Aspen in the Sunlight - A Year Like None Other
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- Название:A Year Like None Other
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- Год:2011
- ISBN:нет данных
- Рейтинг книги:3 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Harry stiffened and spoke through clenched teeth. "That's hitting a bit below the belt, don't you think?" Of course it was. Snape was a Slytherin, himself. Since when did they fight fair?
"What I think, Mr Potter, is that you should have let the Sorting Hat do its job!"
So much for clenching his jaw; Harry's mouth dropped completely open. "You know about--"
"Of course I know; I was there ," Snape softly returned, finally backing away. "Gryffindor valour and honour, such noble traits. I suppose they have their place. But to bring the Dark Lord down will take a great deal more. It requires cunning, something you'd have mastered by now if you'd been placed in my house."
"Gee, thanks, I always wanted to be a cheat and liar," Harry drawled, shaking his head. He didn't want to think about what would have happened to him in Slytherin, he really didn't.
"You are imprudent to exclude any battle tactic that might win this war." With that, Snape strode down the hall to gaze at the series of locks outside Harry's door, no expression whatsoever on his face. That was pretty hard to pull off with Remus' features, Harry thought.
When Snape opened the door and stepped in, Harry decided he'd had just about enough. "Look, this is mental . I don't need a nursemaid, and even if I did, there's only one bed in there--"
"Do you think I plan to sleep?" Snape enquired, chin lifted a bit in challenge. "No. You will sleep; I will keep watch. I truly do not think your aunt will die tonight, but I am not willing to risk you if she does."
"I can't sleep if you're going to sit there and watch me!"
"Yes, you can. I have potion--"
"Stuff your potion!"
"Harry," Snape said quietly, his voice completely level, "Stop this idiocy and go to bed."
Maturity could go hang, Harry thought. "Look, the couch is sounding better and better--"
"You will sleep in your bed," Snape flatly announced, "or you will sit up with me and explain the black energy in the cupboard under the stairs. No? I thought not."
Harry crawled under the covers fully dressed, and snapped his eyes shut, his whole face scrunched up into a scowl so fierce it actually strained the muscles. He wasn't going to go to sleep with Snape watching, he just wasn't. It wasn't obstinacy, or idiocy as Snape had said, it was just the truth. He couldn't relax, not even if a soft spell drifting through the air made the sheets smell slightly like a meadow. Not even if his eyelids were getting heavier, and the faint noise of a chair scraping on the floorboards seemed like it was being woven into a dream, and the room was slowly being swallowed in a rush of warmth . . . and comfort . . .
Not even if . . .
"Hey," Harry murmured sleepily, rolling onto his side, his hands hugging himself beneath the bedspread. "You called me Harry . . . um, I think, when nobody was around to hear it."
"Somebody was around," Snape quietly replied. "Hush, now, Harry. Let yourself sleep."
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Coming Soon in A Year Like None Other:
Chapter Nine: Miss Granger May Be Right
~
Comments very welcome,
Aspen in the Sunlight
Chapter 9: Miss Granger May Be Right
http://archive.skyehawke.com/story.php?no=5036&chapter=9
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A Year Like None Other
by Aspen in the Sunlight
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Chapter Nine: Miss Granger May Be Right
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When Harry opened bleary eyes the next morning, it was to see Snape leaning back in the desk chair, a book propped open on his crossed knee, his black eyes rapidly scanning text.
Harry shook his head, his hair flying wildly as he tried to think past a fog of early-morning confusion. Something was wrong, something beyond the fact that Severus Snape would be in his bedroom at all, or that Harry would be at Privet Drive in October. Something else . . . why was Snape wearing Remus' clothes, which didn't even fit him?
The Potions Master glanced up as Harry shoved the covers aside and sat up. "Good morning."
It was Snape's voice . . . It took Harry only a second longer to put it together. "Your potion!" he accused.
Snape brushed a long strand of black hair away from his eyes. "No need to panic," he chided. "We're safe in here." Setting his book aside, he fished in a pocket for a small metal flask much like the one the false Mad Eye Moody had used. "I'll take more now, though. It does seem to make things . . . simpler."
Harry ignored that remark to focus on the one before. "We're safe, you said. So Aunt Petunia's still all right?"
"She's still alive."
Harry looked away as Snape sipped from the flask. He remembered the flavour of rotting cabbage, the awful nauseous feeling sliding down into his stomach as he'd drunk that same potion, then the wrench of the change, itself . . . But the potion didn't seem to bother Snape. Either the man was used to drinking horribly noxious substances, or his formulation had improved on more than mere duration.
It was Remus' familiar voice again that said, "I found this book downstairs. Read this part."
Harry took the proffered tome, Leukaemia: Diagnosis and Treatment, and ran his eyes over the paragraph Snape had pointed out. "I . . . I don't really understand this, Professor," he admitted when he'd read it through twice. Without even realizing he was doing it, Harry braced himself for a caustic comment.
"No doubt you don't. It's badly written," Snape succinctly replied. "Muggle publication, so what can you expect? Pity they can't even write to the level of the average Hufflepuff, but still, after wading my way through the extraneous verbiage, I gleaned a few useful things. Get up, we'll discuss them over breakfast."
Remembering all they had discussed in the kitchen the night before made Harry wary. And resentful. But he didn't know how to broach that, so the resentment spilled out in another direction. "Are you going to let me make breakfast," he sniped, "or will it be another pizza?"
"If you'd seen your face, whiter than Mr Malfoy's as you stumbled off the lawn, you wouldn't have tried to stay on your feet. But you look fine, now, so by all means play the house-elf if you like."
"I don't like, but food doesn't just make itself, not here."
"Pity," Snape replied.
Harry shuffled through the bedclothes for his shoes and socks. Funny, he didn't remember taking them off. Must have kicked them off in the night . . . except that they were laid out neatly on the floor, socks folded, laces tucked away inside the gaping shoes. Irritated, Harry shot Snape a nasty glance. "Don't touch me, all right? Especially not when I'm asleep."
"You were thrashing," Snape explained, "and it looked all too likely that those huge . . . things would fly off your feet and hit something. What was in your dream?"
"Nothing."
"The Dark Lord? Death Eaters?"
"Nothing!"
"Cedric? Crouch?" Snape drew in a breath. "Black, Harry?"
"Aunt Petunia and Dudley, if you must know!" He rapidly pulled on his shoes and socks, and without another word, stomped out the door, down the hall and stairs, and into the kitchen. There wasn't much to eat, really, and the milk in the fridge had gone sour. Harry found some tinned milk and dry cereal --god awful sugary stuff that Dudley had demanded ages ago-- and had a simple breakfast on the table in under three minutes.
Snape didn't comment on the cuisine, though he didn't eat much, either. Harry had three helpings, washed down with some orange juice he'd mixed up from frozen, and afterwards, he felt a lot less grouchy.
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