Madam Pince is Madam
Prince here, and Tracey Davis is a
Davies. They are related to Snape (his mother was Eileen Prince) and Roger Davies (a minor Ravenclaw character who was Fleur's date in the Yule Ball in Book 4) respectively. Percy's full name is '
Percival' here, even though we were given no indication in canon of 'Percy' not being his full name... mainly because I prefer Arthurian names for the Weasleys. As for romance, any feelings Parvati has for Harry are one-sided, at least for now. I also took liberties with Lavender's character and talents.
Remember, whenever I refer to football, I mean European football, known in America as 'soccer'.
I mostly wrote this in late 2019, early January and early March 2020; late January and most of February were bad months for this story. I split the chapter in two; this one is ~9k words, so you are spared from a 18k-word monstrosity.
I like Neville's character. Unfortunately, this Harry doesn't share that opinion, mainly because he sees Neville as spineless.
I haven't been able to find a beta reader, so I'm my own beta, as usual.
-----
Harry woke up, groggy but still early, as usual for him because his school hadn't been a boarding school, so he had needed to wake up early every day to take the bus there. He went to the dorm's loo, turned the knob at the sink and threw some water at his face, cringing a bit at its coldness.
The creaking of the door opening again could be heard; Harry lifted his head and turned around, seeing his black dorm-mate, Thomas or something. The other boy said 'good morning!' energetically.
"Good morning," Harry said. Then, he said, "you're one of
those, aren't you? You are a
morning person!" Letting out a small yawn.
Thomas sniggered at that and offered Harry his hand. He said, "I'm Dean, Dean Thomas."
Harry nodded and shook Thomas's hand, saying, "Harry Potter."
The two of them got into a conversation about sports outside the loo after finishing what they had been there to do; football, to be exact. Harry found out that Dean Thomas supported West Ham, which was a team Harry didn't have anything against. Not that Harry was enough of a fanatic to condemn someone for the team they supported.
"What about you, Harry?" Dean said, narrowing his eyes a bit, "what's your team?"
"I support Liverpool FC," Harry said, going to get some clothes ready in order to have a shower.
"Oh, all right," Dean said, his voice cheerful, "for a moment there, I was afraid you would say Millwall or something."
Harry rolled his eyes at Dean's silliness. He took a few deep breaths, going through the door next to the loo's, which contained the showers, separately to the loo. As he was getting sprayed with water, it hit Harry that he was going to a school for
magic! He had been able to use his abilities for years, but somehow, this felt more concrete, more... something. He couldn't wait for the lessons to start... which was a strange thing for a schoolboy to say or think. Harry let out a small laugh as he finished his shower.
-----
There he is! Did you see that messy hair? His eyes, too!
Did you see the scar?
Harry Potter's more muscular than I expected!
People were whispering about Harry during breakfast, or at least the ones awake enough to speak did. Harry's lip curved in a sneer for a moment; he still didn't get the idiots who populated the wizarding society, but whenever people blatantly stared, he calmly met their eyes, making them look away. Even his dorm-mates talked about him like he wasn't there sometimes! Well, at least Harry got along with them, especially Dean. Of course, Dean had grown up with Muggles, so he didn't have the hero-worship.
He sat next to the Weasley twins, who made some conversation, telling him about their brothers still in Hogwarts; Ronald or Ron and Percival or Percy. They regaled Harry with tales of pranks they had played, though they had a secret prankster in their family who often kept them on their toes at home, so they didn't have as much time to keep 'perfect prefect Percy' from getting a bigger head. He could hear a lot of conversation, but Harry mainly paid attention to Seamus Finnigan and Neville Longbottom.
Longbottom said something about how he was pureblood, but his folks had thought he had had no magic, so his great-uncle had nearly drowned him once and dropped him out a window another time. 'That explains his meekness, sort of,' Harry thought, sneering at the thought of how worthless all the Longbottoms apparently were.
Finnigan said, "well, I'm half and half – me da's a muggle, mam's a witch. Bit of a nasty shock for him when he found out, but he got over it pretty quick, mam says," his Irish accent still rather obvious.
""You're lucky your dad's a good man,"" Harry said, but there was an echo.
Harry turned to see who echoed him, and it was one of the female Gryffindors in his year – Sally-Anne Perks or something. She adjusted her glasses, scoffed and turned back to her food. Harry decided not to ask. He remembered the business with Dumbledore,
as if I could fully forget, making him decide not to throw any looks at the staff table if he could help it.
Harry finished breakfast with only a few glances at the staff table and no Dumbledore confronting him; he decided to go to the library immediately in order to find the books Professor Flitwick had recommended that Harry hadn't bought, so he asked Percy for directions, following the same all the way there. In the meantime, Percy was making small talk.
Percy said, "so, Harry – how are you finding Hogwarts so far?"
Harry said, "well, it has wonderful food and really good desserts, I've got to give Hogwarts that. Unfortunately, the staring and whispering can get really annoying," his lip curving in a sneer again.
Percy was silent for a few seconds, then he said, "have you not got used to it already?" Brows furrowed, looking puzzled.
Harry realised that Percy thought Harry had lived with magicals after a few seconds, so he shook his head. Harry said, "I live with some relatives of mine, but they're muggles. After the Leaky Cauldron and Diagon Alley, this is the first time I've been directly exposed to the Wizarding society, and let me tell you, that was a really bad first impression!" Letting his true emotions show on his face in front of the older boy.
Percy cringed. He said, "...It's that bad? Are there no famous people in the Muggle World?"
"There are, and Muggles probably react in a similar way to such people," Harry said, sighing, "fortunately, I am nowhere near famous in the muggle society, so I never had to find out first-hand. I don't rightly know what celebrities' children are treated like, but there are laws for the protection of those below eighteen years of age, and I doubt such children are as exposed as I am unless they did something themselves, like starring in a popular film."
