[identity profile] montavilla.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] deathtocapslock
Sorry about getting this posted to late. It’s the holidays. Plus, I had to cut it down—I tended to go on and on in this chapter. I’m sure that surprises no one.

But you’d think this would be my favorite chapter. After all, we’re getting all of Snape’s backstory. Be careful what you ask for...


The Prince’s Tale

Just like the last chapter started with Fred being dead, this one starts with Snape lying lifeless on the floor as Harry stares at him.

Before Harry can actually form a thought, Voldemort’s voice comes echoing with a speech for the Hogwarts’ troops. He starts by praising their bravery—which seems generous, considering that he’s whupping them so badly. He offers mercy to those who stop resisting him and gives everyone an hour to bury their dead.

Then he speaks directly to Harry. Well, he’s still doing the loud voice thing, so everybody gets to eavesdrop, but he tells Harry to come and get killed talk things over. If Harry doesn’t show up, then Voldemort will come out and personally slaughter everyone. Harry has one hour to make up his mind.

As they go across the lawn, Harry notes that it’s about an hour until dawn and that it’s pitch black. Nevertheless, they can see small bundles lying on the grass and a clog the size of a small boat. Okay, you tell me how to reconcile a pitch-black darkness with being able to see small bundles and a giant shoe.

In the Great Hall, the Weasleys are grouped around Fred’s dead body. Harry notes that Ginny’s face is swollen and blotchy. Guess she does occasionally cry. When Harry isn’t around to admire her spunk.

Then Harry sees the bodies of Remus and Tonks “pale and still and peaceful-looking, apparently asleep beneath the dark, enchanted ceiling.” Now, that’s nice image. It makes me think of those stone effigy things you see in old churchs, with the sculpture of a knight. I think it’s dumb that they died, but I do like the image.

Harry reels back from the hall, overcome with guilt. If only I’d given myself up earlier, he thinks, then Fred might still be alive. Apparently, he doesn’t care about Remus or Tonks. But, of course, Harry didn’t even need to give himself up to prevent this carnage. He could have just stopped gaping at everyone like an idiot and found the Ravenclaw horcrux three hours ago. Or spent two minutes researching the alarm system in Hogsmeade so the Death Eaters didn’t immediately know when he arrived.

But note: Harry’s already thinking he ought to just go let Voldemort kill him in order to spare other people.

Harry gets into Dumbledore’s office by using the password Dumbledore, which is a big clue about Snape’s loyalties, and goes inside.

He notices that all the Headmaster portraits, including Dumbledore’s, have deserted the office in order to watch the fighting. Since the fighting is on hiatus, they’re probably watching Bewitched on Filch’s old black-and-while TV set.

What I notice is that there isn’t any portrait of Snape snoozing in the office. This is either a slap in the face to Snape fans or proof that he’s still alive.

Harry, in possibly the most contrived moment in the entire series, pours Snape’s memories into the Pensieve and decides to watch them in order to escape his guilty torment. Like Snape’s memories are going to be any comfort to Harry. As far as Harry knows, they’re probably just going to be filled with Harry failing potions exams or looking stupid.

Look, I know we have to do this. Even when I first read this, I knew the memories were going to contain key information. But does Harry’s reason for doing this have to be so stupid? Couldn’t he want to look at the memories on the hope that they just might contain something useful? Good or bad, this is Voldemort’s right-hand man, and he just got double-crossed. There’s a good chance he’s giving Harry a clue about defeating the Dark Lord. But nope. That would be too cunning or something. Harry needs a noble reason to watch the memories. And escapism is far more noble than trying to succeed.

So, Harry goes into the memories and finds himself in a park with a tall chimney in the background. We know, although Harry does not, that this must be Snape’s home town.

The Prince’s Tale is basically in three parts. This is the first part, which I will call The Prince and the Witch.

Two girls are swinging and little Snape is watching them from behind a clump of bushes. He’s described as wearing a man’s overcoat, too-short jeans, and a woman’s smock. So, Snape is an awkward, social outcast? Check.

Of course, anyone can guess at this point that the girls are Lily and Petunia. I have to say, though, that I was taken aback to see that they lived in this town. I got the feeling that they had grown up in more middle-class area. But maybe that’s why Petunia is so very status conscious as an adult.

Harry moves closer to little Snape and notes the “undisguised greed” as Snape watches Lily in particular. What a strange description that is. It really makes Snape seem like a creepy stalker here. Was that JKR’s intention? I’m not sure that it is, because she uses “greed” more than once when it comes to describing romantic attraction. She will even use “hungrily” when Lily looks at Harry later on. So, I’m not convinced that JKR intended the stalker vibe.

Or, it could be, as other readers have pointed out, that Harry interprets Snape’s look as “greedy” because he’s still in Snape hate mode. But I don’t think that Harry would have been looking at the memories at all in that case.

It’s kind of a shame that Ron and Hermione didn’t come along on this trip. Hermione could have told us all how to feel.

As Petunia shrieks her disapproval, Lily lets go of her swing at the highest point and flies up into the air, floating down far too lightly not to be using magic.

“Mummy said you weren’t allowed, Lily!” Petunia says, which brings up an interesting point. How is it that Mrs. Evans knows what Lily is doing—and knows that she shouldn’t be doing it publicly? If it were worth creating theories at this point in the series, I would have theorized that Mrs. Evans is actually a squib and thus knows enough about magic to realize what Lily’s up to and what it means.

But in that case, Lily wouldn’t need Snape to tell her about the magical world, so forget that.

Lily then picks up a flower and shows Petunia her ability to make it open and close at will. Petunia tells her to stop it, but asks with obvious envy how Lily does it.

