The
Burning Pen
Through the Looking Glass
by Ruth Solomon
The story content is adult in nature and can contain graphic sex and violence. Those under the age of 18 are asked to leave this site immediately. You are not welcome here. The author is not responsible for those under-aged who view these works.
CHAPTER 36
All recognizable characters belong to JKR. No $$$ is being made from this
fanfic.
**************************************
Chapter 36 ~ The Petition
After helping Hermione design the bare bones of the flyer and getting tossed out
of her bedroom for trying to get a shag, Ron and Harry retired to their room.
Harry stripped down to his briefs and climbed into bed. Ron stripped down as
well, sitting in a small wooden chair and studying Snape’s checklist in greater
detail. His brows rose and fell as he read all the options. There certainly were
a lot of them.
”Hey, Harry, listen to this. On this list there are check boxes for voyeurism,
and for additional partners. I think that means Snape just watches too. You
don’t have to do anything with him. And here . . . mutual masturbation . . .”
Harry lay in his bed, looking up at the ceiling and listening to Ron exclaim
over Snape’s list. Harry hated to admit it, but it sounded all right. He had no
idea Snape treated his students so fairly. He always believed that he was little
more than a laughingstock, when actually . . . he seemed to be the coolest
teacher at Hogwarts, despite being the Gryffindor Head of House.
Ron climbed into bed with Harry, rather than his own bed, but it was just to be
there, not for any sexual reasons. He slipped his arm under Harry’s shoulders
and they lay there companionably.
”You know, Harry, I think maybe we’ve been wrong about Snape all this time. This
is a good opportunity to get our marks up. My mum always complains about my
Transfiguration marks,” the redhead said thoughtfully. “I mean, it’s not like we
even have to do anything with him. Hell, we could go in there with a couple of
witches and have a go while he just watches. That doesn’t sound too bad, does
it? It wouldn’t even seem like we’re doing extra credit. Sounds right fun to me.
What do you think?”
”Doesn’t sound too bad, Ron . . . but we’ve shunned him all this time. What will
people say?” Harry replied quietly.
“I don’t think they’ll say much. Every other house already knows how fair he is.
They’ll just think we’ve finally come around,” Ron answered him. Then his blue
eyes narrowed.
”And imagine how much that’ll piss off the other teachers, that we’ll be going
to Snape and not them. Especially if we boycott. That’ll be a kick in their
knackers, won’t it?”
Harry chuckled at the thought of it.
”Yeah, it would be. Flitwick might explode, he’d be so put out,” Harry agreed.
”So, what do you say? Think we should sign up tomorrow?” Ron asked, warming up
to the idea. Harry shook his head.
”No, not yet. Let’s see how the petition goes. Maybe the Headmaster will enact
the rules without the boycott,” Harry replied. Ron was always jumping the wand.
”Oh. All right, then,” Ron said, sounding a bit reticent. “But, maybe we can go
together the first time and wank off or something simple, just to see how he is.
If he’s not bad, then we can bring the witches next time. What do you think?”
”Fine, Ron,” Harry said sleepily, rolling to his side. “Night.”
”Night, Harry,” Ron said, rolling the other way, his head full of the
possibilities extra credit with Snape could hold. If this worked, he doubted
he’d engage any other teachers with the exception of Professor Sinistra. With
her green eyes, long black hair and shapely body, she was hot. And she was
always up for a shag or a bit of oral sex. But Professor Sprout?
That old bird was history.
Ron shuddered involuntarily, then closed his eyes, waiting for sleep to come and
the excitement tomorrow promised to bring.
Hermione was one brave witch.
*******************************
Hermione streamlined her approach, and the next morning she was out in front of
the Great Hall with Ginny, handing out flyers to her fellow students from every
house as they entered for breakfast. This was far better than doing it inside
the Great Hall and she was able to get one to everyone, since all students had
to attend breakfast. What was better was there were no staff members outside the
Great Hall. They all entered through the staff entrance. So, although they might
see students reading parchments, they wouldn’t know who gave them to them. Well,
not immediately anyway.
