Chapter 6: The Siege
Kingston upon Thames, London, Britain, July 6th, 1996
"Hello, Lavender." Ellen Granger smiled at the girl standing in front of their door. "Come in!" She waved the girl inside. Then she frowned. Wasn't Hermione supposed to have met Lavender for the afternoon? And it was now almost evening. She didn't think Hermione would have lied to her, but… her darling daughter could stretch the truth a little when it suited her. "Weren't you with Hermione?" she asked, raising her eyebrows.
The witch winced, which wasn't a good sign. "She hasn't come home, then?"
"No," Ellen replied. "Was she supposed to?"
"She said her stomach felt a little queasy after we ate a little too much ice-cream and that she was going home…" the girl told her.
"She hasn't come home." Ellen shook her head. "When was that?"
"Oh… three hours ago. About that."
That was… it didn't have to mean anything. Hermione could've made a stop at a bookshop on the way home and ended up distracted for hours - it had happened before. Or she could have changed her plans - she was sixteen, after all, and not a little girl any more. And it wasn't yet dinner time. But… Lavender looked concerned. No, more than concerned.
They reached the living room. "Please have a seat." Ellen nodded at the couch. "Do you want a drink?"
"No, thank you, Ellen," Lavender replied. The girl fidgeted with her dress - something was wrong.
"What happened?" Ellen asked, taking a seat in Gabriel's armchair.
"Ah… Ron, my boyfriend, told me that Harry was missing," Lavender said, biting her lower lip like Hermione tended to when she was anxious. "We, Hermione and I, met Ron and Harry in Diagon Alley and went to Fortescue's, that's the ice cream parlour, together."
Ellen nodded. She was well aware of Fortescue's, something Lavender should know - the girl wasn't one of those wizards and witches who thought muggles knew nothing about Wizarding Britain.
"So… we ate there, then Hermione left, saying she felt queasy. Then Harry left, and I stayed with Ron, you know…" The girl smiled, blushing a little.
Ellen nodded again. Hermione had told her about that relationship as soon as it had begun. In detail. Fortunately, her assumptions, based on the fact that Ron was Potter's best friend and, therefore, obviously someone to be concerned about, had proved false. And fueled by Hermione's obvious jealousy that her best friend was now in a relationship. It had been amusing, at the time.
But Lavender had fallen silent. That was another bad sign. "So… they both left?"
"Yes." The witch nodded. "And then I went home - I still have homework to do, and we talked about it, today, Hermione and I, you know - and I didn't think…"
"Lavender." Ellen cocked her head at the girl. "What's got you so worked up?"
"Harry's missing," the girl blurted out. "Ron told me. So, I thought… I mean, Hermione said she was going home, but… if she hasn't come home."
Ellen felt her stomach sink. Hermione was a very smart girl, and a very talented witch, according to her grades and several talks with her teachers. But she wasn't entirely rational when it came to Potter. Ellen and Gabriel had told her countless times to let things go and ignore the boy, but Hermione had been too stubborn to heed their advice.
Sometimes, she was too much like Ellen had been, back when she was a teenager. And if Potter was involved... "They didn't leave together, did they?" she asked.
"What? No, no!" Lavender shook her head. "We - Ron and I - would have stepped in if they had done that. I mean…" She grimaced.
Ellen sighed and nodded. "I know." Several talks with Professor McGonagall had made sure of that. "But if Mr Potter's missing, and Hermione's not back yet…"
"You should call the Potters! They're investigating!"
Ellen frowned again. She hadn't had any trouble with the Potters, and they had been perfectly polite when they had met, but since they had only ever met following a call from Professor McGonagall about another incident, all their meetings had been more than a little awkward.
But this was about Hermione. She could stand a lot more than some awkwardness where her daughter was concerned.
"Yes. I don't suppose they have a phone?"
Lavender shook her head. "But I can call the Knight Bus, and it'll take us to Godric's Hollow."
Ellen grimaced. She remembered the Knight Bus. But if Hermione was in danger… "Let's go."
"Alright!" Lavender nodded and stood.
Ellen quickly wrote a note for Gabriel so he wouldn't worry - or, rather, wouldn't worry about her; he would, of course, worry about Hermione - and one for Hermione, in case her girl returned during her absence, before grabbing her purse. She didn't bother fetching her coat, however; it was warm outside, and her sweater would be enough. She was almost at the door when she gasped. "Wait!" she told Lavender, already turning, "I'll just get the photo album; if we go to the police, they'll want a current picture of Hermione."