Percy stopped speaking again, probably mulling over Harry's words. Then, he said, "wait… what do you mean 'did something themselves'? Didn't you destroy You-Know-Who?"
Harry shook his head, saying, "of course not. I may not remember that night, but it seems obvious to me that my parents must have done something to save me. Is there such a thing as sacrificial magic?"
Percy stopped walking all of a sudden, and Harry, walking to his left and somewhat behind him, stopped in place too. Percy said, his voice trembling, "the sacrifice of human life in magic is either seriously illegal, or means some kind of suicide. Do you really think your parents committed suicide knowingly?"
Harry thought it over a bit. He said, "they were facing a seemingly insurmountable foe. If the only way to save their child was to give their lives, and if they saved tens of thousands of people from death or slavery in the process, I don't see a reason to look down on them – sometimes, disregarding the law is necessary; otherwise, that monster might have been in charge today. As for suicide via You-Know-Who… well, I admit I generally look down upon cowards who kill themselves, but as I said, it might have been truly necessary and saved a lot of lives, so I really can't call them cowards."
"...You might not want to spread this around, Harry. Human sacrifice magic, and sacrifice magic in general, is considered taboo – even the non-illegal parts. You see, that taboo dates back to the witch hunts, when certain parties spread rumours of magic coming from the devil; satanism was often linked with human sacrifice, so wizards and witches understandably wanted to distance themselves from such things. Suicide is also a painful subject in our world," Percy said, looking Harry straight in the eyes. Then, the older boy said, "disregarding the law would have made the 'good' side no better than the other one, though."
Harry shook his head. He considered what he wanted to say carefully, then said, "in the words of a wise muggle: war is not about who is right, but about who is left. If a situation has escalated to civil war, then there is no such thing as law anyway. I'm not saying people should have used the truly horrible parts of dark magic, but slitting the throat of an attacker, or exploding that attacker with a curse or two should have been not only allowed, but encouraged."
Percy answered a few seconds later, saying, "what about vigilante assassins? Should they have been encouraged, too?"
Harry said, "putting a prize on known Death Eaters' heads might have helped," after a few seconds of thought.
Percy shook his head. He said, "there were few to no known Death Eaters; they always wore masks. Try again."
"If they always wore the same robes and masks," Harry said, "then an organisation that executed Death Eaters while they were in garb could have helped things considerably."
"And then, the families of the members would be targeted, often by You-Know-Who himself," Percy countered, "my grandparents, the Prewetts, were killed because my uncles were members of the Order of the Phoenix, which was a kind-of vigilante organisation, founded by Professor Dumbledore, dedicated to fighting against You-Know-Who and his followers… the Order weren't even using lethal means, usually! My uncles themselves were also killed later on, though they actually went lethal on that night when they realised how outnumbered they were – they killed three Death Eaters, seriously wounded a fourth and stalled a fifth who snuck up on them after they had won, Antonin Dolohov, enough to get him arrested, dying in the process."
Harry was certain that those uncles of Percy's must have been serious powerhouses, but he shook off the thought and shook his head. He said, "perhaps that was exactly the Order of the Phoenix's mistake: not killing the Death Eaters when they could – morals are all well and good, but that was too dangerous a situation to afford most morals. How many skilled allies did You-Know-Who have? How long until he ran out? Would he have been able to do everything on his own?"
Percy sighed. He said, "You-Know-Who was exceedingly powerful and skilled – Bartemius Crouch's measures were the only thing that delayed him, and they still weren't doing enough; You-Know-Who started recruiting sometime in 'Seventy or 'Seventy-one and launched his first larger-scale attacks in 'Seventy-seven. Nobody knew where others' allegiance was, and that's without counting the Imperius. For years, our country was on the verge of collapse! Years! Do not misunderstand me; perhaps you have a point, but I am not the one to speak to about that. Do you have any other questions for me?" Getting passionate at some point, then winding down.
Harry decided to let Percy's change of subject go. He considered Percy's words earlier, then said, "I have a few questions about the witch hunts. The history texts I've looked at generally treat them as a joke, but I don't get why: isn't it relatively easy to separate a magical from their wand if you outnumber them, even without magic? Wandless magic is not very widespread, and I doubt it was much more common back then, so I'm quite certain some witches and wizards got killed by muggle mobs before they could manage the Flame-Freezing Charm, and that's without considering other methods of execution, like hanging – losing one's wand would be bad, even after the Charm, in that case. What about little magical children, especially the Muggleborn? Why was the Statute of Secrecy created if Muggles were a minor danger?"
Percy smiled at Harry bitterly. He said, "you're not one for the easy questions, are you? Well, from what I've studied, you are generally correct, but actual witches and wizards were never the targets, so the problem was not as major as it sounds. You see, what the Church of the time wanted was
control… mainly over people's sexuality. People, mostly muggle women, who didn't have the behaviour they wanted –had sex before marriage or a three-way relationship or something like that– were hunted down and executed.
» It's an important reason why having sex in Hogwarts, while not encouraged, is not punished nearly as harshly as in muggle schools when caught, even if breaking curfew or otherwise out of bounds. In addition to all that, while intentional wandless magic is and was rare, even adults may release accidental magic when their life is threatened, so those mobs often lost most of their participants when they caught an actual witch or wizard.
