Amos Diggory's head in the fireplace is talking to Molly and Arthur. This is Harry's first encounter with floo-calling.
Amos wants Arthur to 'smooth things over' to prevent Rita from finding about the curious incident of the dustbins in the night-time. Because Moody ( a recently retired Auror, if we believe Harry in DH thinking he personally trained Tonks) has a history of attacking things (and people, I suppose) for no reason. Later this book Sirius will describe him as one who did not kill suspects if he could avoid it, as if he were one of the saner in the bunch. So it seems his paranoia is a form of PTSD, developed after the war was over.
Of course we know the incident is the subdue of Moody by two dead men - Barty Jr and Peter. Had Amos and Arthur let the Improper Use of magic folks take care of things properly Voldemort's plot might have been halted in its tracks very early on. Voldemort will thank Arthur for his assistance in his resurrection by having Nagini bite him next year. Was Voldemort *counting* on Moody's friends rushing to get him out of trouble? And had it really been a case of Moody hexing Muggles in a bout of paranoia, would he have ended up in Azkaban, next to the DEs he arrested 13 years earlier?
So far Arthur's little ring of corruption includes himself, head of a minor office in the Department of Magical Law Enforcement, Amos in the Department for the Regulation and Control of Magical Creatures, Ludo Bagman in the Department of Magical Games and Sports, an unnamed contact in the Department of Magical Transportation and Alastor Moody, retired Auror. Four out of seven departments. Maybe his big disappointment with Percy was because his son wasn't willing to be his corrupt contact in International Cooperation.
Bill and Charlie share their parents' high opinion of Moody. Fred and George do not, nor do they have a particularly high opinion of their father, or even of Dumbledore's judgment (but somehow this doesn't make them evil).
Meanwhile the Voldie-Imperiurized Crouch is beginning to rely more on Percy. Not that any of his siblings care that he has to be at work rather than see them off to the train.
Sorry Molly, none of your husband's contacts was able to arrange transportation this year. You'll have to manage with taxis. (Why not use the Knight Bus? Because scaring Muggles with owls, fireworks and a clawing cat is more fun, I suppose.)
Charlie and Bill hint about an upcoming event at Hogwarts. Does Bill know he'll be coming to watch the opening of a maze for an hour or so? Molly joins the hinting - nobody will want to come home for Christmas! (Not even Ginny, who is too young to attend the Ball on her own.)
Is this really the first time the possibility that Draco would have attended Durmstrang comes up in a conversation with his friends? Because they are talking about the upcoming Tournament? Durmstrang doesn't take Muggle-borns and actively teaches the Dark Arts. This establishes the school as evil and everyone attending it as DE-equivalent. (Except in DH we learned that Durmstrang alumnus Viktor Krum was from a family that opposed Grindelwald.)
So Hermione read about Durmstrang and knows about the school's uniforms and curriculum, though not its (secret!) location nor the questionable history of its headmaster. I wonder if the school's 'horrible reputation' is because the book was written by a British wizard? Or a Dumbles supporter? How many British wizards are aware of said reputation? Or of the traditional rivalry between the schools? Ron certainly isn't. Oh, he heard of that school somewhere. Like, perhaps in an interview with his Quidditch hero? But he didn't realize Viktor was still a student. Ack! If wizards from different parts of a continent barely interact how can there be traditional rivalry between them? Or their schools? Maybe only the teachers are involved in the 'rivalry' anyway.
Yes, shame that Narcissa loves her son, indeed. In a few years Harry will be thankful to her for that. Or should be. (Is Ron evil for fantasizing about killing Draco the way Draco is evil for wishing the Heir of Slytherin would kill Hermione? Or is it IOIAGDI?)
Hermione is already learning the summoning charm because in 3 months time Harry will need her help with it.
To an innocent observer Draco may appear to be making friendly banter, but Harry and Ron take everything he says as a declaration of war. Until Draco catches that Arthur did not tell Ron about the coming year's events. Then Draco capitalizes on Ron's insecurity and sense of inferiority over his dad and his position at the Ministry. The entire scene comes across as being more about Harry and Ron's defensiveness than about Draco's verbal 'attack'.
Amos wants Arthur to 'smooth things over' to prevent Rita from finding about the curious incident of the dustbins in the night-time. Because Moody ( a recently retired Auror, if we believe Harry in DH thinking he personally trained Tonks) has a history of attacking things (and people, I suppose) for no reason. Later this book Sirius will describe him as one who did not kill suspects if he could avoid it, as if he were one of the saner in the bunch. So it seems his paranoia is a form of PTSD, developed after the war was over.
Of course we know the incident is the subdue of Moody by two dead men - Barty Jr and Peter. Had Amos and Arthur let the Improper Use of magic folks take care of things properly Voldemort's plot might have been halted in its tracks very early on. Voldemort will thank Arthur for his assistance in his resurrection by having Nagini bite him next year. Was Voldemort *counting* on Moody's friends rushing to get him out of trouble? And had it really been a case of Moody hexing Muggles in a bout of paranoia, would he have ended up in Azkaban, next to the DEs he arrested 13 years earlier?
So far Arthur's little ring of corruption includes himself, head of a minor office in the Department of Magical Law Enforcement, Amos in the Department for the Regulation and Control of Magical Creatures, Ludo Bagman in the Department of Magical Games and Sports, an unnamed contact in the Department of Magical Transportation and Alastor Moody, retired Auror. Four out of seven departments. Maybe his big disappointment with Percy was because his son wasn't willing to be his corrupt contact in International Cooperation.
Bill and Charlie share their parents' high opinion of Moody. Fred and George do not, nor do they have a particularly high opinion of their father, or even of Dumbledore's judgment (but somehow this doesn't make them evil).
