Peter's flight to Albania
Nov. 4th, 2022 06:31 pmWhy did Peter go to Albania and restore Voldemort to power instead of, you know, running away? Why not find a distant corner of the globe where no one would recognize him and where the long arm of Dumbledore didn’t reach and live in relative peace?
Well. Remember what Remus said while literally rolling up his sleeves to murder Peter?
What would Peter be thinking once he got far enough away to catch his breath?
“Uh-oh, Dumbledore might actually believe Moony and Padfoot and the kids when they tell him I’m still alive and the real traitor. What if he clears Padfoot’s name, or at least helps him escape? Won’t that leave Padfoot at liberty to hunt me down? And it’s almost the summer holiday—Moony will be able to join the hunt in a couple of weeks. And no one’s taught DADA two years in a row in my lifetime, and where else is he going to get a job now? I’m going to spend the rest of my life looking over my shoulder for those two. If I’m lucky. They might actually find me! What options does that leave me?”
You’d think that working for Voldemort is such a terrible job that living on the run while fearing every shadow is a big black dog doesn’t sound that bad by comparison. There’s no Cruciatus, as long as he doesn’t get caught. On the other hand, Sirius is the guy who tricked a fellow student he didn’t like into entering a tunnel with a werewolf. And none of the Marauders ever actually confirmed that Remus wasn’t a willing participant in that plan. Why was he rolling up his sleeves in the Shrieking Shack if he was only planning a quick, clean death? Maybe Peter sincerely believed that whatever Sirius and Remus would do to him was so terrible, and living in fear of it so unbearable, that Voldemort didn’t automatically look like the worst choice.
And why didn’t Dumbledore send Sirius after Peter? Um. I’m sure we would all like to think that Sirius, unlike Quirrell, would be protected by plot armor if he ended up in Albania and would never return to Britain with a spiffy new turban. Or a motorcycle helmet and a sudden obsession with traffic safety. But…well, would you want a Voldemort with all of Sirius’s cleverness and skill at nasty curses to draw on? Me neither.
How he convinced Sirius not to hunt Peter is another question. Though did Sirius know Voldemort was in Albania? Maybe Dumbledore, ah, neglected to mention that, and Sirius was grimly hunting tropical islands for rats between replying to Harry’s letter and drinking rum.
Well. Remember what Remus said while literally rolling up his sleeves to murder Peter?
“You should have realized, Peter […] If Voldemort didn’t kill you, we would.”
What would Peter be thinking once he got far enough away to catch his breath?
“Uh-oh, Dumbledore might actually believe Moony and Padfoot and the kids when they tell him I’m still alive and the real traitor. What if he clears Padfoot’s name, or at least helps him escape? Won’t that leave Padfoot at liberty to hunt me down? And it’s almost the summer holiday—Moony will be able to join the hunt in a couple of weeks. And no one’s taught DADA two years in a row in my lifetime, and where else is he going to get a job now? I’m going to spend the rest of my life looking over my shoulder for those two. If I’m lucky. They might actually find me! What options does that leave me?”
You’d think that working for Voldemort is such a terrible job that living on the run while fearing every shadow is a big black dog doesn’t sound that bad by comparison. There’s no Cruciatus, as long as he doesn’t get caught. On the other hand, Sirius is the guy who tricked a fellow student he didn’t like into entering a tunnel with a werewolf. And none of the Marauders ever actually confirmed that Remus wasn’t a willing participant in that plan. Why was he rolling up his sleeves in the Shrieking Shack if he was only planning a quick, clean death? Maybe Peter sincerely believed that whatever Sirius and Remus would do to him was so terrible, and living in fear of it so unbearable, that Voldemort didn’t automatically look like the worst choice.
And why didn’t Dumbledore send Sirius after Peter? Um. I’m sure we would all like to think that Sirius, unlike Quirrell, would be protected by plot armor if he ended up in Albania and would never return to Britain with a spiffy new turban. Or a motorcycle helmet and a sudden obsession with traffic safety. But…well, would you want a Voldemort with all of Sirius’s cleverness and skill at nasty curses to draw on? Me neither.
How he convinced Sirius not to hunt Peter is another question. Though did Sirius know Voldemort was in Albania? Maybe Dumbledore, ah, neglected to mention that, and Sirius was grimly hunting tropical islands for rats between replying to Harry’s letter and drinking rum.
no subject
Date: 2022-11-09 04:42 am (UTC)There is the tongue-in-cheek suggestion from Elkins that Peter was obsessed with Lily and stayed with the Weasleys because of his weakness for redheads (Peter doesn't get the girl). But that isn't quite enough of a motive.