» As for why the Statute of Secrecy was made… that's equally as painful a topic, if not more. You see, most of our own wanted to subjugate the Muggles, or eliminate them so that they wouldn't grow into a true threat. Despite their numbers and firearms, the simple Shield Charm is far stronger against physical impacts than spells, so the average adult wizard could directly take dozens of- billets? Bullets? Before his Shield broke, to say nothing of more exceptional ones or the inaccuracy of the projectiles. Add to that the existence of magical trickery, compulsion, Legilimency and mind-control, and we had a distinct advantage.
» Some of the wizards, though, were against subjugating or killing the Muggles – among them was one of my ancestors, Bedivere Weasley. Because of his words and actions, many people labelled the Weasley family as 'blood traitors', though the term has lost most of its meaning nowadays. As a result of the existence of 'blood traitors', our leaders of the time feared that some wizards would side with the Muggles against their own. As a compromise, the Statute of Secrecy was written up, being finalised in sixteen eighty-nine and becoming fully active three years later."
Harry didn't know what to say to that-
crap! His leg sank into... an inexistent step in the stairs? Percy helped free his leg, though Harry had to walk carefully because it was a bit sore due to the impact. Percy said, "ah – I see that you have had your first encounter with Hogwarts's... eccentricities," an amused smile on his face, with a small crease in his brow, probably a sign of worry.
Harry cradled his leg without putting more strain on it by putting a hand on the wall and bending in such a way that he balanced on one foot, his right one. Truth be told, he didn't really need to lean on the wall to do that – all the balance and flexibility exercises the football coach had had him do had made him really good at standing on one foot; in fact, one of the main exercises he had had to go through in every training session -and recently kept doing on his own, considering he was away from civilisation, so to speak- was to balance on one foot while holding up the other leg with one of his hands, without leaning on anything.
As for Hogwarts, Harry's interest was admittedly piqued after the pain had gotten less intense. He said, "so, what kind of
eccentricities does Hogwarts have?" His fingers twitching a bit, trying to hide his eagerness for an answer.
Percy smiled again, saying, "the main ones are distance sometimes being... inconsistent, illusory steps, secret passages, some of which need passwords, and facilities changing locations. In fact, the Hogwarts Library's entrance was up a single set of stairs from the Great Hall just last year; now, it's still on the floor above the ground floor, but the walk needed is far greater." Then, Percy said, "may I cast a diagnostic Charm on your leg, Harry? All of us Prefects get medical training from our third year, the moment we become even candidates, enough to be able to tell if we need to get someone to Madam Pomfrey."
"Go ahead," Harry said, having developed some trust for the older boy.
Percy murmured some words, then tapped Harry's ankle. He said, "you are just fine, Harry, apart from mild bruising."
Percy is amazing; he's much cooler than Fred and George let on when I sat near them in the feast.
"A-hem. Thank you, Harry," Percy said, looking away. "
If the twins only knew that Ginny and I are the ones who prank them at home...," he then murmured, snorting.
Harry hadn't meant to say that out loud. He also decided to pretend he had never heard the last part of what Percy had just said. Percy asked Harry if he would like help with finding everything in the Hogwarts Library, but Harry declined, preferring not to take up more of the older boy's time. As Percy was leaving, he had one piece of advice for Harry: 'respect the rules of the library, or the librarian will be a lot less helpful'.
When Harry entered, he was left with his mouth hanging open. The library was absolutely titanic; it spanned across multiple levels – possibly four or even five? It also went beyond where his eyes could see both in length and in width.
I wouldn't be surprised if the famed Library of Alexandria had been smaller than this.
"The Great Library of Alexandria still exists," an older feminine voice said behind Harry.
Harry turned around suddenly, seeing a woman in her late thirties, maybe; her hair was brown, chin-length, straight but a bit uncared for, and her black eyes were cold and inexpressive. Her skin was an unhealthy colour similar to parchment and her height, unusually for women, was over a hundred and seventy five centimetres, possibly all the way to a hundred and eighty.
Harry was surprised by this knowledge, but on second thought, maybe he shouldn't have been. He said, "is there a book about the Library of Alexandria and other important libraries, then?"
"...We shall see," the woman said in a monotone, "the Hogwarts Library has certain rules which are to be followed to the letter and in the spirit both. It is prohibited to damage or deface any one of the books in any way, so be careful when taking notes; eating anywhere in the Library and picking one's nose is also prohibited, though a bottle of water is allowed, as long as proper precautions are taken; speaking loudly, or otherwise making sounds or noise, is the third prohibition. Casting spells directly on books is the fourth one. The fifth is no messy or noisy public displays of affection, especially if there is a risk of damaging or defacing books; self-affection is included in that. The sixth is that the Restricted Section is not to be accessed by anyone without the proper permit. Finally, nobody is allowed to run, sprint or otherwise move quickly in the Library."
Harry kept himself from laughing at the fifth rule or the nose-picking part of the second one and committed the rules to memory, saying, "I understand and will follow," as convincingly as he could.
"See that you do," the woman said, her expression barely changing, "I am Irma Prince, Head Librarian; you may call me 'Madam Prince'. if you have any questions, you may direct them... elsewhere," then turned to leave.
"I only have one question for you: is there a way to find books more easily without bothering you, Madam Prince?" Harry said.
Madam Prince stopped walking away, then said, "an intelligent question from a student...? Very well. Follow me," without turning to look at Harry.
She took Harry through twists and turns into a hidden corner of the Library, telling him to tap a certain surface with his wand without casting any spells and whisper 'ten to the hundredth power'. Harry did so, and was rewarded with an alphabetical list of all books in the Library, with the option to put in keywords to look up. Unfortunately, as long as he didn't know or suspect at least part of the title of a book, the 'search' function would be near-useless because it couldn't search inside books, only titles. On the up side, he did remember most of the books Professor Flitwick had recommended.