"Oh, good idea!" Lavender agreed.
Stepping back into the living room, Ellen closed her eyes for a moment, squeezing them shut, her words echoing inside her head. Hermione would be OK. She had to be OK. Many children went missing for a few hours, usually for harmless reasons. Even children as smart as Hermione.
And yet she couldn't help fearing the worst - Hermione had told them about the kind of crimes magic made possible. The kind of crimes that had been committed fifteen years ago. And Ellen had no illusions that Wizarding Britain was now free of such criminals.
Taking a deep breath - it wouldn't help anyone, least of all Hermione, if she started crying right now - she wiped her eyes and bent down to grab the most recent photo album from the shelf behind the couch. After a moment, she also grabbed the album Hermione had made for them as a Christmas present. The one with the magical pictures, usually hidden.
They might need to contact the wizarding police, after all. And to think she had been worried that one day, the wizarding police would call because Hermione's feud had gotten out of hand.
Scoffing and holding back a sob, she joined Lavender at the door. The girl was fidgeting again, scuffing her shoes on the carpet.
"She's probably just stuck in a bookshop," Ellen told her with far more assurance than she felt.
Lavender nodded, but her smile looked brittle and fake.
"Now let's…" She hesitated a moment, steeling herself. "...call the Knight Bus."
Lavender nodded and stepped outside. She waited until Ellen had locked the door, then grabbed Ellen's hand and raised her wand. A moment later, the huge triple-decker bus arrived with a literal bang. And everyone else in the street ignored both the sound and the bus.
Ellen shivered a little. If Lavender let go of her hand, she'd ignore the bus as well - she remembered how Hermione had demonstrated that, years ago. Her darling daughter hadn't quite understood, back then, why Ellen and Gabriel hadn't been impressed as much as concerned about the whole thing.
Because Ellen just couldn't help wonder what she was ignoring, hidden by magic. And what she might have been made to forget by magic. She knew it wasn't very likely that she had been manipulated, but… it wasn't impossible, either.
But she forced the familiar worry away. She had something much more important to worry about: Hermione was missing.
Lavender paid the fare, and Ellen picked the closest seat to sit in - she had learned her lesson from her previous trips. Even so, she was thrown into the seat and then almost off it when the bus accelerated at a rate that was positively neck-breaking, wildly swerving around cars whose drivers didn't even notice it as it sped through London.
By the time they reached Godric's Hollow, Ellen felt as if she had spent an hour on a rollercoaster. Without being buckled in. "They really need to improve this bus," she mumbled as she staggered out of it, ignoring the conductor's cheerful farewell.
"Hermione says that all the time," Lavender replied. "She can't wait for Apparition lessons."
Ellen nodded. Her daughter had told her the same thing - repeatedly. "So, where to now?" She looked around.
"We're here," Lavender said, pointing at an empty lot. "Oh. I forgot." She blushed and reached out to Ellen. As soon as their hands touched, Ellen could see a cosy-looking, small house. Appearances were deceiving, of course - even a tent could contain a wizarding palace. Still, the whole house and garden looked just like any other middle-class home in the countryside, and Ellen clung to the familiar look of it as Lavender led her into the yard and to the door.
The bell sounded familiar as well.
The door was opened after a few seconds by Mrs Potter. "Who… Lavender?" She blinked at Ellen for a moment, before adding: "Mrs Granger?"
Ellen nodded. "Lavender informed me that your son is missing. I fear that my daughter is missing as well," she said.
"Oh." For a moment, Mrs Potter and Ellen shared the same worried expression. "Come in, then. James went to work - he's the Head Auror - but we're also gathering friends to help to look for Harry... for them."
The inside of the house was, as Ellen had expected, larger than the outside. And missing modern appliances. But otherwise, it looked normal enough - just like Lavender's home.
"Ron!"
"Lavender!"
That was Lavender's boyfriend, then. Ellen looked at the other man - wizard - present while the teenagers embraced each other. "Professor Lupin?" She recognised the man - they had met when Hermione had insisted on getting permission to join the 'Duelling Club' in her first year, and Ellen and Gabriel had insisted on talking to her teacher first.
"Mrs Granger." He nodded at her. "I'm sorry for the circumstances."
