Chapter Two - Harry at the Manor
After lunch Harry
had Quidditch practice. Draco got to the practice field early and sat in a patch of sunlight,
twirling Harry’s Firebolt in his hand--it was pretty to look at, he had to admit that. His
dad had refused to buy him one until he beat Harry at Quidditch - which, Draco had pointed
out, he wasn’t likely to do until he got a Firebolt to match Harry’s.
A flicker of
movement at the corner of his eye alerted him to the presence of someone else on the field,
someone who was walking towards him. It was a very pretty girl in blue robes; her long black
hair was braided down her back. Draco recognized her vaguely as the Ravenclaw Seeker, someone
he’d played against before.
"Hello, Harry!"
she called in a singsong voice.
Draco waved. He
was still examining the Firebolt. He was, in fact, rather nervous about this practice
session. Harry had a very distinctive flying style, and, well ... Draco didn’t like to admit
this, but Harry was, in fact, a better flier than he was. His team-mates might
--
The girl flopped
down on the grass next to him, breaking his train of thought. Draco was annoyed. He’d been
really looking forward to having a few more moments alone with the Firebolt, getting the feel
of it. "Harry, Harry, Harry," the girl said, looking at him as if he were an adorable, but
rather dim, toddler.
"Yes?" said Draco.
"Did you want something?"
"You haven’t asked
me out for at least two days," said the girl. "Usually you would have chased me down in the
corridors or sent me an owl by now."
"I’ve been busy,"
said Draco.
"Busy?"
said the girl in a tone that suggested no boy had ever told her he was busy
before.
"It’s not a quiet
life, being Harry Potter," Draco went on, warming to his subject. "I´ve got classes, plus
Quidditch, plus interviews with the Daily Prophet, loads of good to do and evil to vanquish,
plus I´m being hunted down by the remorseless killer who murdered my parents. I haven’t got
time to go barging around after girls."
The girl was
staring at him with her mouth open. She looked much less pretty that way. "If you think
you’re going to get me to go out with you by talking to me like that," she said, her voice
tight with rage, "you’re wrong, Harry Potter!"
"Fine," said
Draco. "Don’t go out with me. I’m really famous, I could go out with
anyone."
With a scream of
rage, the girl bounded to her feet and stalked away across the field. Draco watched her go,
mildly grateful that she had taken his mind off the impending horror of Quidditch
practice.
***
If Harry had known
that Draco Malfoy was at that moment ruining any chance he might ever have had with Cho
Chang, he might have been upset. But as he was quite asleep in the back of Lucius Malfoy´s
invisible carriage (Madam Pomfrey wouldn’t let Lucius Disapparate with his son while the boy
was unconscious), being carried rapidly across the barren and windswept moors towards Malfoy
Manor, he wasn’t.
***
On the Quidditch
field, Draco discovered that he’d had nothing to worry about: he had not only inherited
Harry's lousy eyesight, he had acquired his spectacular Quidditch skills as well. Draco
swooped and dove on his broom, amazed how easy it was. When they had a practice game, he
caught the Snitch easily, and did loop-the-loops in the air with it while Harry’s Gryffindor
team-mates clapped and whistled. Hermione, who had come to watch him practice, cheered as
well. "You're amazing, Harry!" she shouted up to him.
Draco waved at
her, and then it happened: Not seeing Hermione on the field, George hit a Bludger hard at the
ground. It streaked directly towards Hermione, who was too shocked to
move.
Without stopping
to think, Draco bent Harry's Firebolt into a spectacular dive, shooting towards the ground
like a bullet. He sped towards the Bludger -- he was going so fast, he could hardly believe
it -- he was level with it now, but nearly at the ground ---he was in front of the Bludger --
he jerked his broom around violently, putting himself between it and Hermione -- and it
struck him hard in the stomach, knocking him off his broom and onto the ground, now only
three feet away. The Firebolt clattered down on top of him.
Draco lay flat for
a moment, sucking in great wheezing gasps of air. He heard the thuck-thuck of feet hitting
the ground and the Gryffindor team landed and raced over to see if he was all
right.
