would be talking about nothing really and then it would hit Harry, the enormity of what was happening between them, the enormity of what was already there between them, hidden behind layers of hatred and misconception and prejudice. Harry wondered sometimes what would have happened if he hadn’t presented if he would have continued to be James Potter’s child and nothing else if he would have kept hating Snape and thinking of him as an enemy until the end. 
“Contrary to popular belief, I don’t actually want to see my students dead,” Severus just twisted the truth, because he wouldn’t have spent days studying books on dragons if the only champion for Hogwarts had been Cedric Diggory. 
“Well, thank you,” Harry smiled, then walked around the desk to reach him. He cupped his cheeks and tilted his head up to meet his eyes, and then he kissed him. 
Severus let him press his lips against his, basking in the warmth of the contact. The need - the urges - completely gone, meant he could enjoy the familiarity of the affection without fearing his instinct and reaction. Oh, how good it was to be bonded to a mate. 
“You’re potion is perfectly Acceptable, by the way,” Snape cleared his throat and changed the topic, as soon as Harry got back to his potion, “a little more green than it should have been, but still, Acceptable.”  
“Because I don’t know why I need to chop an ingredient?” 
“Yes, because you don’t know how an ingredient behaves and how to counteract the intrinsic variability of each element. Following the recipe will usually get you a good enough potion, but you asked me why your potions aren’t as they should, and the answer is that the recipe might need to be adjusted and you don’t know how.” 
Harry seemed to consider that for a moment, “So I should have wondered how waving a wand makes me capable of performing magic, too?” 
Severus opened his mouth, a little speechless, “You... didn’t?” 
“No! It’s magic,” Harry replied as if it were the most absurd request, asking him to consider that. “I mean, the Dursleys have a tv, I never considered how it worked. It just did.” 
“Yes, but that’s a very… muggle way of thinking. For someone who lives in a magic school where you should be taught how magic works, you sure are not so curious to wonder how the universe you live in works,” Severus shook his head. “So many things make sense now. No wonder you never created a spell on your own.” 
Harry seemed to be taken aback by that, his shoulder slumping. “I didn’t know I was supposed to.” 
“I guess a later start is better than no start at all,” Severus huffed. 
As soon as the implication landed on him, Harry beamed, “You’ll teach me?” 
“What exactly have I been doing for the past seven years and counting, Potter?” 
Harry raised his eyebrows in the best imitation of him he could do, “Berating me, insulting me, and somehow always finding a fault in everything I do?” 
“Excuses,” Severus waved him off, “Details of your incompetence do not interest me,” he smirked, which made Harry groan. 
“You’re so frustrating!” 
“Yes, I’ve been told. By many people, one of which was you.” 
He was having fun, the jerk. Harry threw the ladder at him. And then he moved into his lap to kiss him. 
 
danzanelfuoco: (Default)
HARRY POTTER 

Snarry
Squid 
 Game 4 - Un luogo che non è mai esistito - Drabble 200 parole 

It flashes before his eyes - not his life, Harry is not in danger, Snape doesn't have his wand raised against him, he doesn't even know he's here with Dumbledore in the Astronomy Tower. It flashes before his eyes - Harry in the dungeons, Harry clutching the Half-Blood Prince's book and pleading, Snape snarling and hissing and grudgingly giving in, touches that linger a tad too much, Harry blushing, his heart fluttering in his chest. Snape snatching his hand back, Harry nodding and looking away. There was something there, he knew, something in the way he waited for the class to fill out to give Snape his essay,  something in the way he kept clinging to the man, asking for help in his potions. Something in the way Snape allowed him to stay. 

Snape raises his wand and Harry can't move in the spell Dumbledore has cast on him. Snape raises his wand, and "Please, Severus," says the Headmaster, and "Avada Kedavra," says Snape.   

It flashes before his eyes - but that has happened in a place that never existed, in a time they stole, minutes and hours that were never supposed to have happened in the first place. 


danzanelfuoco: (Default)
Harry Potter
Fem!Harry/Severus
SFW for this chapter, NSFW the whole story 
Cow- T, w4, m3 - Un’altra volta (Once more)
        - con un omaggio alle tabelle di Fabian! - 

Chap 1 here 

Chap 3 to come 

TW: pregnacy, brief discussion on abortion



At first, she doesn’t notice - she was never regular with her period, and starving herself in the forest might have made it completely go away, so it’s not a surprise when month after month she doesn’t need pads. She also puts up some weight, despite the risible amount of food that she manages to consume, and as of lately, she can’t even keep half of it down. She must have caught a bug, she tells herself as she throws up and Hermione doesn’t suspect a thing, not at first. 

Weeks pass, and Harry doesn’t get better, no, she keeps throwing up and feeling weird, and maybe she was cursed, that could have happened, couldn’t it? 

Hermione waits for Ron to take the first watch outside the tend to corner her. Harriet should have put two and two together sooner, but it’s fitting that it should be Hermione to bring out the topic. 

“I think you need your hair cut,” she approaches her, “they’ve grown a little.” 

It’s true, the mass of hair on her head has grown into unruly locks, that won’t stay in place despite the length. She thought making them grow to her shoulder would make them heavier, easier to tame, but that never happened so she lets Hermione wet her hair and take the scissors. 

She cuts in silence for a while, trying to find the best way to approach the topic. 

“I wanted to ask you...” Hermione tries to sound nonchalant, but Harriet knows immediately there’s something else, “Did something happen when we weren’t there?” 

“What do you mean?”

“Did you... meet someone?” 

Harriet feels the blood drain from her face - how does she know, what gave them away? - and then licks her dry lips. “No,” she lies, “Why are you asking?” 

Hermione puts the scissors down. 

“You can tell me the truth, whatever happened, I can help you...” 

Harriet looks at her as a deer in the headlight - more like a doe, actually. She can’t tell her - she can’t - but Hermione is a bloodhound and when she has smelled something she never lets go. 

“I don’t know what happened to you when we were gone. We should have never left you. I should have never left you, Ron be damned,” she looks pained as she speaks, tears welling in her eyes, “What I’m saying is, I know we’re not the kind of girl friends who talk all the time about boys and the likes, but if you met someone...” 

 “No,” Harriet denies, closing her out. This is her secret to keep. 

Hermione covers her eyes with a hand, massaging her temples in a tired gesture. She looks like she’s carrying the weight of the world on her shoulder. “Harry, did they do something to you?” 

“They?” Harriet asks 

 “I don’t know. He, they. You can hold off against one, maybe even more... I know you must have had sex with someone but you’re denying it. If you’re feeling ashamed... There’s nothing you have to feel ashamed about. We left you, a girl, alone, in the woods. If someone found you if they forced you...”

“No!” Harriet interrupts her, realizing where she’s going, “No, Hermione, it was... it was consensual.” 

 “Oh,” Hermione breathes, “Oh, thank god, Harriet. I was so worried. I was thinking... and I could never forgive myself if anything...”

“It’s not... It’s ok, Hermione. It was just... he was here. It happened.” She’s about to ask her how she knew then when Hermione asks another question. 

“Then, Harry, if I can ask... Who’s he? Who’s the father?” 

Harriet feels struck. The father? And then it clicks, it downs on her that she’s pregnant. It’s not that she doesn’t know how babies are made, or that there are steps to prevent it and they didn’t think about taking them, or what the symptoms of pregnancy are and that she had been having all of them. She just never put all that together.  

Because she never thought... she never thought it would happen to her. She was the least sexual being in the school, she never had a boyfriend before, never had a crush - not a real one, because Cedric Diggory didn’t qualify past ‘cute’ - and now she has had sex and yes this is something that can very much happen, and when had something that could happen not happened to her? 

She should have seen this coming from a mile away. 

“Harry?” 

“I’m not - I prefer not saying.” 

“You do know who is the father, right?” 

Harriet almost chokes, “Merlin, Hermione! Yes, of course, I do!” She shakes her head, “I haven’t slept with a bunch of people! I know who he is!” 

Hermione raises her hand in surrender. “There wouldn’t have been anything wrong if you didn’t.”

“But I do.” 

 “And you won’t tell me.” 

“No,” she shakes her head, “It wouldn’t change anything.” But it’s a lie. It would change everything.  


-


They have to tell Ron, they resolve. He might not realize what is happening, but he has noticed something is happening.  

“You had time to have sex when we were gone?” Ron asks, tactless as always. 

Harriet doesn’t fight him, only because she needs to throw up. She doesn’t know if it’s because of the pregnancy or because he’s making her nauseous. She was alone, she was scared, she had the weight of the world put on her shoulders - please, forgive her for looking for a little comfort in the only person who could actually understand what she was going through. 

“Maybe if you all hadn’t been gone for weeks,” she bites back, after wiping her mouth, and Ron flushes. 

 “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean...” 

Hermione stares at him, “It doesn’t matter how you meant it, only how it sounded.” If looks could kill, Ron would already be a pile of ashes on the floor. 

 “No, it’s just that... Well, a forest isn’t exactly full of places to hang out and meet people!” 

“It happened, okay?!” Harry snaps before Hermione can retort, “It happened. I didn’t exactly sign up for a child.” 

Ron doesn’t comment further. Hermione wrings her hands. 

“Harry...” she bites her lips, “Do you... do you want to keep it?” 

Harriet looks at her, really looks at her, a question she hadn’t dared to ask herself. “I don’t know.” 

It’s not as if she can waltz in a clinic right now, and maybe there’s a potion, some herbs that Hermione can pull out of her purse, but the thing is... Harriet doesn’t know. 

It’s Snape’s child. Snape’s for fuck sake.

She doesn’t have a clue where to begin untangling this mess - should she tell him, see what he wants to do? Should she keep it, get rid of it? Should she hope the matter will resolve itself? 

The only thing she knows it’s that she can’t let Voldemort win, she can’t stall and postpone for a child she’s not even sure she wants to keep. For a child she will likely leave orphaned anyway. 

Maybe she doesn’t have a maternal instinct, maybe she would be a horrible mother, maybe Lily, who sacrificed her life for her daughter, is turning in her grave at the thought of Harriet going on with the war.  

But she’s not even sure there’s something she could do to bow out of this, even temporarily, even for six months. This is her life, now, and it would be easier, without a child growing inside her. She already has too much to think about even without another being depending on her. 

She still can’t bring herself to tell Hermione to get her the herbs. 


-


Harriet tries to look for him. 

You need to come to me when you’ve completed your mission, he had told her and she hasn’t, but she’s here and maybe they won’t have another chance, so she tries, she asks subtly, but her friends are confined in the Requirement Room and they don’t know anything about him - they don’t even want to know - and she doesn’t want to tip off Hermione.  

The lump of her stomach is still small at her fourth month, hidden under her robes. Nobody notices but Hermione’s not stupid.

Besides, she’s not here for him. She lets Luna guide her to Ravenclaw’s tower, leaving the others behind. She hopes she will stumble upon him, but they meet the Carrows and then they meet Professor McGonagall and Harriet doesn’t ask about him, hoping he’ll come to her now that the Carrows have told Voldemort they have her. Harriet focuses on the diadem, on getting the rest of the students safely out of the school now that a battle is going to happen.

If she had warned McGonagall if she had told her she needed to talk to Snape... 

But Harriet doesn’t, and then Snape is there, “Have you seen Harriet Potter, Minerva? Because if you have. I must insist---” and Harriet feels her chest warm, her heart beating faster. She wants to throw away her invisibility Cloak and run into his arms and kiss him and tell him, be damned who might hear. 

But then McGonagall protects her, Flitwick and Sprout come to her help, and they curse Severus, they fight him because they don’t know he’s on their side and Harriet can’t do anything to stop them, too busy protecting herself and Luna from flying spells, and then Severus is gone, flying the Castle without even knowing Harriet was there, so close. 

When she sees him again he’s bleeding on the floor of the Shrieking Shack and she runs to him. There are tears falling from her eyes because he’s dying and there must be something she can do, there must be... 

But there isn’t. 

Severus dies looking into her eyes and later, when she has seen his memories, she knows he was looking at her, not at her mother. 

It doesn’t matter that he died not knowing they were going to have a child. None of them is going to be alive by the end of the day for it to matter and Harriet goes to face Voldemort, knowing she’ll have to die. They both will.  

But she wins, and she has the child. 

It’s a boy, wailing and healthy, even if a little bit too small for his age, but that had to be expected considering she had been malnourished for the first part of her pregnancy. She calls him Albus Severus Potter and she brings him to his father's grave. 

Eyebrows are raised and words muttered - but only when Harriet can’t hear them, because she’ll go feral if only someone dares imply that Severus had been something different from the hero she knows he was. Nobody ever questions her, nobody even has doubts about the paternity, not when she has given the boy that second name, not when he grows up and they all can see it in the curve of his chin, in the shape of his nose. In the beating of his heart. 



* * * 



Albus Severus Potter travels through time for the first time when he’s thirteen. He knows he’s the same age his mother was when Hermione Granger put a Time turner around her neck and went back hours to save her godfather. Albus knows because Harriet told him, her adventures whispered as if they were fairy tales at Albus’ bedside, to put him to sleep. 

So Albus grows, with a thirst for adventures and a longing for a family. He listens to his mother telling him about his father - the bravest man she’s ever known - and he dreams of getting in trouble sneaking through Hogwarts’ secret passages. 

Honestly, Harriet should have seen it coming. 

So when he’s thirteen - thirteen and sneaking into the section of the Black Library his mother locked, thirteen and already knowing what he’s doing with his charms - Albus finds the book. 

It’s old and ancient, leather cover and discolored pages, sepia ink on yellowed parchment - but the instructions are clear, and the rituals are explained in detail. There are margin notes, explaining what went wrong and how to right the mistake of the wizards that previously used them. 

Albus hides the book under his shirt and runs to his room before his mother could find him out. 

 He reads through the night, a solitary candle in Grimmauld Place. And then he frets and prepares and double checks and never tells his mother any of his plans because if he has learned something is that for how reckless Harriet Potter had been in her youth, she’ll never let him do something so dangerous. 

But Albus - a little reckless himself, a lot arrogant - is good. 

He’s a brilliant student - brilliant enough to study from his father’s books, to get the mechanics behind spells and potions and runes enough that at twelve he had already started doing his own experimentations, botched as they were. 

And Albus is also smart - he doesn’t rush into the ritual without thinking it twice. No, he lulls and cradles his book for months, studying it in every minute of his free time. 

When he returns to Hogwarts after the Christmas holidays, he takes the book - spells it to look like something completely innocuous, and reads it in the Great Hall. 

Teddy laughs at him, “They should have put you in Ravenclaw,” he tells him when he sees him at lunch, hunched over the tome. Teddy, bright laugh, brown hairs, the only Hufflepuff that ever dared sit at the Slytherin table. 

Albus raises his eyes from the book just for him. “I’m trying to do something.” 

His conspiratorial tone puts a glint in Teddy’s eyes, that shift from green to a deep golden yellow, almost lit. “What?” 

“It’s a little too soon,” Albus shakes his head, “But I’ll let you know.” 

“Should I help with some research?” 

“What do you know about time travel?” 

“Not much,” Teddy tells him with a grin, “Not yet.” 


-


Albus Severus Potter travels through time for the first time when he’s thirteen. He’s not alone. 


-


The ritual should bring them to the past and then back to the future in a matter of two hours. Albus is confident enough that if he tampers with the runes a little he might be able to change the time frame, bypassing it completely. 

Teddy is not convinced. “We don’t know enough. What if we get stuck in the past and can’t reverse the spell? What if the time frame misfires and we end up fourteen centuries in the past instead of fourteen years.” 

“Where is your sense of adventure?” 

“We’re not Gryffindors,” Teddy shakes his head. 

“That’s why we’re experimenting,” Albus tuts, hiding the fact that he’s just as scared as Teddy is. “First we try the ritual, see if it works. We go back a couple of hours, that way if we get stuck it won’t be that bad. Then we start modifying the parameters.” 

Teddy knows it’s risky, he knows they could end up dead, or stranded somewhere, or who knows what other awful scenario his mind has not yet had time to conjure. But Albus is offering the chance to save their parents, to get to know them, to get to have a family. 

Harriet Potter is the best godmother he could have hoped for, his grandma is amazing, and Teddy loves them both. But they’re not his parents and all the stories and the anecdotes cannot make up for not knowing them, having never been hugged or kissed on the forehead. 

So Teddy nods and Albus takes out a chart, dates, and hours meticulously written on a piece of parchment with Al’s fine calligraphy. 

“What’s this?” 

“You know I’m organized,” Albus grins, a little embarrassed. He had taken to write down schedules since, during his first year at Hogwarts, Aunt Hermione had shown him how she did her study plans when she was his age. It was love at first sight. 

“I should have known,” Teddy laughs at his friend, “So how long will it take us with all your experiments?” 

“If everything goes right and we have no setbacks...” Albus checks his planner as if he needs to, ”two years.” 


-


It takes them three years - accounting for the fifth-year debacle when they stopped talking to each other for two months, much to Harriet’s chagrin. The Accident That Should Never Be Mention Again involved a flying broom, a particularly well-written Transfiguration Essay, and a toad. And just as abruptly as it had started, it ended. With Teddy's scorched eyebrows and Albus raiding the kitchen for an impromptu picnic. 

(It is telling that neither of them felt confident to go on with experimentation alone - neither of them wanted to make progress without the other even while swearing to themselves they would never talk to the other again.) 

Three years later, a collection of runes embed in their arms - one for every travel they made 

(“What happens when we run out of space?” Teddy had asked, unsettled.

“I’m not sure I want to find out,” Albus had tried to swallow with a dry mouth. “We’ll get there when we have to. Should we try expanding the time limit to three hours now?” 

Teddy Had bitten his lower lip. “Might as well.”) 

- a good plan well written and prepared for all contingency they could think of, they are ready to perform the ritual for the last time. 


* * * 


2nd May 1998 

(Once more, with feeling)


“Have you seen Harriet Potter, Minerva? Because if you have. I must insist---” 

Professor McGonagall moves fast, her wand raising, a spell already in her mouth - but not fast enough. 

“Expelliarmus!” 

The wand in her hand flies, interrupting her spell, and disappears mid-air. 

Another spell, coming from nowhere, blocks the hallway before the other Heads of Houses can come and make this whole situation worse.

Snape, his wand half-drawn, hastily pulls it out of his robes and looks around to the invisible spot where the spell started. 

“Harriet?” He asks, his voice a whisper. 

“No,” a male voice answers, and then in front of him, getting out from under the Invisibility Cloak, there’s a boy. He looks like one of his students, he cannot be older than sixteen, tall and lanky with unruly curly black hair and grey eyes, and a pronounced nose that takes most of his face. Snape has never seen him in his life. “Not Harriet, but I’m here for you.” 

Wary, Snape doesn’t lower his wand. “For me?” Snape asks, not impressed. 

“Yes, you see...” The boy stuffs his cloak away, putting his and McGonagall’s wands back in his pocket. McGonagall observes him with a stern expression. “I’d very much like it if you didn’t die tonight.” 

The understatement of the year - of the decade? 

Snape scoffs at that, disguising his surprise “I appreciate the sentiment, but I fail to see why you would care. I don’t even know you.” 

“Not yet,” the boy smiles at him in an uncanny way, something that weirdly resembles him of Dumbledore if such a thing was possible, “I’m not sure how many details I should tell you,” the boy shrugs, “but I have something for you.” 