She nodded, not bothering to reply with an empty phrase of her own. "So," she asked, turning to Mrs Potter, "Are the police looking into this already, or is this still a… private affair?" That sounded wrong.
"James has informed the DMLE," Mrs Potter told her. "We can't reach Harry with a Patronus Messenger; that means this isn't some
prank." The glare she sent at the wizard told Ellen that there was something more behind this than Hermione's feud.
But she was here for Hermione, not for anything else. "I've got pictures of Hermione, if the wizarding police need them," she said, pulling out the photo album - the wizarding one.
"That should be helpful," Mr Lupin said with a smile. "I can make copies of it."
"Good idea!" Mrs Potter agreed. "I'll get some of Harry's as well. And we need to tell James that there's another student missing."
Ellen wondered if that meant that Mr Potter was leading the investigation - that wouldn't be very professional, would it? But then, who would care about procedure when their child was missing? Ellen would do anything to get Hermione back.
And, watching Mrs Potter send off a glowing doe to her husband, followed by another to a man named 'Peter', telling him to hurry 'back to England', she was sure that she wasn't the only one who felt that way.
It didn't make her stop worrying about Hermione, but it did help a little.
*****
Unknown Location, July 6th, 1996
Harry Potter froze. That roar… the wyvern must be close! He took a step towards the cave exit before he realised what he was doing, then stopped. If Sirius or Remus had seen that…
"Watch out!" a whisper sounded behind him.
So Granger had noticed. Damn. "I'm not even close to the red line," he told her with more assurance than he felt. "Now let's see the wyvern impale itself on my spike!"
"Going after
my bait," she retorted.
He didn't deign to respond to that. Instead, he stared at the trap. If the wyvern was hunting, it would spot the bait any moment now.
"It roared. It might not be hunting," Granger said in a low voice. "Alerting your prey to your presence is counterproductive for a hunter."
"Unless it hunts by driving its prey into a panic by roaring, and then catching it as it tries to flee," he pointed out. "Some magical creatures can even use magic to cause their prey to panic."
"The Terrorising Tayra, yes," she said. "Able to send grown men into a panic through subvocalisation. But we don't know whether that's the case here." She snorted. "Although the roar feels terrifying enough."
"It's not that terrifying." Not really. Not when compared to, say, a Dementor.
"Sure it isn't." Granger scoffed. "Only an idiot wouldn't be afraid of such a monster."
He wasn't an idiot! "I didn't say I wasn't afraid," he told her. "I said it's not that
terrifying."
"Sure."
"Perhaps to you it is. But I've seen worse," he retorted.
"The dragons in Romania, yes. You told everyone about that trip for weeks." She scoffed.
He clenched his teeth. "I meant the Dementor I saw."
"You saw a Dementor?" She didn't sound as if she believed him.
"At the Ministry. It was an accident - it shouldn't have been there." Dad had been livid with the idiot responsible for bringing a Dementor to the Ministry without realising that there was a tour for Quidditch fans that day. But it had been a very memorable trip. Especially Bagman's nervous breakdown.
"Riiight."
He frowned without taking his eyes off the bait. "I'm not lying."
"I guess that depends on your definition of exaggeration."
"That's rich coming from
you!"
"I don't lie to teachers!"
"That depends on your definition of lying through omission," he shot back.
She blinked and stared at him, snorting once, before glaring at him. "How original!"
"Takes one to know one!" He snorted as well.
"Now, that was…"
But before she could finish whatever she was about to say, a blur hit the giant fish across the pond. And then it howled. No, it screeched with rage!
Harry froze for a moment, then smiled. "Yes!" That was the howl of a wounded monster! He could see it thrashing around on the pond's shores, right where they had set the spike. "We got it! Yes!"
As if it heard him, the wyvern stopped thrashing around and heaved - and then the monster's giant head was staring straight at them, the spike apparently lodged in its jaw.
It must have heard them, Harry realised. And it must have understood that they were responsible for its wounds since it charged straight at them, jaws opening wide as it hit the waterfall.
But Harry had already jumped back to the wall, outside of the monster's reach, when the wyvern's head appeared in the cave, screeching and roaring, splattering spit and blood around as it shook its head.
Granger was shrieking as well, he noted. Even though they were perfectly safe here, in the rearmost part of the cave. The wyvern was just too big to reach them here. Especially with the spike hindering its movement.
Harry grimaced when the creature shook its head outside the waterfall, trying to dislodge the offending object - without success, since the spike's barb was stuck in its maw.