This is Snape’s cue to come forward and tell Lily that she’s a witch. Lily takes this as an insult. Snape gets red in the face from embarrassment and Harry thinks the only reason Snape doesn’t take off his coat is to avoid revealing the smock underneath, which makes me wonder how it is that Harry saw the smock in the first place.

Lily runs to Petunia and Snape runs clumsily after her, trying to explain that he meant a real witch, who can do real magic. Petunia laughs at him, calling him that “Snape boy” and sneering that he lives down on Spinner’s End.

So, now we know that Spinner’s End is a street and not a town. Also that it’s worse than the other streets.

Petunia follows that up by accusing Snape of spying. He retorts that it’s not worth spying on a Muggle, and Petunia gets so mad she pulls Lily away towards their, presumably tonier, home.

At this point, the scene dissolves into another memory. It’s similar to when Dumbledore was storing all his old trial memories in the Pensieve back in GoF, but that seemed a lot more random. There is a definite structure to what Snape put into these memories. I choose to believe that he chose each one for a specific reason and hopefully left out the ones that showed his relationship with Lily in a better light.

Anyway, this memory is of Lily and Snape talking about what happens if you do magic outside of school. Lily wonders if Snape is just trying to impress her with a fantasy about this magical castle and all. Snape assures her that it’s not and that someone will come from Hogwarts to tell her and her parents all about it.

Lily asks if it will make a difference that she’s Muggleborn. Snape hesitates and then says that it won’t, then watches “greedily” as she stretches out on the ground to stare up at the leaves in the trees. Okay, maybe JKR is being deliberate about that stalker thing. Let’s see if he starts salivating.

Lily asks about Dementors and Petunia shows up and we finally learn that the “awful boy” was Snape. Hehe. I figured that one out years earlier.

Snape now accuses Petunia of spying and she retaliates by making fun of his smock. At this point, a branch on one of the trees breaks and strikes Petunia on the shoulder. Petunia runs off crying, Lily accuses Snape of hurting her with magic, and Snape denies it, but JKR is careful to point out that this is a lie—which is one of those key points of argument between Snape supporters and Snape detractors.

The supporters note that kids of that age can’t control their magic, and Snape might not really be lying about doing it. It was spontaneous, like Harry blowing up Aunt Marge. Detractors say this shows that Snape was a big fat liar, just like Voldemort and those invisible Slytherins.

Another dissolve and Snape is on the train platform, watching the Evans family say goodbye to Lily. Harry goes over to listen as Lily tells Petunia she’ll try to talk to Dumbledore and convince him to let Petunia come to the school, too. Petunia denies any desire to attend Hogwarts and calls the children “freaks.”

Lily tells Petunia that she knows about the letter Dumbledore sent her. Petunia is horrified that Lily read a private letter, and Lily sort of blames it on Snape by trying not to blame it on him. Brat.

I notice that in her explanation, Snape didn’t actually open the letter or anything. He just wondered how Petunia could have contacted Dumbledore without an owl and speculated about the postal service intercepting letters from Muggles addressed to wizards.

Heh. I just realized something. Harry spends this memory eavesdropping the Lily and Petuna—but Snape couldn’t possibly have heard them (he’s too far away). So, if Snape did choose this memory for a specific reason, we’ll never know what it is. Maybe he thought the story needed a background shot, the way that every movie about England starts with a shot of Big Ben.

Another dissolve: Snape is on the train and he finds Lily post-crying in a compartment filled with rowdy boys.

She’s mad at Snape because of her fight with Petunia—which she is now blaming completely on Snape. Snape doesn’t see why she’s bothered, since Petunia is only a… Muggle is what he’s most likely going to say, but he doesn’t. This is the second time he’s shown a) that he thinks Muggles are not worth much and b) that he knows this is distressing to Lily and he better not say it in front of her.

We’re also given clues that Snape’s parents fight—but his mother obviously isn’t hexing his Muggle dad, because… well, he’d probably be an orphan by now if she was. And we get the small detail of Snape having changed into his school robes already, as though eager to leave his half-Muggle poverty behind him.

Snape tries to cheer Lily up reminding her that they are off to the magic school! And he hopes that she’ll be in Slytherin, the “brainy” House. At this, little James Potter turns around. Harry notes that he is black-haired, just like Snape, but “with that undefinable air of having been well-cared-for, even adored, that Snape so conspicuously lacked.” In other words, James is a dark-haired Draco.

To emphasize this, JKR has James echo Draco’s sentiments about House sorting (but with Slytherin instead of Hufflepuff). He directs his statement to Sirius, who points out that his whole family is in Slytherin.

“Blimey,” James says, “and I thought you seemed all right!”

Is this supposed to be cute and funny? Or to demonstrate the other side of the coin in terms of discrimination? James is being as prejudicial than Snape—and he doesn’t even bother to hide it.

(To digress a little, it seems contradictory to me to portray racists as being the ones in power while simultaneously having the people in power object to racist language. Yes, racism still exists even while we would never use the N-word in polite society, but it doesn’t have near as much power as when white people could openly use the word without any fear of offending someone who might be able to do something about it.)

Sirius—who we had always assumed chose Gryffindor out of principle is basing his choice on following this cool kid he just met.

Anyway, James’s stated choice leads to a tiff between Snape and James and Sirius. Lily decides to move, taking Snape with her. James and Sirius then mock him as being obviously pussy-whipped and the nickname “Snivellus” is born.

I kind of foresaw this before DH came out. I figured that James was going to act more like Draco than Harry when he first encountered Snape. I didn’t think that James and Sirius were going to gang up on him from the very start. I thought it might start out a little more ambiguous. But then, this chapter wasn’t written for me. This chapter was written for people who hate Snape.