The flyer itself was eye-catching. It was on parchment with printed text and a
bold headline, which was followed by the image of a nude teacher on her knees
covered by red circle with a slash through it. The image was drawn by Ron and
looked very much like a certain teacher he couldn’t stand to engage.
The headline read:
TIRED OF DOING EXTRA CREDIT WITH TEACHERS THAT TURN YOU OFF?
Harry thought both the headline and the image were too inflammatory, but
Hermione and Ron argued that it had to be that way to get people’s attention.
The flyer continued:
Tired of performing acts you don’t like?
Tired of receiving whatever points they feel like giving you?
Tired of not having any other options?
Tired of not having a choice of what happens to your body?
JOIN US! SIGN OUR STUDENT’S RIGHTS PETITION AND LET THE HEADMASTER AND STAFF
KNOW HOW WE FEEL!
By standing together as a whole, we can change this unfair system!
What do we want?
1) An itemized checklist where we can choose what acts we are willing to do,
with a strict across the board point system so we know how many points we’ll
earn.
2) Our class work, homework and exams to account for our total marks in each
subject.
3) For extra credit to be a real choice and not mandatory as it is now.
4) Alternatives to sexual extra credit work for those classes taught by teachers
we don’t want to engage, such as written extra credit and special projects.
AS A UNITED FRONT, WE CAN MAKE A CHANGE! IF YOU ARE TIRED OF THE STATUS QUO, ADD
YOUR SIGNATURE TO OUR PETITION AT LUNCH AND SUPPER.
WE MAY BE STUDENTS, BUT WE HAVE RIGHTS TOO!
****CLICK HERE TO VIEW FLYER****
Needless to say, the flyer caused quite a stir, although the students were
hushed discussing it in the Great Hall itself. Still, the staff members couldn’t
help but notice all their charges were reading something.
”What are the students reading?” Minerva said to Tom, who looked a million miles
away.
The Headmaster started, scanning the Great Hall.
”I don’t know,” he replied, then leaned forward and called down the dais to
professor Snape.
”Severus, go and collect one of those parchments for me,” he ordered.
The Transfiguration teacher did as he was asked, walking to the closest table
and taking a flyer from a student, then walking back slowly as he read it,
keeping his face carefully neutral as he mounted the dais and delivered it to
the Headmaster. He returned to his seat without saying a word as Tom looked at
it.
He smirked when he saw the image and held the parchment out so Professor Sprout
could see it.
”Pomona, is that supposed to be you?” the Headmaster purred as she turned red as
a salamander and started huffing indignantly.
”How dare they!” Pomona snapped as Tom chuckled and withdrew the parchment to
study it more. The image alone was very entertaining.
The Headmaster coolly read the contents of the flyer, arching an eyebrow as
Minerva and Flitwick, who was on the other side of Tom, read along, turning
redder and redder as they did so. Tom finished reading and looked thoughtful
before looking out toward the silent students.
”It seems your students are rebelling,” he said softly, his dark eyes scanning
the Great Hall. All the students seemed to be holding their breaths.
”This is sheer madness!” Minerva exclaimed. “Headmaster, you need to put a stop
to this at once!”
Tom narrowed his eyes at her as she took the flyer from him and passed it down
the table, each teacher scowling blackly at it before passing it on and
glowering at the students.
”What do you suggest I do, Minerva?” he asked her in a deceptively calm voice.
He hated anyone to order him about, but he kept himself under control. His dark
eyes rested on Minerva, glittering.
”Well . . . make an announcement here and now that no one is to sign any
petition. How dare they try to curtail us, the little bastards. I want to get to
the bottom of this immediately and punish whoever put this flyer out!”
Tom considered this for a moment, then slowly shook his head..
”No,” he said slowly. “I don’t think I will, Minerva. Let them sign their
petition. I’m interested in finding out just how many of our students want this
change. They aren’t asking for the extra credit to cease, after all. Just some
alterations.”
