Fanfic: Harry Potter and A Memory of Light - Printable Version +- Drunkard's Walk Forums (http://www.accessdenied-rms.net/forums) +-- Forum: General (http://www.accessdenied-rms.net/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: Other People's Fanfiction (http://www.accessdenied-rms.net/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=8) +--- Thread: Fanfic: Harry Potter and A Memory of Light (/showthread.php?tid=8373) Pages:
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Fanfic: Harry Potter and A Memory of Light - murmur - 01-31-2013 This is indeed a Harry Potter fanfic. It is, in no particular order: A continuation, peggy sue, crossover, mega-crossover, fusion, alternate universe, original flavor, darkfic, crackfic. Perhaps the only thing it won't be is a lemon. Hmm, maybe . . . no. No. Oh, by the way, there may be spoilers. Untagged spoilers at that. Given the title, you may be able to guess one particular spoiler. -Murmur - classicdrogn - 01-31-2013 Um... no guesses from me... but... (Old Lady Voice) Where's the fic? -- "Anko, what you do in your free time is your own choice. Use it wisely. And if you do not use it wisely, make sure you thoroughly enjoy whatever unwise thing you are doing." - HymnOfRagnorok as Orochimaru at SpaceBattles woot Med. Eng., verb, 1st & 3rd pers. prsnt. sg. know, knows Chapter 1 Part 1 - murmur - 01-31-2013 HARRY POTTER AND A MEMORY OF LIGHT CHAPTER ONE: A MEMORY OF WHAT ONCE WAS AND MAY BE AGAIN If asked, Harry Potter would have called himself quite ordinary. His hair was a mess, he never focused on homework like he should, and whenever a pretty girl looked his way he completely fell apart. Normal kid stuff, really. And so he was safe in calling himself a normal kid. Alright, yes, so he got into more adventures than the Famous Five—but, he would be quick to point out, he owned no dog. He had a snowy-white owl, but it wasn’t as if she was ever there whenever he risked his life. His home-life was a bit too Dickensian, as a bookish friend of his put it, for his liking. But then many people had terrible home lives. And of course his school was like Greyfriar’s as run by Merlin. Instead of learning chemistry, he was being taught potions; and instead of mathematics, he got charms. But none of his enemies were nearly as funny as Billy Bunter, though some were quite as stupid and gross. Finally, and oh very well, he had a mysterious scar on his forehead that he’d received when the man who had been terrorizing magical Britain had snuck into his house when he’d been a baby and murdered his parents, only to somehow be utterly destroyed when he’d tried to kill Harry in his cradle. When Harry walked down the street, people took one look at his forehead and bowed, or tried to get his autograph, or some such nonsense. None of that meant that Harry Potter wasn’t perfectly normal and ordinary—average, even. Dull as dishwater and as remarkable. He had the grades to prove it. Sitting in one of the compartments of the grand red steam locomotive that wound its way unseen through the British countryside , Harry felt his spirits rise. He was leaving his miserable home life and going to his true home—Hogwarts School for Witchcraft and Wizardry, his magical public school. The only blood relation he had were the Dursleys: fat bully Uncle Vernon, skeletal bully Aunt Petunia, his mother’s sister, and even fatter bully cousin Dudley. Each in their own unique way had his life quite terrible. Until he had been twelve, he’d lived in a cupboard underneath the stairs. His clothes were hand-me-downs from Dudley, who was not and had never been even close to his size. He’d frequently been told that he was a) unwanted, b) a freak, and c) a waster. It had been particularly bad this summer. Firstly, he’d been forbidden his school books. He’d been unable to start his holiday homework until the night he’d snuck down to where they’d been hidden and stole his books back. Harry had been forced to do his homework in the dead of night like a fugitive. Secondly, Harry had been forced to run away from home after he’d accidently blown up Uncle Vernon’s sister like a balloon. It had been an accident, and she had deserved it, but it was enough for him to flee his home –again, like a fugitive. Harry had imagined police chasing after him for breaking magical law. Not only was he an underage wizard, thus not allowed to do any magic at home away from school, but he’d done magic upon a muggle, or non-magical person. This was a serious breach of the secrecy laws that protected muggle from wizards (or possibly the other way around; it was supposedly taught in History of Magic, but as that was the most deadly boring subject in school, he’d never been bothered to remember anything that was taught). However, it had all turned out fine. The Minister of Magic himself had reassured him that no legal consequences would dog him, and Harry was allowed to stay at Diagon Alley, the magical high street and market town that was located in the heart of London. He’d stayed there for the rest of summer, enjoying strange sweets and browsing weird shops. Everything would have been fine except for the third thing. Harry was being chased by a great big dog. He had noticed it on the night that he had run away from home. A huge dog, black as anything, had been watching him on that summer night, just as the wizarding bus had picked him up to take him to Diagon Alley. It had badly frightened Harry, not least because it was one more thing in a night of one more things. However, Harry would have thought nothing more of it if he hadn’t seen a picture of a similar great big dog on the cover of a book of death omens. Apparently, the Grim, as the dog was called, was the most terrible sign of oncoming death. It certainly didn’t help that Sirius Black, an insane follower of Lord Voldemort, the man who had murdered Harry’s parents, had recently escaped from prison. Apparently, Black had vowed to avenge his master by killing Harry, or some such. Honestly, Harry wasn’t too bothered—people vowing to kill him were getting to be pretty old hat by this point. And life went on. He’d boarded the train to Hogwarts on a dreary day that was rapidly becoming dark with rain. Already it seemed more night than day outside the train’s