The
Burning Pen
A Looping of the Scales 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 5
All recognizable characters belong to JKR. No $$$
is being made from this fanfic.
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Chapter 5 ~ Finding His Place
Snape walked down the dungeon corridor, the flickering torches and silence
giving it an even eerier atmosphere than he was used to experiencing. He stopped
in front of the Potions classroom. If it were locked, he wouldn’t be able to get
to the lab. He pushed the door and it swung open with a loud creak.
He entered and looked around. Now that he was focused, he could see that this
wasn’t the classroom of his memory. Slughorn had posters of ingredients all over
the walls, and there was a bright airiness despite the class being in the
dungeons. But this place was dark, dismal. There was nothing on the walls,
nothing to distract the eyes. There was a list of ingredients written on the
blackboard. Snape stared at the large desk and swivel chair. The only slightly
ornate thing in the class was the gargoyle in the corner, spewing water into a
basin. Actually, it was pretty grotesque.
Snape approved of the somber atmosphere. A person would focus on what they were
doing. Slughorn was a decent Potions teacher, but Snape found him too—jovial and
too concerned with flattering and giving legs up to students he thought
exemplary. He never paid Snape too much attention. Although he was excellent in
potions, he wasn’t the kind of boy who was popular, but dark, strange and
Slughorn felt—a bit sinister. He’d had enough of sinister young wizards when Tom
Riddle was around, although he had been very popular—too popular in fact.
Snape walked down the short corridor that led to the Potions lab, and stopped as
he heard a noise. Then he slunk forward. The door to the lab was cracked and
light was coming out of it. He thought he saw a shadow.
He didn’t have a wand, but was curious to see who was in a lab that technically
belonged to him. He eased up to the door and looked around it, only his eyes and
large nose visible.
There was a short, bald wizard in there, poking around and muttering, “Where are
they? They must be here someplace. He couldn’t work without them, could he?”
Snape blinked. The wizard had his back to him and was rather broad. There was
something familiar about that voice. The wizard turned around. He had an
enormous walrus-like mustache, a round belly and wore very old-fashioned
clothes.
Snape walked into the lab.
”Professor Slughorn?” he ventured.
”Severus!” Slughorn gasped. He jumped a bit guiltily at the sudden address.
Snape stared at his old potions teacher. His mustache used to be a kind of
gingery-blonde, and he had some hair the last time he saw him. But now he was
completely bald and his mustache was white.
”Er—I’m here looking for clues as to what happened to you, on Minerva’s orders
of course,” the wizard blustered.
”Minerva?”
”Ah—yes—you’ve forgotten, haven’t you? The headmistress. That’s her name.
Minerva.”
Snape just looked at him.
Slughorn moved closer, now examining the youthened wizard with a critical eye.
”It’s absolutely amazing,” he breathed, “you look exactly like you did when you
were my student. Do you have any idea what you were working on when this
happened?”
”No,” Snape lied.
There was something in Slughorn’s eyes that he didn’t like.
”Well, I’ve tested for Dark Magic, but there is no signature to suggest its use,
so, it must have been a potion you were working on—I couldn’t find any notes—“
”I need to find my wand,” Snape said shortly.
Slughorn was trying to find out what he was working on so he could steal it, he
was sure. Snape began to look around the ruined lab. It was clear there was an
explosion. His dark eyes fell on a long smear of dried blood over by the
shelving, then on pieces of cauldron embedded in the shelves, one large piece
even stuck in a wall. This had been a deadly explosion. How did he survive it?
”That potion you were working on, it could be worth a fortune,” Slughorn
ventured. “Are you sure you don’t know what it is? I—many people could—er—benefit
from its properties. Be restored to their youth—“
Snape located his wand under a desk in the corner and picked it up. It looked so
worn but he could feel its power and felt safer now that he had something
familiar in his hands. He looked at Slughorn.
”I don’t know what I was working on, professor. But I don’t know how beneficial
a potion that takes off years while wiping out your memories would be.”
”Those are just details, Severus, just details,” Slughorn said. “You’ve always
been rather brilliant with potions—I’m sure if you devoted yourself to
recreating whatever it was, you’d be able to figure it out again—“
”I’m more interested in trying to find my place than working on potions,” Snape
said to him, yawning. He was so tired.
”I can’t find any notes,” Slughorn said, looking around the lab again. “Nothing
on your experiments.”
Snape just looked at him. He certainly didn’t know where they were, if there
were any at all. He’d always been rather careful with his notes about potions
and spells. He kept them in his Advanced Potions book, which he always kept on
him. Only once had it come up missing for several days, before mysteriously
appearing on his Potions desk again.
Then, James hit him with the Levicorpus spell he’d created down by the lake, and
he knew the Marauders had studied his work. It was ironic that the hexes he
developed to protect himself were in the hands of his enemies. Ironic and
aggravating.
“Maybe I kept them in my head,” Snape suggested with another yawn.
”That would be a tragedy if true,” Slughorn sighed.
Snape felt his eyes growing heavy. He was too tired to go back to Spinner’s End
tonight.
”Professor, can you show me how to get into my quarters?” he asked the wizard,
who frowned at him. He wanted some information, and Snape wasn’t being
forthcoming.
Then he smiled. No need in making bad feelings. He could look around some more
after Snape retired. He’d find something.
”Certainly, my boy. Follow me,” he said, rolling out of the doorway. Snape
followed him through the classroom and down the short hall to the door that
opened on his office. Slughorn opened it and Snape went stock still as he saw
all the jars filled with liquid, plants and creatures behind the desk. A frog
suspended in purple liquid twitched spasmodically.