Minerva turned purple as did the other staff members.
”Surely you aren’t thinking of putting such a thing in force, Tom?” she asked
him. “You’re supposed to support us.”
Tom scowled at her, and the witch blanched, remembering her place.
”No, I’m not. But I can’t just arbitrarily put a movement down before it
actually becomes a movement, Minerva. There has to be some sembelance of
listening to their complaints and considering their requests. Then, I can shoot
them down. Don’t worry. I’m not going to take your toys away.”
The teachers all sighed with relief. Good. But still, they wanted to know who
had the nerve to put such a flyer out. Well, they’d find out when the petition
was turned in.
Then, there’d be hell to pay.
Tom returned to his meal, as did the staff, although they continued to glare at
the students.
Minerva looked down the dais at the Transfiguration teacher, who was eating his
meal calmly and not glowering at anyone.
”This stinks of Snape,” she muttered to herself.
At the tables, the students were flabbergasted that the Headmaster didn’t order
them all caned for even having the flyers.
”I don’t believe it,” Ron breathed. “The Headmaster didn’t say or do anything
after reading the flyer. He just went back to eating.”
Hermione smiled.
”That means he’s going to let the petition be signed. Otherwise, he would have
said something about it,” she said. “He’s going to give us a chance to plead our
case.”
Around the Great Hall, the rest of the students were coming to the same
conclusion. If the Headmaster didn’t say anything against the petition, maybe it
was all right to sign it. Maybe . . . maybe they could change things for the
better.
***************************************
”Look at all the names,” Hermione breathed after lunch let out. “I’m sure every
student that’s the age of consent signed this.”
In her hands, she held the precious petition. Every page was filled with names.
She had made sure that it stated only those students the age of consent were to
sign, so no names could be determined worthless because of younger students not
affected by extra credit.
”Yeah,” Harry said as they headed for class, ‘and every staff member saw you
collect it at the end, Hermione. You’re going to be on their radar.”
”Bugger them. I’m already on their bloody radar,” Hermione replied, duplicating
the petition and handing it to Harry.
”You keep this one,” she told him, watching as he rolled it up and put it in his
pocket. “Just in case mine disappears.”
Harry was right. The next class was Advanced Charms and Flitwick was in a right
temper, glaring at Hermione and giving her a failing mark on a perfectly good
homework assignment because it was two inches over the requirement.
”Little troll,” Hermione breathed as it was handed back by the student seated in
front of her. “He’s had his last lick of me, he can believe that.”
In almost every class, teachers were subtly defending themselves, not mentioning
the petition but claiming that they were fair with their methods of
point-giving, and not overly demanding in their sexual requirements, doing their
best to try and convince the students. Good thing it wasn’t a broom they were
tossing at their charges, because what they were saying just didn’t fly.
”None of you can say that I haven’t been fair with extra credit marks,”
Professor Sprout claimed as Ron frowned at her. “I require very little of you
and I feel I’m generous with the points I reward. I wouldn’t like that
curtailed. You might end up earning less points with this . . . this checklist.
None of you want that do you?”
Not one student murmured in agreement. Professor Sprout’s comments were met with
stony silence.
”Very well. We’ll be working with Putrid Pines today! Get out your blasted masks
and gloves!” professor Sprout snarled, going to retrieve the smelly seedlings.
If the students insisted on pursuing this madness, they’d suffer for it.
The teachers who were Heads of Houses tried using house loyalty to make the
students reconsider the petition.
”As the Hufflepuff Head of House, I expect you all to be supportive of me. I’m a
very fair teacher, if I say so myself,” Flitwick told his students in a small
meeting.
Hufflepuffs weren’t supposed to be very bright, but even they weren’t buying
this. None of them responded favorably.
Tom had warned the teachers they couldn’t ask students directly if they signed
the petition, or threaten them in any way if they had. The teachers didn’t like
this, but at least they had someone they could harass and blame.
Snape.
Every one of them knew the checklist was his. Minerva, Flitwick and Pomona
cornered him in the staff room when he popped in for a quick spot of tea before
his last class.