He settled on a book about the most basic of information on Potions, took it to one of the reading areas and sat at a table, starting to read it. It largely had stuff that Harry knew from cooking books such as what a 'pinch' or 'dash' or 'smidgen' was, slicing versus dicing and more. What was new was the information that certain ingredients and Potions were affected by the phases of the moon, the positions of planets and stars and more. It explained Astronomy and Herbology being mandatory from the first year. Harry also found out that the majority of Potions needed a little bit of waving of one's wand, so 'Squibs' and Muggles were unable to make them. Harry wasn't sure what the word 'Squib' meant, but maybe it was a different kind of magic user who was unable to use wands, or maybe someone whose magic was crippled somehow.
He closed the book, found one about the most major libraries in existence and their history, and checked them both out for borrowing. Harry resolved to explore the Hogwarts Library, and Hogwarts as a whole, a lot more in the future – he was convinced it hid a lot of secrets beyond the obvious. As he was leaving the Library, he noticed a girl he thought was named Granger peppering Madam Prince with questions, which made him scoff – Irma Prince was not the kind to take well to that. He also noticed a few older students with blue ties on entering the library – Ravenclaws, along with a Ravenclaw girl his age; he didn't know her name.
-----
History of Magic was, simply put, a snooze-fest; it was on the first day, Tuesday, September third, and it started off with a whimper. Harry found it more productive to study ahead in something theory-heavy, mainly Potions and Transfiguration. That earned him a dirty look from Granger, first name Hermione, who was apparently a major teacher's pet, but he simply ignored the girl. Those subjects were thus far way easier than French, which he had had to put countless hours into studying to get As and Bs in.
Defence Against the Dark Arts, or DADA, was a serious disappointment, but not as much as it would have been, had Harry not met the professor beforehand. Quirrell was as much of a stuttering wreck as he remembered, maybe even worse, and as bad a teacher as he had suspected. The turban with added garlic smell was an unpleasant surprise, as if the rest wasn't enough. He simply couldn't understand what it was that made Professor Flitwick wary – unless he had misunderstood the short man's words. The only thing of note was that the creepy voice in Harry's head had let out high-pitched sniggers during the lesson, which was out of character for it; possibly because Quirrell was
that pathetic.
Professor Flitwick was an engaging teacher, but he refused to teach them -as in, the first-year Gryffindors and Hufflepuffs- anything beyond 'Lumos' and its counter-charm ('Nox') until they had truly mastered those two – with good reason, considering Seamus Finnigan had set fire to one of his books by poking it with his wand, which earned him an
Aqueructo, a variation of the Water-Making Charm, in the face by Flitwick… which
did put out the fire, without getting the book wet, somehow. Harry, on the other hand, had to get used to the size of his wand before casting – waving around something as long as one foot was not the easiest of things at his age and size; he had already practised the motion that got his wand out of the holster, which Professor Flitwick had been kind enough to show him, but both that and simply holding the wand were still giving Harry trouble.
Harry got himself into his trance-like state, waved his wand and said "
Lumos", thinking of a light and trying to wish it into existence, only to get nothing at all; it was that way for him throughout Flitwick's class. He wasn't quite behind, only Parvati Patil had managed anything out of all the Gryffindors and only another girl out of the Hufflepuffs, Bones or something, but he hated not being the best at school; it was something he wasn't used to, and something which he definitely didn't like.
'Let's take this logically,' Harry thought, 'I managed to make a magic light years ago, without a wand. So, the problem either has something to do with the wand, or with a difference in the spells.' He thought it over a bit more, but couldn't understand what he was missing. It had been more than half an hour since Flitwick's class had ended, and Harry was still struggling with 'Lumos'.
"Potter," a familiar voice said.
Harry turned, only to see the girl who was ahead of him in the Charms curriculum, Parvati Patil. She was rather dark-skinned and of obvious Indian descent, with black hair and dark eyes, the latter of which shone with something Harry couldn't quite figure out.
"What is it, Patil?" Harry said, carefully keeping the frustration out of his tone.
The girl looked at him, then at his wand and said, "want some help with the Charm?"
Harry was about to snap at her, opened his mouth… then closed it again. He carefully considered the proposition and said, "er, sure, why not."
The giggles Lavender Brown let out made him realise that he had sounded a bit too awkward. He had a bit of a hard time ignoring her, so he glared at her.
"Don't mind Lavender," Patil said, smiling awkwardly, "she's a bit too… jolly?"
"If you say so," Harry said, smirking this time.
Patil looked away for a moment for some reason and Brown simply giggled more, confusing Harry – he had grown used to being able to guess people's motives and emotions, so this was worrying. Harry didn't let any of his turmoil show on his face, though – he looked at the girls expectantly until they calmed down. He noted that Brown had brown eyes and somewhat long dirty-blond hair in ringlets.
"Oh, yes, the spell!" Patil said, back to normal. Then, she said, "show me how you do it."
Harry concentrated, did the wand motion and said the incantation, putting his intent into the spell… and failed. So, he did it again, at Patil's urging… and failed once again.
"You're doing it all perfectly," Patil said, confused, "I don't get what the problem is – you've been trying this many times, so it can't be because you didn't practise enough like the others. Your wand is yours, not an heirloom – right?"
"Right," Harry said, familiar frustration building up.
"Do you picture a light coming out of the wand?" Patil said.
"Yes, of cou- wait, is it supposed to come out of the wand directly, like the wand is a torch?" Harry said.
"Yes, though it's only light, not fire – didn't you hear Flitwick say that?" Patil said incredulously.
"I must have missed that part of the lecture," Harry said, annoyed at himself, giving little heed to the fact that Patil knew nothing of modern torches; flashlights, as Mike called them.