He slowly reaches down inside his pocket and then gets a few vials out. He offers them to him, and Snape takes them, getting closer to him without lowering his guard. 

Whoever this boy is, it might be a trap. 

“What is this?” Snape shifts his gaze to the potions. He vaguely recognizes them, standard practice for a seventh year, but the boy can’t be that old and besides, he considers as he uncorks the caps and sniffs them, they were changed. He can smell the variations, see them in the colors. Whoever made them knew what he was doing. 

“Blood replenisher, anti-venom... A little modified from the original recipe, but I read it in a book,” the boy tells him as if that should make any sense. Something clicks in his mind, but that’s not possible. His old books are all in his possession now, he made sure to get them all back since Harriet lost him his sixth year’s Advanced Potions the previous year. “I inherited it from my father,” the boy goes on, but Severus doesn’t deem that important. Not his books then. 

“These are really specific,” Snape closes the vials without drinking. 

“Yes, especially the anti-venom one, it was awful to brew. But well, I have privileged information about your... death.” 

“And it will happen tonight?” It’s not that Severus doesn’t know he’s risking his life, every minute that he spends deceiving the Dark Lord is another torture that would be added to his painful death if he were to be found out. It’s just that this boy it’s so convinced it will happen tonight of all times, that Snape has to ask more questions - he has, after all, had proof that Divination works on occasion. It doesn’t mean he has to look as if he believes him. “With poison?” 

“The guy, Voldemort, he has a snake, hasn’t he?” 

“The... guy?” Snape asks incredulously.  

McGonagall frowns, trying to put together the pieces because this boy isn’t scared of their enemy, he calls him by his name as Dumbledore and Potter did, and yet he is here to save Snape. 

The boy shrugs, uncaring, almost as if he weren’t that much of a problem.  

“You’re insane,” Snape shakes his head.  

“Probably,” Albus smiles, “I mean, I’m here, am I not?” He shakes his head - he hopes Teddy is doing better than him - and then goes on before Snape, too lost for words, can say something else, “Listen, this should only be a backup plan. Ideally, I wouldn’t want you to go to the Shrieking Shack when Voldemort calls you there, because... well, because then you die.” 

At that, Snape chuckles, bitter, “I can’t exactly disappoint my master’s order, boy.” 

The boy waves his hand, “Yes, yes, such a loyal follower,” he rolls his eyes and Snape feels a chill growing straight in his spine. This boy knows his true allegiance, this boy knows it and he’s talking about it in front of McGonagall as if this weren’t that much of a secret, as if his life and the result of the war didn’t depend on it. “Just. Don’t go,” he reiterates, “I know you think you can convince him to let you go looking for my... for Harriet, but...” Snape registers he wasn’t about to say her name but he has corrected himself and then wonders how exactly the boy knows all these things. The certainty with which he speaks it’s too much for him relaying on mere divination, even if he were a Seer. 

And yet all of it is true because it’s true, he knows Harriet is at Hogwarts, he knows the Dark Lord is coming and he has to talk to her, he has to tell her what needs to be done. He hates that, but he has to, and if the boy is right, if he dies tonight, then he’s running out of time.  

Snape’s head starts to hurt. 

“But maybe I can help you with that,” the boy goes on, oblivious, “Well, this is a little more public than I had hoped for,” he adds, looking at McGonagall. 

She scoffs, “If you think I’m leaving...” There’s nothing she can do if Snape bids her go, not without her wand, but that doesn’t mean she won’t protest. 

“Whatever,” the boy says to her, then turns to Snape again, “Well, I know what you have to tell her.”

“You do?” Snape sneers, trying to not show the waves of panic rolling down his spine. 

“Yes, I do,” the boy replies, forcefully, “And you might as well tell her now since she’s here.” 

Snape freezes on the spot, and McGonagall clenches her fists, regretting the loss of her wand. She knew he was not on their side - he was trying to save Snape’s life - but this feels like a betrayal. 

“Is it true?” Snape asks. 

“Unless I’ve blocked her on the other side of the hallway she should be here,” the boy looks around, shifting over the spot where Harriet and Luna are crouching, hidden by the Invisibility Cloak. 

Harriet looks at him, tightening the grip on her wand. There’s something familiar in those eyes, something that in the end, makes her decide to get in the open. She has to talk with Severus, after all. 

“Do I know you?” She asks as she steps out, leaving Luna hidden, not willing to put her in danger. 

She hears Snape’s short intake of breath, McGonagall’s whine, but she doesn’t take her eyes off the stranger. 

The boy’s face lightens up, as he turns to her, “Ah, yes! Yes, you know me. Well, you will.” 

She looks at him attentively. He doesn’t make sense, and yet he feels so familiar. The way he moves, his features, it’s almost as if he was right but not quite, as if she's expecting to see something in him, something that isn’t there. 

“How will I know you? When?” She asks, mesmerized, and the boy bites his lips and then looks at her, pointedly, moving his eyes from her face to her stomach, accompanying the gesture with a raising of his eyebrows to highlight the importance of his stare.  

Her hand runs to cover the bulge in her belly, shock running through her because nobody knows, and he’s implying... 

“In five months, give or take,” he smiles at her.  

“But that’s -” Impossible.

“Magic?” the boy smiles, “I heard you can do a lot of things with that.” 

Harriet covers her mouth with a hand, tears welling in her eyes. “The Time Turners have all been destroyed, the limit is eight hours...” she tries to be rational, to put up counterarguments, but deep down she knows. 

Her son. 

He’s her son - she’ll have a boy - and he’s here, alive and well, and here. In the past. Because - 

“You’re here to save his life.” She doesn’t need to ask, he told them as much. His father, who dies in the war. 

Harriet looks up at Severus, trying to contain her tears, then she throws herself at her boy, her beautiful and amazing son that traveled through time to change their future. To have a family. 

She knows what it feels like, what she would have given to have her parents back, the lengths she would go to. “I’m sorry,” she tells him, as she presses him against her body, “I’m so sorry.” 

“There’s nothing...” He tries, because it’s not his mother's fault how he grow up, there’s nothing wrong with his life, there’s nothing she could have done differently that could have turned out better. 

“I know,” she tells him, “I’m sorry anyway.” 

She looks at Severus over her child’s shoulder, and he doesn’t meet her gaze. He’s looking away, his jaw set. 

“Give me just a moment, Albus,” she whispers against his hair as she places a kiss against his temple, and he smiles at his name, because of course she already had chosen a name, even if she weren’t sure to keep him. 

It’s actually difficult for her to part from him - from the living proof of what’s going to become the child that she carries. It doesn’t matter that at the moment he’s maybe a couple of years younger than her, that she isn’t yet the mother he knows - that she will never be if he has his way and changes the timeline. 

Severus refuses to meet her eyes. “He’s someone we can trust, I assume,” he says, his wand still in his hand. 

“Yes, we can,” she smiles at him, placing a hand on his forearm to get his attention, “Severus, there’s something we should talk about.” 

“This seems hardly the moment,” Severus tells her, trying to take a step back. She follows him, without letting him go. 

“I don’t think there will ever be a better one.” 

He shakes his head, “Harriet, whatever you need to tell me... I don’t really think it’s something that concerns me.” He looks at her then, scolding his face into blankness, and Harriet wants to scoff and roll her eyes, wanting to kiss him stupidly. The idiot. 

“Oh, trust me, it does,” she levels her gaze at him, squeezing his arm, “You should shut up and listen, before you say, again, something you will regret.” 

Snape winces at her reminder of just last time his judgment had been clouded by his emotions and he had hurt her. He doesn’t lower her gaze, daring her to continue, to say something he isn’t expecting her to say. 

She does. 

Your son has just traveled fifteen years in the past to save your life,” Harry tells him, carefully choosing every word and delivering with a meaningful force. 

It doesn’t register, not at first. Of course, it doesn’t, Harriet and Albus have just had a half-verbal conversation based on the assumption that both of them knew what was going on. Snape, on the other hand, is oblivious, doesn’t know she’s pregnant, couldn’t gather it from a half-gesture and some soft-spoken words. 

“My...?” His voice cracks, as he tries to speak. He doesn’t have a son, it’s the first thing his brain supplies. Not yet, is the second. But that would mean... 

“Are you...?” He can’t even finish the sentence. He searches her eyes for a confirmation, half expecting her to burst out laughing and tell him it’s a prank - a sick joke like the ones her father used to pull on him, a cruel mocking. 

But Harriet is deadly serious when she nods. 

Her hand, the one that’s not gripping tight Severus’ arm, raises to her belly, fully completing the gesture and Severus looks at her and swallows. There are so many ways this could go, and Severus was right, this wasn’t exactly the best moment, not with Voldemort on his way and a war to fight, but this is the only time they have and Harriet needs to know if he would want him, their son. Albus. She’s not as naive as to think that one night could make them a family, but there had been something between them, and maybe they could start from there. 

“What’s the meaning of all this?” Professor McGonagall growls because she too didn’t have all the pieces to put together what Harriet and the boy were talking about, but she’s not stupid, and the picture they’re panting is that Severus Snape, teacher of her school, - traitor - has slept with one of his students. And it simply can’t be. It can’t be, because then she’ll be forced to wonder if it has happened other times - she knows what the school has become, she tries to help the children but she’s seen the punishments, the tortures, and if she has to wonder about this too, about what could have happened every time there was detention... That way lies madness. “Severus,” she asks of him, menacing, “I need an explanation.” 

Severus straightens his spine, ready to fight back because this - that night, this child - he’s not going to regret it. Of all the morally wrong things that he has done, he won’t allow her to have this, to sullen and spoil something precious to him. He feels Harriet tightening the grip on his arm, steeling herself - she’s no longer a student and she’s very much capable of making her own decisions without needing to defend them. 

“Oh, they’re going to have a baby, Professor!” 

Truth be told they all had forgotten Luna was there - Snape hadn’t known it in the first place, and Albus vaguely remembers her mother telling him once or twice that Luna was there with her at the time, the main focus of the story being her regret for not speaking with Severus when she had the chance. But Harriet... oh, Harriet completely forgot about her. 

Professor McGonagall, just as startled, turns. “What?” 

“That’s true, isn’t it?” Luna asks, tilting her head with a curious glance, “That’s what you are talking about. You’re having a baby and that’s him. Or it will be him” she pointed to the boy, still, in the middle of the tableau. “What’s your name?” 

The boy fidgets, then deciding he can’t do worst for the timeline than jumping into it to screw it and completely change it, he answers. “Albus.” 

Professor McGonagall chokes down a noise, something that could be a sob or a cough. 

“The complete name is Albus Severus Potter, even though, me being here, I was hoping to change it.” 

“That’s a really pretty name,” Luna beams at him and Harriet is smiling, bright and proud, and Severus... Severus looks stunned. 

“You give him my name,” he whispers, so low Harriet barely ears him. She knows she would, if Severus were to die tonight, she would. 

“I won’t,” she tells him, “You won’t die and I won’t give him your name.” 

He looks at her. It was just one night - they were desperate, they were searching for comfort in each other. He couldn’t hope - couldn’t want something more. Could he

He looks at her - she’s young, she’s innocent. He was her first and he wouldn’t trap her, wouldn’t force her into a relationship, to something so close to what his mother had. He’s too old, too broken. 

He looks at her, at her resolution. She’s fierce and determined and she told him - she’s not a child. She can make her own decisions. 

“Are you sure?” He asks of her, because he needs to know she’s not doing this because she thinks that’s what she should, but because that’s what she wants. 

She falters then, her eyes turning to doubt, “If you don’t -”

“That’s not what I said,” he interrupts her. “I asked you if you were sure.”  

“Then yes,” Harriet nods, convinced, “I am sure.” 

They share a look then. There’s longing and desire, something that neither of them would have thought possible, but he knows the smell of the curve of her neck and she knows the pressure of his fingers on the skin of her back and somehow what should have never happened - what was so absurd and impossible - that is what they want again. 

“This is... insane!” Professor McGonagall shrieks. She feels as if she’s going mad. Maybe she already has. Severus Snape has killed Dumbledore; he’s a Death Eater - confirmed, not repented - loyal to Voldemort. She does the math, when would they have even met when Harriet was in hiding? Why wouldn’t he have captured he? Why would Harriet even entertain the idea of... her mind refuses to even bring up the idea... with Snape. 

And yet, she can see it, now that it has been pointed out to her, that the boy in front of her does have a resemblance with Harriet, and yes, with Severus too. And the way they look at each other... She might need to sit. As it is, the wall behind her has to be enough of a support, but she curses Albus - Dumbledore, not the child, and she feels like laughing for of course Harriet has named him so, and here he is, meddling as his namesake, even before his birth. But no, Minerva curses Albus Dumbledore because he could see it happen - if he were alive, Minerva would own him five galleons of lemon sherbets. 

“This is insane,” she says again, to herself this time, and she shakes her head, but she sounds resigned. What has her life been in the past year, if not insane? 

“Professor McGonagall, this isn’t really the moment to have a breakdown,” Albus tries, “Can I give you back your wand, without you hexing someone?” 

She passes a hand over her eyes, tired, “Yes, Mr. Potter,” she answers him, and when he hesitates, she goes on, “I promise I won’t use it against anyone of the present.” 

Albus gives her wand back, then, pressing it in the palm of her extended hand. “He was always on your side,” he tells her. It sounds like a justification. 

Professor McGonagall spares a glance in their direction. They’re being entirely appropriate, but there’s something in the way Severus looks at her, something in the way Harriet clutches his forearm, something that gives them away. 

“They look happy, don’t they?” Luna asks, quietly. 

 ‘Happy’ isn’t exactly the adjective anyone else would use. There’s a war raging on, and they are central pieces in it, both with a death sentence looming over their heads. No, ‘happy’ is not the right adjective. But it could be if they had the chance. 

Minerva allows the corner of her mouth to twitch upward, in a tiny grimace that might resemble a smile. “Yes, they do.” She doesn’t sound happy about it, but she’s not enraged anymore and Albus deflates. 

“Thank you, Professor.” 

She doesn’t know why this boy should care - but maybe he’ll know her, even if she doesn’t know him already. Maybe she’ll be his Professor, his head of House even. 

It’s not important, not right now. Harriet cries, her hand shooting to her forehead, as pain takes her, and Severus tries to steady her, but his Mark is burning through his forearm. 

“What’s happening?” Minerva asks, trying to assess the situation. Albus pales, his heart fluttering in his chest. It’s something to know that his mother could feel Voldemort’s emotions and that it wasn’t pleasant. It’s another whole thing witnessing how painful that connection was - watching and knowing there’s nothing he could do to alleviate her pain. 

“He’s angry,” Severus manages, through clenched teeth.  

“Yes,” Harriet pants, righting herself, “He already found out about the locket, now he knows about the cup, too. He’s on a rampage, I have to hurry up.” 

“You have to go,” Severus interrupts her, “Now. Before he comes here.” There’s something wrong with him, he’s frantic, a lilt of desperation in his voice. 

“What?! No!” Harriet shakes her head. “Severus, you know what I have to do, what I came here for. I still have to find-”

“Harriet, there’s no time for that. He’s coming here, he’s coming for you,” he takes her hands. 

“I know!” She tries to tell him, but he shakes his head. 

“You’re not listening. You need to go. You need to... hide. I can help you, throw them off. I’ll send him looking for you in another direction. There must be a place where you can lay low.”

She thinks she gets it, he wants her safe in her pregnancy - it’s what they did with her mother after all, hiding the whole family, letting the Potter have the child in relative peace, protected by a Fidelius. It’s not what Harriet wants for herself - she’s the only one who can stop this war, she can’t be secluded away. 

“I can’t lay low for five months!” she protests, “The war is going on!” Besides, she knows he won’t go with her. 

“Not just for five months,” he shakes his head, and that’s where she loses him. 

“Severus, you’re not making any sense.” 

“Oh, yes, he is,” Albus says, his voice distant as if he hadn’t thought at the fact that having a family, that knowing about his future son would make it so that Snape wouldn’t send Harriet to her death. It makes sense, in the stories his mother told him, that Severus would damn the rest of the world for the people he cared about. “But you’re also wrong. She has to do it.” 

“No,” Snape shakes his head, in denial, “No, I won’t let her...” 

Albus interrupts him, “In my timeline, you never knew. You died not knowing. And she did what she was supposed to do and we both ended up fine.” 

“How?” He asks, completely focused on his son. 

“What is it that I have to do?” Harriet asks, but she goes ignored. Albus knows that the less he alters the timeline, the easier it would be for his alternate future self to go back in time to keep the changes he’s making now and avoid a paradox. It’s better if it’s Severus the one that tells her, just as it was in the original timeline. 

“I don’t know the specifics, you... well, my mum didn’t exactly tell me the details, but it works fine, we both survive.” 

“What is it that I have to do,” Harriet asks again, demanding to know. 

Severus exchanges a glance with Albus, “Are you sure?” 

“I’m here,” Albus nods, “Which means I’m alive.” 

Then Severus turns to Harriet. “I-”

“Tell me!”  

“You have to die.” 

He tells her, and it quiets the room. 

“This makes no sense,” Professor McGonagall whispers. She doesn’t want to believe it. It’s not fair. It’s not how it’s supposed to go.

“You have to let Voldemort kill you,” Severus goes on. His jaw is clenched, his eyes unreadable. He looks like a man ready to be stricken down. 

“What?” Harriet ignores her, and asks Snape, trying to make sense of what he’s saying, “Why?” 

“The things you’re trying to destroy...” Severus looks away, collecting his thoughts, choosing his words, before looking back at her, “there’s one in your head. It got there when the killing curse rebounded on him.”

Her hand raises to her forehead, to the scar that connects her to Voldemort, to the physical evidence of the piece of his soul in her mind. It makes sense. 

“And if Voldemort kills me, if I let him do it...” 

“He kills that connection. I don’t know how you could survive it. I thought you would have to...” Severus has tears welling in his eyes. He looks up at the ceiling, willing them away. He’s a spy, for fuck’s sake, he has control. She places a hand over his forearm as if he was the one needing comfort. He scoffs at his weakness and squeezes her hand, “I can’t let you die, now,” he tells her, “I don’t know how you could even survive.” 

Harriet nods, dread still coiling in the pitch of her stomach. 

“How?” She turns to the only one with answers, “How does all this happen?” 

“I don’t know,” he shakes his head. “You just told me you died, and that you went to a place that looked like King’s Cross, and I was there and so was Voldemort’s fragment. You were offered a choice to move forward or to go back to the living, and you took me back with yourself. I don’t know why you have been offered that choice. You always told me it was the first time you saw me, the first time I felt real and you couldn’t leave me behind.”

Harriet smiles at him. She knows the feeling - this might not be a post-mortem hallucination, she might not be seeing his blooming soul in a mental train station, but she understands it. 

“Okay,” she says. She’s scared. Oh, of course, she is. 

“Wouldn’t you die?” Snape had asked her, “If it meant stopping the Dark Lord, keeping the people you care about alive, wouldn’t you sacrifice yourself?” 

She knows now why he had asked, why it had felt so significant when he had done it. 

“Yes”, she had replied, “Yes I would.” 

It hasn’t changed. She would do it, she would willingly sacrifice herself, walking the path of the lamb, if it meant stopping Voldemort, if it meant giving other people the chance to live, to defeat him. That her son is here to tell her that she survives this, that she comes back and she brings him with her, should only make her feel better. 

“Okay, I’ll - I’ll do it.” 