”Severus! This petition the students have signed stinks of your influence,”
Minerva hissed at the wizard, who wisely placed a strong repelling spell on his
person the moment he left breakfast. He kept strengthening it throughout the
day.
The Transfiguration teacher said nothing, but discreetly slipped his hand to the
handle of his wand as he walked over to the teapot.
Minerva stalked over to him, watching with narrowed eyes as he calmly made a cup
of tea.
”What do you have to say for yourself?” she demanded. “You’re the only one who
could have given them the checklist idea!”
Snape turned to face her, blowing on his tea and taking a small sip of it before
responding.
”Minerva, I’ve been using that checklist for years. It’s nothing new. Every
student that comes to me for extra credit has been aware of my system,” he said
softly. “Every year I’ve tried to make it mandatory for the rest of you. Every
year I’ve been laughed at and voted down. Now, you’re acting as if I’ve just
introduced it. Like I said, it’s nothing new.”
Minerva and the other staff members frowned at him. He was telling the truth. He
had been using that blasted checklist for years while they did as they pleased
with the students. What happened to make it become a school-wide issue?
Flitwick caught on immediately, and frowned at Minerva as Severus made short
work of his tea and exited the staff room.
”Minerva, the only students who wouldn’t know about that checklist are your
Slytherins. Miss Granger was the one who collected the petition. We all saw her.
Your house is at the bottom of this. They’re the only ones who would think that
checklist something new,” he squeaked at her, “because they are the only
students who don’t engage Snape. You have to do something about this.”
Minerva stared back at him.
”But what can I do? Tom’s curtailed us for the most part. We can’t even question
the students about it,” the witch responded sullenly.
”No, we can’t,” professor Sinistra interjected, gliding closer to Flitwick and
Minerva, her green eyes narrowed. “But . . . in the case of new movements, what
is the best way to end them before they start?”
Both professors looked back at the Astronomy teacher.
”Remove the leader,” she continued, her face taking on a wicked mien. “And we
all know who the leader is . . . the one who collected the petition. Hermione
Granger.”
Minerva looked very hesitant.
”Yes. Severus warned us that we were pressuring the witch. She’s lashing back at
us now. We all know there are students who don’t like their extra credit, which
makes it a little sweeter for me, but still it seems Miss Granger has managed to
pull them together, despite what houses they occupy. We have to divide them.
Professor Sinistra is right. We need to remove Hermione Granger. She’s their
rallying point,” Flitwick said.
”I’m not about to kill a Muggle-Born in order to keep the status-quo,” Minerva
said. “Especially one of my own house. You forget, Tom favors her.”
”I’m not saying kill her, Minerva. Simply hex her . . . send her to the
infirmary,” Flitwick pressed as Minerva’s eyes widened with horror.
”I’d be murdering her by default if I sent her to Poppy,” she snapped at him. “I
won’t be part of this! Besides, Tom isn’t going to grant the petition. We should
wait.”
”Wait for what? Do you think it will stop at Tom saying no? I’m familiar with
movements of this nature. This is grass roots. They have no respect for the
establishment, Minerva. I wouldn’t be surprised if they had a sit-in, or worse .
. . a boycott.”
”A boycott? Filius, don’t be stupid. They’d all face failing,” she replied.
”This isn’t one or two students, Minerva. This is most likely the entire
graduating class, as well as others the age of consent. We can’t fail them all.
If we do, we’ll look inept, and there will be cries for our replacement. They
will blame us for their failure, saying our teaching abilities are below
standard. If the students realize this, we’re finished unless we bow to their
demands. I for one don’t want to be bested by a gaggle of sniveling students. We
need to remove Miss Granger,” Flitwick said forcefully. “At least until the
hubbub dies down.”
Minerva hedged.
”I won’t do it, Filius. Miss Granger is my charge and under my protection. As
much as I disagree with what she’s attempting to do, I won’t be party to this,”
Minerva said firmly.