And here it came again, shaking its head and banging the spike against the cave walls as if that would allow it to reach them!
Then the spike broke free, spraying more blood over the floor - and flying straight towards them.
"Watch out!" he yelled, tackling Granger and throwing her to the ground. The spike passed over their bodies and hit the wall, then the ground, rolling back towards them. He managed to twist his body, kicking out with both feet and pushing the thing away from them, towards the entrance of the cave.
"Yes!" he cheered. That had been close - but Seeker reflexes had saved the day, and their lives, once again!
"Get off, you lout!"
Then Harry realised that he was lying on Granger, not on the ground. And she was mad.
*****
"Get off me!" Hermione Granger repeated herself, emphasising her order by slipping her hands between her chest and Potter's and pushing. "You're crushing me!"
He slid off her, finally, and she glared at him as she slowly sat up. The idiot had thrown her to the ground - which was made of rock - and then had jumped on her and ground her into the rough stone some more by his antics with the spike. Her knees, hips and back hurt. And the back of her head.
"Sorry."
He didn't sound as if he was sorry. Typical. She eyed the monster which was still trying to get them. It was bleeding from its maw - part of which was torn; she could see the ripped skin and flesh, and there were blood drops splattering against the cave floor and walls as it shook in rage.
She cringed when the monster roared. She quickly hid her reaction, straightening her spine - she wouldn't look like a scared girl in front of Potter. "It can't get us here," she told Potter as much as herself.
"Unless it throws things at us," Potter replied.
"I doubt that it's smart enough to understand that. Tool use seems beyond its capability," Hermione pointed out. If the monster could use tools, it would've tried to widen the cave by now. And it wouldn't have fallen for the trap, either.
"I don't think that's a deadly wound," Potter said.
"Unless it gets infected," Hermione told him.
"We can't count on that - magical creatures are tough." He shook his head. "We need to take it out now." He flicked his wand, and the spike turned back into a wooden stake. A few slashes followed - Severing Charms, she noted - and smaller slices fell off the spike. What was he…
Ah. "You want to banish lead down its gullet?" she asked.
"Yes. If it's trying so hard to eat us, better feed it, I say." She saw him wet his lips and pick up one of the pieces of wood. "Turn this into lead? I'll banish it at it."
The monster roared again, and she tried to shut it out. Shut everything and everyone out and focus. Focus on the transfiguration… She swished her wand, and the piece of wood turned into dull lead. Potter threw it into the air, then pointed his wand at it with a stabbing motion.
The lead slice flew at the creature, straight into its gaping maw. "Yes!" Potter cheered. "Straight down its gullet!"
The monster started to cough and retch. Not unlike Crookshanks when he needed to cough up a hairball. Hermione's eyes widened. "Take cover!" she snapped, casting a Shield Charm.
"What?" Potter asked, but he dropped to the ground, then cast a Shield Charm of his own.
Not a moment too soon, since the monster drew back its head, then threw it forward, coughing and retching, and the leaden slice shot out of the creature's mouth - and directly at them. It hit Hermione's shield, shattering it as she shrieked, then ricocheted off and slammed into a wall before hitting the wall next to it at an angle and rolling over the floor.
Hermione found herself on the ground again, this time without a rather muscled Quidditch player on top of her - and didn't that sound dirty? "No more feeding it balls," she told Potter. "Not when it can shoot them back at us!" He chuckled, though with a grimace, and she scoffed. "This isn't Quidditch! That projectile could've killed us!"
"That's like professional Quidditch!"
Potter was an idiot! "We've got a raging dragon-like monster trying to kill us, and you want to talk about Quidditch?" she asked, not bothering to hide her scorn.
"You started it!"
The monster roared again, and, for a moment, Hermione feared it would force itself forwards, wedging itself into the too narrow cave. That would trap the two of them inside as well.
But the monster suddenly withdrew and pulled back - out of the cave, and out of their sight. She shook her head. "Now it's wounded and mad at us. Great."
"Hey! That wasn't my fault!"
She smirked. "Did I claim that it was? But it's telling that you feel that way."
"I'm the only other person on the island," he shot back. "Who else would you blame?"
"Myself, if it were my fault," she told him. Did he think she lacked integrity and wasn't intellectually honest with herself?
"'If it were'?" He scoffed as well. "I don't remember you objecting to the plan!"