It’s definitive as any death sentence is, and just as sobering. 

Minerva closes her eyes, a pained expression on her face. Luna throws herself at her and hugs her. Severus looks like he’d prefer to kill himself instead. 

It doesn’t matter if she’ll come back, death is still death and nothing besides it is ever certain - Albus might be the living proof she’ll be back, but there’s still the chance that by changing the past as he’s doing he’ll change the future too. 

“In your timeline, what happened?” Severus asks. 

Because it hadn’t gotten past him that in the boy’s timeline, they had won. 

“What?” Albus shifts his attention to his father - his father, he allows himself to think, his father who is alive and breathing and who’ll continue to do so if Albus’s doing this right. 

“What originally happened in the timeline where you weren’t here, where I die.” 

Albus opens his mouth, hesitates. Then he tells him everything he knows, every little detail he remembers. 

Albus tells him what would have happened, tells him about him fleeing, about the school barricading, and Voldemort asking for Harriet. He tells him about the Shrieking Shack, about his mother holding him as he was dying and taking his memories. He falters as he talks, he can’t quite reconcile the man from his mother’s tales to the man standing in front of him, flesh and blood. The brave spy against the man with a sneer and an awful attitude. The smart boy from his school books, the teenager that would invent spells and modify potions in the margins, and the stern man looking at him with a calculating glint in his eyes. 

“Very well,” Severus nods, “Then I need to go. Keep this as close as possible to the timeline.”

“What?!” 

“No!” 

Harriet and Albus speak at the same time. 

“If I run, Minerva can still barricade the school.” 

 “You can barricade the school!” Harriet protests, “You’re the headmaster!” 

Severus shakes his head. “No. If I turn coat now, he’ll raze the walls down. I can be of more help if things go as planned. I can buy you time to destroy the diadem. I could even kill the snake. ” 

 “The snake gets killed anyway, and he won’t have 

“Yes, it does. Professor Longbottom killed it with Gryffindor’s sword!” 

“Professor -?” Snape grimaces, “You know what? This, I don’t want to know. But, Harriet, the less you change, the more of what you know will happen as you know it. I’m not risking you to save my life.” 

“You’re not dying tonight.” 

“Neither are you. Not permanently. And I have his Potions, I’m safe.” 

“You can’t be sure,” she shakes her head. “No offense, honey.” 

“We could,” Albus intervenes. “Take them now. If I disappear, it worked.”

“You disappear?” Harriet looks at him bewildered, almost scared. 

“It’s the paradox,” Albus says. “If I save you, then I have a father and future me won’t have a reason to go back in the past to save him. Which reminds me,” he searches for something in his pocket and takes out a scroll of parchment, “It’s best if you give my future self this. Instructions. You see, this way he can go back in time and know what to do even if for him it never happened, ensuring that for him it never happens. Also, so that we don’t destroy the timeline and possibly the universe.” 

Severus Severus looks stricken, Harriet twists her hands. 

“But you’ll disappear? You’ll... die?” 

Albus lets out a breathy sad laughter, “Well, that’s pretty philosophical, isn’t it? I’ll never have existed. Not this version of me, because my father never knew about my existence and now he does, because my mother never talked with him before his death and now here you two are because nobody knew of his true allegiance, and now other two people know,” he gestured toward McGonagall and Luna. “No, I won’t exist and so I will disappear. But an Albus already exists in this timeline and I am him.” 

Harriet looks about to cry

“You’d do that for me?” Severus asks, amazed. 

Albus shakes his head, “I’m doing this for myself,” he chuckles, “This is entirely selfish from my part,” from our part, because he hasn’t told them about Teddy, about doubling the possibilities that something might go wrong. He has written about Teddy in his letter because if one of them fails, they wanted the other to know and bring the other along to try again. 

“I choose this,” Albus goes on, “I choose this for myself. And it won’t be easy for the Albus to come either. I’m placing on his shoulders the weight of the timeline. But it’s worth it,” he tells them. “Now take the potions, dad.” 

Severus does something then, that nobody has ever seen him doing since he was a kid. He takes a step forward and hugs him. 

Albus is shocked still, the warm arms closed around his shoulders, the weight of the body solid against him. His father is hugging him. Albus feels the tears in his eyes, and he lets them go, raising his arm to hug him back, gripping the cloth of the back of his tunic with desperation. This is the first and last hug he’ll ever receive from his father. He hopes the Albus that will take his place won’t ever have to know what it means.  

“Thank you,” Severus whispers against his hair, his voice looks mere seconds from breaking. He won’t disrespect him by telling him he shouldn’t have done all this. It’s already done, and he won’t look ungrateful. “Know that if I had been alive in your time, I would have loved you just as much as I do now.” 

Albus sobs then, tears rolling down his cheeks and shoulders shaking. “I love you too, dad.” 

“I know,” Severus tells him, “you’re here.” 

They hug for what seems an eternity and still not enough. But they don’t have much time, so Albus clears his throat and disentangles himself, wiping away his tears. His eyes are red and puffy, and his smile is trembling, but he’s smiling nonetheless. 

“You should take the potions, now,” he tells him, and Severus finds he doesn’t have enough voice to reply. His eyes are glassy and red too. 

He looks at Harriet and she takes it as her clue to throw herself at her son, clutching him against her chest. She doesn’t have words either. 

That’s when Severus uncorks the first vial and takes it. Harriet grips Albus tighter, as the second potion follows and then a third. 

For a few seconds nothing happens, and then the consequences of his actions ripple through the timeline changing it, the future blurs and shifts. 

Albus shivers and then he starts to fade. 

His father will live.

He did it. 

He just hopes Teddy did too. 

 
danzanelfuoco: (Default)

Harry Potter/Good Omens
Harry Potter/Adam Young
COW-T#12, w6, m3: Credo proprio che diventeremo amici
 

E dunque, tu vuoi una storia. 

È buffo, nessuno mi ha mai chiesto una storia prima.
Di solito sono tutti molto più interessati a raccontarmi la loro, a cercare convincermi a non portarmi via la loro anima proprio adesso, perché hanno mille altre cosa da fare che non sono riusciti a fare prima del mio arrivo. 

Se non sono in ritardo li lascio parlare, sai? Ho sempre adorato le storie - capita, quando ti tocca di sorbirti sempre e solo il finale. Non che serva loro a qualcosa, se non a guadagnare una manciata di minuti in più che comunque passano con me. 

Però nessuno ha mai voluto che fossi io a raccontare…

E va bene, non garantisco sulle mie capacità di narratrice, ma conosco la storia che potrebbe fare al caso nostro.
Dopotutto, come ti dicevo, in millenni di esistenza ne ho conosciute di persone che hanno tentato di sfuggirmi, di esorcizzarmi, di imbrogliarmi o di corrompermi e nessuno di quei ciarlatani aspiranti immortali è mai riuscito ad ottenere niente di diverso dal normale e fisiologico svolgersi degli eventi. Io arrivo e loro vengono via con me. Sempre. 

Beh. Quasi sempre. 

Ci sono state due grandi eccezioni. 

Ed è questa la storia che vuoi sentire, non è vero? Ho catturato la tua attenzione. 

D’accordo, siediti. 

La prima persona di cui ti parlerò è Adam, perché Adam me lo aspettavo.

Cioè, non mi aspettavo proprio Adam, ma sapevo che qualcuno come lui prima o poi sarebbe arrivato. In fondo l’Apocalisse era già nella prima bozza del contratto di lavoro, prima che negoziassi le ferie, per cui sapevo che prima o poi sarebbe arrivato l’Anticristo a guidarmi in battaglia insieme agli altri Cavalieri e alla fine sarei potuta andare in pensione, proprio come Pestilenza. 

Ovviamente siamo qui a parlarne e il mondo sta ancora girando attorno al proprio asse per cui avrai capito che l’Apocalisse non c’è stato, ma questo dovresti saperlo già. E poi non voglio davvero raccontarti, di come un bambino di undici anni abbia deciso che alla fin fine il Giudizio Universale non fosse l’opzione migliore per il genere umano. Non è così divertente, fidati, io c’ero. È stato tutto un gran girare a destra e a manca per tutto il mondo per poi essere congedati senza nemmeno un ‘grazie per l’attenzione, ma non servite’. Mettiti nei suoi panni, quale undicenne sceglierebbe l’Apocalisse con la terra che si spacca e i fiumi di sangue piuttosto che andare a prendere un gelato con i suoi amici? Non per parlare male di nessuno, ma chiunque avesse pianificato la cosa non aveva pensato davvero bene a cosa stesse facendo. 

Oh, ma sto divagando. Dicevamo? 

Ah sì! 

Parliamo di Adam. 

 “Pronto?” 

“Adam!” 

“Sì?” 

“Dovresti venire qui. Subito!” 

“Ma chi è?” 

“Adam! Sono Anathema! Sophia è finita su un albero e non riesco a farla scendere!”
“Anathema? Ma che ore sono?” 

“Le sette e mezza, non fare il brontolone, non è così presto! Solo che non vuole scendere e io devo andare a lavoro. Ti prego!” 

“Anathema, non puoi chiamarmi tutte le volte che tua figlia fa qualcosa di paranormale…” 

“Adam! Sono le sette e mezza, sono in ritardo su tutte le tabelle di marcia possibili, Newt non è qui ad aiutarmi e tu sei l’unico che la può far volare giù da quel ramo se non decide di scendere spontaneamente. Non farmi giocare la carta del ‘chi ti ha aiutato quando pensavi di doverti far internare in manicomio’, ok?” 

“Va bene, va bene, sto arrivando. Ma, Anathema?”
“Sì?”

“Tua figlia sarà pure quella con i poteri magici, ma la vera strega sei tu.” 

“Oh, Adam, sei sempre un adulatore.” 

 

- - - 

 

La storia del manicomio è parecchio buffa. 

No, in realtà, non è affatto buffa. Allora era stato piuttosto un incubo e anche adesso a ricordare i fatti non è che ci sia tanto da ridere, ma lo humor e l’ironia a volte sono i modi migliori per affrontare un trauma, così Adam riesce a parlarne anche casualmente in qualsiasi conversazione, quasi non fosse stato in lacrime e sull’orlo di un tracollo nervoso quando si era presentato alla porta della strega del villaggio a sedici anni.
Con Anathema fino ad allora aveva sempre e parlato solo occasionalmente, incontrandola per la strada. Per qualche motivo lei sembrava averlo preso in simpatia - nonostante lui non ricordasse di aver scambiato che qualche chiacchiera con lei sulle streghe e l’inquisizione la prima volta che si erano conosciuti - e si interessava sempre abbastanza da chiedergli come andasse la scuola, cosa facesse di bello o come stessero i suoi amici. 

Si era sentito un po’ a disagio nel suonare il campanello. Come si chiede a qualcuno quanto di vero c’è nella sua filosofia di vita e se potrebbe essere coinvolto anche lui nella stregoneria, perché altrimenti l’alternativa sarebbe dover andare da un dottore di quelli bravi? 

Alla porta aveva risposto Newt e Adam era già stato pronto a voltare i tacchi e andarsene quando la strega era comparsa alle spalle del marito e lo aveva praticamente trascinato in casa, al grido di “sciocchezze, Adam, non disturbi! Vieni pure! Cosa succede?” 

Adam aveva deciso che avrebbe bevuto il tè che gli veniva offerto - perché una bella tazza di tè bollente è la soluzione ad ogni cosa -, avrebbero scambiato i convenevoli di rito, negando di avere un qualsiasi problema e sarebbe tornato a casa. 

Invece Anathema non aveva fatto domanda, piazzandogli davanti una tazza fumante di quella che lei chiamava ‘la sua Pozione Calmante, ricetta della buona e cara Agnes Nutter, strega’ con tanto di occhiolino coordinato. 

Adam non sapeva quale intruglio di erbe Anathema ci avesse gettato dentro, ma aveva cominciato a percepirne gli effetti quasi immediatamente e, senza nemmeno accorgersene, aveva cominciato a blaterare. 

 

* * * 

 

Adam aveva sempre saputo che c’era qualcosa che non andava in lui, qualcosa che lo rendeva speciale a prescindere dai complimenti di sua madre, - che si sa, ogni figlio è un piccolo fiocco di neve speciale per i propri genitori -, ma la conferma l’aveva avuta ad undici anni. 

Oh, beh, dopotutto, undici anni è il momento perfetto per le grandi rivelazioni, vedrai. 

In ogni caso, Adam sapeva che non tutti potevano muovere gli oggetti solo pensandolo o cambiare il tempo perché splendesse sempre il sole, ma non aveva idea di che cosa significasse, non fino a quando non aveva fermato l’Apocalisse. 

Sempre che fosse accaduto davvero. 

Sì, perché una parte del suo cervello lo dava per scontato - ‘certo che accadono cose strane vicino a te, è nel tuo corredo genetico’-, mentre l’ altra parte ignorava bellamente la cosa e si stupiva puntualmente quando accadeva qualcosa di fuori dall’ordinario. 

Le due parti avevano convissuto in armonia per buona parte del tempo, specialmente nel periodo subito successivo al mancato Apocalisse. Potevano passare anche intere settimane senza che Adam dovesse ricordare di non essere completamente umano. C’erano giorni in cui non gli sembrava che un sogno e per un po’ aveva persino creduto di essersi immaginato tutto. 

Con il passare del tempo però avevano cominciato a comparire delle crepe nel perfetto muro di contenimento che gli permetteva di rimanere sano di mente. 

C’erano cose che non quadravano e diventava sempre più difficile ignorarle. 

I suoi amici avevano… beh, non dimenticato, non proprio. Se Adam glielo avesse chiesto sarebbero stati in grado di dirgli a grandi linee che cosa era successo, ma non tutto e non esattamente e non sempre. I dettagli erano confusi e sfumati, così intrecciati con il normale tessuto della realtà circostante da non preservare traccia di magia o sovrannaturale, spesso richiamati a fatica dalle profondità dell’oblio delle loro menti, a volte contraddittori, ma sempre a formare un quadro incompleto. Sembrava quasi che non fossero in grado di ricordare, come i losers di IT che avevano perso la memoria di Derry una volta che se ne erano andati. 

Solo che i suoi amici non se ne erano andati affatto. E Adam sapeva che, a tredici anni, non avrebbe dovuto leggerlo quel libro dell’orrore - Mr Phele glielo aveva ripetuto più volte, che non era adatto -, ma a volte provava quell’impulso di ribellione dalle figure autorevoli che faceva tanto storcere il naso al suo giardiniere e gli faceva mormorare un ‘tutto suo padre’ anche se non aveva senso perché suo padre non si era mai ribellato neanche quando il suo capo gli aveva imposto gli straordinari la vigilia di natale. 

Ma quella era solamente la punta dell’iceberg, perché nemmeno la presenza di Mr Phele era logica. Non aveva senso che, vista la piccola casetta in cui vivevano, loro avessero bisogno - o anche solo si potessero permettere - un giardiniere, né che quello si fosse presentato a lavorare da un giorno all’altro e i suoi genitori lo avessero accettato senza battere ciglio, proprio come non avevano fatto domande per la comparsa di Dog. 

Per non parlare della tata, Miss Crow, che era comparsa da un giorno all’altro come Mary Poppins, portata dal vento, quando sua madre era stata sufficiente per i precedenti undici anni, con giusto un’aiuto nei weekend, quando chiamava una studentessa delle superiori perché lo tenesse d’occhio mentre lei e suo padre andavano al cinema. 

Non. Aveva. Senso.
Non aveva senso perché quando aveva incontrato la sua precedente babysitter, ora studentessa universitaria, e le aveva chiesto come mai avesse smesso di occuparsi di lui lei gli aveva detto che era stato perché voleva concentrarsi sugli studi ora che avrebbero occupato buona parte del suo tempo. Solo che tre giorni dopo lo aveva fermato per strada, con un sorriso e un “è tanto tempo che non ci vediamo, Adam! Che peccato che poi tua madre non abbia più avuto bisogno di una babysitter, vero? Ci divertivamo così tanto!” 

Così Adam aveva preso il suo mal di testa, il suo panico e la sua preventiva autodiagnosi di schizofrenia e aveva fatto l’unica cosa possibile. 

Andare dalle uniche due persone che, in tutto quel caos, sembravano essere rimaste sane. O almeno, non più pazze di quanto non lo fossero prima. 

 

* * * 

 

Anathema e Newt avevano ascoltato la sua storia senza interrompere, senza dargli del pazzo e soprattutto senza mettere su quell’espressione di compatimento da ‘povero caro’. 

Adam aveva finito di parlare, la gola secca, gli occhi lucidi e la tazza vuota. “Non ci capisco più nulla.” 

Anathema e Newt si erano scambiati un lungo sguardo che portava una conversazione ancora più lunga, poi Newt aveva sospirato e intrecciando le mani sotto il mento si era chinato verso di lui. “Ok, così è come ce la ricordiamo noi.” 

E forse era perché entrambi erano coinvolti nella parte sovrannaturale dell’universo già da prima e il salto dalla stregoneria ai demoni, gli angeli e l’AntiCristo non era così grande da farli impazzire, ma Anathema e Newt avevano superato la storia dei ricordi confusi già dopo qualche settimana dal mancato Apocalisse. 

“Ricordati che ho vissuto tutta la mia vita seguendo e interpretando le previsioni di una donna morta secoli fa. Niente è abbastanza strano da fermarmi, neanche un paio di ricordi annebbiati,” Anathema aveva sorriso, posandogli una mano sulla spalla in conforto. 

La parte razionale di Adam era orripilata, voleva scappare e mettere più chilometri possibili tra quei due pazzi che avevano appena confermato che tutto quello che pensava di essersi inventato, in realtà, era accaduto. A un livello più profondo, Adam però aveva capito che il problema non erano le cose folli che gli accadevano in torno, ma le vestigia di incredulità che il suo cervello si ostinava a mettere in piedi anche contro l’evidenza. 

“Io - io - Oh, cielo. Io sono l’AntiCristo.” 

“Sì, Adam, penso che dovrai abituartici.” 

“Credo che andrò a vedere come sta Agnes,” aveva detto Newt. 

“Si chiama Sophia!” Anathema aveva rimbrottato, strappando un sorriso ad Adam, che, come tutto il resto del paese, era a conoscenza delle perenne diatriba sul nome della bambina, tra suo padre, che insisteva a chiamarla in un modo per onorare la memoria della strega che aveva profetizzato l’incontro con Anathema, e sua madre che invece non ne poteva più delle interferenze dell’antenata. (‘Sono un branco di pazzi,’ aveva detto l’impiegata dell’anagrafe dopo una settimana di tira e molla prendendo in mano la situazione e chiamando d’ufficio la bambina Agnes Sophia, “un branco di pazzi, povera bimba’.) 

Di quel passo la ‘povera bimba’, che già aveva tre anni, si sarebbe ritrovata con un disturbo della personalità.

“Sophia! Come la conoscenza, che avrà perché avrà l’occhio e questo dovrebbe già bastarci senza imporle il nome della mia bis-bis-bis-avola!” Anathema aveva incrociato le braccia al petto con uno sbuffo. 

Adam si era lasciato sfuggire una risata sollevata, la prima da quando aveva cominciato a pensare di star impazzendo e di dover essere rinchiuso in un manicomio. 

“Oh, e penso che dovresti andare a fare qualche domanda anche al tuo giardiniere e alla tua tata, visto che ci sei, penso che potrebbero darti una versione ancora più dettagliata di quello che è successo in realtà.”