Meanwhile the Voldie-Imperiurized Crouch is beginning to rely more on Percy. Not that any of his siblings care that he has to be at work rather than see them off to the train.
Sorry Molly, none of your husband's contacts was able to arrange transportation this year. You'll have to manage with taxis. (Why not use the Knight Bus? Because scaring Muggles with owls, fireworks and a clawing cat is more fun, I suppose.)
Charlie and Bill hint about an upcoming event at Hogwarts. Does Bill know he'll be coming to watch the opening of a maze for an hour or so? Molly joins the hinting - nobody will want to come home for Christmas! (Not even Ginny, who is too young to attend the Ball on her own.)
Is this really the first time the possibility that Draco would have attended Durmstrang comes up in a conversation with his friends? Because they are talking about the upcoming Tournament? Durmstrang doesn't take Muggle-borns and actively teaches the Dark Arts. This establishes the school as evil and everyone attending it as DE-equivalent. (Except in DH we learned that Durmstrang alumnus Viktor Krum was from a family that opposed Grindelwald.)
So Hermione read about Durmstrang and knows about the school's uniforms and curriculum, though not its (secret!) location nor the questionable history of its headmaster. I wonder if the school's 'horrible reputation' is because the book was written by a British wizard? Or a Dumbles supporter? How many British wizards are aware of said reputation? Or of the traditional rivalry between the schools? Ron certainly isn't. Oh, he heard of that school somewhere. Like, perhaps in an interview with his Quidditch hero? But he didn't realize Viktor was still a student. Ack! If wizards from different parts of a continent barely interact how can there be traditional rivalry between them? Or their schools? Maybe only the teachers are involved in the 'rivalry' anyway.
Yes, shame that Narcissa loves her son, indeed. In a few years Harry will be thankful to her for that. Or should be. (Is Ron evil for fantasizing about killing Draco the way Draco is evil for wishing the Heir of Slytherin would kill Hermione? Or is it IOIAGDI?)
Hermione is already learning the summoning charm because in 3 months time Harry will need her help with it.
To an innocent observer Draco may appear to be making friendly banter, but Harry and Ron take everything he says as a declaration of war. Until Draco catches that Arthur did not tell Ron about the coming year's events. Then Draco capitalizes on Ron's insecurity and sense of inferiority over his dad and his position at the Ministry. The entire scene comes across as being more about Harry and Ron's defensiveness than about Draco's verbal 'attack'.
Re: Severus in the DTCL
Date: 2011-03-15 01:50 pm (UTC)Severus sighed and followed Professor Fairstone to the dungeon...his own party hat still in hand.
He paused when the woman, Professor Fairstone stopped at the door that would usually take him into his office; however the door visually appeared to be the same but for whatever reason it was alien to him, like someone had place a differnent door that looked exactly the same.
Fairstone opened the door and moved inside, Severus hesitated, trying to see inside, but it was dark, no light entered into the void the open door created. He moved his hand down to his robe pocket where his wand should be; it was not there.
Fear gripped him, he did not want to go into the black room.
"Severus?" the Fairstone woman said inside the darkened room, he could not see her. "Don't be afraid." she added.
"I-I'm not afraid,." he snarled viciously. "Why would I be afraid of my own office." he complained gruffly, but his feet would not move to take him inside.
"Because it's dark, most people are a little afraid of the dark." the female voice said softly.
"I am not a afraid of the dark," he insisted.
"I know you are brave, but you are still hesitating." she replied.
Severus felt a great lump of frustation swell his chest, like something just happened to him that was not registering in his mind.
"Nobody notices me in the dark, it's safe. A person can get by in the dark and never be bothered." said Severus, but he was not quite sure why he said it.
He felt strange, like his head was very heavy. He touched his hand to the wood door frame, as much for support as to reasure himself it was solid and actually there.
"I don't think thats right, Severus." Fairstone's voice disagreed, "People are likely to bump into you if you stay in the dark...maybe even run over you." the woman continued, "and you're more likely to get hurt, hiding in the dark. People will not trust you."
Severus narrowed his eyes, "Turn on the damn lights, woman." he barked angrily; he was feeling hot and uncomfortable.
(Okay, thats all I've got right now, I gotta run or I'll be late for work)
Re: Severus in the DTCL
Date: 2011-03-15 04:23 pm (UTC)Yeah, my friends and I used to do the same thing back in high school...often to hilarious results.
I even had a creative writing teacher who had us do that as a writing assignment; I ended up with a prompt that involved a rich, handsome, albeit insipid hero who had a bright shiny sportscar and all the beautiful women he wanted but no living relatives, and his Gary Stu BF.
I brought it to the teacher and begged her to let us redo the sorting of the prompts; she read what I'd gotten and laughed, and told me to just do the best I could.
So I had the jealous Gary Stu modify the brakes of the sportscar so that the hero died in a car crash, after making sure the hero had left his fortune to the Gary Stu; the girls who'd written the prompt were suitably crushed when they read it. :-)
"I don't think thats right, Severus." Fairstone's voice disagreed, "People are likely to bump into you if you stay in the dark...maybe even run over you." the woman continued, "and you're more likely to get hurt, hiding in the dark. People will not trust you."
Severus narrowed his eyes, "Turn on the damn lights, woman." he barked angrily; he was feeling hot and uncomfortable.
"There's no need for lights, Severus," Fairstone replied. "Just follow your nose, it's big enough to smell the jasmine flower in my hair..."
Severus could just make out Fairstone receding further into the dark, the jasmine bloom shining like a star in her hair.
He started to follow, suddenly he was no longer in the dark dungeon, but in an open field. It was sunny, and he was surrounded by more people than he could count, who all seemed to be singing. Hundreds of crystal spiders streamed by, sparkling in the sun, and a shining angel hovered overhead, with a face that seemed vaguely familiar to Severus.