Harry tried again, failing once more; this time, though, he realised he was close to a breakthrough. After nearly half an hour and many more tries, he managed to get a very small light. He felt his lips quirk slightly at his accomplishment, snapping out of his trance when he heard clapping.
Patil was the one making that sound. She said, "that's it Harry, you did great! See? All you needed was a bit of a push," smiling.
Harry wanted to be annoyed, he really did, but his elation at getting the spell right couldn't be doused. He said, "thanks, Patil," trying to smile at her, only to realise that it was more of a smirk again.
"You're welcome," Patil said, looking away once again and making Harry want to solve the mystery of her behaviour.
"
Nox. …By the way," Harry said, thinking of the old woman who had helped him in the past, "have we met before? I remember meeting an old woman and a little girl who looked just like you a few years ago."
"What!" Patil said, very loudly, "so, Grandma and Padma weren't joking?! What the bloo- what the heck?!" Incredulously.
Harry ignored her outburst and left, but he could feel that his lips were still curved upwards at the corners. He found an unused classroom and gave the wand-lighting spell a lot more tries, trying to make the light brighter. Unfortunately, while he managed to change the intensity of the light, he couldn't control how much it changed, as if it was random. He tried thinking the incantation rather than saying it out loud, but that only made the light more uncontrolled and erratic.
Well, Harry had felt
something in the air inside "Ollivanders' " and when he first arrived at Hogwarts; maybe he could try feeling the flow of that 'something' in him as he used the spell, if it had anything to do with magic...? It was worth a try. Harry got into his trance-like state; unlike his usual application of the state, having modified it to better apply to spellcasting, Harry let his mind wander from thing to thing freely. He cast the spell again with a muttered "
Lumos".
There! No, I lost it. Again! It felt like a few minutes had passed when Harry managed to get a handle on the minuscule amount of energy(?), but he heard a bell sound, which signified the start of dinner, so he had been there for hours.
'I didn't manage to control the spell better, but come to think of it, I
am hungry,' Harry mused, 'fortunately, using magic with a wand is much, much less taxing on my body, apparently.' It took him quite a few minutes to get back to the Great Hall, but Harry managed not to get lost… much.
-----
Every night, Harry kept doing the Occlumency exercises the Hat had put into his mind without fail, with the voice getting less and less frequent in its interventions and his nightmares receding again; he also looked up the 'something' he had felt before (the presence of magic?) in the Library's search function, but found nothing, who knew why – it could be that it was unique to him, that he was using the wrong words… or maybe it was in the Restricted Section.
From the 'Lumos' debacle on, Parvati Patil and Lavender Brown had started following Harry around constantly. He was confused by that, until he realised that they wanted to be his friends, which was a new experience for him – he
had spent time with his teammates from football, but this was the first time his classmates wanted to befriend him, female ones at that, though the fact that his previous classmates had been nearly twice his age might have been the reason.
Whenever Harry didn't feel like having company, he told Parvati and Lavender (as they insisted he call them) without hesitation, which caused friction between them – Harry didn't deal well with crying girls.... Harry had had to explain that he was mostly a loner many times before the girls got it, or at least chalked it up to Harry being weird and stopped complaining. Dean had been much more understanding, though he found Harry's fondness for isolation hilarious. Fortunately, Dean was much more empathic than Harry, so he had helped calm down Lavender when she had cried.
...Which had still left Harry with soothing Parvati.
Parvati kept snivelling while Harry grasped for what to say or do. Eventually, he put a hand on Parvati's shoulder, saying, "look, Parvati – I like you well enough, but I'm a loner. I don't do well around people all the time."
Parvati looked up, her eyes a bit reddened, and said, "is this the part where you tell me you don't wanna see me ever again?"
What
? "Of course not," Harry said, "what I meant is that sometimes I want to be around people, including you, and sometimes I prefer to be left alone."
Harry hadn't spent so much time around the same people before, but he didn't like it, apparently – he was certain that if he kept on without saying anything, he would end up sick of Parvati and Lavender before long.
Harry heard a whisper from Parvati, something about books and the series on the Wizarding Wireless failing her, and may her namesake help her with emotionally stunted males. Then, she said out loud, "all right, Mr. loner – I will give you your space," sighing and patting Harry's cheek with a bit too much force.
Harry had been left with only Dean's company for a couple days; Harry thought that it was them that needed space this time, but according to Dean, they probably wanted an apology. Harry weighed the idea in his mind – while he would not apologise, as he had done nothing wrong, he decided to take the initiative and seek out their company; after all, friendship was a two-way street. Apparently, he had had the right idea, because that got the two girls to talk to him again.
Parvati sat close to him in the first Transfiguration lesson. When the professor, McGonagall, entered the classroom in her emerald green robes, the woman gave them a short lecture on the dangers of Transfiguration and warned them to take her class seriously, or else get kicked out forever. She then showed them a few Transfigurations that were probably more advanced than the class could handle, including desk-to-pig and her ability to turn into a cat.
Harry wanted some of that; he could think of quite a lot of things that could be accomplished by temporarily becoming a cat... or was it any animal? McGonagall somehow retained human intelligence as a cat, Harry suspected; otherwise, she wouldn't be able to turn back on her own, nor could a real cat look that stern. He tried to wrap his head around how it was possible to change into an animal with a completely different mass or make a living thing out of a desk, but the professor gave them some more safety instructions then, and managed to make Seamus Finnigan nearly piss himself when he tried poking his desk with his wand.
She also warned them very solemnly against transforming things into gases, which could and would kill people when they reverted, and to be extremely careful with Transfiguring from gases and from and to any liquid, too, though Conjuration was less dangerous. "I repeat," McGonagall said, "never transform anything into a gas – if somebody inhales it, then it turns back into wood or mercury or most anything else inside their body, that person is likely to die. Additionally, it won't be only one person who inhales it; it could be dozens or hundreds or more.