Now we see the sorting. Lily is sorted into Gryffindor and smiles sadly at Severus, knowing that they won’t be in the same House now. Even the first time I read this, I didn’t think she was all that upset about it. This is when I started to really dislike Lily as a character.

So, Harry watches the whole sorting in the memory, including his father, Remus Lupin, and Peter Pettigrew. Wow. That must have taken almost the whole hour Voldemort gave him right there. Especially when you consider that there were probably a lot more students in those days—as many of them didn’t survive to have kids.

Finally, Snape is sorted into Slytherin and goes over to the table where Prefect Lucius Malfoy welcomes him and other students cheer. Is this because they don’t know him yet? I mean, he’s not really one of them. He’s a half blood from the bad part of a Muggle town.

Or am I simply invested too much in the idea of an ostracized Snape? Draco told Harry to be careful of associating with the “wrong” type of wizard, yet Eileen Prince went and married a Muggle. That sort of thing gets you blasted off the tapestry in the Black House. Plus he’s poor and he’s funny-looking and he doesn’t have a lot of social skills. Are we to assume that none of that matters to the snobs in Slytherin?

Well, maybe not, considering that sixty-percent of them are carrying troll blood in their veins.

The scene changes. Lily and Snape are walking through the courtyard together. Harry sees that they are taller and reckons that a few years have passed since they were sorted. Try five years, Harry. They are both fifteen—probably sixteen--years old right now.

So, Snape is upset they’re supposed to be best friends. I wonder what Lily is doing (or not doing) that’s making him feel otherwise. Lily replies that they are, but she doesn’t like the people he hangs out with. She mentions Avery and says that Mulciber is creepy. “D’you know what he tried to do to Mary MacDonald the other day?

No. What? Tell us, damnit. Was it as bad and turning her upside-down and taking off her panties?

“That was nothing,” Snape replies. “It was a laugh, that’s all—“

Lily then says that it was Dark Magic. Okay… what spells do we know are Dark Magic? It’s not Sectumsempra, because that’s Snape’s spell and I doubt that even he would call cutting someone to bits “a laugh.”

Obviously, it wasn’t Avada Kadavra, or Crucio Cruciatus. Maybe it was Imperio? Maybe Mulciber made her cluck like a chicken in the courtyard? That would be both Dark Magic and in the neighborhood of funny.

Any other spell that might be described as “a laugh” that we know about has been done by the “good guys.” You know, stuff like making tentacles sprout on someone’s face, or turning them into giant slugs. Or making their heads swell up. Or having their toenails grow, or their tongues stick to the roof of them mouths. I honestly can’t figure out what Mulciber could have done to Mary MacDonald that would be so much worse than those things. That could inspire this indignant reaction in Lily.

Who we know will just smile when her best friend is petrified, made to choke on soap suds, and hung upside down in front of the whole school.

So, Snape tries to turn it around by bringing up “Potter and his gang.” (I guess he doesn’t know about the Marauder moniker.)

Lily asks what’s Potter got to do with anything. She’s got a good point, there. Especially since Snape brings up the lame fact that what Potter is doing is sneaking out at night. Why doesn’t he bring up the head-swelling and bullying stuff that we know happened? Or does Bertram Aubrey not count in Lily Evans’ list of victims?

Snape also mentions that Lupin is weird—which, again, doesn’t really help his argument. But it does let us know that Snape thinks Lupin is a werewolf (actually, Snape knows that Lupin is a werewolf), and that Lily’s heard this theory before. Either she doesn’t believe him, or she’s pretending not to.

Then she blushes under the intensity of Snape’s gaze. Because she knows he’s attracted to her and she’s turned on by it? Or because she’s embarrassed that such a creep likes her?

Lily scolds Snape for being “ungrateful” to James for saving his life from “whatever’s” down under the Whomping Willow. At which point, Snape goes ballistic and starts spluttering with rage about James and how he’s not a hero and he’s not going to let Lily—

Let me? Let me?” Lily rages back.

This is so alarming to Snape that he starts backtracking immediately. We don’t know what Snape wasn’t going to let Lily do. The most obvious answer to me is that he isn’t going to let her date James. He would have no power to stop her in any case, but Lily’s indignation that he would even try and his fear of her anger shows me that Lily has all the power in this relationship.

Wow. This is sort of like that memory of Eileen cowering while Tobias yelled at her, isn’t it? Raised voices are Snape’s kryptonite. Hehe. My spellchecker knows the word “kryptonite”!

I get the strong feeling in this scene that Lily is fed up with Snape as a friend, and I don’t buy that her objection to his friends is based on principle. While his friends may very well be proto-Nazis, it comes across to me like an excuse to dump Snape.

(Another digression: I think this idea is supported by having Lily meet Snape before they start attending Hogwarts. Had they met later, it would be easier to buy the friendship as them having something in common (like a love of potions). But, in canon, what they have in common is being the only two magical children in their hometown. Once Lily gets to Hogwarts, she meets hundreds of magical children—so what draws her to Snape is no longer there.)

What really convinces me is when she tells Snape that he’s being ungrateful to James for saving his life without being at all concerned about whether Snape is okay after that experience. If she had heard about it from someone else—wouldn’t she be pumping Snape to tell her what happened?

Lily then performs a bit of emotional jujitsu by insulting James and turning Snape back into putty. They go off together and Snape is happy as can be to think Lily hasn’t fallen for James… yet.