Così Adam aveva ottenuto tutta la storia. 

 

 

Non mentirò - e perché dovrei - Adam non la prese benissimo, ma comunque meglio di quanto mi sarei aspettata. Ero lì ad osservarlo, sai? Io sono sempre con lui. Gli altri Cavalieri erano stati congedati, ma la morte è ovunque, in attesa, e dunque non avrei potuto allontanarmi da lui nemmeno se avessi voluto. 

Ero nell’ombra all’epoca, una mera presenza che aleggiava attorno a lui, una frazione dormiente della mia coscienza, se coscienza si può chiamare quello che sono. Ma quando divenne consapevole di cosa fosse, quando ogni piccola incongruenza poteva essere spiegata da quello che gli avevano confermato Anathema e Aziraphale e Crowley, non ci volle molto perché il ragazzo cominciasse a riconoscermi e a parlarmi. 

Ben presto mi ritrovai ad essere con lui, molto più di quanto ero nel mondo. E poi avvenne quello che avvenne. 

Già, è ora di parlare di Harry. Non avrai mica pensato che mi fossi scordata di lui? 

 

 

Harry aveva una particolarità già molto prima che accadesse quello che è accaduto. Forse era destino, scritto nelle stelle fin da prima della sua nascita, profetizzato da un’altra strega, non altrettanto prolifica di premonizioni quanto Agnes, ma comunque una Veggente notevole. 

In ogni caso, Harry Potter non moriva. 

Non che sfuggisse consapevolmente alla Morte, era soltanto un bambino di poco più di un anno la prima volta che quella avrebbe dovuto prenderlo con sé. E invece semplicemente tutte le condizioni che si sarebbe dovuto verificare perché lui morisse erano stato ritorte, e il bambino era sopravvissuto contro ogni logica. 

Era sopravvissuto e aveva continuato a sopravvivere negli anni nonostante maghi oscuri, basilischi e draghi si impegnassero a metterlo in situazioni dalle quali era logico non sarebbe potuto sopravvivere. E invece. 

Poteva sembrare una casualità, all’occhio meno esperto, fortuna sfacciata l’avrebbe chiamata qualcun altro. Ma poi Harry aveva riunito i Doni della Morte e no, il titolo di Padrone della Morte non era metaforico.

 

* * * 

 

Essere un Auror era stato divertente… più o meno per i primi dieci minuti. Forse sarebbe pure potuto piacergli come lavoro se solo lui non fosse stato Harry Potter, dannazione al suo nome. Un’Auror avrebbe dovuto essere discreto, non attirare l’attenzione delle masse, e il suo nome lo aveva reso il centro di diverse trappole piazzate dallo zoccolo duro dei seguaci di Voldemort che ancora non si rassegnavano della sua sconfitta. 

Quando si era deciso a consegnare le dimissioni era stato un sollievo sia per Harry che per il Ministero, che certo non si poteva permettere di licenziare l’eroe della seconda guerra magica. 

Non aveva saputo che fare, Harry della sua vita, ma poi Minerva - dannazione quanto gli faceva strano chiamarla in quel modo - gli aveva proposto la cattedra di Difesa COntro le Arti Oscure, che chi meglio di lui avrebbe potuto ricoprirla ed Harry, che aveva sempre considerato Hogwarts come la sua vera e unica casa, aveva accettato. 

Era ironico, perché se gli avessero chiesto ad undici anni cosa ne sarebbe stato del suo futuro, mai avrebbe potuto immaginare che sarebbe finito così: un accademico. E per di più un accademico che cercava di ampliare il suo campo di studi. 

Quando aveva detto ad Hermione che avrebbe voluto fare ricerca - e su cosa -, l’amica aveva sgranato gli occhi e si era portata una mano al petto, “Chi sei tu e che nei hai fatto di Harry Potter?” 

Sì, il resto della sua vita non era andata esattamente come si era aspettato, lui e il resto del mondo, perché in quel momento stringendo al petto il tomo dalle fragili pagine scritte in una lingua che probabilmente aveva la stessa età della sua improbabile aiutante, si era sentito stranamente realizzato. 

“L’ho trovato!” 

“FINALMENTE. ORA POTREMMO TORNARE A CASA,” aveva detto la nera figura alle sue spalle, senza traccia di appropriato slancio nella voce. 

“Un po’ più di entusiasmo sarebbe gradito. Dopotutto questa scoperta è in gran parte merito tuo.” 

“E PER L’UMANITÀ, HIP HIP, HURRÀ.” 

“Non sei divertente.” 

“DIO NON VOGLIA. L’UMORISMO NON FA PARTE DEL CONTRATTO DI LAVORO. ACCOMPAGNARTI IN GIRO PER IL MONDO ALLA RICERCA DI UN TOMO SULLE ARTI OSCURE E COME COMBATTERLE SÌ PURTROPPO, MA ALMENO MI È ANCORA CONCESSO DI FARLO CON TUTTA LA VERVE DEL CASO.” 

“Risparmiami,” Harry aveva alzato gli occhi al cielo. 

“NON LO FACCIO FORSE TUTTI I GIORNI?” 

“Oh Merlino, per favore.” 

“LO SAI” disse la Morte, “SEI PARECCHIO NOIOSO PER ESSERE COSÌ POTENTE.” 

“Che ti aspettavi?” 

“PIANI DI CONQUISTA DEL MONDO, VENDETTE PERSONALI PORTATE A TERMINE,  UN ALTRO APOCALISSE… NON QUESTO.” 

Harry si era rifiutato di chiedere cosa intendesse la Morte per ‘altro’, perché no, aveva già troppi problemi, grazie,“Definisci questo.” 

“PASSARE TUTTO IL TUO TEMPO IN UNA BIBLIOTECA. HO PIÙ VITA SOCIALE IO E SONO LA MORTE.”

“Intanto questa è una cripta nel mezzo del nulla, protetta da pericolosi incantentesimi -”

“NON FARMI RIDERE, SEI IMMORTALE.”  

“E comunque non ho bisogno di una vita sociale, grazie. Ne ho già avuta abbastanza per bastarmi due vite.” 

“PECCATO. NE CONOSCO UN ALTRO DI TIPO COME TE -”

“Annoiato, dedito al lavoro e, soprattutto, immortale?”
“SÌ.” 

Harry si era voltato di scatto verso la figura nera, credendo che scherzasse, “Come scusa?”

“SAI, DOVREI PROPRIO PRESENTARTELO.” 

 

 

Mi piacerebbe prendermi il merito di averlo fatto davvero, sai, ma alla fin fine l’Universo ha lo strano senso dell’umorismo di far accadere quello che deve accadere a prescindere dalle circostante. Così quando li ho presentati ufficialmente, l’Anticristo e il Padrone della Morte, loro si conoscevano già, erano Adam e Harry. 

Quella prima volta non ero presente - e perché avrei dovuto? Il mio Padrone, l’Anticristo e due donne molto competenti (anche se allora Agnes Sophia aveva soltanto undici anni). Chi mai poteva morire lì, eh?
Ovviamente avevo altro di meglio da fare

 

- - - 

 

Anathema ha le braccia incrociate sul petto e un cipiglio scuro in volto che farebbe indietreggiare  Satana, “Sophia, scendi da quell’albero.” 

“No!” 

La bambina si aggrappa al ramo, dondola i piedi e le fa una linguaccia. 

Anathema è a tanto così dall’andarsene e lasciarla sull’albero, quando una voce alle sue spalle interrompe i suoi pensieri. 

“Mrs. Pulsifer?” 

Anathema ruota suoi tacchi e si ritrova davanti un ragazzo il cui aspetto nulla ha a che fare con l’aura che emana. È potente, lo percepisce, in un modo che forse aveva sentito soltanto quando Adam era un bambino, eppure ha l’aspetto di un innocuo bibliotecario

“Device, prego. Ho tenuto il mio cognome. Come posso aiutarla?”

“Mi scuso Mrs. Device. Sono Harry Potter e sono qui per sua figlia Agnes Sophia.” 

“Cosa ha combinato?” 

“Niente, assolutamente,” quello scuote la testa, “Tuttavia sono sicuro che si sia accorta anche lei che accadono cose strane intorno ad Agnes…” 

“Sophia,” lo corregge di riflesso Anathema, e poi inclina la testa, assottigliando gli occhi per studiarlo meglio, “Per caso lei è un angelo, un demone o qualcosa di vagamente legato al prossimo Apocalisse? Perché non ci interessa partecipare.”

“Io - veramente - io sono… Le sembrerà folle, ma io sono un mago, in realtà.” 

“Ah,” Anathema sospira, nemmeno un po’ impressionata, né scandalizzata. “Tutto qui?” 

“Vede,” Harry continua, già sollevato che la donna non abbia chiamato un manicomio, ma forse quella più pazza qui è lei, “sono un insegnate presso una prestigiosa scuola di magia ed è nostra convinzione che sua figlia sia una strega, quindi sono qui per offrirle-” 

“Certo che mia figlia è una strega,” Anathema lo interrompe, alzando gli occhi al cielo, “la prossima cosa che mi dirà qual è, che per fare il tè serve l’acqua calda?” 

Harry rimane spiazzato per l’ennesima volta. “D’accordo,” continua incerto, “di solito i Babbani non accettano così facilmente l’idea che la magia esista.” 

“Ho avuto streghe nella mia famiglia per generazioni, signor Potter,” Anathema pronuncia il suo nome senza particolare ammirazione, “Solo perché negli ultimi secoli siamo stati Maghinò con troppa poca magia per frequentare Hogwarts non significa che siamo diventati tutti idioti. Adesso, se vuole scusarmi, devo far scendere mia figlia dall’albero sul quale è volata, per lasciarla alla baby sitter.”

È in quel momento, mentre la bambina dondola i piedi da un ramo, Harry sta cercando di capire se la donna abbia accettato o meno di far frequentare alla figlia Hogwarts e Anathema sembra sul punto di esplodere, che lui arriva. 

“Anathema? C’è qualche problema?”

Anche se la domanda è rivolta all'amica, Adam non stacca gli occhi dallo sconosciuto come a saggiarne le intenzioni. 

Anathema che non è mai stata una damigella da salvare alza le mani al cielo, "Finalmente, Adam! Ce ne hai messo di tempo." 

"Beh, non sono a tua disposizione," il ragazzo si rilassa pensando che se Anathema ha tempo per preoccuparsi della sua puntualità quello sconosciuto magari sta solo cercando di salvare una bambina in una situazione apparentemente incresciosa. Adam si massaggia il ponte del naso sperando di non finire con un mal di testa. 

"Convincila tu a scendere, Adam, non so più che altro fare." 

"Non capisco perché pensi che dia più retta a me che a te, sei tu sua madre." 

"Ma tu sei lo zio preferito." 

In tutto questo Harry ha altre tre famiglie di Nati Babbani da visitare, nella speranza di non trovarsi con altre sorprese come questa. 

"Permette?" chiede dunque prima che il battibecco possa prolungarsi oltre. 

Adam lo osserva estrarre un bastoncino dalla tasca e muoverlo nell’aria in un ghirigoro strano e una parola in latino che non riconosce. 

Considerando tutto quello che sa del mondo e che le stranezze tendono a gravitargli attorno, non è poi così strano che il risultato sia che Agnes Sophia venga depositata ai piedi dell’albero senza nemmeno un graffio. 

“Oh, meno male,” Anathema sospira afferrando la figlia per la mano prima che possa decidere di tornare sull’albero. “Poteva farlo prima, ma grazie, signor Potter. Ora noi dobbiamo andare che siamo tremendamente in ritardo, ma ci risentiremo per la visita a Diagon Alley e i materiali scolastici, giusto?” 

Harry prova a rispondere ma Anathema sta già correndo via prima ancora di aver finito di parlare ed è troppo lontana per udire alcunché. 

“È riuscito a tirare giù Sophia dall’albero. Impressionante,” Adam si lascia scappare un sorriso, voltandosi per incontrare lo sguardo dello sconosciuto. “Lei è…?”
“Harry Potter, insegnante di Difesa contro le Arti Oscure presso la scuola di Magia e Stregoneria di Hogwarts.” 

Harry tende la mano. 

“Adam Young,” gliela stringe l’altro. 

Ed eccolo, il momento a cui tutta questa narrazione ha teso: l’incontro, l’instante in cui le loro pelli si toccano e se lo sentono addosso l’alone della Morte che li accompagna ma non li può toccare. La somiglianza tra loro, qualcosa che non si aspettavano di incontrare in nessun altro, che li aveva sempre resi così diversi dal resto del mondo e che ora hanno incontrato quasi per sbaglio. Come se l’universo potesse mai sbagliare.
Si studiano in quella che sembra una frazione di secondo e poi Harry emette il suo verdetto. 

“Credo proprio che diventeremo amici.”


Oh, ma come sai, alla fine sono diventati molto di più. 


danzanelfuoco: (Default)
HARRY POTTER

Severus Snape/Harry Potter

COW-T #12, w5, m5 - Neve

2203 parole


Le strade di Hogsmeade sono innevate e piene di studenti.
Severus nasconde il naso aquilino nella sciarpa di lana, l’unica nota di colore con il suo verde e il suo argento sul nero delle sue vesti. 

Di tutte i privilegi che aveva avuto come Preside di Hogwarts, quello di non dover più supervisionare i weekend nella cittadina magica è quello che gli manca di più. Un ragazzino del terzo anno gli sfreccia accanto e Severus deve trattenersi dall’afferrarlo per la collottola e togliere cinque punti a Corvonero. Sarebbe un buon modo per sfogare il suo malumore, ma ha smesso di rovesciare la frustrazione sui suoi studenti adesso che il suo ruolo di spia è stato accantonato per sempre. 

Severus marcia verso i Tre Manici di Scopa, schivando i cumuli di neve sulla sua strada, attento a non scivolare sul ghiaccio. Non appena apre la porta l’aria calda gli colpisce la faccia, arrossandogli le guance. Ovviamente il locale è fin troppo pieno e Severus odia essere lì, e soprattutto odia essere lì in un weekend di Hogsmeade, circondato da studenti che non faranno altro che sparlare. 

Potter è seduto in un tavolino all’angolo, un bicchiere di Burrobirra calda davanti a lui. 

Severus potrebbe voltare sui tacchi e andarsene - potrebbe, certo, ma poi Potter alza gli occhi e lo vede e Severus non è mai stato un codardo.
Il ragazzo non alza una mano per fargli cenno di avvicinarsi, è Rosmerta che lo spinge dentro con cipiglio determinato perché così impalato sulla soglia fa soltanto entrare il freddo e la neve e Severus non può fare altro che andare a sedersi di fianco a lui. 

“Non ero sicuro saresti venuto,” Potter gli dice, sorseggiando la Burrobirra. 

Severus ordina un tè perché non può bere niente di più forte, non quando dovrebbe vigilare, almeno in teoria, sugli studenti. Un vero peccato. 

Inghiotte il ventaglio di secche e velenose risposte che gli sono salite alle labbra. Troppe opzioni e nessuna accettabile.

“Perché sono qui, Potter?” chiede invece, sciogliendo il nodo della sciarpa. Non che voglia restare seduto a quel tavolino per più di quanto non sia strettamente necessario, ma il calore della sala è troppo per restare completamente vestito - e poi sarebbe da idioti pensare di cavarsela in dieci minuti. Non quando il Salvatore del Mondo Magico chiede udienza. 

“Non posso semplicemente avere voglia di vederti?” 

Severus inarca le sopracciglia in quel cipiglio che fa chinare gli occhi a tutti i suoi studenti, pregando di non ritrovarsi con i punti della clessidra decimati. Su Potter ovviamente non ha più alcun effetto, sempre che mai l’abbia avuto. 

“Non so quale assurda idea tu ti sia messo in testa, ma no, non puoi.” 

Potter giochicchia con il bicchiere, a disagio. Bene. Forse questa farsa finirà prima del previsto. Severus davvero non riesce a capire cosa voglia il ragazzo da lui - averlo salvato nella Stamberga Strillante, aver ripulito il suo nome, avergli fatto riavere la sua cattedra, la sua casa ad Hogwarts… sarebbe dovuto essere fin anche troppo. E invece Potter continua a cercare la sua attenzione, a chiedere il suo tempo. 

“Sarebbe davvero così assurdo?” 

Severus torna presente alla conversazione. Assurdo? Che Potter abbia voglia di vederlo? Ovviamente.
“Per quanto abbia sempre avuto dubbi sulla tua intelligenza, Potter, mi chiedo se questa volta non sia il caso di preoccuparmi e farti visitare al San Mungo…”
“Tu ti preoccupi sempre.” 

Severus non è sicuro di aver sentito bene, non quando le parole di Potter non sono state altro che un sussurro tra le risate e le conversazioni a voci troppo alte che li circondano. 

“Come, prego?” 

“Non ti sei sempre preoccupato per me?” 

La domanda di Potter è retorica, ovviamente, lo sanno entrambi. Eppure Severus sente il bisogno irrazionale di negare. 

“Irrilevante,” Severus sorseggia il suo tè, “Il fatto che mi prema tenerti in vita esula dalla necessità di starci vicendevolmente simpatici.” 

Potter alza gli occhi al cielo. “Davvero?” 

“Sì.” 

“Sono stato nelle tue memorie, Snape. Ha smesso di riguardare mia madre molto tempo fa.” 

Severus è stato una spia per la maggior parte della sua vita, è sopravvissuto ad un Signore Oscuro e ad Albus Dumbledore ed è solo grazie alla sua preparazione che non lascia cadere la tazza, rovesciandosi addosso il suo contenuto. Le sue nocche sbiancano notevolmente attorno alla ceramica, comunque. 

“Non so cosa tu voglia insinuare…” 

“Oh per Merlino, Snape, non voglio insinuare nulla!” Potter incontra il suo sguardo, occhi verdi che sembrano attraversargli l’anima. “È così assurdo pensare che voglia passare del tempo con la persona che mi ha tenuto in vita per quasi un decennio?” 

“Sì, quando la persona che ti ha tenuto in vita si è piccata di far sì che ogni secondo di quella vita fosse miserabile,” Severus sibila e Potter scuote la testa, come se fosse Severus quello irragionevole. 

“E quanto di quell’odio era vero, quanto facciata?” Quella è una domanda a cui Severus non può rispondere perché non lo sa nemmeno lui.   

Lo odiava quel ragazzino, così uguale a James Potter, così poco simile a Lily, lo aveva voluto odiare fin dalla prima volta che aveva posato gli occhi su di lui. Ma Harry non era James, qualsiasi cosa ne pensasse quell’idiota di Black. Se deve essere onesto, c’era stato un momento, durante il suo quinto anno, prima che violasse il suo Pensatoio, in cui essere civile con il ragazzo non gli era risultato così difficile.  Ma avevano un Signore Oscuro a cui pensare e Potter era sufficientemente in grado di farsi odiare per sé stesso. 

“Non ha importanza, Potter. La guerra è finita.”
Potter si alza, lascia sul tavolo abbastanza galeoni per pagare la consumazione di tutti gli avventori del locale, e si infila il cappotto. Severus non si era nemmeno tolto il suo. Tutto sommato una conversazione più breve di quella che si era aspettato. 

Eppure Potter lo sorprende. 

“Andiamo,” dice, posandogli una mano sulla spalla. 