Slughorn looked at the gruesome display and shook his head slightly.
”I must say I’ve never appreciated your decorative tastes, Severus,” he said
tightly as he walked over to a shelf of books and pulled one out. The stone wall
slid back and to the side, leaving an opening. Snape didn’t notice as he stared
at the jars.
”These are mine?” Snape asked, drawing closer and studying the specimens.
”Every blessed one,” Slughorn replied with a shudder.
Snape gave a little smirk at how awful they were. Students must have hated
coming to his office.
”Now, you pull out this book to get into your quarters,” Slughorn directed,
showing Snape the black bound book titled, “Entering the Dark Domain.” Snape
turned and walked over, memorizing the title and eyeing the door.
Slughorn walked through, followed by Snape. It was a study, and there were
books, thousands of books from the floor to the ceiling, lining the walls.
Snape’s eyes rounded. He had liked collecting books, but damn! This was
definitely obsession!
”You pull this torch to the left to open the wall from the inside,” Slughorn
informed him, his face twisted in disapproval at the study.
When he stayed here, there was plush carpeting and other amenities. But now, the
stone floors were bare and only a writing desk, a sofa, two armchairs, a liquor
cabinet and a small table furnished the place. It was sparse and very dungeon
like. A cold hearth finished it off. The only bit of decoration was the
Slytherin standard hung over the fireplace.
Severus thought it perfect. He grew up poor and was used to having just the bare
necessities. That was reflected in his private quarters. All he needed to be
comfortable was here. He pointed his wand at the fireplace.
”Incendio!” he hissed, igniting the wood within. He turned to Slughorn.
”Thank you, professor Slughorn. I should be fine from here,” he said, dismissing
the wizard.
”I hope to talk with you again, Severus. We really need to figure this out. You
could be quite famous if you recreate that potion. Very famous.”
Snape frowned at him slightly.
“Aren’t I famous already?” he asked Slughorn. Hermione had told him he was in
the history books.
Slughorn cleared his throat.
”Ah—yes. Yes you are,” Slughorn admitted.
”So, why would I want even more fame? I’m not sure I want what I have,” Snape
said to him coldly.
Slughorn frowned.
”Just think about the potion,” he said irritably, leaving the study, the wall
sliding over and closing behind him.
Snape’s stomach gurgled. He was more than hungry. He looked at the fireplace and
the box resting on top of the mantle. He walked over and took it down. It was
Floo powder. One of the perks of being a teacher. He cast a handful into the
flame of the fireplace and it turned green.
”Kitchen?” he called through.
”Is the kitchens!” a squeaky voice replied. Snape gave a small smile.
”I want fish and chips, with salt, vinegar and mushy peas,” the wizard ordered.
“And a pumpkin juice.”
”Yes, sir. It will comes shortly,” the house elf replied. The fire turned red
again.
Snape straightened, looking around the study again, then walked over to the
writing desk. He sat down and pulled open the top drawer. There was a ledger in
it. He opened it and scanned it, his eyes rounding as he saw the amount of
Galleons he had in Gringotts bank. To an older, more knowledgeable Snape, two
thousand Galleons wasn’t enough money to do anything of consequence with. It was
the equivalent of ten thousand pounds, or about twenty thousand dollars. But to
an eighteen year old wizard who had grown up with hardly a sickle in his pocket,
it was a bloody fortune!
”I have this much money?” he breathed.
He closed the ledger and rifled through some papers, but didn’t find anything
interesting until he felt the bottom of the drawer shift slightly. He pulled it
up and felt around under it, pulling out a small, yellowed photograph. It was
torn, and a picture of Lily Evans. Not the Lily he remembered. She was older,
smiling and waving at the camera.
She was still beautiful. But why was the picture torn?
Snape stared at her image, drinking it in. She looked so happy, so alive—
Alive.
No, she wasn’t alive.
She was dead, probably dust now—gone. Gone—forever. Because of James. Because of
Tom. Because the world was cold and dark and unfair. Because—there were no gods.
Snape blinked away the water in his eyes. What would he do now? Everything he
had done, he’d done with the hope of getting Lily back into his life. Now, she
was gone. His purpose was gone. His very reason for existence was gone.
What was there to live for now?
Nothing.
A house elf winked in and placed Snape’s food on the table. Snape quickly wiped
his eyes and did his best to look unaffected as he slid the plate and juice
toward him. He noticed a blue flask as well.
”I didn’t order this. What is it?” Snape asked the elf, who bobbed a bit.
”That is Sleeping Draught, sir. It is what the Snape needs,” the elf said
nervously. “Needs sleep. No dreams. No—pain.”
Snape blinked at the house elf. It had brought him what it believed he needed.
House elves lived to give good service after all, and he did need a good sleep
after the day he’d had.
”Thank you,” he said to it, and the creature smiled.
”The Snape never thanks. This is greatest honor,” it said happily before bowing
and winking out.
”The Snape never thanks?” Snape muttered as sprinkled a bit of salt and vinegar
on his food and bit into the crisp battered fish. “The Snape never thought he’d
ever be in a situation like this either.”
Snape finished his meal, then drank down the Sleeping Draught.
He barely made it into his sparsely furnished bedroom before falling face first
into the bed fully dressed, his snores loud and his sleep, mercifully dreamless.
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A/N: Thanks for reading.
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