windows. The light from the gas lamps that had automatically lit up some time before gave a cheerful, warm glow that was nothing like the cold florescence and garish neon that Harry associated with muggle lights. There was something more human and humane about the flames that danced about on the walls of the cabin. Harry was sitting in the rearmost cabin of the train, his school trunk stowed above him. With him were his two best friends, but surprisingly there was an adult in the cabin. The only adult that the Hogwarts students ever saw on the train was the lunch trolley woman, who came by to sell treats and other food. But this tired-seeming man, who had spent the entire time since before the train left Kings Cross Station sleeping, was apparently a new teacher on his own way to Hogwarts. His name was R.J. Lupin, which had a slightly sinister sound to it. In the back of his mind, Harry hoped that this one at least wouldn’t be trying to actively murder him. It would make for a nice change to not be threatened by a grown-up. A thought occurred to Harry. Turning to one of his friends, a girl with bushy hair who had her face stuck in a book—The Standard Book of Spells, Grade Three—Harry asked, “Hermione, how is my life ‘Dickensian’? I mean, the only ghosts I ever meet are at Hogwarts and they’re quite nice, really.” “What?” said a baffled Hermione Granger. The daughter of two non-magical dentists, she had taken to magic with a passion. She read voraciously, oftentimes did things to her friends ‘for their own good,’ and had built a reputation as one of the smartest girls in the school, if not the smartest. She also had a reputation for being the swottiest swot this side of Swotland, but that was counterbalanced by the number of times she’d almost died in one of Harry’s adventures. Being one of the smartest people around, she quickly picked up the thread of conversation. With a sigh, she answered. “Oh, honestly, Harry. Haven’t you ever read any of Charles Dickens’ other books?” “I haven’t read that one,” said Harry proudly. Hermione gave a disgusted sniff in response. “I only used to watch the movie before the Queen’s Christmas message.” The third occupant of the car looked at them curiously. He was a tall, redheaded boy, with a long, thin nose and an explosion of freckles on his face. Ron Weasley was the first friend that Harry had ever made, never mind the first wizard friend he’d made. He was in the same year as Harry and Hermione, but unlike them came from a wizarding family. As oftentimes as Ron was astonished by Harry’s ignorance of the wizarding world, so was Harry surprised by how wrong Ron could be about the muggle world. “Sorry, what’s this?” “Well, on Christmas day, the Queen comes on the telly to make a speech,” explained Harry. “I haven’t seen one since I started going to Hogwarts, but before then Uncle Vernon used to make us all watch it. It’s usually about, oh I don’t know, wars and marriages and like that.” “I know about the Queen,” said Ron in exasperation. “We get her on the wireless, though I can’t understand half of what she bangs on about. No, who’s this Charles Dickens bloke?” “Well, he’s a writer,” started Hermione excitedly. Hermione loved books, and one of the best ways to both distract her and get her attention was to mention a book. Already a pleased flush was spreading across her face. Ron, on the other hand, cared very little for books. If it was not about the history of his favorite sport, Quidditch, then he would much rather not have anything to do with a book. This meant that when studying with Ron, Harry was far more likely to skive off than not. Already Ron was tuning out, his gaze not-so-politely blank as Hermione went on to describe Charles Dickens and his impact on Victorian-era social justice. Harry, whose fault this was, made the effort of grunting every once in a while, as if in agreement. However Hermione soon became absorbed in her book once more, and all three of them fell into a companionable silence. Though Ron had wanted to play exploding snaps, Harry had pointed out the sleeping professor in the cabin. Instead he and Harry were playing wizard chess, though Ron had made sure that the pieces fought each other silently. To make up for it, the pieces were being very melodramatic, pantomiming grievous wounds and taking a long time to die. Ron was about to tell the pieces off when he became distracted by his stomach. Going over to the window, and being careful not to disturb Professor Lupin, Ron went to see if he could tell how far from the school and its feast they were. Even as Ron looked out the window, the train had begun to slow down, which surprised Hermione greatly. “But we’re not nearly at school yet,” she said, checking her wristwatch. “We shouldn’t be slowing down at all.” “Well, we are,” said Ron. “So why’re we stopping?” “I don’t know,” said Hermione. Each word was distinct and filled with distaste. Hermione hated not knowing, and even more hated admitting not knowing to someone other than a teacher. As often as Harry led them into adventures, so too did Hermione lead the three of them into investigations—though those investigations usually began in the library, ended in the library, and stayed in the library. The train came to a stop with a great hiss and squeal, which was soon followed by dull thuds and crashes as peoples’ luggage fell from their racks. Yells of pain and surprised floated through the train corridors. “I think some people are getting onto the train,” said Ron, his face still pressed against the window. “They look like—” Whatever else he was going to say was cut off by the lights of the train suddenly going out. The gentle glow of the wall lamps snuffed out in their cabin. Harry, who had been sticking his head out into the corridor, saw that the same was true for the rest of the train. With the darkness outside from the storm, the train was completely dark. Already the grumbling complaints from the other students on the train turned into panicked exclamations. People began shouting, trying to find friends in the dark. It even happened in Harry’s cabin, as first Neville Longbottom, a fellow third year and one of Harry’s roommates, stumbled in. He was soon followed by Ginny Weasley, Ron’s little sister and a second