The next memory is Snape’s Worst Memory. Harry, unlike many Snape-haters, believes that Snape inadvertently wandered too close to the Marauders (instead of deliberately choosing his spot to eavesdrop on them). That Harry prefers to stay away from the action is clue that he’s beginning to weaken on that Snape-hate he’s been carrying around for nearly seven years.

Then we have a scene outside the Gryffindor common room, where we learn that Snape has staged a sit-in until Lily comes out to receive his apology. And we learn that Lily refuses to accept that apology and calls Snape a future Death Eater.

As a point of interest, she says that Snape calls “everyone of my birth” a Mudblood (except Lily, until SWM). This implies that Snape is more of a bigot than he appears in his memories—which I don’t have trouble believing or reconciling with the Snape I like.

What I do have trouble accepting is that this feisty, spunky Lily who has all the power in their relationship never called him on it before—or that he wouldn’t have internalized it. The implications are that he did know that this was wrong, and that he tried very hard not to appear anti-Muggleborn in front of Lily. So, maybe she never heard him call “everyone” of her birth a Mudblood, but found out that he was doing it behind her back?

Oh hell, maybe I’m just overthinking it.

Anyway, they split up and Lily went and cast obliviate on all her friends so that everyone forgot that she ever liked the weirdo kid from Slytherin and that explains why no one ever mentioned their relationship to Harry. Not even Hagrid, who spilled the beans about everything else under the sun.

Thus ends the first part of the Prince’s Tale. The second part is called The Prince and the Manipulative Bastard.

The next we see of Snape, he’s standing the middle of a storm on a hill, waiting for Dumbledore. A bit melodramatic, aren’t we, Snape? Couldn’t just meet him at a coffee shop? Or a gay bar?

Dumbledore can’t resist making a grand entrance, arriving like a lightning bolt. Snape drops to his knees and cries out, “Don’t kill me!”

So… was Dumbledore that badass in the first war? It’s a pretty far cry from the twinkly guy with the candy dish.

Dumbledore asks what message Snape is bringing from Lord Voldemort. Which implies to me that Snape’s main function as a Death Eater was probably to carry messages between Dumbledore and Voldemort. Which implies a bizarre political dynamic. Was Dumbledore the most powerful opposition to Voldemort? If Snape was carrying messages, then wouldn’t Dumbledore know he was a Death Eater back at the Hog’s Head? Eesh.

So, Snape stammers that he has a request and mentions Trelawney, and Dumbledore asks how much of the prophecy Snape told to Voldemort. Snape replies that he told as much of it as he heard. Dumbledore seems to be jumping awfully quick to conclusions to be surprised here. Either Dumbledore is reading Snape’s mind (in which case he doesn’t need to ask at all), or he’s so incredibly smart that he figures out in a micro-second what happened (in which case, why would he have been so dumb back when Snape heard the prophecy), or Snape telling Voldemort the Prophecy was something Dumbledore was well aware of.

Snape tells Dumbledore that Voldemort thinks the Prophecy refers to Lily Evans and Dumbledore replies that didn’t. It referred to a boy born at the end of July. If Dumbledore didn’t know what Snape told Voldemort, that’s a stupid thing to let slip.

But no harm, Snape explains that Voldemort is targeting a baby boy. He just doesn’t care about that. He’s worried that Voldemort will kill the whole family, which includes Lily.

So, why don’t you just ask Lord Voldemort to spare her? Dumbledore taunts. And when Snape explains that he already did, Dumbledore says, “You disgust me.”

Wow. This is not how I imagined this scene would go. But then again, I always imagined that Snape would be telling Dumbledore something he didn’t know already.

Dumbledore goes on explain that he’s disgusted because Snape cares only about Lily’s life and not about her husband or son. Snape says nothing, but only looks at Dumbledore.

I can’t help thinking that Snape’s wondering how the hell he was supposed to beg Lord Voldemort to spare the very person Voldemort was bent on killing. Especially since Voldemort was worried that person might grow up to kill him.

But Snape merely begs Dumbledore to keep Lily—and the others if he must—safe.

And Dumbledore demands payment. At least, he demands to know what Snape will give him in return for protecting the Potters.

Snape looks as thought he’s about to protest—as well he should. I mean, it’s like Draco going to Harry and begging him to protect Hedwig and Harry replying, “What’ll you give me?”

But Snape doesn’t protest. He simply says, “Anything.”

The next thing we see is Snape in the grips of suicidal depression after Lily’s death.

“I thought… you were going… to keep her… safe,” he moans.

“She and James put their faith in the wrong person,” Dumbledore says, getting in a dig at Sirius Black. Then he twists the knife in Snape: “Rather like you, Severus. Weren’t you hoping that Lord Voldemort would spare her?”

Um. No, Dumbledore. He was pretty sure that Voldemort wouldn’t spare her. That’s why he came to talk to you. Oh wait, was the person Snape put misguided faith into… was that you? Because then it all makes sense.

Dumbledore then tells Snape that Harry survives and that he’s got his mother’s eyes, and if Snape really loved Lily, he’d dedicate his life to protecting her son. Too bad he never says anything about dedicating his life to treating that son decently, but I guess we can’t have everything.

Snape agrees, after Dumbledore declares that Voldemort isn’t really dead, but he asks in return that Dumbledore never tell Harry why he’s protecting him. Dumbledore thinks this is a mistake, but he agrees. Then Dumbledore spends the next ten years trying to figure out which lie will piss Snape off the most when he tells it to Harry instead of the truth.

New scene: Snape complains about what an arrogant toerag Harry is, but Dumbledore disagrees in a bored tone, while reading a magazine and orders Snape to keep an eye on Quirrell. This scene is to show us that Snape really did hate Harry and wasn’t just pretending to impress Draco. It also shows us that Dumbledore is an annoying jerk.