Flitwick’s small face contorted furiously, and his devilish white curls seemed
to become even more curled and devilish.
”Protection? Pah! That’s just lip service and you know it, Minerva. You’re just
too cowardly to do what needs to be done. But don’t worry,” the diminutive
wizard breathed, I will remove her myself.”
*************************************
Professor Snape was pleasantly surprised at his Advanced Transfiguration class.
When he entered the classroom, he noticed there were no drawings on the board of
him in tutus, tiaras or with fairy wings. Usually one or more Slytherins would
make a sketch like that for him to erase before starting class each day. There
was also a lack of note passing, or clumps of parchment whizzing past his head.
In fact, it was the best behaved class he’d had in ages.
He guessed his checklist had made an impression on the Slytherins, as well as
Hermione. Gods, she moved quickly. In one day the witch managed to accomplish
what he’d been working toward for years. A unified student body.
He covertly looked at the witch. She was absorbed in her reading.
The wizard’s black eyes glittered as he studied her. He knew what he was
thinking was wrong and went against protocol. He could be sacked for what
stirred inside him.
Desire. He desired Hermione Granger . . . and it had nothing to do with business
as usual. Who would have believed such a shallow, self-absorbed witch would have
the ability to do what she did? Oh, no doubt she wanted revenge on the teachers.
Snape wasn’t under the delusion that hers was a selfless act. Not by a long
shot. More than likely, the desire for payback played a large role in motivating
Hermione, as well as her anger and the desire for control. There was no way she
could have changed completely.
But she didn’t need to change. She only needed to reach inside herself and find
the strength to work with others, to realize she was part of something larger.
Possibly, the trip to the alternate universe had opened up her eyes and shown
her the world or worlds didn’t revolve just for her.
Whatever the witch’s motivations, she had succeeded where he had failed. She was
making a difference. Snape really didn’t care how change came about, or who
received the credit for it. He just wanted to see it in action . . . to see
results. Already, it seemed his fellow teachers were running scared. It was
glorious.
Hermione looked up at him at that moment and met his eyes. He nodded at her
slightly, and she gave him a small, crooked smile before returning to her
reading.
As he scanned his quiet classroom and all the studious students, he wondered if
any Slytherins would be signing up for extra credit soon. After all, he was the
only teacher with a checklist. Wouldn’t that be a kick in the nads for the other
teachers? That he would be the only one the students would engage. It would go
down hard, especially after all the years of taunting him concerning Slytherin
house.
It would finally be his turn to do a bit of psychological tormenting.
He looked forward to it.
At the end of class, Snape asked Hermione to stay for a moment. She did so,
watching as several Gryffindors made appointments. She idly wondered how he
handled so many of students. More than likely he didn’t engage each and every
one the same way. He might not do much shagging at all, or see several students
at once. He had to have some kind of system.
When the last Gryffindor left, Hermione walked up to the wizard’s desk. He
looked up at her wryly.
”You work quickly, Miss Granger,” he said to her softly.
Hermione nodded.
”Well, I didn’t want to let another day pass without doing something,” she said.
“It was surprisingly easy to pull it all together, considering I’ve never done
anything like this before.”
Snape nodded.
”Perhaps it was in you all the time, Miss Granger. You only needed a reason to
let it out. That was quite the flyer . . . very eye-catching. Particularly the
banned teacher.”
Snape’s lip quirked a bit at the thought of the naked professor Sprout.
”Ron added that,” Hermione said, smiling.
Snape drank in her smile. It was also something new. Usually she scowled at him
or just stared at him as if he were a troll.
”Very creative, as was the fist in the lower right corner,” the wizard stated.
”Dean Thomas added that. He said it represented ‘Power of the People,’“ Hermione
replied. “We needed a symbol. An upraised fist was perfect. It says it all.”
”Yes, a very effective logo. How did the petition signing go?”
”It’s all filled up. Everyone signed it.”
Snape felt his heart catch at learning this. Excellent.
”And when do you intend to present it to the Headmaster?” Snape asked her.