“Non ho finito il mio tè,” Severus temporeggia, la tazza vuota in mano, cercando di ignorare il suo tocco e tutte le possibili implicazioni, perché per quanto Potter non si più un suo studente da almeno un anno, Severus non può fare a meno di pensare che qualsiasi forma di contatto fisico tra loro sia inappropriata. 

“A me sembra di sì,” Potter lo spinge leggermente e Severus si ritrova ad alzarsi in piedi e allacciarsi la sciarpa attorno al collo. 

Potter ha una mano attorno al suo braccio, mentre lo guida fuori dal locale, e Severus sente su di sé gli sguardi di un tavolo di Tassorosso. Dannazione quanto odia quei mocciosi pettegoli, Severus quasi rimpiange la guerra, quando gli studenti non avevano così tanto tempo da perdere. 

Fuori fa ancora più freddo, sta calando la sera nonostante siano a malapena le cinque del pomeriggio.  Continuano a camminare e Potter non lascia la presa sul suo braccio, nonostante adesso siano fuori dalla folla e non abbia più bisogno di guidarlo. Severus lo lascia fare, forse perché non è più così bravo a negarsi quello che vuole adesso. 

Potter dovrebbe odiarlo, dovrebbe guardarlo con disgusto. Ha visto i suoi ricordi - ha visto Lily e Petunia, ha visto suo padre e Sirius Black, lo ha visto diventare un Mangiamorte e condannarli a morte tutti. 

“Non ti capisco,” dice Potter e, sì, il sentimento è reciproco.  

Severus sbuffa, derisorio, ma non lo interrompe. Nemmeno lo spinge a continuare. 

“Pensavo che avresti avuto pace, adesso che Voldemort è morto. Pensavo avresti smesso di…” la sua voce si spegne, perché non sa nemmeno lui come continuare. 

“Essere me stesso?” Sopperisce Severus, le labbra si piegate in un ghigno, “Potter, non sono un cavaliere in scintillante armatura.” 

Potter sembra sul punto di controbattere, ma Severus continua. 

“Non sono un eroe e non sono un Grifondoro. Sono l’untuoso bastardo che vive nei sotterranei e lo sono sempre stato a prescindere da quanti strati di Occlumanzia abbia usato per distorcere la mia immagine.” 

“Lo so,” Potter si stringe nelle spalle e nel movimento sfiora le sue, “solo non capisco perché tu non possa provare ad essere felice.” 

“Chi ti dice che non lo sia?” Severus replica, “Cosa ti importa poi che io lo sia?”  

“Cosa mi importa-?” Harry schiocca la lingua, “Non puoi essere serio.” 

“Ero un tuo professore, Potter. E tu non sei più un mio studente. Qualsiasi rapporto interpersonale è cessato quando hai lasciato Hogwarts.” 

“Stronzate,” Potter non si lascia ingannare, “non sei mai stato soltanto un mio professore, e lo sai benissimo.” Severus vorrebbe ribattere e ridergli in faccia, “E poi, ho visto i tuoi ricordi,” il ragazzo continua e il tono nella sua voce è determinante. 

Severus sente il ghiaccio invadergli il petto. Sperava che Potter fosse un idiota, sperava che certe sfumature non fossero trapelate, evidenti solo a sé stesso che già sapeva. Dopotutto quando il ragazzo gli ha restituito la fiala con le sue memorie, Severus si era accertato che non ci fosse nulla di compromettente dentro. 

Una parola di troppo, certo, forse uno sguardo che indugia qualche secondo in più del necessario. Severus ha passato una vita a provare forti emozioni nei confronti di quel ragazzino, anni a renderlo il cardine della sua esistenza, ad assicurarsi che rimanesse in vita, che non si mettesse in troppi guai, che fosse in grado di sopravvivere là fuori. Severus si dice che Potter è l’eccezione, che in vent’anni di carriera non si è mai invaghito di nessuno studente, e che con tutto il sangue sulle sue mani, quella è un amoralità che può permettersi fintanto che non vi agisce. 

“Ho visto i tuoi ricordi,” Potter insiste, si ferma in mezzo alla strada e si piazza davanti a lui, ”ho visto quello -“

“Hai visto cose che non avresti dovuto vedere,” Severus scuote la testa, “Stavo morendo, Potter, non stavo esattamente scegliendo quali memorie darti.” 

“Quindi non è vero?” 

Severus potrebbe negare, ha mentito per tutta una vita, una bugia in più non fa alcuna differenza. 

“Non so cosa tu credi di aver visto -“

“So quello che ho visto.”
“No, non lo sai.”  

“No, forse non lo so, perché pensavo che adesso che non ci sono più ostacoli, avremmo potuto…”
“Avremmo potuto? Potter, sei un ragazzino!” Severus sbotta incredulo, “E io potrei essere tuo padre…” 

“Ma non lo sei,” Potter scuote la testa, “E io non sono solo un ragazzino.” 

“Hai diciannove anni-” 

“E ho già vinto una guerra. Penso di sapere quello che voglio.” 

“E vorresti me?” Severus lo deride, perché è assurdo, un segno di pazzia evidente. Forse dovrebbe davvero portarlo al San Mungo. 

“Devi sempre rendere tutto così difficile.” 

“Te l’ho detto, non so quale immagine mentale tu ti sia costruito di me, ma non sono un eroe.” 

“Io penso che tu lo sia,” Potter si lascia scappare una risatina senza gioia, amara. “Ma ti taglieresti un braccio piuttosto che ammetterlo.” Scuote la testa con quell’espressione di disappunto sul viso, come se Severus davvero gli dovesse qualcosa.

“Non mi conosci affatto.”
“Ti conosco fin troppo bene,” replica, puntandogli un dito contro il petto, “ti conosco meglio di chiunque altro.”
Forse è vero, dopotutto Severus non ha mai lasciato entrare nessun altro nella sua testa. Non vuol dire che sia disposto ad ammetterlo. 

Potter lo fissa, sfida il suo cipiglio e le sue braccia conserte, sfida il gelo che gli si infiltra nelle ossa e la neve che ha ricominciato a scendere attorno a loro. Severus scuote la testa, anche se non sa esattamente cosa stia negando. Tutto, probabilmente, perché le persone come lui non ottengono mai ciò che vogliono; nemmeno dopo aver espiato; e soprattutto se ciò che vogliono è sbagliato. 

“D’accordo,” Potter capitola alla fine. “D’accordo, sei un bastardo e io mi sono fatto un’idea sbagliata.” 

Sulle sue labbra il sarcasmo stona, e Severus si dice che non sente qualcosa costringergli il petto, nel punto dove una volta probabilmente c’era il suo cuore. 

Potter fa per girare sui tacchi e andarsene, ma scivola su uno strato di neve compattato dai passi di troppe persone prima di lui e per Severus è un riflesso innato evitargli di cadere e rompersi l’osso del collo.
Lo afferra di scatto e lo tira contro di sé, prima che perda l’equilibrio, ritrovandoselo premuto addosso in quello che potrebbe sembrare un abbraccio. Sente il fiato caldo sulla guancia, le mani che si aggrappano alla stoffa del cappotto nero come ad un ancora e Severus dovrebbe spingerlo via adesso, staccarsi da lui come se ne fosse rimasto fulminato, ma non ci riesce. 

Harry è troppo vicino, i suoi occhi verdi incorniciati da lunghe ciglia nere si fissano nei suoi e poi scendono a fissargli le labbra. 

Severus si chiede come abbia mai potuto pensare che quelli fossero gli stessi occhi di Lily. 

“Se mi dici che me lo sto immaginando, potrei lanciarti addosso una maledizione,” la voce di Harry è un sussurro roco e Severus sente un brivido scorrergli lungo la schiena. Per qualche motivo non pensa sia colpa della neve. 

Scuote la testa, no, non può negare il momento, non può negare la tensione, il desiderio negli occhi del ragazzo, uno specchio di ciò che è riflesso nei suoi e oh, vadano al diavole le vestigia della sua moralità, si è dannato l’anima per molto meno. 

Severus chiude finalmente la distanza irrisoria tra le loro labbra. 

Intorno a loro, cade la neve. 

danzanelfuoco: (Default)
HARRY POTTER

Severus Snape/Harry Potter

CW: Major Character Death (book 7 compliant), angst, mentions of past underage relationship 

COW-T #12, w5, m2: Nessun lieto fine

574 parole 


The headstone is covered in lilies and Harry's hands shake, clenched in fists in his pockets. 

Hermione has come to him with books on grief, he knows his anger is part of the process, but he wants so bad to trash the grave, unhearthen the lilies planted by his admirers - admirers, ah, as if Severus Snape could ever have admirers. 

Harry knows it's his fault, he revelead Snape true allegiance to Voldemort in front of everyone during the Battle of Hogwarts, and then he was the one to go and retrieve the body, to organize the funeral, to clear his name at the Ministry, to show them his memories, to insist he was awarded a damn Order of Merlin, First Class - the one he robbed him in third year when he helped Sirius escape, would that Severus ever let him forget. 

And now Harry's angry. 

There shouldn't be lilies on his grave, because Severus was never in love with his mother like that and nobody can ever know. He let them thought so when he showed to the members of the Wizegamont the memories, he never denied it, because they couldn't know about them, couldn't know what happened in his sixth year, when Severus was still his professor, and Harry was still just a kid even if he was destined to die to kill Voldemort and had to face more than any normal teenager would ever. 

He's angry with Severus because he had to betray him - he had to kill Dumbledore and make him believe he had only used him, he had only tried to win him to the Voldemort. He's angry with Severus because he had be just following orders and never even hint it wasn't otherwise. He's agnry with Severus because he had to die - who even knows about the Voldemort poisonous snake and doesn't take precautions against venoms and snake bites? 

Harry's angry, oh, so angry. 

Harry's angry with himself, because he had all the pieces, he had the meaning to realize what was happening and he let his hurt feelings cloud his vision. He never realized Severus could have sold him to Voldermort the same night Harry fell asleep on his couch, never realized that he could have given him over times and times again, that Dumbledore wasn't an idiot, he knew Malfoy was trying something and so did Snape and why hadn't Harry put two and two together. 

Harry had seen the doe patronus in the forrest and had felt his heart break a bit more, thinking about Snape, and yet he hadn't really realized it could be him - matching patronuses were meant for people who loved each other and so Harry knew it couldn't be Snape's. 

Except it was and Severus had kept watching over him and he had loved him, in his twisted sarcastic way, he had loved him. 

Harry's angry at him for never telling him, for letting him hang there, hoping against hope. 

Harry's angry at him for letting go, for asking him to look at him as he died, and never ever trying to survive. 

Harry's angry at himself for letting him die without telling him that he forgave him, without telling him that he loved him. 

And now Harry's left with nothing else but a tombstone and lilies. So many lilies. 

danzanelfuoco: (Default)
15. HARRY POTTER 

WolfStar

100 parole 

C’è una parte della riunione tra vecchi amici dopo dodici anni di separazione e sospetti, che Remus e Sirius pensano sia meglio tenere per loro. 

È quella parte fatta di lacrime e scuse, di 'mi dispiace' sussurrati contro la tela lacera dei vestiti, perché solo uno è stato in prigione, ma nessuno dei due se la passa bene. 

È quella parte in cui cercano di rammendare dodici anni di distanza, perché sono amici - sì, certo, amici. Perché Remus lo ha aspettato tutti quegli anni, nonostante Sirius sospettasse di lui, perché Sirius è diventato un cane per lui. 

Perché sono amici e molto di più. 

 
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HARRY POTTER

Severus Snape & Harry Potter

Note: I don’t even know

COW-T 12, w3, m4: Unicorns prefer virgins 

1123 wordcount


The first time Snape met her, he was strolling through the Forbidden Forest in search for the  roots of a particular flower that should be collected only during the new moon. 

It was for a potion he was trying to brew, a new concoction that would revolution the whole field, if only he were able to get a decent result, back in the days when he was a simple Potion Professor at Hogwarts, when the war was over and it looked like it would never start again, when Severus could pretend he wouldn’t need to take up the role of spy again. 

He saw the unicorn as he reached the clearing, the white mane shining silvery under the star light. He stared at her for what seemed an eternity, thinking the animal would run. Unicorns preferred women, or at least pure hearted people, and Snape was neither a woman nor pure hearted. 

Untouched, oh, yes, that he was, after all, he was Snivellus, the greasy kid with too large a nose and hand me down robes and when he joined the Death Eaters there weren’t exactly much opportunity for anything even remotely resembling romance or even physical attraction, so yes, he was untouched, not even kissed, and it was just as good for him. After Lily’s death he didn’t think he had a right to that. 

The unicorn huffed and neighed at him and then moved toward him. As Severus wasn’t really sure he knew what he should do, he stood still. The unicorn passed him, nudged his cheek with her nose and then went her way, disappearing in the forest. 



She wasn’t exactly his unicorn, Snape wasn’t so stupid to think someone could own a unicorn. It was just that he ended up on her path more often than not when he strolled the Forbidden Forest looking for potion ingredients. It was that she always looked at him and she wasn’t scared and she always looked for a contact with him before going away.
So Severus began to think of her as a part of himself, something he treasured and never revealed to anyone - not that he had any friend to tell. One day, he actually petted her, caressing the white stripe of fur under her horn right between her eyes. And she didn’t run. 



“I was worried about you,” he said and it was the first time he had actually tried to communicate with her. 

He had heard from Hagrid that the gamekeeper had found unicorn blood in the Forest, and Albus had been worried about the Dark Lord and the Philosopher Stone and Severus had nodded and excused himself and went to check on her, desperately hoping it wasn’t her. 

It wasn’t, he breathed, as he saw her, beautiful and majestic as always, unscathed and alive. 

“I’m glad you’re safe,” he said as he petted her and she tilted her head as if she was listening to him. 

It was the first time he talked to her. It wasn’t the last. 



She was as sentient as a magical beast could be, and yet, Severus found solace in her company. He didn’t go to her often, but when he did he had always a treat for her, and he ended up pouring his heart, even if he had told himself he wouldn’t this time, because it was stupid and she couldn’t understand a word of what he was saying anyway. 

And yet, he talked to her. 



And then, one night, somebody heard him. 


Harry shouldn’t be there. The Forbidden Forrest is forbidden for a reason, but he has been there so many times during the years, that he almost feels like the adjective is just there for show. And beside, he thinks as he feels the potion thrumming through his veins, the Felix Felicis that helped him get Professor Slughorn's memories won't fail him now.  

So he follows his instinct, he tucks the vial in his pocket, knowing it won't break and off again he is, hidden under his Invisibility Cloak, lucky enough to never step on any twig, nor to stumble on any roots, smoothly and silently moving through the trees. 

He doesn't know why he's there, doesn't know what he's looking for, or if he's looking for something at all, he just knows he needs to be here. So he keeps walking, and then the potion tells him to stop. Still maniacally grinning, Harry realizes he doesn't know where he is, he has lost his direction. It doesn't matter, he'll found his way back soon enough, but now what? 

In the silence of the forrest, with no noise but his quiet breathing, Harry hears the voice. 

It's dark and deep, he has already heard it somewhere, and he shouldn't be eavesdropping, but there's so many things Harry shouldn't be doing right now, or shouldn't have done in the whole evening, -  in his whole life, -  that one thing more shouldn't be a problem. So Harry gets closer, taking extra precautions to be silent even if his luck would never betray him. 

And as he gets near the words begin to make sense. 

"He asked me to kill him," the voice says, "he asked me." There's despair, maybe even tears, in that voice, and Harry shudders at that more than at the words. He recognizes that voice, he has been hearing it for six years, but never like that. 

"And I had to say yes, of course, I had to."

The trees opens in a clearing and what Harry sees is - it doesn't make sense. 

There's Snape, of course, he recognized him, but he's sitting on a rock, or maybe a tree stump, but his hand slowly threading through the white mane of a unicorn. Maybe the Felix Felicis was expired, and now Harry's having hallucinations. 

“Why are you even still here?” Snape asks, leaning his head against the neck of the animal, “I’m not pure hearted,” he scoffs, “I’m the least pure hearted person in this whole school, you should avoid me like a plague.” 

In response, the unicorn nudges him with his muzzles. It may look like she’s comforting him, telling him to go on, but her eyes are fixed on a point over his shoulder. The same point where Harry’s staying, completely hidden, but not from her gaze. 

Listen closely, she looks like she’s saying him with her eyes, listen closely because this is gonna change everything.
And oh, of course it is. 

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HARRY POTTER

Harry Potter/Severus Snape 

Cow-T #12, w2, m2: Cattiva fede



Dear Ron and Hermione, 


Nothing new happened since my last letter. I’m still stuck in a place I can tell you nothing about, with a person I can tell you nothing about, doing nothing, period. 

I know it’s all for my safety, knowing myself I would have already told you everything and tried to run away and meet you somewhere safe, but I need to consider that the person that’s keeping me is risking their life too. They tell me everyone is very curious to know who has me and their motives are for the most part ‘evil’. 

Anyway, what I can tell you is how much I miss you, (you and the rest of Gryffindor tower and probably the rest of the school, too. At this point I would even be happy to see Malfoy’s stupid face if only that meant coming back). 

Don’t feel too bad for me, though. I’m safe, and treated way better than I ever was at the Dursley, so there’s no need for a rescue on a flying car, though I really appreciate what you’re trying to do for me with the H.O.L.A. (By the way, Micheal Corner is an idiot and that name is amazing!). It’s just… be careful, ok? With what you told me about the new DADA teacher, I wouldn’t want you to get punished for opposing the Ministry, be either on Voldemort’s return or Omega’s rights. I know I would be the first to talk back to her, probably I would have landed a detention the first day of class, so it’s a little bit hypocritical of me, but I just… I don’t know, lay low? If that makes sense. 

Whatever, I feel bad writing a letter so short, but there’s nothing really I can add without giving away too much, or at least what they think is ‘too much’. 

You know, I think they are a little bit paranoid, but better safe than sorry they say and I trust them, so my lips are sealed (or my pen is dry?). Anyway, the less you know, the safer we all are. 

But please, keep sending me updated on everything that happens in the castle! It almost feels like being there with you.


Love, Harry. 


PS. I’m sending along another letter for Snuffles. Can you please forward it to him? I asked him to send the reply to you, too. I don’t want to draw too much attention to place I’m in with sending more owls than absolutely necessary (in case some one decides it could be worth intercepting them) and besides a lot of letters are sent to Hogwarts, it’s way less noticeable. Thank you. 




* * * 


Hermione sighed and thumped her head on the book opened in front of her, disheartened. 

“Something’s wrong?” Ron asked, looking up from his homework. He was trying to stretch his  Transfiguration essay past the first foot without much success. 

“It’s just that I can’t find anything useful,” she sighed again, her forehead still plastered to the book. “O.C.A.’s reports aren’t accessible to the public, the books that I’ve found on the Alpha and Omega’s biology are either informative pamphlet that skims over the physiological mechanism, or full of incorrect made up theories that anyone who had ever met Harry could disprove in three minutes and I don’t know where else to look.” 

She looked so dejected, Ron wanted to hug her. He didn’t, of course, because that would have been weird. He looked away instead. “So no luck.” 

He didn’t know what to do, research was Hermione’s area, and if she couldn’t find anything, how was he supposed to help?

“I know I’m missing some clue,” she told him, sitting back straight and closing the useless book that had caused her outburst, “There must be something we can do.” 