"You were the driving force behind it!" she told him, scowling at the boy. He wouldn't pin the blame for this debacle on her!
"We're here because you couldn't be bothered to stay out of Knockturn Alley!" he yelled.
"We're here because you thought that you could order me around!" she yelled back.
Before he could make another stupid claim, the sound of a boulder rolling down a rocky hill, followed by a splash, interrupted their row.
*****
"It's above the entrance!" Harry Potter exclaimed. The wyvern must have flown and landed above them.
"So I gathered," Granger replied.
He frowned at her. "We're lucky that it sent a boulder down or we might have walked into an ambush."
"We would've been - will be - checking for such, anyway. And…"
Another boulder hitting the pond interrupted her.
"Once is happenstance, twice is coincidence…" Harry said.
"...three times is enemy action," Granger finished.
Another splash. "What's it trying to do? Bury us in here alive?"
"Or trying to burrow into the cave from above," Granger said, looking at the ceiling.
"That's ridiculous," he replied. "That's solid stone, all the way to the top."
"Not so solid stone," she pointed out as another stone crashed into the pond. This time, it didn't disappear completely, but ended up in a shallower part, sticking out of the water. "Perhaps it's trying to raise the water level so the cave gets flooded. Ravens are smart enough to come up with plans like that, so a monster like this might be capable of such reasoning as well."
"That won't work - the overflow will run downhill, not up into the cave," Harry retorted. "We're above the shoreline here."
Granger took a step towards the cave exit. "If it blocks the waterfall from the pond, the stores might act as a dam and force the water - or enough of it - into this cave."
That would be… well, technically, they could cast Bubble-Head Charms, but… "We'll have to vanish the rocks, then," he said.
"That's only a temporary solution." Granger, of course, had to criticise him.
"The wyvern will run out of rocks sooner or later. Or succumb to its wounds." Harry nodded. The creature couldn't keep this up indefinitely.
"Unless it triggers a rockslide, and we get buried alive in here."
"You're a ray of sunshine, aren't you, Granger?" He clenched his teeth. "We can burrow our way out with Vanishing Charms."
"Provided that we don't vanish a rock holding up other rocks, and trigger another rockslide." Granger shook her head. "We can't stay here. Not now that it knows we hurt it and that we're in here."
"Provided that it doesn't die." He smiled at her.
She pursed her lips in return but didn't reply.
Two more rocks had joined the others in the pond. "It's slowing down," Harry said. "It must take longer and longer to find suitable rocks."
As if the wyvern had heard him, a roaring noise filled the air, followed by what looked like half the mountain hitting the pond, sending water flying everywhere - even through the waterfall. Granger jumped back just before a wave reached her, though.
And looked at him as if this was his fault.
He scoffed. "Well, whether it's doing this to bury us or to flush us out, it's getting a little concerning."
"A little?" Granger raised her eyebrows at him.
"Nothing we can't handle," he shot back with a confident grin. "Unless you slept through our lessons."
"Oh, you…" He could see her clenching her teeth - her jaw muscles twitched. "Then let's do something about it before the creature causes another avalanche."
He snorted and took a few steps closer to the waterfall, then stopped. "Can you divert the water somehow?" His charm would only hit the falling water, otherwise.
She sighed as if that was asking the world of her. Or beneath her. But she flicked her wrist, and the closest piece of the spike grew, then floated towards the entrance, forming a small gap in the water curtain as it entered the waterfall.
Well, better than nothing. He took a few steps closer, then aimed his wand at the closest boulder. "Evanesco!"
His spell hit the rock, and it vanished. Yes! He hadn't been entirely sure that he'd manage to vanish so much volume.
The next rock was about the same size and vanished as well. The third, though, was too large - his spell failed to affect it. He clenched his teeth in frustration - Granger wouldn't let him forget this, he just knew it - and cast a Shrinking Charm on the offending rock. That worked, and his next Vanishing Charm made the boulder disappear.
"Clever."
He frowned, not looking back. It hadn't quite sounded like an insult - Granger's sarcasm usually was unmistakable - but… Granger wouldn't praise him. Instead of replying, he vanished two more boulders with his spell combo.
Then he heard a noise from above again - more rocks? He looked at the cave ceiling, then at the entrance…
...and saw the wyvern coming at him.
Gasping, he flicked his wand, and a shimmering field enveloped him a fraction of a second before the monster crashed into it. His shield shattered a moment later, and he was sent flying backwards. He hit the ground, sliding and rolling over the rough stone.