Slowly, he raised
himself on his elbows -- his stomach hurt, but nothing seemed to be broken. He looked up and
saw Hermione staring at him, white with shock. "Harry," she said. "You could have been
killed."
He looked away
from her, feeling very uncomfortable, and saw the rest of Harry’s team crowded around him.
George was falling all over himself to apologize, Fred was hitting George, and Elizabeth,
Katie and Alicia were taking turns comforting Hermione and patting Draco on the head.
Eventually, Draco managed to extricate himself enough to stand up.
"Right, then,"
said Fred, who was the team’s captain, "go on back to the castle, Harry, you’ve had enough
excitement."
"I´ll walk him,"
said Hermione, jumping to her feet.
Hermione, seeming
oddly nervous, talked the whole way back to the castle. "Everyone's talking about how you
scared off Goyle during Care of Magical Creatures, Harry, it was just amazing, what did you
say to him?"
Draco grinned.
"Nothing, I just threatened him with a little wizard duelling.... You know he's no good at
that kind of thing."
"Well, you were
brilliant, the look on his face! And the way he ran!"
Hermione dissolved
into giggles. Draco looked over at her, and, without even pausing to ask himself what on
earth he was doing, dropped his Firebolt and his Quidditch robes, grabbed Hermione, and
kissed her.
For a moment, she
melted into the kiss. Then her arms went as rigid as broomsticks and she shoved him away.
"Harry, no!" Her eyes, huge and shocked, stared at him.
For the first time
in his life, Draco found he had nothing to say.
"You shouldn't
make fun of me this way," said Hermione, tears springing into her eyes. "It isn't
fair."
"I'm not making
fun of you!" gurgled Draco, finding his voice.
"It isn't fair,"
she repeated, "Harry, you're my best friend, and I know how you feel about
Cho--"
"Cho?" Draco's
mind was blank. "The Ravenclaw Seeker?"
Hermione
stared.
"That explains why
she was acting like that!" Draco exclaimed, then glanced back up at Hermione and said
brightly, "Look, I'm well over her, Hermione. She's not even-"
"Harry!" she said
warningly.
They looked at
each other. Then Draco did something else he had never done before.
"I'm sorry,
Hermione," he said.
Her expression
softened, so he added hopefully: "I’ve been feeling off since, uh, since Draco banged my head
into the ground in Potions--"
This had been the
wrong thing to say. Hermione turned her face away. "It's all right," she said in a very small
voice, starting to walk again. "I know you didn't mean it."
What on earth is
wrong with me, he thought, following her back towards to the castle. This Polyjuice business
is affecting my mind.
They were halfway
there when he saw Ron running toward them along the darkening path. "Harry!" he yelled. "I
can't believe I missed Care of Magical Creatures! I heard you totally destroyed
Goyle!"
"Destroyed is a
little strong," Draco protested, but he was laughing as Ron steered him up the
path.
"I've got to go to
the library," said Hermione as they stepped inside the castle. "Sorry!" and she ran off
without a backward glance.
Ron looked after
her curiously. "Is she all right?"
"Just panicked
about our Charms exam tomorrow, you know how she is," lied Draco, and felt an annoying little
twinge of guilt as he did so.
When they got to
the Gryffindor common room, Dean Thomas and Neville Longbottom gestured them over with yells
of welcome. Draco wasn't in the mood, though. He pushed past them and headed upstairs, where
he sat for a long time staring at the photo album full of wizard photographs of Harry's
parents, who waved at him, beamed, and smiled in a way he could never remember his own
parents doing.
***
Hermione had, in
fact, gone to the library, but not to study. She needed a moment to think and be
alone.
Harry had kissed
her. Oughtn’t she to be ecstatic, or at least pleased? She had been thrilled when he had put
his arms around her, but seconds later had been swamped by a feeling of terrible wrongness
the like of which she had never experienced before. That was why she had pushed him away. She
knew Harry so well, she thought, knew how he looked when he woke up, how he sounded when he
was tired, happy, afraid, worried; how he smelled, usually like soap and grass from the
Quidditch practice field. But this time, when she’d put her arms around him, he’d smelled
different....like...pepper?
She groaned and
put her head down on the desk. Hermione, she thought, you are so stupid. You’ve been
in love with Harry for years, so what if he changed his cologne?