“Let’s just review what we talked about in the past HOLA’s meeting, ok? See if we missed something,” Ron gave up on his essay and used his parchment to write the list on it. “One, we should prove that Omegas are sold, as Greengrass put it.” 

“But we can’t, because the O.C.A. never admitted it and we can’t exactly go to another Omega to ask them if they were sold, nor to an Alpha and ask them if they wanted perhaps to buy Harry this time.”
“Yes, well, I don’t think this was a really good point from the start,” he looked apologetic, “I mean, people already kind of know Omegas get sold, even if it’s just a rumor.  I don’t think the backlash of proving something like that will be enough to change the laws.” 

“But if we can prove it…”

“I’m not sure people would want to believe us, or even if they believe us that they would see something wrong in it.”

“Because they still think Omegas are dangerous.” 

Ron nodded. “So, two, to prove that Omegas aren’t dangerous.” 

“Which I can’t do beside telling anyone that Harry never lost control of his magic.” 

“Yeah, not a good point either. Especially with all the bad press the Ministry gave him for You Kn- no, for Voldemort’s return. I bet you someone will say Harry was just being hormonal when he said he was back.” 

“They can’t do it!” She shrieked and half the Gryffindor in the common room turned to look at her. She blushed, lowering her voice. “But of course they will, it’s just too convenient to pass it up.” She passed a hand over her face, tiredly. 

“So, let me guess, you’re just talking about the H.O.L.A., aren’t you?” Ginny dropped on the chair next to her brother, Neville right beside her to take the last free chair. 

“I really don’t know what gave us away,” Ron joked, looking at Hermione with fake surprise. 

“Yeah, well, sorry about that, but it’s getting frustrating.” 

“Books are not the solution?” Ginny asked, picking up Hermione’s discarded tome to look at it. 

“Not the ones at Hogwarts, no.” 

“And what about the Restricted Section?” 

“I can’t go there without a teacher permit,” Hermione replied “We can’t sneak in without Harry’s cloak and no teacher is going to give me access.” 

“We tried and McGonagall basically said that Dumbledore knows what he’s doing and we shouldn’t worry.” Ron thoughts on that take were extremely clear on his face. “If only the DADA teacher was an insufferable idiot as Lockhart, instead of that toad.” 

“But what about the other teachers?” Neville asked, trying to be useful, “I’m sure someone must be sympathetic with what we’re doing.”

“Hermione tried with Flitwick since she’s his best student…” 

“I’m not really,” Hermione tried to play modest, “but he also made it clear that the teaching staff was unite in letting Dumbledore deal with it.” 

“… I even went to Trelawney. I predicted I would die three times in a row just getting to the library to see if she would sign the permit, but she’s too scared of Umbridge to help us. We’d have better luck asking Snape.” Ron threw up his hands. Why were adults being so obtuse? Maybe he would really try it with Snape, what did he have to lose, a thousand points for Gryffindor? 

As silence stretched and they all though about possible solutions, Neville perked up. “But maybe we could get the books outside of Hogwarts.” 

“How? If they’re in the Restricted Area we can’t exactly purchase them at Flourish and Blotts,” Hermione had already tried it all and she looked just a step away from committing a crime.  

“Beside, how much do you think it would cost just one of them?” Ginny added, practical as usual. 

“I wasn’t thinking about buying them,” Neville shook his head, “what about family libraries? I’m sure I can owl my grandma and ask her if we have some books about that. And I’m sure the Greengrass have something too. Every Pureblood family must have books on the topic.” 

Ron and Ginny exchanged a look. Of course! Since both their parents had oldest siblings, they didn’t get the family library, - books in the Weasley household were ancient just because they were second hands, not because they were passed down generation to generation - so they hadn’t even thought about it. Their mother must at least have something from when Bill presented.
“The Greengrass know so much about secondary sexes, they must have books we can check, see if they overlooked anything,” Hermione was glowing at the idea of getting her hands on more books. 

“If we trust them enough to think they aren’t keeping back anything from us,” Ron added, not wanting to get his hopes up that much. The two sister might be friendly, but they were still Slytherin.  

“Well, they seem very concerned about Omega’s rights,” Ginny rolled her eyes at the house prejudice. “That must mean something.” 

Hermione looked contemplative. “Do you think one of them will present as an Omega?” She had been thinking about it quite a lot, puzzling over motivations and possibly hidden purposes. 

“That would make sense,” Ron nodded, “I mean, Daphne, right? The one in our year? She seem really… determined every time we meet with the H.O.L.A. I bet it’s her.” 

“It’s Astoria,” Neville corrected him, so sure, and then proceeded to blush when everyone stared at him. 

“Astoria?” Hermione looked doubtful. It wasn’t that she didn’t trust Neville, but since she thought it was Daphne too, she just wanted to know the reasoning behind that conclusion. 

“It’s Astoria. I mean, I think…” Neville blabbered and got even more red. “It’s just a… a feeling?” 

A feeling?, Hermione though. A feeling wasn’t enough to form a hypothesis. But again she really didn’t know how Alphas and Omegas worked, and maybe, maybe it wasn’t just about having a feeling, maybe there was something else she couldn’t get at because she hadn’t a secondary sex. But if Neville could, maybe Neville too was… No, that was being too forward, she’d have to wait to prove that theory out. 

“So, how do we get those books from them?” She got back on topic, wanting to spare Neville the round of questioning. He was already uncomfortable as he was. 

“We can’t exactly go to them in the Great Hall. Everyone will talk about it and I don’t want Umbridge to even get the wind we’re organizing something like this.”

“We could met them in the hallway,” Neville fidgeted as he talked, not meeting their gaze. “IknowAstoriaisabouttoendCharm.” 

“Uh?” 

“I know Astoria’s Charm class is about to end, so if we get there we could met her in the hallway. We’ll make it look like a chance meeting.” 

Neville didn’t met their eyes, and missed their glances. A whole conversation seemed to go on just in those few seconds because Ron shut his mouth, Ginny smiled and Hermione simply said, “Ok, let’s go.”

Ginny actually waits for the portrait to close behind their backs, before nudging him with her elbow, 

“Neville, why is it that you know Astoria Greengrass schedule?”  

“I don’t, well, yes, I do, but - it’s not -  It’s just that she gave it to me for, you know, cases like these. She asked for my schedule too.”

“Bloody hell, you’re befriending the enemy!” Ron cried out, slapping him lightly on the arm. There was no malice in his tone, it was a friendly jest that should have conveyed how happy he was for him, but Neville felt embarrassed nonetheless. 

“She’s not the enemy,” he muttered. 
“Of course she’s not, Ron is just being Ron, don’t mind him.” 

“Anyway,” Ginny looked at him with a glint in her eyes, “are you sure you want us to come with you?” 

“We wouldn’t want to take away too much time from your ‘chance meeting’ with your girl friend,” Ron didn’t take the scolding to heart. 

“Why did I even tell you?” Neville whined, already embarrassed. 

Hermione nudged him, trying to make him feel a little more at ease, “Because we are your friends?”

“And you love us?” Ginny kept up the banter and Ron actually winked at him. 

“Not as much as Astoria, of course.” 

“Are you sure you want to keep mocking me?” Neville looked at them exasperated, but at least no longer defensive, “I could stop helping you…”

“Come on, mate, do it for Harry.” 

“That was a low blow,” Neville complained. 

“Yes, I’d say it went below the belt,” Ginny wiggled her eyebrows, “exactly where you want Astoria to go…” 

“Oh my -” Neville blushed to the root of his hair. 

“Ginny!” Ron looked at her, scandalized. 

“You’re such a bunch of prudes,” she rolled her eyes. “Come on, I’ll behave, we’re already there,” she gestured to the classroom door, and almost on cue, students began to pour out. 


* * * 


Sirius Black was an idiot. 

An idiot with a heart of gold, but still an idiot, as many twenty years old guys are. 

The fact that he was actually thirty-five was a trifle - after all, he had spent twelve years of his life in Azkaban where he didn’t have that much occasion for an emotional and psychological growth. 

Anagraphical age notwithstanding, Sirius was still a rash and impulsive Gryffindor, so of course he briefly reflected on the best course of action and then proceeded to do it, without a second thought. 

He didn’t tell Remus what his plan was, because he was sure his friend would have stopped him and  even thought Sirius should have by now realized it wasn’t actually easier to ask for forgiveness than for permission, he needed answers. 

So that’s why on a late evening of middle September a black dog was walking hurriedly in Hogwarts grounds, moving away from a strangely still Whopping Willow. 

Oh, the thrill, the adrenalin rushing through his blood - Sirius had missed the feel when he had settle down at Grimmauld Place, months before. And now it was all back, he could feel the tingle of excitement as he stealth through the corridors, trying to be inconspicuous as he had done the last time he was there, uninvited and unwanted. Well, at least this time there would not be any slashing of portraits, the place he needed to infiltrate was guarded by gargoyle’s statues and surely he couldn’t force his way in. 

No, Sirius sat and prepared to wait. Sooner or later, Albus Dumbledore would leave or come in his office and then Sirius would be able to talk to him. 



* * * 


There was shouting, when he approached the Headmaster’s office. 

Snape couldn’t exactly make out who was shouting what, but it put his senses on alert. Who would even dare to - oh. As the stairs brought him up he could recognize Black’s voice. That idiot. 

He leaned against the cold stone of the wall, trying to regain his breathe as he clutched his arm. The throbbing pain was already unbearable and piling on it an argument with Black was just pure cruelty - but he would bear it as he had always had, because this couldn’t wait. 

Severus composed himself, hiding the pain behind his mask of impassability, and opened the door without knocking, softly enough that the noise was covered by the yells. 

“…demand to know where he is!” 

In the silence that followed Black’s idiotic demand, Severus grinned maliciously, “Well, if this isn’t a surprise.” 

Black’s head snapped to him so fast that Severus had to wonder how it was still attached to his body. Not that it would make a big difference. 

Snape cocked his head, looking at the ragged man in front of him. “I thought you would still be in Grimmauld Place, hiding.” 

He thought that would at least elicit a growl, at least make him bare his teeth, but Sirius Black just stared at him with a blank face. 

“You son of a bitch,” he breathed, incredulous. “You have him.” 

Severus was too good of a spy to let anything make him look surprised, but how the fuck did he found out? He wasn’t - he didn’t have a secondary sex, Snape was sure, and yet all it had took was a look at him, a few seconds in the same room to know. How?
“Oh, you didn’t know?” Severus mocked him, without losing a beat, “We’ve always been so close, he personally requested my help,” he scoffed, trying to make it seem absurd to even hint such a thing. “I get your brain can process more than one thought at the time, but the fact that you were here discussing about Potter, doesn’t mean I’m here for the same reason.” 

“Don’t try to fool me,” Black did growl this time, and to someone it might have even sound dangerous, but Snape was not afraid of him. “I can smell him on you.” 

Severus spared a glance at the headmaster, to see what he should do. It seemed pointless to deny it, but Sirius Black was the last member of the Order that should have been told - if only he thought that was the best think he could do, he would do something about it without even stop and considering the consequences. It was his fault, Severus knew, a damn mistake that could cost him his spy role and his life, but Black shouldn’t have been able to smell anything, he had counted on it. 

Dumbledore sighed and nodded, “Yes, Sirius, Severus is the Alpha tasked to take care of Harry.” 

“What did you do to him?” Sirius didn’t even acknowledge the admission, not tearing his gaze away from the Alpha. 

Severus took in the clench of his jaw, his fists closed against his sides, the anger burning in his eyes, threatening to overspill… and deliberately stung him, “Nothing he didn’t ask for.” 

Dumbledore was old and that was why a lot of people tended to underestimate him, but his reflexes were still fast, or maybe he just knew who he was dealing with. He disarmed Sirius before he could even completely extract his wand from his pocket. 

“No violence,” he warned them. “And Severus if you could tone it down, it would be much appreciated.” 

“I don’t know what your twisted plan is…” Sirius spat between his teeth, not even moving to retrive his wand from Dumbledore’s hands. He knew he would try to hex him again, if only he had the meaning to do so - damn, he wasn’t past using his fist to wipe that smug smile from his face. 

“Please, spare me,” Severus scoffed. “Potter has been with me for months, if I ever had the intention of giving him to the Dark Lord he would already be there, twisted plans be damned.”

But Sirius shook his head, he knew Snape must have had a secret intent - maybe it wasn’t giving Harry up to Voldemort right now, but he had a plan, he was certain and it surely had to be more convoluted than that. 

“I know there are ways to avoid the developing of a second sex, and you do too,” he pointed out, as calm as he could, which meant he was still growling, “I don’t know why you did it yet, but you let him present as an Omega!”
“I did no such thing!” Severus looked affronted, but Sirius knew it was just a façade.  

“Oh really? And it’s just a coincidence that now you have him, isn’t it?” 

“I assure you, the last thing I’ve ever wanted was the burden of an Omega Harry Potter.” 

Sirius scoffed, “You assure me, you assure me! I don’t trust you, I’ve never have, so your assurances are worth nothing to me.”

“Then it’s just so fortunate that I couldn’t care less for what you think about me,” Snape bit back, unrelenting. It was true, of course, that he should have noticed the signs, but he hadn’t. It hadn’t been a conscious decision letting him presenting, he wouldn’t have risked it. 

“Sirius, please, calm down,” Dumbledore tried to placate them, “I too should have noticed, and I failed to recognized the signs as well.”

“Yes, yes, you failed him. And now he’s in the clutch of that slimy Death Eater.” 

“Sirius!” the Headmaster chastised him. 

“Well, clutches he’s enjoying at least,” Snape sneered, provoking him. 

“You have a death wish,” Sirius growled, “you son of a bitch.” 

“Said the mutt.” 

“Maybe it’s time I actually earned my twelve years of prison.” 

“Enough!” Dumbledore said, not yelling yet, but stern and forceful enough to silence them, “Both of you! Enough!” 

They stood, silently seething, not looking away from each other as if waiting for the other to struck. 

“Sit down,” Dumbledore instructed, waving his wand to conjure another cup and pouring in it some tea. “Drink and don’t force me to treat you like children.” 

Severus obeyed, sitting down to take the cup, but he didn’t drink from it. He felt bile in the back of his throat and he swallowed it dry, feeling as dirty as Sirius Black was hinting he was. 

Black sat down too, scowling at the Headmaster, and not even moving to take his cup. 

“I know this is a situation none of us expected,” Dumbledore said, shifting his gaze from one man to the other, “but, Sirius, rest assured that Harry is now in the best hand he could be.” 

Sirius sneered at that, but didn’t interrupt the Headmaster. 

“If we had known, we would have suppressed him, you know it.” 

Sirius believed him, but Severus had the extracorporeal feel that Albus might have been telling a lie. It wasn’t that he had voluntarily ignore the symptoms, Severus knew Dumbledore had been taken just as blindsided as he had when Potter had been taken into custody by the O.C.A.. It was just that Severus wasn’t so sure Dumbledore would have really told him to prepare a Locking Potion if he had known. After all, maybe this was the power the Dark Lord knew not, and if they were to dampen it… 

“I know how to brew the Locking Potion, if I had even the mere suspect that Potter would present, I would have started brewing it.” 

“I know you know it” It was still hostile, but at least he wasn’t being personal anymore. “The only reason you knew anything at all is because of my cursed family. For all the good that it did to us, you knowing how to brew it.” 

Severus wasn’t about to ask how he knew he had taken the book from his family library, he wouldn’t give him the satisfaction, but Sirius noticed the lapse of surprise in his features, if only because he was looking for it. 

“Oh, yes, you don’t think it was just a fortuitous coincidence for you to find an old recipe, in my family library, do you?”

Severus looked at him, deadpan, “I’m sure you’re about to enlighten me.” 

“Mother suppressed me,” He shrugged, as if it wasn’t a big deal, “She regretted it a few years later when she banned me from the family tree, told me I could have at least brought prestige to the family if I had been sold. But she knew the Master Potioner she had contracted was too old, it was the same that helped her grandfather after all, and you were such a promising student… she invested in you to keep the Black offspring out of O.C.A.’s hand, she forged you into becoming the new brewer for the family. Of course she couldn’t have foreseen how we all had ended, my brother dead and me in prison, no offspring and no generations of Blacks for you to keep safe.” 

It was twisting a knife in a wound he had just provoked, telling him he had been set up, manipulated, again and again, to do someone else’s bidding. But Severus was also relieved, for Black had been suppressed. He had smelled the boy on him because he did have a secondary sex, albeit castrated, he hadn’t made any mistake. 

He was about to reply, scathingly asking him, why, if he had such a sensible nose, hadn’t he recognized Potter’s symptoms when the Headmaster interrupted him. 

“Why are you here, Severus?” Dumbledore asked him, tiredly. 

Severus was snapped out of his spat, back to the more urgent problem. 

“I need to leave the school ground,” he replied, his anger sobered up, “the Dark Lord called me.” 


* * * 


Malfoy’s Manor was buzzing with activity when Snape arrived, and he managed to reach the study where the other Death Eaters were waiting for their Lord inconspicuously enough that he had almost raised his hopes in falling under Lucious’ radar. 

Wishful thinking, of course. 

“I can’t believe she dragged even you in this farce.” 

Cursing inwardly at himself for not noticing him coming, Snape turned to his host,  “Excuse me?” 

“Your smell, Severus,” Lucius smiled knowingly and Severus had to rein the impulse to hex him just to wipe that gloating expression from his face, “I don’t know what Althea has on you but I would have never imagined you accepting to change your smell for her.” 

“I don’t know what you’re talking about, Lucius,” he replied without loosing a beat, his tone so sincere anyone else would have believe him. Anyone else, except someone already knowing he was lying, of course.
“Oh, spare me,” Lucious waved his hand, dismissing his excuses, “I saw you talk and dance with her the night of my party. You didn’t seem very happy about it, from where I was. And every single Alpha in the room smelled weird, so it was not difficult to put together what was going on.”

Severus had to thank every single minute spent in practicing Occlumency for his lack of reaction at Lucius’ words. Damn it. 

If every Alpha had smelt differently, Severus hadn’t noticed - so much for being a good spy, even if he had more pressing matters to worry about. Back then he hadn’t talked with anyone but Althea, and it had been too long since they met each other for him to tell if her smell was any different, to tell if anyone else’s was. It was both a relief and a new worry. Yes, his cover was safe for the moment and more solid than he thought, but that also mean that Althea had come to the party with a plan. Althea had known that he had the boy even before smelling him that night? Or had she hoped so - hoped that the only one who could save her daughter was also the one who had the boy? In the long run, it didn’t matter if Althea knew where his loyalty truly lay before, or if she was just gambling on it, for now she knew it nonetheless, but… if she had found out somehow, be it by putting all the clues together or by pulling some strings and making someone talk a little too much, then Snape’s position as a spy was more fragile than they had though. 

Severus quirked an eyebrow and filed the information away for later.

“How did you find out it was her that made every one change their smell?” Snape asked instead,  ignoring the sense of guilt in confirming to Lucius that it was indeed Althea’s plan. The woman could stand some suspicion, after all. She wasn’t a Death Eater, so she couldn’t be called a traitor for taking the boy, but she was also a Pureblood and a Slytherin. They wouldn’t attack her or her family straight away, no, they would try to recruit her before, to make her see the advantages of joining them and handing over the boy. 

“She could have been the only one to pull out something like this, the only one neutral enough to know wizards from both sides and asking them this kind of favours.”