Dumbledore and Snape discuss Karkaoff on the night of the Yule Ball. Dumbledore asks Snape if he plans on fleeing with Karkaroff and Snape replies that he’s not such a coward. Dumbledore agrees that Snape is braver than Karkaroff and says, “I sometimes think we Sort too soon…”

At which, Snape looks stricken. Many readers interpret this to Snape thinking that if he’d been sorted into Gryffindor, he would have never lost Lily. I take it as Snape reacting to the incredibly insulting swipe at Slytherin—the House that he heads!

How I wish that scene had ended with Snape kicking Dumbledore in the ass.

Dumbledore’s office. Snape is trying to heal Dumbledore. He asks why Dumbledore put on an obviously cursed ring. Dumbledore says that he was sorely tempted, but won’t say what tempted him.

They discuss the curse, and Dumbledore “casually” asks how much time he has left. Because Dumbledore isn’t even scared of death, that’s how much of a badass he is. Snape hesitates, then gives Dumbledore a year at the most.

Snape keeps asking curiously about the ring—why Dumbledore put it on, why he broke it with the sword, but Dumbledore brushes aside the questions and starts hatching a plan to thwart Voldemort’s scheme for using Draco to kill Dumbledore by having Snape do it instead.

As an aside, he asks if he has Snape’s word to protect the students once Voldemort takes over the school. Snape nods. Obviously, the word “protect” does not mean the same thing to Dumbledore and to Snape as it means to me.

So, Dumbledore tells Snape to find out what Draco plans to do—since a frightened teenager is often a danger to others as well as to himself. Right, Dumbledore. This is why you don’t allow Draco to order cursed necklaces and poisoned wine from school.

Incidentally, it’s probably why you shouldn’t entrust a teenage boy to hunt down a bunch of Horcruxes on his own, either.

Bwahahaha! Dumbledore is telling Snape to offer Draco help and guidance. The very things he’ll specifically keep people from giving Harry a year later! Adult help and guidance only hinder the young.

Dumbledore then asks Snape to kill him, to avoid damaging Draco’s pure young soul. When Snape sensibly asks what that means about his own soul, Dumbledore brushes him off by saying he’ll just be helping an old man avoid pain and suffering. Then he brings up the image of Fenrir Greyback eating him and Bellatrix Lestrange performing horrible and perverted acts upon him.

These are the choices? It’s either Snape… or Fenrir and Bellatrix? There’s a bunch of other Death Eaters, you know. Or, how about this one? How about Dumbledore just dies a natural (cursed) death?

Well, it wouldn’t be Dumbledore if he weren’t coming up with some stupidly complicated twist.

So, Dumbledore asks again for Snape to kill him, and his eyes pierce Snape as they had frequently pierced Harry, as though the soul they discussed was visible to him. So, while asking Snape to tear his soul for him, Dumbledore is examining that soul for blemishes. Great. Now he’s Petunia and Snape is the neighbor’s garden.

Snape and Dumbledore strolling through the Forbidden Forest. Snape asks “abruptly” why Dumbledore is spending so many evenings with Dumbledore. First—it’s not that many evenings. Second, Snape sounds like he’s been reading the first draft of Rita Skeeter’s biography of Dumbledore, and just got through the chapter about their “sinister” relationship.

Dumbledore makes a joke about how much Snape has been putting Harry in detention—which is a continuity error. Snape didn’t put Harry into a huge number of detentions until long after this conversation took place. (Hagrid mentions overhearing this conversation while coming to see Ron in the Hospital Wing. It was after that that Harry cut open Draco, and that was what caused Snape to assign Harry to multiple detentions.)

Anyway, they continue to argue and, after Snape threatens not to kill Dumbledore, Dumbledore tells him to meet him in the office that night for his final assignment.

Dumbledore’s office. Dumbledore tells Snape that Harry contains a piece of Voldemort’s soul. Snape needs to be on the lookout for a time when Voldemort starts protecting Nagini. At that time, and not before, Snape must tell Harry the truth about being a Horcrux and that he must allow Voldemort—and no one else—to kill Harry.

Snape is taken aback by this, since he’s been dedicating his life for the last sixteen years to protecting Lily’s son. Dumbledore goes on to say that it was necessary to protect Harry until he was strong enough to kill himself. With his eyes shut, Dumbledore says that by the time Harry goes to meet his death, he will have “arranged things” so that it will mean the end of Voldemort.

I mention this, because it had occurred to me that a simple way to avoid Legilimency would be to keep your eyes shut when telling a lie. So, I think Dumbledore is trying to keep Snape from suspecting that Harry can survive the encounter with Voldemort.

Snape is now shocked that Dumbledore would raise Harry only to sacrifice him at the proper age. Dumbledore is shocked that Snape is shocked, asking, “How many men and women have you watched die?”

That’s kind of a personal question, isn’t it?

Snape’s reply is, “Lately, only those I whom could not save.” Oh, what a pathetic line! Complete with the unnecessary “whom” that makes Snape sound like he’s in Lupin’s Melodrama Club. We Snape-lovers can console ourselves that he’s no longer solely focused on protecting Lily’s son—but JKR makes it clear that this is only lately. It wasn’t until last Tuesday that it started to bother Snape when non-Lily’s-son people were dying.

And then Snape goes into asshole mode and complains that Dumbledore has been using him. He has spied for Dumbledore and lied for Dumbledore and put himself in mortal danger! Damn Dumbledore for making him do good things! And the whole thing was supposed to be about saving one kid! And now it turns out that the kid was being raised as Christmas dinner!