I cannot stress this enough. If I see anyone breaking this rule, I will ban you from performing Transfiguration ever again, and possibly try to have your wand snapped. Eating anything that has been Transfigured can also be lethal, so do not turn them into edible things. Animals are fine; they will revert when cut to pieces or cooked."
'She is just as strict as she lets on – of course, Transfiguration is dangerous, so it's necessary; it's good I never turned anything into a gas in the past,' Harry thought. Then, 'I wonder how hard it is to become an animal with human intelligence,' noting in his mind that he should ask her about it.
Minerva McGonagall looked to be around her early forties; she had black hair tied in a bun and very dark-green eyes, still visible behind her square-shaped glasses, and was nearly as tall as Madam Prince. The Professor had them learn the theory, which Harry had already studied, then gave them matches and told them to try to turn them into needles. This time, it was Hermione Granger who got results first (turning her match a silvery colour), getting two points for Gryffindor, while Harry was considering how to proceed.
"Won't you try it?" Parvati urged him.
Harry nodded, and didn't bother saying the incantation out loud… turning the match into a needle.
"My word," McGonagall said, walking up to them and checking the 'needle' for flaws, favouring Harry with an unexpectedly sweet smile, "Mr. Potter, you managed the transformation flawlessly on your first try! Five points to Gryffindor!"
Granger gave Harry the stink eye once again, but Harry ignored her and simply asked McGonagall how to turn the 'needle' back.
"Untransfiguration is more difficult than Transformation, Mr. Potter," the Scottish professor said, but she did give a brief overview on what each branch did and how. "You see, there are four known main branches in Transfiguration, from easiest to hardest: Transformation, Untransfiguration, Vanishment and Conjuration. Untransfiguration spells are considered counter-spells in addition to Transfiguration.
» As for Vanishment, it is the art of turning things into the base materials of the universe, and I mean much smaller than atoms: you are vanishing, essentially destroying, something. Finally, Conjuration is bringing something into existence from base materials – the opposite of Vanishment. Vanishment is taught in the fifth year, whereas Conjuration is taught in the final two years of Hogwarts, as long as you pass your Transfiguration OWL with at least an Exceeds Expectations."
She showed them a spell, Reparifarge, which could reverse some wrongly done Transfigurations; then, she told them it was normally taught in second year and, even so, few got it before fourth year, because it was a general spell, as in free Transfiguration – not for a specific occasion such as reversing a beetles-to-buttons Transformation. It was taught to students because it was designed to be all but impossible to worsen things and because the sooner a wrongly-done Human Transfiguration was reversed or at least mitigated, the less likely the person was to remain that way… especially when the transformation caused asphyxiation, though wizards' and witches' bodies were really adaptable and resilient, so that wasn't easy to cause.
Harry decided that he would manage both Reparifarge and Vanishment with a wand by the end of the next month, October – he would probably be constantly busy with learning things like how to write with a quill and changing the amount of power he put into his spells the current month.
Harry could Vanish things wandlessly, but with nowhere as much ease as before
that voice had awakened – he had been able to do that by pointing with his foot, but since then, he could manage it only through his hands and a few other parts, though he was slowly improving again. Once he was done with that, he would look into Conjuration. Harry stayed back after the class in order to ask about the human-to-animal transformation, which he did immediately, though politely.
Professor McGonagall silently looked at Harry through her spectacles for a few seconds, then said, "why are you asking, Mr. Potter? Is it for practical jokes?"
Harry's mood soured slightly. He said, "as much as I like the Weasley twins, that kind of stuff is not for me; I've had enough people try to stuff my head into a toilet seat and think it hilarious to put me off such things forever."
"I see," the professor said, still studying Harry, "should I assume that they failed?"
"They did," Harry said, confirming, "I never planned to punch someone in the crotch, but there is a first time for everything."
McGonagall went quiet again, then said, "you are not what I expected, Mr. Potter," her face strangely unreadable.
"What did you expect, then, Professor?" Harry said, slightly annoyed at yet another person judging him without ever meeting him.
"Do not take that tone with me, Mr. Potter," the woman said, her lips thinning slightly, her eyes narrowing and her nostrils opening and closing many times quickly, "I merely expressed my surprise that you are not nearly as spoiled as the son of the people you were left with was when you both were babies."
That made more sense,
marginally – this person had been one of the ones who had left him with the Dursleys... and while all ended well, there was no way anyone with a lick of good sense had thought that was a good idea. Harry took calming breaths, feeling his anger being channeled through the floor, possibly literally, considering the existence of magic. Harry said, "be thankful that Uncle Vernon is a good man; I would rather not imagine what I would be like, had I been raised by Petunia only," his fingers twitching slightly.
Well, his uncle had
become a decent person, but he hadn't started out that way… not that he would tell McGonagall that.
A calmer-looking McGonagall shook her head, saying, "I did express my doubt to Professor Dumbledore, but he brought up the argument of your fame in the Magical World."
That brought Harry short, and made him think: what would he have been like, had he grown up in the midst of hero worship? He shuddered – he had heard horror stories of former child stars who had not had supportive parent figures, especially their adventures with abuse of alcohol and all kinds of illegal drugs. If Harry had grown up with somebody like Petunia anyway, or distant, or indifferent, or someone who spoiled him
on top of the hero worship.... "The Headmaster probably made the best, or at least least bad possible call, then," Harry admitted, his anger deflating, leaving him feeling tired.