year. As they banged into each other in the dark, yelling all the while, the Professor woke up and illuminated the cabin with a flame that floated just above his open hand. The relief that Harry felt at having both light and someone taking charge was snuffed out like the cabin lights when someone began to open the cabin door. Standing there was a cloaked figure. It— for it was impossible to tell if it was a man or woman beneath that black cloak—loomed over everyone, the top of its hood brushing the ceiling. Mist gathered around its unseen feet and crawled up it and slowly filled the cabin. The only thing that was visible was a single hand, scabrous and skeletal. As if sensing Harry’s gaze somehow from beneath its concealing hood, the figure started to withdraw its hand back into its cloak. But then, before it had halfway hidden it, the figure stopped. Professor Lupin began to lunge forward, but before he could pull Harry back the figure reached out and grabbed Harry. The corpse-like hand gripped Harry firmly. Terror filled him, and his mind went blank with it. Never before had he been so frightened. Even facing his parents’ murderer, his monstrously pale face pushing out the back of his Defense against the Dark Arts professor, had not been as horrifying as that hand touching him. The cloaked figure drew in a deep breath, the hissing inhalation loud and ominous. And with it, it seemed that the figure was somehow breathing in all the happiness from the world. While before he had been struggling against the grip despite his fear, Harry went limp in the figure’s grasp. The mist seemed to fill him, his mouth and nose suffocated with it. The wand that Harry had unconsciously drawn from his pocket, but had been too stupid to use, fell to the floor. Harry was distantly aware of the shouts of his friends and the Professor, but it all seemed so far away. The figure drew back the hood slightly, revealing . . . . Everything went dark. Chapter 1 Part 2 - murmur - 01-31-2013 [*] “Not Harry. Please, not Harry,” screamed the woman. “Stand aside,” commanded a high, cold voice. There were more screams, terrible and pleading. A choice was made, to sacrifice a life willingly in order to buy just a few more moments of time. There was a flash of green light, and a thud as a body fell. Harry stared down at the woman who was his mother. She was beautiful and brave, and he knew nothing about her. Yet he loved her and it tore at him to see her like this, to remember her like this. But he could not stop looking at her, drinking in her features even as they were frozen in death. Everything went dark, and Harry both regretted it and was thankful. - DHBirr - 01-31-2013 Quote:(Old Lady Voice) Where's the fic?You ki-- er, old ladies these days, you need to have everything done for you. No imaginations. Haven't you ever had stone soup? Why, in my day . How the rant can apply to fanfics, you'll just have to imagine. ----- Big Brother is watching you. And damn, you are so bloody BORING. Chapter 1 Part 3 - murmur - 01-31-2013 [*] There was a man in a forest. It was night, and the man was tired. Harry watched as the man walked cloaked and unseen, surrounded by the loving dead. The man was tall, with dark messy hair and glasses. He walked until he came to a clearing in the forest, where masked figures waited impatiently. A huge man was hanging, restrained and struggling, while a large snake floated in a glowing cage. Beneath the snake, and watched by his followers, was a pale, bald man in black. His eyes were slits, reflecting the fires that lit the clearing. The pale man was growing ever more furious, but that fury became twisted delight when he spotted the tall man, who had taken off his cloak and revealed himself. The followers stilled themselves, watching intensely as the pale man slowly and with great deliberation raised a long wand. The pale man was obviously taking great delight in this moment. This was triumph, this was victory; a balm for all those years in the dark, screaming in impotent frustration. The man stood there, watching impassively, even as the huge man struggled and screamed a name. But then there was a bright green light, and the man—who was a boy, really, couldn’t have been more than seventeen—was on the ground, dead. Harry looked down at the dead body, and knew who it was who lay on the ground. Harry knew that he had witnessed the sacrifice of Harry Potter, who had given his life to save his friends. And the world went dark again. Chapter 1 Part 4 - murmur - 01-31-2013 Chapter 1 Part 5 - murmur - 01-31-2013 [*] There was a palace, wonderful and wondrous. It was the site of great struggle and great joy. It was a palace but also a home, filled with husbands, wives and most importantly children. Yet there knelt a man on the ground, screaming in agony, surrounded by his dead family and friends. Most terrible of all was the woman that he held close to him, her hair still vibrant as the sun even as her pale, dead face was locked in her rictus of disbelieving horror. She, like everyone else in the palace, had died by his hands, for this man had been insane. Yet he was no longer mad, as he had been healed. It was not done kindly, but as a cruel torment done by the gloating man in black with fire for eyes. This man was laughing at the kneeling man’s grief. Yet he stopped laughing when the crying man drew in power, and more power, and still more power. He held that power for a brief instant, before letting it go in a torrent. The man in black disappeared before the release, wanting to see his grief but unable to withstand the grief-stricken man’s unfettered might. He had nothing left to live for, and so had no need to hold back. His world was already destroyed, and so he would usher in the age when everyone’s world would be shattered by the power of madmen. The palace was destroyed in fire and churning, molten earth. And where it once stood rose a mountain, taller than any other mountain. A cairn for a lost world, and a lost family. Harry Potter watched the death of Lews Therin Telamon, called the Dragon, the Lord of the Morning, and finally the Kinslayer. Harry watched and knew himself in Lews Therin. Chapter 1 Part 6 - murmur - 01-31-2013 [*] Names and lives flickered through the darkness, each time ending