See… it’s that Slytherin thing, isn’t it? Lately, Snape has been caring about everyone in danger, but essentially, he only cared about one person: Lily. Harry was just the next best thing to Lily. Maybe the hat Sorted too soon. Maybe it didn’t.

Snape proves his undying attachment to Lily by casting his doe Patronus, which touches Dumbledore to tears. (If I weren’t so bitterly anti-Dumbledore at this point—and if I didn’t find the whole Ariana thing dull—I might even think that Dumbledore realizes how similar he and Snape are at this point. They both would give anything to have a woman they loved back again.)

Now, mind you, I can see this Snape love for Lily as a very knightly, romantic thing. But JKR really seems to be doing her best to make it clear that loving Lily is the only decent impulse Snape has ever had in his life. So, it’s not the enobling emotion we’ve come to think of as love. Or maybe Snape was such piece of crap to begin with that even love for the Sainted Lily only raised him to the level of pitbull.

Now we get into the Third Part of the Tale: The Prince’s and the Portrait (Who Is Still a Manipulative Bastard).

Harry now sees a series of memories dealing with Snape’s role after killing Dumbledore. First, we see him in the Headmaster’s office with the Portrait of Dumbledore. It is not explained how Snape is in the office when he should have been wanted by the aurors for murder—and persona non grata at Hogwarts. But Dumbledore is telling Snape to mess up the Move Harry to Another House scheme. It’s also not explained how Dumbledore would know about this scheme at all. Maybe there’s a big portrait of him in Moody’s bedroom.

Then we see Snape confounding Mundungus to change the plan to include the Seven Potters.

Next we see Snape flying on a broom. I guess he hadn’t learned that solo-flying thing yet. A Death Eater points his wand at Lupin’s back (so is George not riding behind Lupin? Is he riding in front? Or on another broomstick?) and Snape tries to cut the man’s hand off, but misses and cuts off George’s ear instead.

Snape must have really felt bad about that to include this memory. Maybe he does have a soft spot for the twins. (Although, as far as he would probably know, that was Harry up ahead. He’d realize later on that it was George, when George turned up the shop without an ear. He might also be able to distinguish Harry from other people by broom-riding styles.)

I’m sure that Snape haters are astonished that Snape would try to save Lupin’s life. I just say it’s a shout-out to Snupin fans.

Next we see Snape in Sirius’s bedroom. He’s in tears. Perhaps because he just realized that Sirius is straight. According to JKR, Snape came to the Black House before Moody set up the wards, so this scene is out of sequence.

The weeping Snape pockets half a letter that Lily wrote (the half that says, “Love, Lily”), and tears up a photograph with James, Lily, and Harry, so that James is left out. So, we know that Snape is totally focused on Lily and still respects nothing about Harry, including his belongings.

As a Snape fan, it annoys me no end that he’s being such a jerk in this scene—but I have to give JKR props. She’s not going to compromise and make him nice. And she’ll make him both tragic and ridiculous by having his tears drip off the end of his hooked nose.

Next, Snape is in the headmaster’s office and Phineas Nigellus comes in to report that Harry and Hermione are in the Forest of Dean. Nigellus calls Hermione a Mudblood and Snape yells at him for it.

This is another key moment that gets debated ad nauseam. Does this mean that Snape has repented his racist ways, or is it just that he doesn’t like that word because it lost him Lily? I think that if it’s there, you have to acknowledge its importance. But then, you have to acknowledge all the negative moments, too. I’ve done my share of trying to explain away Snape’s nastiness. But in the end, he is what he is. Good and bad. Ecce homo.

Dumbledore gets all excited about passing the sword to Harry. Interestingly, Dumbledore is worried that Voldemort might find out Snape is helping, not from Snape, but from reading Harry’s mind.

To me, this implies that a) Dumbledore probably didn’t mind the Snape/Harry feud and wanted to help it along, and b) when he told Harry that Voldemort had conveniently closed the mind connection, he knew that wouldn’t last, and c) when Dumbledore told Snape that he was worried about Snape spilling stuff to Voldemort, that probably wasn’t completely true, either.

And d) Dumbledore was manipulative as hell.

Anyway, Dumbledore tries to micromanage Snape, telling him that he must not be seen, and then that the Trio probably won’t take kindly to him after the George thing. Like they wouldn’t already be upset by the killing Dumbledore thing.

So, first Dumbledore tells Snape that he mustn’t be seen, or Voldemort will find out that he’s helping Harry, and then he warns Snape that the Trio will be mad at him for cutting George’s ear off. So, is he thinking Snape’s going to interact with the Trio or not? Let’s be charitable and say Dumbledore is flustered.

Snape tells Dumbledore that he has a plan and goes out the door. It isn’t exactly kicking him in the ass, but it’ll do.

And then Harry wakes up on the carpet of the office, having totally gotten over hating Snape.

Fan Service:
Snape was Dumbledore’s man.
Dumbledore treated Snape like crap.
Lily treated Snape like crap.


Fan Slappage:
James was an even worse jerk than we thought. And SWM took place after the Prank, which makes the whole thing worse than the most pro-Snape fanfic ever written.
Lily? Kind of a bitch.
We may have suspected that Dumbledore was a manipulative bastard, but he descends into even lower levels of assholism.


DVD Extras:
TITLE CARD:

The following events take place between the hours of 3:00 and 4:00 a.m.

INT: Headmaster’s Office.

Harry pours a flask of memories into the Pensieve, takes a deep breath and plunges his face into the silvery liquid.

Cut to:

THE GREAT HALL

Hermione pulls away from hugging Ginny. She moves to Ron, who is standing a little ways away from the family.