So...what was he after? If he was after information, alternating between the Ministry-gossip household of the Weasleys and Dumbledore's stronghold at Hogwarts might offer possibilities, but what kind of information would matter enough to him to make it worth the risk? The puffskein-killing Twins alone would be enough to make most rats want to run away, I should think. So it would have to be something really important. Other than Voldemort's location, which he might have found out was Albania during Ron's first two years of school.
Actually, it's even worse. The other Death Eaters knew that "Wormtail" sent the Dark Lord to Godric's Hollow, where he was defeated by a baby. But the Death Eaters didn't know each other's identities back then because they stayed masked even at meetings, except maybe to members of their own cells. Could any of them even connect "Wormtail" to Peter Pettigrew? And Sirius was the only living person who knew Peter was the real Secret-Keeper. Couldn't Peter have just killed Sirius from behind (and maybe framed someone else for it, since he's so good at it) and gone on with his life, pretending to be shocked and horrified at Sirius's apparent betrayal along with everyone else?
no subject
Date: 2022-11-10 07:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-11-12 11:24 am (UTC)I think Peter didn’t just kill Sirius from behind — and hell, openly take credit for it: as far as everyone knew, Sirius was the traitor who sold the Potters to Voldemort and then killed a dozen Muggles in his botched escape. Why hide that you were the one to kill him? It fits the framing — for similar reasons to why Peter was still in Britain: J.K. Rowling needed Sirius around for the “give hope to Harry that he can escape the Dursleys and then yank it away” sequence in Prisoner of Azkaban so around he was even if it made the confrontation between him and Peter a bit silly, what with the frameup specialist not finishing the job. I think a dash of Stupid Evil was also involved, even if it’s one of the worst scenes to invoke that trope in.
And yes, if Peter feared Remus so much that he went to Albania help Voldemort resurrect after Prisoner of Azkaban, it’s all the more reason he shouldn’t have stayed in Britain in the first place: first, he knew of Remus’s situation just as well during the first war so he knew that after it, with the Order of the Phoenix winding down, Remus would be just as free to hunt him down as after Prisoner of Azkaban. Second, he assumes going abroad with Remus both knowing he’s alive and wanting his head on a pike would at the absolute least buy him time — it’s not like Voldie can shelter him before his resurrection and that happens once back in Britain — so he has no reason to assume slipping away when Remus thinks him dead wouldn’t buy him peace…well, so long as he kept his head down, but big flashy actions always seemed to be James’s and Sirius’s province amongst the Marauders.
no subject
Date: 2022-11-13 02:04 am (UTC)After the first war he could avoid being hunted down by Remus by faking his death. I don't see why the frame-up was incomplete? Sirius was framed for betraying the Potters and killing Peter (plus a bunch of Muggles) If Remus believed Peter was dead he wouldn't be looking for him. Also, since he believed the frame-up he had no negative feelings about Peter, only Sirius. But once remus found out the truth? Yes, now he had a reason to hunt Peter down.
no subject
Date: 2022-11-15 09:48 am (UTC)Even then, I don’t think he could know Dumbledore would chose that time to switch from covering Sirius to throwing him under the bus: after all, a trial with the attendant Veritaserum would have revealed immediately that Peter was the traitor and not Sirius.
For me the frameup is incomplete because even after it he still acts as if it didn’t happen and he were still on the run: if Peter really thought the frameup was successful, what the hell was he doing as a rat for so many years?
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Date: 2022-11-16 07:03 pm (UTC)Which maybe takes care of the "why not take credit for killing Sirius" problem, but not the "why hide as a rat" problem. Doylistically, yeah, Rowling just forgot. But Watsonianly? If he thought Karkaroff or Rookwood might have sold him out but the Ministry was keeping it quiet as long as they thought Peter was dead (and the duel was a case of villains falling out) because "poor hero Peter" makes a better story...could he have wondered whether Dumbledore would know in that case and send Remus after him if he popped up in another country? And stuck around to see whether Arthur, lower-ranking DMLE employee and brother-in-law of Order members, would say something? I'm not sure it works, but it's the best I've got so far.
no subject
Date: 2022-11-16 07:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-11-16 05:44 pm (UTC)Or maybe he was always fine killing strangers and it was only killing a school buddy that he balked at. He also zapped Ron unconscious rather than killing him when he made his escape outside the Shack, which might mean he had too much affection for the kid who at least fed him for several years to kill him directly. And, of course, he hesitates to kill Harry.
We just don't have quite enough evidence to be confident about any of this, though. And it still doesn't explain why he didn't move to Australia after faking his death the first time. Which takes us back to, is there something or some information in Britain he thought he needed for some reason? Did he somehow get on other countries' most-wanted lists without anyone else knowing he'd even made jaunts abroad? Does he just like British food and weather that much?