“Have you considered that she might do it for someone else?” Snape asked, because he didn’t need Malfoy to think about it on his own and entertain the idea too much, “Maybe someone blackmailed her.” 

Lucious laughed at that, not just a smirk or a polite giggle, but a real laugh, as if the mere thought was ludicrous. “Please, Severus. The day I see Althea Greengrass not having the upper hand with someone is the day I snap my own wand.” 

“Ah, you’re right, of course. Foolish of me to even think such a thing,” Severus lips quirked imperceptibly upward, “But I wasn’t aware she had asked that of other people too.” 

“Well, she did and now I am curious to know why you accepted.” 

“It was just a simple favour she asked of me, nothing that could hinder me.” 

“But it could hinder our cause,” Lucious’s reply was harsh, but Snape didn’t dignify him with and answer, forcing him to elaborate further. “She’s muddying the waters, trying to throw us off with pathetic tricks.” 

“Do you think she has Potter?”

“You don’t?” 

“I didn’t enquire why she had to ask that of me, she wouldn’t have told me anyway, but if what she wants is muddying the water, she’s not being very smart in doing so, is she?” 

“Perhaps so,” Lucious seemed reluctant to dismiss her role in the scheme, “but now I’m really wondering, Severus, what does she have on you?”
“Ah, Lucius, but why would I have allowed her to ask such a favour in exchange for her discretion just to go around and tell it myself?” 

“True,” Lucius conceded the point, “but you know you can trust me. I wouldn’t tell anyone.” No, of course not. Not until it would be useful anyway. “Besides, who better than me to help you keep her at bay.” 

“Keep her at bay.” 

“You yielded to her, she’s gonna come back with some other favour to ask of you.”

Lucious looked at him expectantly and Snape wondered if it was too soon to cave and tell his lie, if someone with such a secret would have confided it in Malfoy, even if under pressure. 

But again Lucious would have bragged about it - he was sure of it - he would not have considered it shameful or appalling. 

So Severus let the silence stretch a little longer, as he would if he were too focused on the internal struggle of assessing the risks of confiding in him, and then he sighed, both defeat and relief in his voice,  “Lionel Greengrass.”
“Althea’s younger brother?” 

“Yes.” 

“What of him?” 

Severus refused to explain, he just looked at him, the ‘what do you think?’ written on his face. 

Oh,” Lucius realized, and then, “but I don’t see the scandal in that. I hardly think your… proclivities are worthy of a blackmail.” 

Snape let out a bitter chuckle, “As much as I appreciate your… liberal views about what you call my proclivities, I am sure the Board of Governor would beg to differ.” 

“You’re too paranoid,”  Lucius scoffed, “Even if she tells them, there’s no base to have you fired.”

“Of course, because the Board of Governor has always acted on evidences and has never been forced by someone else to bend to their will, hasn’t it?” Severus let out a mirthless laugh, “Besides, it wouldn’t be in my best interest telling you that this isn’t just about where my interest lays. I don’t suggest you to do the math and realize how old Mr. Greengrass exactly was eight years ago.” 

It took him a moment, but Lucius’ eyes widened at the realization. He wasn’t particularly acquainted with the young man, too young to be recruited in the previous war, sent to Europe to continue his studies right after graduating at Hogwarts and not very much seen in the English wizard society since then. But still, Lucius knew who they were talking about and it didn’t take that much of a leap to realize that he must have still being a student at Hogwarts eight years ago, maybe even underage. 

Before he could ask anything, Severus continued. “But after all, you, contrary to Althea Greengrass, have no proof of it except my word.” Which would be enough, should Malfoy really want to harm him, even if what Severus had just told him was a lie and had never happened. Well, there in every rumor there was a grain of truth and Mr. Greengrass had actually developed quite a crush on him, but Severus had known better - at least back then, for his sanity this days was up to debate. “And no reason to use it against me. If it got out I would be fired and the Dark Lord needs an insight in Hogwarts, you realize.” 

“But of course, of course, I wouldn’t dare ruin the Dark Lord’s plans. Rest assured I wouldn’t have told anyone nonetheless,”

And then with a grin that disgusted him and made him feel sick to his stomach , Lucius placed a hand on his shoulder and leaned against him with a conspiratorial attitude, “Ah, Severus, corrupter of innocent souls, are we.” 

He was prying for details and Snape wouldn’t have liked anything better than shaking off the hand on his shoulder and go home to drown in bleach. Instead he plastered a smirk on his face, as if he was secretly pleased with himself about his debauchery and now he could finally let it out. “Well, let me tell you, he wasn’t innocent at all. I don’t like them quite that young.” Liar, liar, liar. He swallowed the bile that had raised to his throat. He had an underage boy currently residing in his quarter that he had abundantly taken advantage of to prove the contrary. 

“Well, look at the bright side, if he wasn’t underage, at least you’ll only be sacked and not imprisoned,” Lucius had never been funny and this was no exception. Severus looked at him and then laughed nonetheless. 

For the moment that problem was averted. Now he just needed to let Althea know about his lie. 

But first, he had a Dark Lord to deceive. 

 

Edvige

Feb. 26th, 2022 05:04 pm
danzanelfuoco: (Default)
 HARRY POTTER

Cow-T #12, w2, m3 - Il grido della civetta 


1 - Il grido della civetta risuona cupo fuori dalla sua finestra in risposta.. 

“Edvige, smettila!” Harry sibila tra i denti, sentendo i passi dello zio al piano di sotto, ma non riesce comunque a smettere di fissarla con un sorriso a trentadue denti, nonostante il rumore. 

La sua nuova civetta bianca è chiusa nella gabbia, ma questo non le impedisce di richiamare con il suo verso i suoi simili all'esterno. 

A Harry, undici anni, una lettera scritta in inchiostro verde e un baule pieno di libri sulla magia chiusi nel ripostiglio sotto le scale dove una volta dormiva, non importa particolarmente se zio Vernon ora verrà a sgridarlo per il dannato rumore che fa la sua civetta. 


2 - Il verso di compatimento di Edvige è l'ultima cosa che Harry vorrebbe sentire, ma se deve essere onesto si compatisce da solo. 

Un'intera estate passata senza nemmeno una lettera dai suoi amici, Edvige che scalpita per uscire dalla gabbia, che lo guarda con malcelata disapprovazione perché 'andiamo, apri la gabbia, fammi andare a consegnare qualche lettera'. E certo che Harry vorrebbe, conoscendo la sua civetta tornerebbe senz'altro con qualche lettera. Ma quelle che ha scritto lui all'inizio dell'estate non hanno ancora avuto risposta e non vuole sembrare così disperato da continuare a scrivere e scrivere e scrivere ad un muro. 

Gli sembra quasi che Edvige scossi la testa, quando le dice che 'no, non stavolta, solo perché io non ho niente da fare non significa che tutti gli altri non si stiano divertendo'. 

(Quando vedrà di nuovo quell'infame dell'elfo domestico Edvige gli beccherà quelle orecchie a sventola che si ritrova). 


3 - Edvige emette uno strepito quando il Nottetempo prende una curva un po' troppo stretta ed Harry finisce a gambe all'aria, facendo quasi cadere la gabbia. 

Forse non è stata una buona idea salire su un autobus magico, non dopo aver considerato quanto facciano schifo i mezzi di trasporto magici - davvero, sa chi abbia inventato la MetroPolvere, ma se questa corriera è l'alternativa Harry preferisce vomitare la cena tutta in una volta appena uscito da un camino piuttosto che un po' alla volta ad ogni curva. 

Edvige lo guarda diventare verde non particolarmente impressionata, mentre la gabbia beccheggia tra le sue mani come un pendolo. 

Ah, le cose che sopporta per questo umano. 


4 - La civetta grida, attirando la sua attenzione, non appena Harry entra nella voliera. 

Il ragazzo la fissa, si morde il labbro inferiore e poi sposta lo sguardo sulla lettera che stringe tra le mani. 

"Mi dispiace," dice ad alta voce, tornando a fissarla, e poi scossa la testa, "Davvero, Edvige, lo sai che te la farei consegnare se potessi, ma sei troppo riconoscibile." 

Certo, Edvige lo sa, lei è bianca, candida e bellissima, attira lo sguardo di chiunque e ne è sempre stata fiera. 

Si lascia comunque scappare un verso di disapprovazione quando Harry lega la lettera alla zampa di un gufo dal piumaggio marrone, assolutamente banale e gli dice, " Portala a Sirius, cioè a Felpato." 


5- Edvige affonda il becco nella carne con un grido e uno strepitio e un frullare d'ali. Il sangue comincia a scorrere e zampillare e le imbratta il becco coriaceo, ma Edvige è implacabile quando vuole. E ora vuole. 

(Le ha dato un ordine, ma anche se non lo avesse fatto, Edvige beccherebbe le dita della ragazza comunque perché scriva quella dannata lettera e gliela dia; non esiste che il Ragazzo soffra così tanto se lei può fare qualcosa per impedirlo). 

Hermione si stringe la mano al petto cercando di sottrarla alla civetta. 

"Va bene, va bene, sto rispondendo," dice, con il sangue che le cola tra le dita della mano non dominante - perché la civetta è intelligente e sa benissimo di non rovinare quella con cui la ragazza deve scrivere. 

Edvige smette di beccare, e si appollaia accanto a lei, fissandola con quegli occhi gialli che sembrano vedere tutto. 


6 - La civetta arruffa le piume e lancia un grido da perforare i timpani. 

"Buona, dai," il ragazzo con i capelli rossi stringe la sua gabbia tra le mani e si guarda intorno, “Adesso Harry arriva.” 

Ma Harry non è tornato ed Edvige lo sente che è in pericolo. Lo ha visto sparire nel corridoio del treno dopo aver preso il dannato mantello che pensa lo renda invisibile - come se lei ed i suoi occhi rapaci non fossero abbastanza acuti da vedere oltre a quel velo di stoffa; e se può farlo lei che è solo una civetta chissà a chi altri è visibile il ragazzo, pensando di non esserlo. 


7 - Edvige pensa che ci siano modi peggiori per morire. Sette anni è stata con il ragazzo, ha portato le sue lettere, certo, ma ha anche tentato di proteggerlo. E forse non vale niente, forse è stato tutto inutile per morire in una gabbia, a metri di altezza nel cielo senza nemmeno star volando, senza nemmeno poter sbattere le ali. 

Forse ci sono modi migliori per morire, certo che ci sono, ma questo in fondo non è nemmeno così brutto. Vicino al ragazzo. 

L'ultimo grido della civetta. 

danzanelfuoco: (Default)
 Empowering rituals

A thesis on how magical traits can be enhanced by the drawing of magic from nature and the fundamental use of the Connection Rune  - (1798)


By Cordelia E. Corday 

Department of Runes for the Developing of New Wards and Enchantments


… Other than the “Merlin Drawing” and the “Salazar’s Rite” whose true intent and procedures are just fantasized hypothesis considering the fragmentary nature of the reports available to modern academics -  it’s uncanny how many researchers have based their work on ten lines of text salvaged by a monastery fire - the first real Ritual we have evidence of is the one known as the “Snakes Connubium”, and thus is the only Ritual we should take into account in the examining of the Medieval and Pre-Medieval Runes usage. 

In regard of the “Snakes Connubium”, if we allow ourself to gloss over what are considered the most important Runes of the Ritual in academic circles (the second - the Ouroboros, also know as the Eternal Serpent of Life, - and the fifth Rune - independently of its interpretation either as the Marriage or the Family) and if we don’t get into the well known trap of trying to guess what the lost third, fourth and sixth Runes could have been, we can then proceed to examine the remaining two Runes. 

The first and seventh runes are the well known Rune of Protection and Rune of Connection, often undervalued as the basic Runes for every ritual. 

But while the Rune of Protection explains his role in his own name, - shielding the caster from the power they are trying to call upon - the Rune of Connection is much more mysterious and yet underrated. 

Also known in the academic field as ‘the Universe’, the Rune of Connection is often discarded as a simple stabilizer to the whole casting, while instead we believe it to be an actually integral and not ignorable part of the ritual. In the second chapter of this thesis we will try to demonstrate how ‘the Universe’ is not merely a side rune, but one of the most important known to the whole wizardry world. 

While we can’t have certain proof of the nature of magic, we are inclined to believe that the theory explicated in ‘Universus: the epitome rune of the holistic nature of Magic’ by Augustus Oaktree has fundament. If we take into account Oaktree’s equation of Magic as Life itself, then the Connection Rune, the one that binds the Ritual to the forces of Nature, is what allows magic in the first place. Without that connection, the ritual wouldn’t be different from any Muggle bumbling… 



…While the ability to speak Parseltongue is considered to be an exclusive of Salazar Slytherin’s descendant, there are quite a few disproving examples of Parselmouths that aren’t officially part of Slytherin’s genealogy (we won’t speculate on the possibility of out of wedding births, but it seems quite improbable that a magical power would be tied to one and only one family), thus providing the possibility for Parselmouths to exist as their own entities, such as Animagi and Metamorphomagi. 

We won’t also speculate on the nature of “Salazar’s Rite” - nor its possible resemblance to the “Snakes Connubium” - but surely it couldn’t be the only ritual ever performed by one of the four more powerful wizard of that Era, and while no written proofs of such a ritual even exist, it wouldn’t be so absurd to imagine the Parseltongue ability was gained by a ritual performed drawing upon the forces of Nature directly connected with snakes, instead of being a random mutation of magic that never happened again…


Honestly, Cordelia, my dear,

 I’m very glad you want to discuss your thesis with my Department,

 but the topic is not acceptable for your degree. 

First of all, the hypothesis of the Seven Runes is improbable at its best, (we have already discussed about the Five Runes protocol in use, there is a reason if it is the standard for casting) so I wouldn’t take it for granted that there were seven runes in the ‘Snake Connubium’ as you seem to be doing. The mere idea of the seven runes for the seventh son of a seventh son was an academic joke not even that funny back in 1658. Imagine writing a whole thesis about it. You would be mocked in every academic circle for centuries to come. 

And second, old magic legends are just that… legends. If you want to make a career in the field you should specialize in the creation of new spells and runes, not in the investigation of old rituals that probably never worked and that have no real application. 

I’ll wait for the new draft of your thesis via owl in three months. 


Millicent Hughes 

Head of the Department of Runes for the Developing of New Wards and Enchantments


PS. Don’t try to convince me, you would fail. The topic is not acceptable. If you tell me again that only by knowing our past we could move into our future, I’m gonna send you to the Department of History of Magic to ask for a thesis. It’s a threat

PPS. And for goodness’s sake, leave the Parseltongue out of this. It’s just some Dark Art thankfully long forgotten. Leave it forgotten. 



(The unpublished thesis, along with Madame Hughes corrections, are currently consultable both in the Department of Runes’ library and in Miss Corday’s heirs’ library - as possession of the Department, both the original and its private copy are written on pre-runed parchment that allows the immediate translation of the content in a language understandable to the reader, as it was originally written in Latin) 

 
danzanelfuoco: (Default)
Calendario dell’Avvento (Kaos Borealis)

06/12: Albero di Natale


Harry Potter

Snarry

SAFE



There was a fucking three in Potter’s room. An enormous monstrosity that took up great part of what Severus thought it should have once been the living room and now just looked like a portion of the Forbidden Forest transplanted inside of the castle. 

“Hello, Severus,” Potter greeted him still on the threshold. He looked tired and a bit overwhelmed - and also a little bit cute with leaves and golden threads stuck in his hair, as cute as someone taken straight out of a poster ad about Christmas, Severus corrected in his mind, “If you are here to return the mistletoe, I’m busy and I don’t want it back, so…”  his voice trailed off, waiting for his reply. 

“You were telling me about a cup of tea, Harry,” and yes, probably Severus shouldn’t put that much contempt in a name, but Potter - Harry, ugh - brightened nonetheless. 

“Yes! I mean, of course!” Then he looked behind his shoulder, as if he had forgotten completely he was decorating the Christmas three just a few minutes before. “Right now I’m a little busy, though. Unless you don’t mind…” and he actually took a step back to let him in. 

Severus considered laughing in his face, telling him he just had a cup of tea and he should make it count if he really wanted it, scoffing at him that of course he didn’t mind being subjected to only half of his attention, that it was a great bargain actually. 

He just nodded instead, and Potter lead him in. 

“Earl grey?” he asked, expectantly. 

And maybe it was the Christmas spirits, maybe Potter’s tree was really infested by nargles, but “No, thank you. I suppose I should save the caffeine quota for that cup of tea I’ll have to offer you.” 

 

Do ut des

Dec. 4th, 2020 12:13 am
danzanelfuoco: (Default)
Calendario dell’Avvento (Kaos Borealis)

03/12: Secret Santa


Harry Potter

Snarry

SAFE


Severus Snape was not a festive man. After all, there weren’t that many things to celebrate in his life. 

He had always tolerated Christmas, maybe out of nostalgia of what he had had his first years at Hogwarts - a house, a friend, a scrap of happiness, however ephemeral. 

As the years passed, thought, he found all the decorations and cheers and carols were grating on his nerves to the point where he would gladly entomb himself in his chambers for the whole Holiday. 

Ah. And he thought he was a bitter man before. 

Minerva, however, wouldn’t let him, of course. As Headmistress, she had ordered him to at least attend the meals - and if she could order him to also be happy about it, she undoubtedly would, but be as it may, he took a wicked pleasure in his stone cold silence and deadpan expression, enjoying it even more when that had Minerva purse her lips in displeasure and sadly sighing. He still hoped one of this years she would renounce her Dumbledoresque attitude toward him and just let him be. 

He could leave of course, resign - but to go where? 

He didn’t have anywhere else to be, any other place to call home, except Hogwarts - he hadn’t planned in surviving the war. 

So he had endured the decorations and the cheers and the carols. 

But not this year. 

This year he wouldn’t do it.
It was enough for the Headmistress to have hired Harry bloody Potter for the Defense Against the Dark Arts position. She wouldn’t force him at his same table. 

Why on Earth Potter had decided to stay at the castle, instead of spending the holiday surrounded by red-headed idiots who kept spawning as soon as you looked away was another mystery, but Snape had already had enough of investigating Potter’s motive to last him a lifetime. 

He didn’t care at all. 

That’s when Potter knocked at his door. 

Severus pondered to leave him there as an idiot. He should do it, just to get rid of him. 

But Potter was a pest, he knew. If he ignored him, he would go length to find a way to circumnavigate his door to talk to him - he shuddered at the thought of being ambushed in a hallway by the invisible cloaked brat. It was just more convenient to cave in, talk to him, and if necessary tell him in a profusion of details where to shove whatever he wanted from him. 

“What do you want?” 

“Merry Christmas, Severus.” 

Severus closed his eyes and counted to ten - let’s make ten thousand. He knew Hogwarts staff was at a fist name basis - he had felt awkward for about a year calling McGonagall Minerva, as if he hadn’t been her student just a few years before - but he had tried to drill into that thick skull of his that he was Snape to him. As usual Potter was selectively deaf. 

Severus would have gone on endlessly in his head, if only Potter hadn’t trusted in his hand a small packet, so awfully wrapped he wondered how it wasn’t falling open in his hands. 

“What’s the meaning of this?” 

He scowled at the thing as if he was a particular disgusting and dangerous variety of Blast-Enden Skrewst. 

“Your Christmas gift. For the staff Secret Santa,” he said, and his tone was weary, as if reminding him of something he hadn’t really being paying attention to, could set him off. Severus at least appreciated the survival instinct. It was new. 