"Potter! Stupefy!"
He came to a stop, wheezing, and got up, pointing his wand at the monster - and clenching his teeth so he wouldn't groan with pain.
"Stupefy!"
"Granger!" he snapped. "Stunners won't hurt it!"
"I'm trying to distract it!"
"It's stuck in the mouth of the cave. It's about as distracted as it can get," he replied.
"At least it can't spit a Stunner back at us!" she snapped.
"It can't reach us here." He straightened, wheezing again, and ran a hand over his chest. His ribs didn't feel broken - as a Seeker, he was familiar with that kind of injury.
"It almost got you!" she hissed at him.
"Almost doesn't count," he quoted Oliver.
"You… You idiot!" Granger pointed her wand at him.
"What are you doing?" he snapped.
"What does it look like? Healing you, idiot! Episkey!"
He looked down. His pants were torn in several places, and he could see - and, now, feel - the scrapes on his legs.
"It's nothing," he said. "My Shield Charm protected me."
"You were thrown back two yards! And you bounced on the ground!"
"Exactly - out of its reach." He grinned at her.
She glared at him with bared teeth, then whirled and slashed her wand at the wyvern, which was still stuck in the entrance. A red line appeared over the beast's ripped cheek, and it withdrew, roaring louder than before.
That had been a Cutting Curse. He hadn't known Granger had learned how to cast that. "Why did you learn the Cutting Curse?"
"It's not illegal," she replied.
"I know that," he said, clenching his teeth. "I was asking why you learned the spell."
"It's on the Defence curriculum."
"For the seventh year."
"Some people like to study ahead." She sniffed. "Besides, you recognised it."
He pressed his lips together for a moment. "Some people like to study ahead."
She huffed - like she usually did when her own words were turned against her. "Why did you learn the curse?"
"So I could defend myself if some Death Eater remnant came after me." At least that was the excuse Uncle Sirius had given for teaching him. Mum hadn't been amused but had accepted it. And had made him swear he wouldn't use the curse unless his life was in danger.
Something he doubted anyone had made Granger swear or promise.
*****
Hermione Granger fumed. Potter was an idiot! Almost getting eaten by the monster, bouncing over the ground like a cricket ball and then grandstanding about his wounds… And he had the gall to question her for learning a perfectly legal spell! See if she healed him again unless he was bleeding all over the floor!
That reminded her… She cast a simple healing charm on the scrapes on her legs - short shorts definitely weren't the right clothes to go caving. Or for getting smashed into the rocky ground by some stupid boy tackling her. She should've done that sooner - if those scrapes got infected… She cast a more advanced healing charm. Just in case. Episkey was supposed to remove dirt and other foreign matter when closing a wound, but she didn't know if that would be enough to prevent an infection by itself.
"So… we know that the wyvern is smart enough to ambush us," Potter said.
"Obviously," she replied. "And we have to assume that it knew what it was doing when it started dropping rocks into the pond." That meant it was at least as smart as a raven. A raven the size of a small plane, with skin hard enough to withstand most spells.
"And that it takes getting hurt personally," Potter added.
"Yes." And that was Potter's fault. She frowned at him.
He frowned back. "Now, we need a way out of this cave without becoming monster food."
"And a safe place to hide from the monster afterwards," she pointed out. "In here we are, as has just been demonstrated, safe from it - at least from direct attacks - as long as we don't stray too close to the entrance."
"We can't stay in here, though," Potter insisted.
"Why not?" They were safe here. They wouldn't be safe outside, no matter how they got out. She pressed her lips together to keep them from trembling. She wouldn't cry now.
"What about food?"
"We can summon a coconut and enlarge it." She took a few deep breaths. She had to keep her composure. Panic would be deadly. They were safe, for the moment, anyway.
"That won't last or work forever."
"I thought your parents would be here soon." She bit her lower lip - she hadn't meant to blurt that out.
He snorted. "That's my line."
She managed to snort as well. "We can stay here for a day or two. At least."
He shook his head. "And wait for the monster to get bored? We hurt it. I don't think it'll give up."
"We need the time to plan. No more half-baked efforts!" she told him.
"We almost got it!" he protested.
"We miscalculated and we underestimated its intelligence," she retorted. "We can't afford to do that any more."
"Then what's your plan?" He narrowed his eyes at her and crossed his arms.