HERMIONE
I’m so sorry, Ron.

RON
Did you see where Harry went to? He’s gone missing again.

HERMIONE
No… maybe he’s up in the dorms?

They hurry out and up the stairs.

Neville draws in a few students, including Ernie, Luna, Seamus, and Oliver.

NEVILLE
We have an hour. Red sparks for wounded. Blue for dead. Let’s go.

They all spin off towards the grounds. Ginny, drawing away from her family, wanders after them.

GINNY
Neville? Luna?

She passes by a Madam Pomfrey, who is bandaging Lavender Brown.

LAVENDER
(loudly) What do you mean, I might be a werewolf?!

EXT: HOGWARTS COURTYARD

Ginny wanders down into the dark grounds.

GINNY
What’s going on? Luna?

A dark shape steps behind her. She whirls around.

GINNY
Neville?

Fenrir Greyback, his face covered with blood, steps into the light from a castle window.

FENRIR
Not exactly.

Ginny gasps and turns to run, but he grabs her, clapping one hand on her mouth.

FENRIR
Now, now. Let’s not make a fuss, pretty girl. Come with me over where we won’t be bothered by no one.

He drags her off towards a distant grove of trees.

Cut to:

EXT: HOGSMEADE

Lucius hurries out of the Shrieking Shack to join Narcissa, who is pacing worriedly.

NARCISSA
Where have you been? He was asking about you.

LUCIUS
It’s fine. Everything’s fine.

NARCISSA
Our son is still missing.

LUCIUS
Draco may have gone back to the castle.

NARCISSA
How do you—oh. Let’s go, then.

LUCIUS
Right—

Bellatrix appears.

BELLATRIX
Lucius! Narcissa! Come! We’re heading into the woods.

Lucius and Narcissa share a look, then follow her into the trees.

Cut to:

INT: GRYFFINDOR DORMS

Ron and Hermione push the door open. The five beds stand empty, the curtains blowing in the breeze of an open window.

RON
Not here.

He turns to go, but Hermione is blocking the door.

HERMIONE
Ron…

RON
What is it?

HERMIONE
What do you think will happen? What if Voldemort does attack again?

RON
We’ll fight.

HERMIONE
I don’t want to die—

RON
That’s not—

HERMIONE
I don’t want to die without… letting you know how much I love you.

Ron’s eyes can’t help but be drawn to the empty beds.

RON
Are you saying what I think—

She kisses him on the mouth. There’s a brief moment when he almost draws back—as if to rationalize things. Then he gives up and kisses her back. They tumble onto a bed.

The camera moves discretely to the window, picking out a pair of dark figures: One hulkingly large, the other small and struggling desperately, but being pulled toward a grove of dark trees.

Cut to:

FENRIR AND GINNY

She struggles desperately as he half-carries her to the darkness under the trees. As they move, he feels in her pockets, finally pulling out her wand.

FENRIR
Don’t need that now, do we?

He throws it off into the distance.

GINNY
Please. Let me go.

FENRIR
Now, now. It’ll be over soon. Such soft skin…

He throws her on the ground. As she lands, she rolls over to kick him—but he suddenly freezes with a strangled cry. He falls down, nearly landed on Ginny, who throws herself out of the way and looks up to see a WOMAN in a dark mask, holding a wand. The woman pulls off her mask, revealing a line of pustules, spelling out the word SNEAK across her face.

GINNY
Marietta Edgecombe? What are you doing here?

Marietta blinks uncertainly.

MARIETTA
I’m not sure. I was hoping you could tell me.

Cut to:

ANOTHER PART OF THE GROUNDS.

Neville kneels by Colin Creevey, who is covered with blood and delirious.

COLIN
I read about him in the papers, you see. They said he had been studying at Hogwarts. He was the first hero I ever knew.

Colin struggles a little to get up.

NEVILLE
Lie still. Help is coming.

Oliver Wood arrives, his eyes questioning Neville. Neville shakes his head slightly.

COLIN
I was in love with him.

NEVILLE
Still are, I imagine.

COLIN
Not for long.

He leans his head back and the light goes out of his eyes. Neville nods to Oliver, who bends down. Together, they lift the body.

Cut to:

A PATH IN THE FOREST

Lupin trudges down it, his shoulders hunched. Tonks runs after him.

TONKS
Remus! Wait for me!

LUPIN
Dora? I told you to stay with Teddy.

Tonks stops, her wand drooping.

TONKS
I came to be with you.

LUPIN
(shaking his head)
That’s over. It never should have been in the first place.

TONKS
Never should have been? Are you saying you never loved me?

LUPIN
Not the way you wanted me to.

TONKS
And Teddy? Was that a mistake, too? Was our son a mistake?

LUPIN
(running one hand through his hair)
I don’t know. It’s not fair, I know that. I told you to stay with him.

TONKS
But I couldn’t bear to live without you.

LUPIN
Now you’ll be dead without me. Can you bear that?

He turns and walks down the path.

Cut to:

HOGWARTS GROUNDS

Ginny and Marietta search through the grass.

GINNY
Found it.

She holds up her wand.

MARIETTA
I’m sorry I don’t remember you. I left school before my N.E.W.T.s. Everyone hated me and I could never tell why.

GINNY
I’m sure they—it probably wasn’t—it doesn’t matter now.

MARIETTA
It mattered to me. Mother wanted me to go into the Ministry, but you can’t without N.E.W.T.s. And, if you have a face like mine, you can’t even work in a shop.

GINNY
So, why did you come back?

MARIETTA
I felt something burning in my pocket.