“You can give this to whoever I was supposed to buy a gift for. I don’t intend to part in this… preposterous charade.” 

“I really doubt I would appreciate this…” 

Of fucking course, Snape would draw Potter in return.

… not as much as I think you would do.”
Oh, his nerve. So he presumed to know him enough to give him a gift he would appreciate? 

“Fine,” he sneered. “I’m gonna open it.” 

“Shouldn’t you wait to open it on Christmas?”
“Shouldn’t a Secret Santa be secret?” He could have added something more, he could have taunted him about not being able to not take the lighting spot, even for something so silly as a secret santa. It would hurt him, he knew, for he knew it was also untrue. He didn’t know why Potter had knocked at his door with his gift instead of sending it via House-Elves as most Christmas Gifts were delivered, but he knew someone who secluded himself in a cold Scottish castle was hardly trying to parade himself. 

“Are you really gonna open it right here right now?” Potter asked, as Severus fought against the slippery ribbon that was keeping the whole thing from falling apart. 

“Yes, so I can properly tell you how presumptuous…” but his words died on his lips. “But it’s…” 

“Black Mistletoe,” Potter supplied. “It’s an ingredient used in potion -”

“I know what Black Mistletoe is, Potter,” the Potion master scolded the student who had barely passed his potions NEWT, but his voice didn’t hold any harshness. He was still a little shocked from the gift. 

It’s an ingredient used in potion, had said the boy. Yes, and diamonds were rocks. 

And a diamond it’s what it must have costed him, because Black Mistletoe was something so rare - harvested the night of the winter solstice, but only if there was a new moon darkening the sky, from a plant whose seed had sprout during an eclipse. 

‘Why?’ He wanted to ask. ‘Why would you give me something so valuable?’

And then ‘What do you want for it? What was the grand scheme behind gifting me something so priceless?” but Potter was not the scheming type, he wasn’t Slytherin enough. 

“I can’t accept this,” Severus said instead and tried to hand him back the branch, but Potter took a step back, almost as if he feared to get burned if he were to touch it. 

Had he poisoned it? Severus asked himself, before thinking better of it. No, that was just his old paranoia, coming back as a habit. Potter was too straightforward for poisons. And surely even he wouldn’t be that stupid to spoil such a valuable ingredient just to spite his old professor.

“Yes, you can. And you will.” 

“Because the great and mighty Harry Potter says so?” Snape taunted him. 

“Because you deserve it,” Potter said and, to Severus astonishment, he looked like he truly believed it, “but if you don’t believe me, than yes. Because the great and mighty and famous - you don’t wanna forget famous, right? - Harry Potter said so.” 

He was mocking him. Harry Potter was mocking him.
No. Not mocking, it wasn’t malicious. He was… jesting. 

As if this was an old joke between friends. 


“Still, I can’t accept it. Even if I were to take part in this absurd idiocy and give you a gift, I could be never able to repay…” 

“Severus,” Potter interrupted him and oh, Severus didn’t know if he was more annoyed at the interruption or at the name, “you wouldn’t even know where to start looking for a gift for me.” 

It was true, wasn’t it? 

And besides, Potter was filthy rich - as the mistletoe in his hands proved - nothing Severus could put his hands on would be something he couldn’t have bought himself if he so wished. 

“But if it what it take to have you accept my gift is finding me something in return, then I’m gonna tell you what I want.” 

Severus shook his head, “I won’t stand for a symbolic price such as a galleon or something along those lines. And I can’t give you nothing you could ask me as valuable as this, and you know it.” 

“Then I’m gonna ask you something as invaluable as that mistletoe,” Potter smiled, and Severus was taken aback. So there was a plan. He wouldn’t have put it on Potter, but it had been a do ut des all along. 

He didn’t know why it stung, but at least this was familiar ground. Hidding behind a calculating gaze, he pushed his inner spy forward to deal with him. “Name your price.” 

Potter didn’t miss a beat, didn’t take time to think about it. 

“Your company.” 

Severus blinked. And then he blinked again. 

“My… company?” 

Are you out of your fucking mind? and That’s it, we’ve lost him! and Who is gonna tell Minerva we need another DADA teacher so soon? and I’m gonna kill him, even if he didn’t realize what he just asked 

“Yes, your company. Your… time.” 

“And do you want me to disrobe here or are you more comfortable with scheduling an appointment?” Severus snarled, because if Potter was for real, he would just decapitate him on the spot, and if he just had misconstructed his sentence, then he would embarrass him enough to get rid of him and the three generation of Potter that were bound to come to disrupt his quiet in the future. 

But Potter didn’t wrinkled his nose and demanded back his gift since he had refused -as he would do if it were the former - , nor had started spluttering incoherently, freaked out just by the idea existing in the realm of possibilities - if it were the latter. 

No. Potter blushed. 

“I was thinking more of a cup of tea. You know, perhaps without you insulting me into New Years Eve. But since you are so against it… never mind. But keep the mistletoe, please. I wouldn’t know what to do with it anyway.” 

Then he left. 

He left and didn’t brought the damn plant with him. 

So much for talking about familiar ground. 

Snape closed the door at the empty hallway. 


TBC 

(gosh, every time I write this I think of tubercolosis, isn’t there another way to say this isn’t finished yet?) 

 
danzanelfuoco: (Default)
 Harry Potter

Snarry

COW-T #10, w7, m4 (Dark Horse - Katy Perry)

Wordcount: 1905


 

So you wanna play with magic

 

Boy, you should know whatcha falling for


The room was hot as a furnace. The fumes of potions brewing in all those cauldron was making it difficult for Harry to concentrate, the sweat dropping from his forehead, not to mention the sweet smell, almost like putrefaction, provoking him a vague sense of nausea.

“Potter! What on Earth do you think you’re doing?” The snarl caught him unaware, blocking him in the act of adding what Harry thought was the fundamental ingredient to his potion. 

Professor Snape covered the distance between them in two stride and, with a motion of his wand, made the liquid Harry was brewing - with not so much attention as he thought - disappear. 

Harry sighed. Seven year of this and he still wasn’t able to create a decent potion at the first try. Not so good for someone who wanted to became an Auror (but, if he allowed himself to think about it, after everything happened with Voldemort, he had lost the interest. Truth be told, he had enough fighting for a lifetime. Not that he allowed himself to think about it). 

“Adding ginger root?” He asked tentatively.

Once Snape would have taken points from him, even given him detention for just daring to answer, but things between them had changed a little, shifting form the consolidate axis of hate to some obscure and unknown grey zone. You can’t really keep hating someone when you’re showed everything you knew about them was wrong. Harry felt like he had the key to interpret what Snape had done in a new light, and though he couldn’t forgive him everything, he could at least understand him. Seeing Snape’s weakness and pain made him realize he was human and not just a cold hearted son of a bitch. 

On the other hand, Snape must have faced his same epiphany. His behavior toward him changed, too, as if he had smothered his edges. Harry didn’t know what was the cause of it, he had not given Snape some of his memories from which drawing conclusions and he didn’t think saving his life from Nagini’s venom had helped (he knew his father had saved Snape’s life once and that only worsened his hate), but nonetheless something had happened to make the hate in the professor’s eyes disappear, replaced by a cautious investigating look, the same you could have if you were trying to solve a puzzle that could turn and bite you.  

And lately Harry was developing the odd craving to actually bite him - taste him - every time Snape stared at him like he wanted to strip him of his skin to understand what was going inside him. It was a look that made Harry shiver, but it was a thrill, not disgust or hate, that went down his spine. 

“Do you want to blow up the entire classroom?” 

Snape was towering over him, leaning with his frowning gaze at a few inches from his face, and Harry, almost in a trance, found very difficult to remember what he was doing right there. 

“N-no” he stuttered, retreating. 

That were the times when he remembered that as adult as he could be after all that happened he was just eighteen, a teenager that dealt with more than anyone could expect from him and now of major age, but a teenager nonetheless. And having Snape so close to him, when all of his feeling about him where a tumultuous mix of residues of hate and care, anger and understanding (and something else he couldn’t quite define), well that was confusing and definitely not helping.

“Well, Mr Potter, this is not working. I demand a private interview to discuss about your future career.” 

“Is this a detention?”
“If it was so, I would have said detention, Mr Potter.” 

“Yes. Yes of course.” Harry gulped down, feeling his throat extremely dry. 


* * * *


Harry lingered after the end of the class. He had a free period and if Snape wanted to talk to him, it was better to get over with it. 

The professor arched his eyebrow as the rest of the students filed out while Potter didn’t, even if he had already recollected his things and approached him. 

Harry felt again the thrill of anticipation and wondered what the heck was wrong with him and his responses to the man. 

“Mr. Potter?” 

“You wanted to talk to me, right? About my career.” 

“Now?”

“Why not? Do you have another class?” 

Snape pondered if it was better to get over with it or schedule a proper appointment as it would require the protocol. After all, with Potter - and the whole lot of those damn Gryffindor - there needn’t be formalities. 

“I know you have stated you wanted to become an Auror,” Snape started, “but frankly Mr Potter, your Potion skills are abysmal and I cannot, in good conscience, pass you. You would end up dead by the end of the month if you were to start your training in such poor conditions.” 

“And you wouldn’t want me to die, would you?” Harry retorted before he could think better of it. 

“Of course, not.” The ‘I’ve spent my whole life trying to keep you alive, you stupid brat’ wasn’t said, but lingered in the air nonetheless. 

Harry passed a hand in his hair, embarrassed. “Yes. Yes, of course. It was stupid of me.” 

Snape remained silent, his face speaking enough. 

“So what should I do?”

“I would suggest you to direct your efforts toward another profession. I realize your whole life has been dictated by the mad Dark Lord trying to kill you, but that shouldn’t reduce your horizon.” 

“Your life has been as well, and yet you’re still here teaching.” 

My career is not the topic of this conversation. I’ve been teaching for almost twenty years of my life, I could hardly wish for another job.”

“But I thought you hated teaching…” 

“Mr. Potter. My job - is not - the topic - of this - conversation,” Snape stressed every word, as if it needed to be hammered in his head, “Yours is. And I suggest you a change of career. However, if you are inclined toward becoming an Auror notwithstanding the fact that your Potion skills will never be adequate…” 

“Now, I don’t think I’m a hopeless case!” Harry interrupted him. He had been an amazing Potion student with the help of the Half Blood Prince in sixth year, that should at least vouch for is not complete incapability on the subject.  

Snape licked his lower lip and bite into it as if to restrain himself from saying something very nasty. 

Harry would have wondered about that - once Snape would have spat in his face whatever insult without a second thought - if only he hadn’t be so damn mesmerized by the act itself.

“I am the teacher.”

“Uh -?”

“I decide whether you are a hopeless case or not.” 

“And am I?” 

Snape pinched the bridge of his nose, and Harry looked at him, greedily, wondering if he would lick his lips again. 

“You are not… a complete failure. Your bases are… acceptable. But bases are first year knowledge, and by now you should know better. This is an art that requires precision, your starts are good, but you tend to… wander during the brewing. That’s what spoils your potions. You are not careful enough. What is it that it’s distracting you so much from paying attention to even the simplest of instruction?” 

“You.” 

It was out of his mouth before he could even think about it. 

He could feel heat and blood rising to his cheeks and he wondered what shade of red he had become. 

“Excuse me?” 

“I keep thinking about you and the war and I try to figure you out, and I can’t so I get distracted and -” 

“Potter…” 

“No, no, hear me out, we didn’t talk about - ” 

“Potter, we have nothing to talk about,” Snape grimaced. 

“We do!” Harry exclaimed, before the professor could walk away. “I see how you look at me! And -” 

Snape gripped his collar, his eyes wide, his expression twisted in anger. 

“You should know,” he seethed, bringing their face closer, “that whatever you are trying to say, to imply -” 

“No, no, you don’t understand!” 

“Oh, I think I understand perfectly, Potter. After everything I did for you, you are willing to jeopardize my job on some obscure pretense that I -” 

Harry kissed him, bluntly, sliding his tongue in his mouth. 

He could feel the tension in Snape’s body deflate as he returned the kiss, his tongue pushing his way in Harry’s mouth, the hand still on his collar clutching harder and then - 

Snape pushed him away.
“Why did you do it? What possessed you?” Disbelief and shock and a little of anger, but mostly in Snape’s eye there was the blankness that accompanied the very specific thought of ‘I don’t have the faintest idea of what just happened’. 

“I couldn’t help it.”

“You couldn’t help it?” Snape snarled. “You couldn’t help it! What is this… mockery? If you think that… just because what you saw in my memories about my sexual preference… that this would be an appropriate way to pass your class -” 

“Oh, shut your mouth just for once.” 

And Harry kissed him again. 

This time it took Snape a little less time to snap out of it. 

“Potter! I demand - ” 

“I got it. I knew why you were looking at me like that and why I felt what I did and this… this whole tension thing going on… ” 

“You don’t make sense, Potter.” 

“I think I like you.” 

“Oh, well, should I thank you, then?” Snape scoffed, “The Great Harry Potter likes me. You don’t know what you’re talking about.” 

“Well, why don’t you show me?” 

“Potter…” this time it was a plea - to make sense, or to have pity on him and stop whatever it is he was doing. 

“You kissed me back, so maybe you know I know what I’m talking about.” 

Snape looked ready to give up and emigrate in Mexico - or in another very warm country, where he could buy cheap alcool and forget about the rain and the wind. “I’m too old for this shit.” 

“You’re not even forty and I’m legal. No one needs to know,” Harry chirped, placing a chaste kiss on his lips, so fast the professor couldn’t even react.

With a sigh, Snape gave in. “I’ll be known as the Death Eater who defiled the Harry Potter the Saviour.” 

“I thought you would be more difficult to convince.” 

“I’ve been a spy, Mr. Potter. I know to take advantage of the opportunity served to me on a silver platter.” 

“Aw, an opportunity, is it?”
“Kindly shut up, now, and use your mouth in a more fitting way.” 

“Yes, Sir.” 

Sir

Eight years, a war and an almost dead experience, and this was what it took to be called Sir. 

It probably was to be expected, Snape thought. 

And then Harry put his mouth to better use - he kissed him and then… well, you can imagine what happened then -  and Snape didn’t think at all. 


 

'Cause once you're mine, once you're mine

 

There's no going back


“I think the solution should be Potion tutoring. Extra lessons.”

“Are you really willing to apprehend or is this just some poor excuse?” 

Harry smirked. “Both?” 

“Both is acceptable.” 

danzanelfuoco: (Default)
 Harry Potter

COW-T #10, week 7, m2

Prompt: Immagine 1 (ragazzo triste) 

Wordcount: 433

 

La lapide è bianca e piena di fiori.
In retrospettiva non avrebbero dovuto rivelare al pubblico dove fosse, non che ci volesse un genio per capire che le sue spoglie mortali sarebbero rimaste a Godric’s Hollow, accanto a quelle di sua madre e suo padre, dove sarebbero dovute essere sedici anni prima, se solo… 

Il funerale era stato pubblico, con tanto di fanfara e lacrime e lutto nazionale. Persino i Babbani si erano resi conto che qualcosa non andava. Aveva piovuto per giorni e a largo delle Highland c’era stato persino un uragano. I maghi non avevano mai avuto mezze misure in fondo. 

Sarebbero dovuti essere felici, finalmente il Mago Oscuro più temibile della storia - se non si teneva in considerazione Grindelwald e Morgana la Fata e tutti gli altri maghi oscuri che avevano cercato di conquistare il mondo prima di Voldemort - era stato sconfitto. 

Onestamente non era questo il finale che si era aspettato. 

Per prima cosa non si aspettava di sopravvivere. 

Il fatto era che negli ultimi quindici anni e poco più la sua intera esistenza era stata volta a riparare il più grande errore della sua vita e ora… ora si sentiva svuotato. 

Sì, certo avevano sconfitto il Signore Oscuro, sì certo aveva vendicato la morte di Lily. 

Ma tempo una ventina d’anni ed ecco che le linee si sarebbero sfumate e Voldemort non sarebbe sembrato poi così cattivo e forse in fondo proprio tutti i torti non è che li avesse, no? E ne sarebbe arrivato un altro, così come Voldemort aveva seguito Grindelwald che a sua volta aveva seguito qualcun altro. 

La storia si ripete. 

Severus avrebbe dovuto gioire, avrebbe dovuto essere soddisfatto di vedere Voldemort cadere. Ma non aveva riportato Lily in vita. 

‘Non è che ti sei affezionato al ragazzo, Severus?’

Mai. Mai, eppure…

Eppure tenerlo in vita era stata l’unica cosa che aveva potuto fare. Per Lily, ma anche per sé stesso. 

E ora stava guardando la sua lapide bianca piena di fiori. 

A che prezzo avevano vinto? 

Chi non aveva mai conosciuto il ragazzo avrebbe detto che una vita per salvarne migliaia era un sacrificio che andava fatto. 

Severus chiude gli occhi. 

No, non sarebbe dovuta andare così. 

Lui sarebbe dovuto morire, il suo compito esaurito. E quello stupido ragazzino, Grifondoro fino al midollo, avrebbe dovuto tirare fuori un trucco dalla manica e sopravvivere. 

Alas, la vita non è giusta e il mondo non funziona come nei libri. 

Harry Potter era morto, martire suicida immolato per salvare il mondo magico da sé stesso, dal mostro che aveva generato. 

Sic transit gloria mundi. 

Severus caccia indietro le lacrime che non ha versato in diciassette anni, cercando di convincersi che non comincerà proprio ora. 


Unforeseen

Mar. 31st, 2020 08:55 pm
danzanelfuoco: (Default)
 Harry Potter (Snarry) 

COW-T#10 - week7, m6 (Fili intrecciati del destino) 

Wordcount: 341 parole


Why things would never happen as they should was a mistery to him. 

Why was he always the recipient of such absurd occurrences was even more than a mistery.

Yes, yes, he knew, he knew he was the Chosen One and the Boy Who Lived so of course, if something had to happen it would happen to him. 

But still, why every incident, accident and related fortuitous events where always related to him?

Bah. 

Divination classes should have been a piece of cake. Should.

Why was should always the focal point? 

Still. 

Divination classes should have been a piece of cake. 

Except of course, that particular lesson... well, it wasn't. 

Threads of destiny professor Trelawney called them, and Parvati blushed and asked if there was a spell to actually know ones' soulmate. 

As if soulmate ever existed.

No, Hermione would have scoffed at the notion of his soul being destined to fit perfectly with another one - she was more the type who thought a relationship should be built upon the little compromise not some starcrossed love - but again, Hermione was not attending this particular class. 

Professor Trelawney said that yes, of course there was a spell, but it appeared that it seldom worked. Another way to say it was utter crap. 

That didn't stop the girls from chuckling and gingerly asking if the professor could cast it. 

Professor Trelawney looked more terrified and horrified at the idea than Harry was, but alas, her whole class now was very interested in soulmates and discovering theirs so she had to perform. 

Harry knew deep down it wasn't a good idea. 

He knew it. 

But really, after defeating the Dark Lord, what could go wrong? 

Yes, he should have known better than to even think that question.

It could be raining. 

And thunder he heard for as soon as the spell was cast on the whole class and he could feel his forearm twitch and looking down he saw his soulmark. 

Oh, fuck. Really?

The name on his wrist was 'Half-Blood Prince'. 

 

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