”Tomorrow, right after breakfast,” Hermione answered.
Snape considered her.
”Do you have someone to support you?” he asked her. “Someone who will accompany
you?”
Actually, he would like to be there when she presented the signed petition to
the Headmaster.
“No, I’m going to do it by myself, in case there’s trouble,” she replied.
“There’s no need for everyone to suffer.”
Hm. Was that a self-sacrificing nature coming to the fore? No. More than likely
she wanted the glory of success for herself.
And Hermione did. If Tom accepted the petition, it would be like she’d done it
single-handedly. She’d be a hero to the other students. She liked the idea of
that.
”Don’t threaten him, Miss Granger,” Snape said suddenly. “The Headmaster doesn’t
like to be threatened. If he denies the petition, simply listen to his reasons,
thank him and leave. Say nothing about boycotting. Not a word.”
Hermione blinked at the wizard.
”You think he’ll turn it down, Professor? I mean, he didn’t try to keep it from
being signed.”
Snape shrugged.
”You never know what Tom will do until he does it. But I’m inclined to believe
he won’t accept it, not at first. He does have to support his staff. You’ll just
have to see what he says, then act accordingly,” he told the witch. “But I must
say, Miss Granger . . . and I mean this with every fiber of my being, you are
the most extraordinary witch that has passed through Hogwarts in years. You are
truly a brilliant young woman.”
Hermione flushed with pleasure at his words. She’d never been called brilliant
before, and it felt . . . well . . . good. And he thought she was extraordinary?
Well, she’d thought that about herself for years, but somehow, hearing it from
Snape felt like a validation. The other teachers had said it now and again, but
their words didn’t have the impact that Snape’s did.
Snape noticed the flush and smiled slightly. His compliment had pleased her. But
he did mean it.
”Now, Miss Granger, I realize I’m not your Head of House, but I am probably the
only teacher at Hogwarts that sides with you. In order to make this work, you
are going to have to work with people you normally wouldn’t associate with, and
that includes me. If you are having difficulties, want to strategize or just
want to talk, I am available at any hour to assist you.”
Snape reached into his top drawer and took out a number of small, square
parchments. He handed them to the witch. They were signed passes. The name,
date, time and destination fields were all blank.
”These should help you and other students move freely around the castle at off
hours. I will provide more as needed. Be sure to keep them well hidden. Your
room will probably be searched in the days to come. A reason will be found for
it,” he said to her softly.
Hermione looked down at the passes, then at Snape.
”I never thought you’d be so helpful, Professor,” she said to him.
”You never had a reason to really think until now, Miss Granger. I imagine
you’ll find many more things that will surprise you in the months to come,” he
responded.
Hermione stared at him, feeling she should say something to the wizard. He had
been the one who helped her find a solution to her problem. Thank you just
didn’t seem good enough. But she wasn’t used to expressing gratitude. She had
always lived as if she deserved everything given to her.
”Fill out one of those passes to get you into supper,” Snape said, passing a
quill to her.
Hermione filled out her name, date, time and destination, handing the quill back
to him. Their hands touched for a moment, and she felt a little pulse at the
contact. What was going on?
You may go, Miss Granger,” Snape told her. He had felt the pulse as well.
Definitely not business as usual.
”Thank you, Professor,” Hermione said in a near whisper, putting the rest of the
passes into her pocket, hoisting her backpack over one shoulder, then turning
and exiting the class. She still felt out of sorts, as if there was something
she should say to the professor . . . but he’d let her off the hook.
Maybe later she’d figure out what she needed to say.
*************************************
Draco Malfoy stood Disillusioned in the entrance hall, watching for Hermione. He
was hiding behind the rusted suit of armor near the front doors. He wanted to
talk to the witch about the petition and saw Snape had held her back. He could
have approached her at the end of class, but despite the petition, he wasn’t
sure if she would even talk to him. She was always dismissive and rude.
And so hot.
Still, he’d rather approach her when no one else was around. It would be less
embarrassing if she responded nastily.