in death. Sometimes it was in triumph, others in tragedy. Oftentimes it was both. Strange fates shaped those lives, and in each of them Harry recognized himself in those men and women. Garion and Sparhawk, who led lives of wonder and courage against evil gods and bleak futures. Leto, who sacrificed his humanity for the sake of humanity. Severian the light-bringer, the sun-maker. Kimball, Dave, Donal, Valentine and Elijah. Elric, Erekose, Corum and Jerry. Usagi, Utena, Nausicaa. Nadia, Shinji and Simon. Gully and Kaneda. Sinclair, Sheridan and Delenn. John, who created himself. Kara and Jack. The boy magicians: Tim, Christopher and Will. Ged, who was truly named. Ellidyr, who had nothing except his name, his sword, and his friends. Paul the twice-born. Eustace, who was saved when he turned into a dragon. All of them and more. Finally, there came the last life, which was also the first. Yet in the confusion of lives, Harry wondered if there could ever be a first, just as if there could be a last. Chapter 1 Part 7 - murmur - 01-31-2013 [*] The black sword spoke, as he knew it would. His pride brought him here, just as it had killed everyone who had loved him and succored him. Every home he had known, he had destroyed for his pride. He could blame the curse that was laid upon his family by the Great Enemy. He knew that, even now, the others were doing so. Yet here in this last moment, as he molded the earth around the sword’s hilt so that it would firmly hold the blade in place, he knew that his pride was curse enough. How many innocent men and women had he killed, generous friends who had taken him in and cared for him, rescued him even from the ruin that he brought, only to be ruined thereby? Two of them he had killed with this very sword, one unknowingly but the other in purposeful rage. But he knew himself well enough to know that he could have lived with the guilt of even that last murder. War filled him up, made him great. He was a war leader of great power and presence, eventually turning people away from their own chiefs and into his soldiers. He had done this very thing so many times, but always to the death of those same followers. He had no doubt that he would have continued on in this fashion, if not for the truth which had caused the last murder. He looked down at his hand, where the dragon’s venom had fallen and burned him. It had been bandaged, lovingly, the last loving gesture by his wife. When he had killed the dragon, he had fallen unconscious from his malice, and she had come upon him and healed him as best she could. But then the dragon, in his dying, used the truth to cause his wife to kill herself by leaping from a great cliff. Already all things died on the cliff side. He had briefly considered joining her in her fall, but no. For here was the murderous truth: that the dragon had, in years past, caused his wife to forget herself, and in the forgetting find herself in his company. They fell in love, a great love which calmed his martial spirit, and she eventually were married. She carried their first child in her, and he looked forward to that birth most of all. But the dragon’s death brought with it the end of his works, and its culmination: for his wife was his sister, and the horror of it caused her to kill herself. Now he shall do the same. And he did. The sword shattered at he fell upon it, and he was buried with its shards. And Harry Potter knew himself in Turin, son of Hurin, called Turambar, Master of Doom, who was himself mastered. The darkness claimed him one last time. - murmur - 01-31-2013 I hope you old ladies are now sated with this first chapter. Remember, replies save lives. -Murmur - classicdrogn - 01-31-2013 That is tasty fic. MOAR! -- "Anko, what you do in your free time is your own choice. Use it wisely. And if you do not use it wisely, make sure you thoroughly enjoy whatever unwise thing you are doing." - HymnOfRagnorok as Orochimaru at SpaceBattles woot Med. Eng., verb, 1st & 3rd pers. prsnt. sg. know, knows - Bob Schroeck - 01-31-2013 Oh, yes, indeed, now that I have had the time to read it. More, please. -- Bob --------- Then the horns kicked in... ...and my shoes began to squeak. - Jorlem - 01-31-2013 This looks like it is going to be really interesting. I'm looking forward to seeing how you are planning on weaving (heh) together the different types of magic from Harry's other lives, from Rand's use of the One Power, to Garion's Will and the Word, and Elric's Sorcery, just to name a few. ----- Stand between the Silver Crystal and the Golden Sea. "Youngsters these days just have no appreciation for the magnificence of the legendary cucumber." --Krityan Elder, Tales of Vesperia. Super-Harry AKA Boring Invincible Hero Harry. - murmur - 02-01-2013 Given the risk of that, I don't know if I'll have Harry wielding Stormbringer in one hand, the Sword of Aldur in the other, weaving balefire and shooting spiral energy, all while floating telekinetically using the power of his Lens. Seems a bit overkill, honestly. However I am working on the next chapter even now. Oh, fun game, try to identify all of the lives that Harry experienced. I'll give you one of them: John who created himself is John Connor from The Terminator. -Murmur - classicdrogn - 02-01-2013 Harry doesn't need any of the special powers of his other lives to be awesome, just a bit of self-confidence, the ability to think things through and follow up after the immediate moment is past, and the motivation to not be such a slacker. Potterverse magic lacks major direct damage effects, but if you just combine the various exploitables it is godlike in the support/utility roles, and with a whiff of planning and effort mundane physics can do all the direct damage you could ask for. -- "Anko, what you do in your free time is your own choice. Use it wisely. And if you do not use it wisely, make sure you thoroughly enjoy whatever unwise thing you are doing." - HymnOfRagnorok as Orochimaru at SpaceBattles woot Med. Eng., verb, 1st & 3rd pers. prsnt. sg. know, knows Yeah, still . . . - murmur - 02-01-2013 Harry *could* do all that. He *could*. Unfortunately, he is a teenager, and therefore genetically programmed to carry the Idiot Ball for quite a while. -Murmur - Jorlem - 02-01-2013 Well, it lacks