The professor smiled at Harry again, saying, "that is a mature way to look at things, Mr. Potter; honestly mature, not the kind of
maturity that gets a lass praise when what it truly is is distance from her peers because her social skills are extremely lacking, and she finds solace in getting attention from adults such as her teachers... who do not care, and only praise her because they need to put in no effort to get her to stay quiet, pay attention and learn the material. The kind that confuses distaste for her demeanour for envy of her intellect, and seriousness with being an insufferable little- never mind that," her smile fading into a scowl gradually.
Harry wasn't sure he would be as mature when he faced Dumbledore, but he put that aside because he was a bit confused by the professor's suspiciously specific rant. He said, "are you talking about Hermione Granger, Professor?" Still feeling drained.
McGonagall's face soured further. She said, "she is not the one I was referring to, though she
is displaying similar signs to- to a certain young woman I knew during my school years."
Harry looked McGonagall in the eyes, then said, "ah, I see," trying to keep the smirk off his face, but he averted his eyes quickly, remembering the existence of Legilimency.
McGonagall coughed theatrically, then said, "back on topic: why were you asking about the Animagus Transformation?"
Harry grew more animated after that. He said, "I noticed that you kept your intelligence as a cat, and thought up a lot of potential uses… like sneaking out of dangerous places, hiding from murderers and assassins and more." Seeing McGonagall about to interrupt, he quickly added, "don't tell me nobody would want to assassinate me, Professor McGonagall; I'm not stupid. Professor Flitwick told me that more than one heavily cursed artifact found its way into my personal vault by way of gifts, and I can read between the lines."
McGonagall's lips thinned, but she nodded slowly. She said, "very well, Mr. Potter. The Animagus Transformation is one of the highest pinnacles of Transfiguration. One finds their potential form, if they possess one, through a process I am not going to describe. The vast majority of wizards and witches
do have the potential to be Animagi, if not all, though it is difficult to tell without a doubt. A person gets a single form, no more; the species varies in accordance with the person's character and personality, and cannot be changed on purpose as far as I know."
McGonagall went into the legality of the Animagus Transformation, then its difficulty and risks; Harry promised he wouldn't try to get into it without instruction from a true expert, at her request – he saw no reason to try breaking that promise, at least until he knew what he was doing. Once McGonagall was finished with her lecture, Harry thanked her for her time, effort and the new knowledge she had imparted.
-----
Severus Snape looked a bit like Madam Prince – tall frame, nearly as tall as Ollivander; inexpressive black eyes, and even colder than Madam Prince's; unhealthy looking skin, though his was much paler. The greatest differences were that Snape had a much larger, hook-like nose and black hair. He was also a lot younger, possibly in his twenties, and possessed slightly longer hair and a small goatee. Harry thought this professor must be the youngest on the staff, with the possible exception of the stuttering wonder; Quirrell had been sorted into Ravenclaw twenty-three years before according to Flitwick, so the man was most likely thirty-four. Of course, wizards aged differently from muggles, so who could say which of them was younger?
Snape's robes looked especially ominous – the black colour and long, flowing parts made him look like an overgrown bat. Though his dental hygiene was better than most wizards'(*), his shoulder-length hair was covered in grease. On second glance, it looked less like the usual grease and more like something he had covered his hair in, like hair gel.
The man started taking roll call, but he paused during Harry's name. "Ah, yes, Harry Potter; we will see whether fame translates into talent," Snape said, the sneer obvious in his voice without even looking.
Harry barely hid a yawn – the Astronomy they had had on the previous night had left him with less sleep than he was used to, since he always woke up early and had been unable to go back to sleep. Snape apparently noticed, because his sneer became worse, but Harry didn't care enough to apologise.
After finishing roll call, Snape warned them about the dangers of messing up Potions without raising his voice, but somehow managed to make everyone listen carefully. Then, Snape went over safety precautions twice; finally, he gave a rather impressive speech about how powerful Potions could be. After all of that, Snape addressed Harry directly. He said, "Potter! What would one get by mixing asphodel and wormwood?"
Harry thought it over, throwing a brief glare at Granger for the annoying behaviour of raising her hand and shaking it back and forth, then he said, "they form the basis for the Draught of Living Death, a powerful sleeping Potion, Professor."
"A passable answer," Snape said, his lips curving downwards slightly, "where would you look for a Bezoar, Potter?"
"The stomach of a goat," Harry replied without hesitation.
"And what does it do?" Snape insisted.
"It's a cure to most poisons, Sir," Harry said, not volunteering any more information.
"So you
have read ahead, Potter; continue like this, and you might prove not to be a complete dunderhead. A final question: what is the difference between monkshood and wolfsbane?" Snape said, this time without as pronounced a sneer.
After a bit of thought, Harry remembered the answer. "They are the same plant, Professor Snape," Harry said; again, not adding anything more.
Harry did thank his lucky stars that he had read all of the books, including Herbology's 'One Thousand Magical Herbs and Fungi', though. He hadn't known exactly what was more important and what wasn't in magical studies, so he had made sure to pay attention to all of them, though he
had read some more times than others – 'Magical Drafts and Potions' and the Fantastic Beasts book had drawn his attention in a major way. If Professor Flitwick had mentioned the overlap between Herbology and Potions, Harry had missed it, but maybe the man had thought it obvious. Of course, Harry had realised that thanks to the Potions basics book from the library, though late.
"Essentially correct; it is also known as aconite, and can be lethally poisonous to consume; it is even dangerous to touch without gloves, and still lethal to muggles that way," Snape said, his cold black eyes sweeping across the classroom. Then, he said, "well? Why are all of you not writing it down?" Prompting everyone to pick up their quills.