Draco sighed, then stiffened as he saw Hermione appear on the first floor
landing, making her way down the marble staircase. There were no students about.
Everyone was in the Great Hall. He was going to get caned for not being there
himself, but talking to Hermione would be worth a caning.
Hermione made it to the ground floor and began to walk toward the Great Hall.
Suddenly, Draco saw a movement on the side of the marble stairwell. It was
professor Flitwick, and he had his wand out. The little teacher looked murderous
as he watched the retreating witch.
Draco got a bad feeling, and before he could stop himself, he ran from behind
the suit of armor, screaming, “Granger! Get down!:
Startled, Hermione spun, whipping out her wand just as Flitwick cast a powerful
spell at her. But she was a fraction too slow. She wouldn’t be able to block it.
”No!” Draco cried, slamming into Hermione and shoving her out of the way,
catching the full blast himself and falling to the floor unconscious, the
Disillusionment spell dissipating.
Hermione yelled, “Stupefy!” as Flitwick blinked at the limp body of Draco,
stunned in more ways than one. He dropped to the floor rather heavily for such a
small man.
Hermione ran over to Draco, who was unmoving, his lips rather blue. She leaned
over him, pressing her ear to his chest. She could hear his heart beating, but
it was slow, very slow. She lifted one of his eyelids to look at his eye. The
pupil was fully dilated. She lit the tip of her wand and held it close. The
pupil remained dilated. It didn’t react to light.
What did Flitwick hit him with? Clearly, the wizard had meant to attack her. She
hadn’t thought to put on a Repelling spell. And Draco? What the hell did he do?
Why did he take the hex for her? Was he mad?
What should she do? Go into the Great Hall and get help? No, Draco could end up
being sent to Poppy, especially since he was a Gryffindor and Snape wasn’t the
most popular staff member right now. If the Transfiguration teacher had been in
the Great Hall, it would be all right, but he was still in his classroom.
Or so she thought.
Suddenly, she heard Snape yell, “Miss Granger! Did you attack Mr. Malfoy?”
The wizard had just appeared on the first floor landing, and when he saw
Hermione leaning over his charge, he assumed the worst. Snape hurried down the
stairs, severely disappointed. There couldn’t be any unity if the students
continued attacking each other, particularly Hermione.
Hermione quickly explained what happened.
”No! I didn’t do this. He, he took a hex for me. Flitwick tried to blast me when
my back was turned, and Draco just appeared out of nowhere and pushed me out of
the way,” she said as Snape walked up quickly and knelt, examining Draco. After
several moments, he looked very grave.
”Go to supper, Miss Granger,” he said, picking Draco up in his arms and rising.
“I’ll attend to Mr. Malfoy.”
”But . . . what are you going to do, Professor? Take him to Poppy?” she asked
him.
”No, I’m taking him to Gryffindor tower. I will attend to him myself,” the
wizard replied, walking toward the stairs and glowering at the unconscious
Flitwick. He stopped and turned toward Hermione.
”I suggest vigilance, Miss Granger. It appears that although house rivalries may
have died down for the moment, the staff has targeted you. Keep a Repelling
charm on you at all times.”
Hermione watched as Snape carried Draco up the stairs, his pale face concerned.
What had Flitwick done to Draco?
Hermione looked over at the unconscious wizard, her face contorting. She looked
up again. Snape was now riding the shifting stairwells up to the seventh floor.
Hermione walked over to Flitwick, looking down at him . . . her wand drawn.
”You little bastard,” she breathed, hexing him, then turning and entering the
Great Hall.
She walked up to the dais and handed Filch her pass. The wizard scowled and
stuck it in his pocket. Hermione then walked to the Slytherin table, sat down
between Ron and Harry and pulled food toward her.
She said nothing to anyone about Draco or the teacher outside.
**************************************
A/N: For those of you who would like to see the flyer Hermione, Ron and Dean
designed, you can view it at:
http://www.theburningpen.com/glass/flyer.htm
Thanks for reading.
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