major direct damage effects that they teach to teenagers in school, anyway. Pettigrew was able to blow up that street somehow, after all. Also, regarding the different forms of magic, I meant it more along the lines that they would all presumably be differing expressions/manifestations of the same thing, likely the One Power (which comes from the True Source, as opposed to the True Power which comes from the Dark One.) Those are just different Ages of the world, after all, not entirely different worlds. Edit: I showed the list of names to a friend, who was able to get all of them but the John Connor one, which he says needs a better hint. He also said: Quote:He lacks Robert Howard references. I'm not saying Conan it up but a nice throw out to Bran Mac Morn would be coolJust passing that along. ----- Stand between the Silver Crystal and the Golden Sea. "Youngsters these days just have no appreciation for the magnificence of the legendary cucumber." --Krityan Elder, Tales of Vesperia. I did consider it - murmur - 02-06-2013 After all, the whole Kull to Conan to Bran mac Morn reincarnation thing is pretty well established. One of the reasons why I didn't is because Robert E. Howard heroes tend to eschew the "messianic" hero stereotype that I was working with, and more into the adventurer/conqueror hero. Besides, I was getting a bit full up. I may be making references to Kull and Conan and Bran (maybe even Howard's boxing character?), but I may not. This does not mean, of course, that Harry Potter didn't have visions of Conan reaving and wenching, just that I never mentioned it. Just like I never mentioned all that Harry spent trying to reach a certain tower inhabited by a certain figure in red. I will say this: Harry Potter was never Merlin or King Arthur or any of his knights; nor was he Robin Hood. -murmur Update coming soon - murmur - 02-08-2013 So I'm just finishing up chapter two. Look for it soon, and when reading it watch for as many cliches as you can find! It has quite a bit more exposition than the previous chapter, and not a lot of banter. I hope it reads all right, though. -Murmur Chapter 2 part 1 - murmur - 02-08-2013 CHAPTER TWO: A DIFFERENT COLORED JUMPER Harry woke up in stages. He was convinced, upon opening his eyes and seeing only darkness, that he was somehow trapped in the non-place between lives. His heart thudded fast and painfully for a few moments, until he noticed the dimmed lamps that glowed from high brackets on a wall before him. He knew then where he was, as the familiar crisp linen sheets rustled beneath him and he cocooned himself deeper in his soft blankets: he was in the Hogwarts hospital wing. He spent quite a lot of time there, over the years. Just last year, he had had a memorable and painful night as the bones in his right arm regrew after a bungled healing attempt. Just last year . . . what did that even mean, now? All those lives and memories swirled in his mind, but what was especially clear was the life of Harry Potter, the man who had walked to his death willingly. Was he now him, reborn in a thirteen year old kid’s body? A bone-deep exhaustion, one that had been pushed aside by the rush of fear and adrenaline upon waking, came back with a rush. Unable to stay awake any longer, and truly not wishing to, Harry fell asleep and dreamed ordinary dreams. chapter 2 part 2 - murmur - 02-08-2013 [*] Harry woke at lunchtime to the sound of friends talking concernedly. “Isn’t he supposed to be better now?” asked Ron, his tone at once worried and angry. He oftentimes sounded like this, as if embarrassed by caring, and angry at being embarrassed. “He is better,” said Hermione, though she too sounded worried. “Professor McGonagall said that Madame Pomfrey told her that Harry was sleeping instead of . . . instead of . . . .” She trailed off, as if choking on the words she could not get through. Awake enough to move now, Harry stirred in his bed. Forcing open his gummy eyes, it took a moment to focus properly. Automatically, he reached out his hand to try to find his glasses. With a squeak, Hermione took them from the side table and placed them in his hands. Sitting up now, Harry put on his glasses and looked at his friends. “Do I look as bad as you lot?” he asked. Ron grinned widely, instantly destroying the wan expression on his face. Hermione, on the other hand, still looked worried and upset, though much less so than a moment ago. “Nah,” said Ron, obviously lying. “You look fine, now. You should have seen yourself after the Dementor attack, though. That’s what that cloaked thing’s called, by the way. A Dementor.” “Oh, Harry, we were so worried,” said Hermione, now looking as if she were about to cry when before she had seemed to be feeling better. “When you collapsed, everyone thought that you had . . . died.” “Yeah, mate. You should have seen it. Professor Lupin shot this white, glowing mist from the end of his wand. Scared the Dementor right off the train, it did.” Ron’s eyes shined with the memory, the words bringing back a part of the fearful energy he must have felt at the time. “Anyway, he started forcing small bits of chocolate down you all the way to the castle.” “Apparently,” added Hermione, “chocolate is recommended treatment for exposure to Dementors. However, from what Madame Pomfrey said when we got here, it’s never been used for severe cases, because people usually . . . usually die.” “Well, yeah. But I’m not dead, am I,” said Harry, trying to sound breezy to keep Hermione’s spirits up. From her quavering smile, he knew that he was at least somewhat successful. Ron, who had been looking at Hermione worriedly, smiled at Harry and nodded encouragingly. They told him all about what happened after his collapse. How, as soon as the train had stopped at the station, Professor Lupin had rushed Harry off of it. Hagrid, a huge, hairy man that was the school’s gamekeeper and the one who had introduced Harry to the wizarding world, saw Harry in Lupin’s arms and wanted to carry Harry himself. However, by this point, Professors Dumbledore and McGonnagal and Madame Pomfrey had rushed down from the school and met them. Professor Dumbledore was the school’s headmaster, and a very old and powerful wizard. Though he had an odd sense of humor, oftentimes