She got up and
headed downstairs to dinner.
***
That night, at the
Gryffindor table, Draco sat between Ron and Hermione (who seemed determined to act as if
nothing had happened), feeling oddly not hungry. He pushed his food around his plate with his
fork and listened to them laugh and chatter. His mind buzzed with questions. Why had nobody
noticed he wasn't Harry? Surely he couldn't be acting like Potter, he hated Potter, he
couldn't act like him if he tried. He just looked like Harry, so everyone assumed he was
Harry, and so they liked him. Not just Gryffindors, but Hufflepuffs and Ravenclaws, students
whose names Draco had never bothered to learn, came up and chatted with him easily. It was
disorienting.
What was more
disorienting was that he liked it, it was as if in taking on Harry's appearance he had taken
some part of Harry into himself, and he couldn't kill it or destroy it. It just sat there in
his chest, making him do things like rescue Neville's toad, save Hermione from the Bludger
and....and kiss Hermione. He couldn't believe he had done that, either. Why? It must be that
Harry had some kind of feelings for her, and now Draco had them. But if she knew....knew who
he really was.....
Something that had
been nagging at the back of his mind suddenly crystallized into a sharp and painful thought.
What if Harry died? What if he never woke up? Would he, Draco Malfoy, be doomed to be Harry
Potter forever?
"Harry," came
Hermione's voice, "What's wrong? You look a million miles away."
Draco pushed his
chair back from the table and stood up suddenly. "Got to go," he muttered, and, pushing his
way past a startled Ron and Hermione, he ran out of the dining hall, through the front hall,
and up the stairs to the hospital wing. He banged on the closed door until it was opened by a
harassed-looking Madam Pomfrey, whose eyes widened when she saw him.
"What's wrong,
Potter, are you ill?" she demanded.
"I'm here
because... I need to see....Malfoy," he gasped, out of breath. "Is he still knocked
out?"
Madam Pomfrey gave
him a look of deep suspicion. "I suppose you might as well know," she said. "Draco Malfoy is
no longer with us."
The shock nearly
knocked Draco off his feet. His vision dissolved into a swirling blur of colours, and he
gurgled, in a sticky sort of voice, "Is he...is he...he's not dead?"
Madam Pomfrey
looked shocked. "No, Potter, of course he isn't dead!" she snapped. "Really! He's been sent
home temporarily. His father came and picked him up this afternoon."
And she shut the
door in Draco´s face.
***
There was light,
faint at first, sharpening to a sudden, stabbing beam. Harry groaned and rolled over, opening
his eyes.
He wanted to sit
up, but amazement kept him pinned to the bed. He was lying in a bedroom, but a bedroom the
like of which he had never seen before. The walls were carved out of unpolished stone, and
the ceiling rose so high it disappeared into shadow, despite the bright sunlight that was
pouring through the arch-shaped leaded glass windows that lined the room. The huge
four-poster he was lying on, canopied in black velvet printed with silver snakes, was the
only piece of furniture in the room apart from an enormous wardrobe propped against the far
wall, the front of which was covered with an ornate design of gilded letter
"M"s.
It was the M´s
that did it. Harry sat up and swore out loud, staring down at his hands --- they were not his
hands --- long, pale, and unfamiliar. He touched his forehead and felt no scar. Finally, in
desperation, he yanked out a handful of his hair and stared down as the silvery-white strands
sifted down to the black bedclothes.
He was still
Draco. And what was worse, he was - somehow - in Draco Malfoy´s house. He must have been
passed out cold for a long time, someone must have brought him here.
Right on cue, the
door burst open, and Lucius Malfoy stood framed in the doorway. He was wearing black, as he
had been wearing black every time Harry had ever seen him. Harry felt himself going cold with
apprehension.
"So, boy," said
Lucius, striding over towards the bed. "Do you know who you are, now?´
Harry stared at
him. Surely Lucius couldn’t know who he really was. If he knew he had Harry Potter in his
house--
"Draco Malfoy," he
said. "Your son."
Lucius´ face split
into a cold smile. "I told that Pomfrey woman she didn’t know what she was talking about," he
said, satisfied. "There’s nothing wrong with you, boy. No Malfoy has ever forgotten who they
are."