After all was said and done, Snape put them up to brewing a Cure for Boils, making rounds of the class to check on them; Harry ended up being one of the few people to be alone by their fire, mainly because their professor had been the one to assign them places. Snape told them that they must follow the instructions on the blackboard during their first five years of Potions, not the instructions in the book, whether they were the same or not. That was to avoid sabotage through changing someone's books and for other reasons, the man explained.
The potions recipe on the blackboard seemed simple enough to Harry, who made sure to read the instructions twice before he even started, and true to form, his was one of the few Potions that were the right colour (light red, with hot pink smoke emitting from it); the only others who managed that were a Slytherin boy and a Slytherin girl by the name of Knot or Nott and Davis or maybe Davies, though Harry couldn't tell which of them deserved the credit; as well as Granger and Malfoy, the former alone and the latter sitting by a darker-skinned Slytherin boy (possibly from Southern Europe(*2)) and regarding Harry's cauldron and Harry himself with a calculating gaze.
Harry barely kept himself from shivering, turning away from Malfoy and his interest, only to see Seamus Finnigan about to add the porcupine quills with the fire still on, which the books and Snape's instructions cautioned against. He warned the other boy, but it was too late. The liquid inside Finnigan's cauldron let out green fumes, with Harry holding his breath for good measure.
Snape
moved, as Harry saw from the corner of his eye. The solution -it probably could not be called a Potion yet, or… ever- froze in place. It was as if it was replaced by a solid of similar colour. Then, the professor called out an incantation for the first time in the entire duration of the class, '
Gelflamma' and after that '
Evanesco', making the solution disappear. The incantation 'Gelflamma' was unknown to Harry; the other one was the Vanishing Spell, obviously.
Snape moved his wand a fourth time, saying '
Ventus Recens' and the air
rippled, making any trace of fumes disappear, which was Harry's cue to resume breathing. The smell of Pine tree entered his nostrils... which made Harry a bit nauseous because of an incident in which he had found out that he was allergic to Pine tree pollen – he would have liked some Cure for Boils at the time. Fortunately, he was not allergic to the point of his life being at risk, but that incident had still made him panic – in hindsight, it was good that he hadn't been chosen by a Pine wood wand… maybe Harry should research the meaning of wand woods at some point.
Snape berated Finnigan for not paying the instructions enough attention. Finnigan apologised, but Snape said, "apparently, you are too lazy to put effort into your studies, Finnigan; it is one thing to make a mistake due to inexperience and another entirely to take dangerous subjects lightly. You will be seeing me on Saturday evening – scrubbing cauldrons
by hand for your detention. Four points from Gryffindor."
Harry was starting to respect his Potions professor more (and to feel less nauseous), with the man's next words cementing that respect.
Snape said, "the first spell I cast, you won't find in books yet; it is something that I invented myself in the past decade, with the Ministry officially approving it and giving me the patent last year – I call it the
Delaying Charm, though certain… elements in the Ministry of Magic prefer the name 'Stasis Charm'. It does not work on most currently-living beings, but is really well-suited to situations like this. The second one was the Flame-Freezing Charm, incantation 'Gelflamma'; its movement is waving one's wand downwards from above their head. Ask your Charms professor for information on that one.
» 'Evanesco' is the incantation for generic Vanishment, which is a branch of Transfiguration. As for the
Air-freshening Charm, incantation 'Ventus Recens', it is one of the spells attributed to Merlin himself, though he apparently did not consider it very useful according to surviving writings. Merlin lived in the tenth and eleventh century Anno Domini and was sorted to Slytherin House at Hogwarts, though he was retroactively added to events –or rather fiction– of six centuries before then sometime in the eleventh or twelfth century. King Arthur may or may not have existed."
Harry was looking at his young professor in awe; he could see that, though Snape's explanation was a bit protracted, it had managed to awaken a thirst for mastering magic and learning about Wizarding history in his classmates that no amount of listening to Binns drone on would; not even Professor Flitwick was that good at motivating a class. He wondered just how reliable the sources of a thousand years in the past were, and if Snape was serious about Merlin having been a Slytherin.
'Wait,' Harry thought, 'I might forget the incantations and such!' Immediately starting to take notes on what Professor Snape said, making a lot of smudges in his inexperience with quills.
As Harry was leaving, having delayed a bit in order to keep a sample of his first ever Potion in a vial, he heard a whispered
"Maybe you are not a lazy waste of space, Harry Potter. Two points to Gryffindor for shouting a warning just quickly enough for me to act, and for proper preparation", but he might have imagined that.
'Yes,' Harry determined, 'there's no way Snape said
that. He didn't even give points to his Slytherins!'
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IIRC, Neville and Seamus worked on the same cauldron during the first Potions lesson. Considering Snape's potential bias against Neville, it's possible that it was Seamus who screwed up. That Seamus causes explosions in multiple subjects is also a point against him.
*There's no way Snape couldn't whip up something that would protect and/or fix his teeth and hair… if you want more of an explanation, then it's spite that made him take more care of himself (kids mocking him about his appearance during his Hogwarts student years).
*2 I'm not sure if Blaise was described as black or simply 'dark skinned' in the books, but I went with the latter, which could mean a Mediterranean tan, so he's Italian, like a lot of writers make him.
…Take Percy's words on the Statute of Secrecy and witch hunts with a grain of salt. Both alternate history and unreliable narrator apply to this, so even if there were few to no witch hunts in Britain during the 1600s IRL, there might have been plenty in this continuity. Also read carefully; someone on another site thought I was saying that magical means of protection are immune to mundane means of attack, which is not true.
PERCY said that the Shield Charm was very difficult to break via 'billets'... in the 1600s to 1700s, when firearms were inferior to today, and Muggles had a far lower population and smaller armies. It also doesn't take cannons into account, much less more recent things like bombs and chemical weapons.