leading others to believe that he wasn’t quite all there, he was nevertheless greatly respected by the wizarding community. Indeed, he had been instrumental in fighting off dark wizards for over fifty years. He was even on a chocolate frog card, which meant that he was very important indeed. Professor Dumbledore had ordered Hagrid to continue taking charge of the first year students and to leave Harry in the care of Professor McGonnagal and Madame Pomfrey. One of Hagrid’s jobs was to lead the incoming first years on a boat ride on the lake between the train station and Hogwarts as a way of marking the transition from their old lives to their new ones. Professor McGonnagal was the head of Griffindor House, as well as the transfigurations teacher. Stern and straightforward, she had little tuck with shenanigans, but she was also even-handed and just. Her colleague, Madame Pomfrey, was the school’s matron and thus handled all of the medical emergencies that could happen when you had hundreds of underage wizards and witches banging into each other in a great heap of a castle. They led Professor Lupin, still holding Harry, through the thick crowd of students and into the hospital wing. Professor McGonnagal had had to speak quite sharply to some of them to get them to move, and a talking-to from McGonnagal was no laughing matter. But she was not the only one who was upset by the situation. “You should have seen Dumbledore,” said Ron. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen him so angry.” “Obviously he’d be angry, Ron,” said Hermione. “I’ve heard that he protested quite vigorously against the Dementors being posted at the school; and even before we got here, there was a wrongful attack.” “Anyway, as soon as we had you in the hospital wing, and it looked like you were going to make it, Dumbledore went running straight back to his office to talk to the Ministry of Magic.” Ron laughed, though it was tinged with anxiety. “I thought that I saw lightning shooting out of his wand, he was that upset.” “Why are the Dementors here at the school, then?” asked Harry. “It’s to capture Sirius Black,” said Hermione. “The Ministry believes that he’ll come to Hogwarts, and so they’ve sent out Dementors to look for him.” She looked at Harry with an expression of grave concern, which at least brought the color back into her face. Hermione was very empathetic, easily crying in sympathy towards other people’s pain. It made her a very good person, but an embarrassing friend. “Cause Black’s looking to kill you,” said Ron matter-of-factly. “Though if he doesn’t hurry, the Dementors will be doing his job for him.” Ron, on the other hand, had all the sensitivity of a paralyzed boulder. It made him an oftentimes cruel person, but a funny friend. “Ron!” chided Hermione. “Anyway, the rumor is that the Ministry’s going to let the Dementors do a kiss on Sirius Black. That’s what they do when they want to kill someone—just suck people soul’s out when they lift up their hood.” Ron sounded both disgusted and fascinated by this, while Hermione merely looked ill. “Like what they tried with me,” said Harry quietly. “Why did they try it?” Ron and Hermione had no answers, nor did they try to make one. They only looked back at him in concern. chapter 2 part 3 - murmur - 02-08-2013 Soon enough, Madame Pomfrey came back in to chivvy Ron and Hermione away. Hermione promised they’d both come back after dinner with all the homework Harry missed. Ron merely rolled his eyes in disgust, then promised that he would be bringing him some dessert. As Madame Pomfrey waved a wand over him, apparently to check to see if he was still breathing, Harry watched his two best friends walk out of the hospital wing. “Give him his homework?” said Ron. “Hermione, don’t you know that the best part about being ill is that you don’t have to do homework?” “Honestly, why would one be at school if not to study?” asked Hermione rhetorically. Ron looked at her in shock as they went through the wide oak doors that opened onto one of Hogwarts’ many corridors. The last thing Harry heard was Ron saying, “It’s like you’re another species or something, you are.” After telling Harry that he was fine but would have to spend another night in hospital, Madam Pomfrey left Harry to settle back down on his bed. Harry stared at the hospital wing’s ceiling and brooded. He was not, despite what he may have thought, a seventeen-year old stuck in a thirteen year old boy’s body. He knew this because he simply could not imagine himself doing what the older Harry Potter had done. Some of the most memorable acts of the older Harry Potter, beyond the battles and derring-do, was dating and kissing girls. Harry imagined kissing Ginny Weasley, both the twelve-year old girl as she was now, and the sixteen year old girl she would grow into, and blushed scarlet. He and Ginny seemed to have spent most of his sixth year snogging in isolated corners of the castle. He thought of Cho Chang, a very pretty girl who was one year old than him and was in Ravenclaw House. The older Harry Potter had gone out on a few dates with her and had even had his first kiss from her. Harry blushed even hotter at the memory. So, in conclusion, and anyway, and let’s ignore kissing girls and stop it, Harry very well may be the reincarnation of Harry Potter, but he was not Harry Potter. Harry briefly considered asking Madame Pomfrey to come back and give him a potion for the headache that just rampaged through his mind. Once recovered a bit, Harry resumed his brooding. In other words, he was living his life over again from its very beginning. Indeed, it was possible that the world was playing out its history all over again from its beginning. Both Rand al’Thor and Lews Therin Telamon believed that time was a wheel, replaying its events over and over again until time ended. Rand believed that he was living in the Third Age and was the reincarnation of Lews Therin, while Lews Therin believed he was in the Second Age and believed that he was some unknown person’s reincarnation. Both had been told, and both believed, that they would have to live their lives over again when their respective Ages came around again. Harry had no idea if this was true or not. It was all a bit too mystical for him. Did all of this