Harry looked into
Draco´s father’s cold grey eyes and said nothing. His throat seemed to have closed
up.
"Well, since
you’re here," said Mr. Malfoy, "We might as well have some fun."
He drew his cloak
aside and Harry saw a long silver sword strapped to his side. His stomach plummeted. He
doesn’t believe I’m Draco, he thought desperately, He’s going to hack me into
bits.
"How about a spot
of fencing practice?" Lucius Malfoy went on. "Test your mettle, boy."
Great, thought
Harry, who had never even seen a fencing match. He does believe I’m Draco, and he’s still
going to hack me into bits.
"All, right,
Father," said Harry, striving for Draco´s drawling tones. Mr. Malfoy was looking impatient,
so Harry swung his legs over the side of the bed and nearly yelled when his feet touched the
ground - it was like ice. Mr. Malfoy didn’t appear to be worried about his son freezing his
toes off, however - he hurried out of the room, and Harry, still barefoot,
followed.
He found himself
nearly running to keep up with Lucius Malfoy as he stalked down a long corridor lined with
Malfoy family portraits. There were a few hags, some very pretty women who were definitely
veela - which was probably where Malfoy got his fair hair - some rather pale men who were
probably vampires, and a rather unpleasant-looking wizard who was pictured riding an enormous
spider whose bridle was fastened around its poison-dripping pincers. Yech, thought Harry,
what a horrible lot.
Lucius Malfoy
opened a huge stone-bound door with a wave of his wand and went inside, followed by Harry. He
found himself in another huge room; this one had a smooth stone floor and was decorated with
tapestries which depicted various scenes of wizard battle. Angry-looking wizards ran at each
other, using their wands to decapitate, disembowel, and set fire to their victims. As Harry
watched, mouth open in horror, a goblin with a long, flaming sword chased a screaming wizard
right across one tapestry and into another.
Lucius, following
Harry’s gaze, nodded, looking pleased, "Yes, I just got the tapestries cleaned, the blood was
starting to look quite dull and not at all shiny. Shall we begin?" And he tossed Harry a
long, pointed rapier, which Harry looked at dully. "En garde!"
Harry raised his
sword, resolving to bleed copiously as he died and hopefully ruin the Malfoys´ nice stone
flooring. Fortunately, at that moment a knock sounded on the stone door, and it swung open. A
tall wizard in dark green robes strode into the room.
"Hello, McNair,"
said Lucius Malfoy, lowering his sword and turning away from Harry. "Did Narcissa let you
up?"
"She told me you
were in here, yes," said the tall man, who Harry recognized as a wizard who worked for the
Department for the Disposal of Dangerous Magical Creatures. He was also, Harry recalled
grimly, a Death Eater. "I came with some news--" He broke off as he saw Harry, "Hallo, Draco,
I didn’t know you were back home."
"His mother wanted
to see him," said Lucius smoothly. "You know how women are. She misses him while he’s away at
school."
Madwoman, thought
Harry.
"Well, the news I
have actually has to do with Hogwarts," said McNair. "Lucius--"
He looked from
Lucius Malfoy to Harry.
"You can say
anything in front of Draco," said Lucius Malfoy. "He is entirely obedient to
me."
"Of course," said
McNair. "I had not meant to imply otherwise." He turned to Harry. "How goes your work at the
school?" he asked. "Are you spreading the word of the Dark Lord?"
"What?" said
Harry, flabbergasted. He’d known Draco was nasty, but....
"You know," said
McNair, "Keeping the Dark Lord’s message alive among your generation. Making sure the right
sort of people get the right kind of message. Holding Death Eater meetings." He winked.
"Keeping the Mudbloods down."
"Oh, yeah," said
Harry, who was shaking with rage and hardly knew what he was saying, "me and the Slytherins,
we all got together and had a bake sale, raised loads of money for evil, no worries
there."
McNair did not
seem to have heard this. "I remember when I was in Slytherin," he said. "Those were great
days!" He turned to Lucius Malfoy. "So, Lucius," he said. "I wanted to talk to you about the
Plan. And about Harry Potter."
Chapter
3
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