She pulls a galleon out of her robes and lights the end of her wand. They both lean over the coin.

MARIETTA (cont’d)
See? There’s writing on it. It says, “Get to Hogwarts as soon as you can.”

GINNY
Oh. (quietly) I’m glad you did.

A bellow pierces the night. They both turn, Marietta’s wand illuminating their terrified faces.

Fenrir runs towards them. It’s hard to tell if he’s a man or a wolf, but he seems to be running on all fours.

Ginny screams and Marietta pushes her to the side as Fenrir leaps at them. He lands on Marietta, a knife flashing in his hand.

Ginny lands and rolls back on her feet. She points her wand at Fenrir.

GINNY
REDUCTO!

He flies into the air from the force of the spell, impaling himself on the sharpened stump of a tree branch. He struggles for a moment to free himself, but finally slumps down, dead.

Ginny, still holding her wand up defensively, sidles over to where Marietta is lying on the ground. She kneels down.

Marietta, holding her side, is bleeding from a deep wound.

GINNY
No, no. Marietta…

MARIETTA
Mother… Mother wanted me to go into the Ministry. She’s going to be angry.

GINNY
It’s all right. It’s okay. We’re going to get you inside…

MARIETTA
But I want to go home. I don’t want to fight anymore!

GINNY
I know. (her voice breaking) It’s going to be all right.

A rustle in the grass makes her turn her head. Her eyes search the darkness.

GINNY (cont’d)
Is anyone there? Please. Please help us.

The footsteps of an invisible person move away from her and towards the blackness of the forest.

GINNY (cont’d)
I can’t move her by myself. Please….

FADE TO BLACK

Date: 2009-12-27 07:37 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] horridporrid.livejournal.com
I do think that Snape loved her--and that he loved her more than he lusted for her. The tragedy was that he didn't know how to love someone, never having any positive models.

This is how I see it. Going by what we're given (which is, unfortunately, a total mess - but you works with what you got *g*) I think Snape was horribly abused as a child. And witnessed some fairly horrific abuse as well. So he attaches to Lily like a baby duckling and is so emotionally scarred he cannot tell that Lily is horrible to him. As far as he's concerned, that's how you treat the ones you care for. And it's not like the Wizarding world is the place to get your head together.

There's nothing of love to it. It's a young boy desperate to be loved, and a young and rather thoughtless little girl who see that his desperation can used by her to make her own life more pleasant. (And then he's used by an old crank to make his own diabolical plans spin in a twinkly sort of way.)

Date: 2009-12-27 11:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] night-axe.livejournal.com
IAWTC. Snape wasn't capable of real love as a boy, nor did he care if James and baby Harry died. But that's hardly surprising from a young man who's met with a lot of cruelty and no love even from his parents. That Eileen treated her son better than Tobias is widespread fanon, apparently based on the notion that a (possible) abuse victim can't be an abuser herself. In canon she's an embittered sourpuss who seems to have resented Snape. The only time they're seen together, his shoulders are hunched as if he's expecting a slap.

Lily isn't a terrible human being, but she's a spoiled princess who, instead of developing empathy for social misfits, takes up with an equally privileged asshole jock. Such is her Aura of Smooth that Snape doesn't end up hating her as one might hope expect. After her death he transfers his need for love and validation to that monstrous user, Dumbledore. Frying pan, fire.

Date: 2009-12-27 11:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] horridporrid.livejournal.com
Lily isn't a terrible human being, but she's a spoiled princess who, instead of developing empathy for social misfits, takes up with an equally privileged asshole jock.

And really, is there a worse place to kill any chance of learning empathy than Hogwarts? The school seems designed to create monsters. Just look at its most celebrated alumni! ;)

Date: 2009-12-28 12:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] night-axe.livejournal.com
Ah, I get it. But if JKR was talking about Lily's show of lukewarm interest, which I agree seems most likely, isn't the logical conclusion that Snape was never really loved by anybody? As [livejournal.com profile] horridporrid says, he imprints on Lily like a duckling. If Eileen of the unpleasant disposition had shown him love, wouldn't he have been inoculated against Lily, so to speak?

Date: 2009-12-28 05:09 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] oryx_leucoryx
And the whole thing about that level of love making him more culpable than Tom, really. Tom at the orphanage was better cared for than young Severus and if the reaction of the admiring students in the Slug Club is any indication he had more positive peer attention than Severus got from Lily.

Date: 2009-12-28 10:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] night-axe.livejournal.com
Heh, don't get me started. Of the three so-called lost boys, the boy Tom had the best life of all. As you say, the orphanage children were treated decently, and at Hogwarts he'd soon have made himself one of the popular kids. He's definitely the leader of Slytherin, which doubtless had a slightly better rep in pre-Voldemort days. If he was never loved it's because he didn't want it.

Date: 2009-12-29 01:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] horridporrid.livejournal.com
IIRC, JKR said in an interview that the room in the ministry that studies love (the room Harry and co. couldn't get into because it was such a massive power or something) contained a tub of that love-potion that Slughard mentioned (or made? the one that gets the love-smeller going? iirc?). You know, that potion that creates a massive uncontrollable lust that got Ron slugging Harry while under the influence.

As far as I was concerned, that little tid-bit told me all I needed to know about the way this story dealt with love. Which was: badly. ;)

Date: 2009-12-29 12:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] seductivedark.livejournal.com
Amortentia.

I guess that's because your amor tents... um, something.

Tent. Camping. OMG, camping is a euphamism for... tenting.

Date: 2009-12-30 01:35 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] horridporrid.livejournal.com
I both LOL'd and wrinkled my nose in an "eww" sort of way.

Clever you. :D

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