happen before and was happening again? Now, however, Harry frowned in consternation. Was his life playing out exactly the same? Or was something different? Desperately, he searched through memories that he knew to be his own and compared them to the life of that other Harry Potter. This was particularly difficult, as all that he could think of when he tried to remember his life was the ice cream he’d had at Florian Fortescu’s Ice Cream Parlour in Diagon Alley just a few days ago, or the first time he’d ridden a broom two years back. Beyond unpleasant memories of Professor Snape, the potions teacher and Harry’s least favorite person, he could not remember much of his time in class. Well, there was that one time that Gilderoy Lockhart, the second-year Defense Against the Dark Arts professor, had released Cornish pixies in the classroom and they’d attacked everyone. That was one of those funnier in hindsight moments older people keep on talking about. When he thought to compare the other Harry Potter’s life, what stuck out were the big events: battles at the Ministry of Magic, a fight with a dragon, a duel with Voldemort, another fight with a dragon, another fight with Voldemort—this time in midair, and so on. All the life-threatening things that he’d done in the past, and would apparently do in the future. That, and of course, kissing girls. Harry far preferred the memories of kissing girls, even if it made him feel feverish. It was not until he was thinking of nothing in particular, possibly having to do with Quidditch, that his eyes fell upon his clothes. Ron had brought him a change in clothing, and Hermione had thoughtfully folded them into a neat pile on a chair next to the bed. On top of the black school robes lay a wooly jumper which Mrs. Weasley had knitted for him last Christmas. Every Christmas since his first year, Mrs. Weasley had knitted him a Weasley family jumper. He had already been having a wonderful year, as he no longer had to live with the Dursleys and had found friends for the first time in his life. Yet with that first Weasley family jumper, he felt like he truly belonged. That, in a way, he was loved. Though he had outgrown it, he still kept the jumper in the bottom of his school trunk. Mrs. Weasley, though she had only seen him for a few moments, had remembered Harry’s green eyes and had knitted that first jumper in green, with a large letter H at its center. This showed how truly generous in her love Mrs. Weasley was, and the kind of mother that Harry always wished he had, and always envied Ron for having—not that he would ever tell Ron that. It would way too embarrassing. His green jumper. He knew it as well as he knew the feel of his Nimbus 2000 flying broomstick that he used to play Quidditch. It was green. So why did he think, for a brief moment, that it was black? A black jumper . . . black jumper . . . . It came to him, then. That other Harry Potter: his first Weasley family jumper had been black, instead of green. In the letter that accompanied the jumper, Mrs. Weasley explained that it was to match his black hair. To relieve it, there had been a red letter H at the center, and red trimming. The other Harry had loved it as much as he loved his green jumper. So, there was the difference. It was unlikely to be the only difference in the lives of the two Harry Potters, but it was the first that he noticed. However, despite the different colored jumper, the large events of his first and second years at Hogwarts had not changed. Both had faced Lord Voldemort before the Mirror of Erised for possession of the Philosopher’s Stone. Both killed the basilisk that had been terrorizing Hogwarts during their second year in order to save Ginny Weasley from possession by the ghostly memory of Tom Riddle, the Hogwarts schoolboy who would grow up to be Lord Voldemort but who had somehow been able to place a copy of himself in his old school diary. Harry sat up with a start. It wasn’t ‘somehow’; Harry knew exactly how Voldemort had left been a copy of himself in his diary when he was a schoolboy at Hogwarts. It was because of this method that the other Harry Potter had walked willingly to his death. Harry gave a low groan that mixed frustration and misery. He had far too much on his plate in the immediate future to have to deal with this Voldemort nonsense. Quidditch season was coming up. He was too busy to plan to die. chapter 2 part 4 - murmur - 02-08-2013 [*] Harry spent the rest of the day, and part of the night, deliberately not thinking about dying. Instead, he took the opportunity to explore the other lives that had somehow made their way into his head. The three lives, other than his own, that were most clear were those of Rand al’thor, Lews Therin Telamon, and Turin Turambar. The first two were the most obviously connected, one being the reincarnation of the other. Rand’s world was completely different from Turin’s world. Rand’s Great Enemy was the Dark One, an amorphous and chaotic being trapped inside the world by the Creator—God, presumably. The Dark One was released in Lews Therin’s time by an experiment in the One Power, their version of magic. Lews Therin, now called the Dragon, led the Armies of the Light against the Dark one’s forces, among them evil men and women called the Forsaken and manufactured monsters called Shadowspawn. The forces of Light won, but at a cost. In trapping the Dark One and the Forsaken in the hole in reality that was his trap, the Dark One had tainted the male half of the One Power. It drove every male channeller—their wizards—insane, and in their insanity they had killed families, friends and ultimately shattered and remade the world. After thousands of years, Rand was born. It was at a time when the Dark One’s power was growing, spreading his influence across the world and brining death and chaos everywhere. Rand fought against the Dark One with the help of his friends, and by learning life lessons he was able to overcome him and heal the world. There was a bit more to the story than that, but that was it in its essentials. Life lessons and friendship. There was a Dark One in Turin’s world as well. Called The Great Enemy, apparently at the dawn of creation when the All-Father—God again, presumably—was creating the world, the Great Enemy had somehow corrupted part of creation, bringing in evil. The Great Enemy then manifested himself in the world and did what evil things do: dominate and destroy. Turin’s father, Hurin, fought against the Great Enemy but lost and was captured. Hurin’s whole family was cursed, and Turin’s death was the result. Harry recognized himself in all three of these men. Though it sounded insane, he thought that might actually be those men. Was he not only Harry Potter reborn—ha!—but also the Dragon Reborn, Reborn? Turin reborn? But their worlds were so different from his own. For one thing, the magic of Rand’s world was very much more destructive than any magic he had ever heard of. The One Power was capable of terrible lightning storms and hail of fiery arrows that were capable of destroying armies. There was a weave—or spell—that could erase people from time and existence, burn them out of reality back before the moment they were hit by the spell. Given enough power, it could be and had been used to destroy entire cities. In Turin’s world, magic was the province of the Gods and the craft of the Firstborn, the immortal first thinking peoples of the world. Turin’s black sword was such a creation of the Firstborn. It carried its creator’s dark nature, and gloried in blood, but even it could not like the accidental murder of its owner and the killing of the innocent. The Gods could make the trees to light the world, the sun and the moon, and people too. But the Firstborn could make fabulous jewels to carry the last light of those trees, and stones to see far, and glowing stuff. Their worlds were not Earth as he knew it, but could it be Earth as they knew it? Could entire universes have risen and fallen, with a thread of life that would one day be called Harry Potter running through them all? He had vague memories of the boy magicians, Tim, Christopher and Will. They had all lived in England, and in some ways their lives were much like his. Ordinary kids thrust into extraordinary lives by the magic that bubbled in their blood. Yet their magic was unlike his, as far as he could remember. Similar but not the same. Or maybe he was remembering it poorly. With yet another mounting headache, Harry drifted to sleep, dreaming of skies so clean, and waters so pure that you could just reach out and touch paradise. The homework that Hermione had brought after dinner was left untouched, but Harry had finished the dessert Ron had snuck into the hospital wing before going to bed. chapter 2 part 5 - murmur - 02-08-2013 [*] The first thing Harry realized upon waking was that he had absolutely no idea what to do. There were so many things to do that he just couldn’t decide where to start. First, there was the problem of the horcruxes. These were containers of pieces of Voldemort’s soul and which ensured that even if his physical body was destroyed, he would still stick around even as something less than a ghost. Or at least this had been how Voldemort kept from dying during the other Harry Potter’s life. Was this how he kept from dying this time? Harry thought back to the other Harry Potter’s sixth year, when Professor Dumbledore had been teaching the other Harry how to kill Voldemort. Dumbledore had been absent from school quite a lot, always searching for clues and memories. Despite the diary, which held Tom Riddle’s schoolboy memories and soul, Dumbledore still required proof. Dumbledore had been fairly sure, even almost certain, but he still wanted proof—not just to the method, but the number of horcruxes Voldemort had made. Harry too wanted that certainty. He was fairly sure that this time around Voldemort was using horcruxes again. The diary was certainly one. And so was he. The method by which a horcrux is created, according to Dumbledore, was through murder. Murder tore at a soul, weakening it. Somehow—and Harry never learned the details—there was a method by which one could tear apart the weakened soul and affix it to an object or a person. So long as that object or person existed, then the soul-portion was protected. So long as the soul-portion was protected, the person who created the horcrux would not die completely. But Voldemort in the other world had made so many pieces of himself that, when he murdered the other Harry’s mother and then tried to kill other Harry but failed and was destroyed, in that failure a piece of Voldemort’s soul went into other Harry and made him into a horcrux. It was because of this that the other Harry had the lightning-bolt scar. And presumably this was true for Harry now. Harry rubbed at his scar, though it did not prickle or burn as it would in the presence of Voldemort. He was a container for a piece of Voldemort’s soul—Harry felt that this was true, despite not having any real evidence that he could show. It wasn’t as if he could open up his skull and see a tiny Voldemort waving out at him, probably ranting about ‘mudbloods.’ Harry distracted himself a bit by imagining reaching into his head and squishing the tiny Voldemort between his fingers like a flea. It was quite a satisfying fantasy. The second problem had to do with Sirius Black. The other Harry Potter too had been chased to Hogwarts by Sirius Black. Sirius Black back then had been a friend of the other Harry’s father, his best friend, along with Professor Lupin and a man called Peter Pettigrew. The other Harry’s father had made Peter Pettigrew the only person who could magically reveal the location of the entire Potter family, after they had been magically hidden away. However the world thought it had been Sirius who had been the Secret-Keeper, the key to the magical protection around the Potter home. And so when Voldemort had found the Potter family and killed both of other Harry’s parents, people thought it had been Sirius who had betrayed them, not Peter Pettigrew. It didn’t help that Peter ‘confronted’ Sirius on a street filled with dead muggles, crying foul betrayal and disappearing in another explosion. People thought that Sirius killed Peter, leaving behind only a finger, when in reality he turned himself into a rat and was in hiding in the Weasley house. So, having made absolutely no decision, but knowing what the problems before him were, Harry got up with the sun and went to breakfast. |