*****
Harry Potter stared at Granger. Turnabout was fair play. He was sure that the swot didn't have a plan, much less a better plan than his own. "Hm?"
"I don't have a plan yet!" she retorted, rolling her eyes as if he had asked a stupid question. "That's why I said we need time to carefully plan our next, ah, plan."
He smirked at her fumbling her words. 'Plan our plan', huh? "And do you have any ideas, yet? Somewhere to start?"
"If I had, I would've said so, wouldn't I?" she replied. "Really."
He shook his head. "The longer we stay in here, the more time the wyvern has to come up with something else to get us."
She scoffed. "While it's clear that it's not a mere animal, I am confident that we'll outsmart it easily - now that we have its measure."
She talked like a character in one of Dudley's cartoon series, yet thought purebloods were old-fashioned? But, right now, pointing that out wouldn't help anyone except the wyvern. "You're very confident all of a sudden," he commented instead.
"I'm
confident that rushing into another half-baked plan would be a bad idea;" she said.
He clenched his teeth. "It almost worked."
"Who was it who said 'almost doesn't count'?"
"That's different. And the wyvern might still die from infection - or, as you would say, 'succumb to its wounds'." He grinned at her.
"Of course you would think that having a wide vocabulary was something to make fun of," she shot back with a deep scowl.
What? He frowned. "It was a harmless joke."
"I've heard that before, too. It's always a 'harmless joke', unless it happens to you, isn't it?" She glared at him.
"I make such jokes with my friends all the time!" he protested. Well, often.
"The difference is that I'm
not your friend," she spat. "And I don't think it's funny!"
He was taken aback for a moment. Then he remembered that this was Granger talking to him, not some poor helpless first year. "But calling me the Bait Who Lived is OK, huh?"
"That was in retaliation for one of your 'pranks'!"
Oh for… "Didn't we go over this already?"
She blinked, then actually blushed. Unless that was a trick of the light - it was a little dimmer now. "Right." She said through clenched teeth. "Let's focus on surviving this."
He nodded, more than a little stiffly. "Let's. We need to get out of the cave without being seen by the wyvern. And we need a secure shelter to, ah, hide in." He'd almost said 'to shelter in'.
Judging by the slightly pouty expression on her face, Granger had caught that as well. "There's only one exit. And last we checked, it was trapped."
"We could make another exit," he suggested.
"How? Vanishing Charms won't work on parts of an object."
So she didn't know a digging spell or something like that. "Transfigure stone to water?"
She gave him a flat look. "Are you asking whether or not I can work such a transfiguration because you can't?"
He forced himself to smile widely. "Yes."
She sighed. "No, I can't do that, either."
Damn. But Harry wasn't out of ideas yet. Not by a long chalk. "Blasting Curses!"
"Do you want to bury us under tons of rock?" she countered. "Unless you have some training as a miner and in demolition, I'd rather not try to blast our way out of this cave." She blinked. "But that could work against the monster!" She smiled, then her face fell. "And if you knew how to cast that spell, you'd have already tried it when the monster was stuck in the mouth of the cave."
He nodded. He wouldn't have thought that finding out that Granger didn't know a spell - several spells - could feel so disappointing. Right now, he'd be grateful if she showed off a N.E.W.T.-level spell that solved their problems. "I've got it! The Shrinking Charm! We can shrink ourselves and sneak away and hide that way! The wyvern won't see us if we're just a few inches tall!" And they had both learned the charm in their second year!
Granger, though, didn't seem enthusiastic. "Can you cast the spell well enough to risk casting it on yourself?" she asked. "It's dangerous to cast it on humans - and very difficult. You don't want to end up with your body proportions out of alignment. That can lead to organ failure."
Harry frowned. He did remember some warnings about that, now that he thought about it. "We're not second years any more."
"How often have you used the charm?" she asked. "It's very complicated when used on a human."
He raised his eyebrows. That sounded like… "Speaking from experience?"
She pressed her lips together. "I didn't have a bad experience, but it was more complicated than I thought it would be - and I wasn't trying to shrink my entire body."
Harry blinked. "You experimented with shrinking parts of your body?" That sounded… actually that sounded both dumb and terrifying.
"I shrank my teeth," she spat. "Perfectly safe. But Madam Pomfrey still lectured me when she found out."
"Why didn't you go to a specialist for that?"
"My parents wanted to fix my teeth themselves. Having someone else - someone magical - do it wouldn't have been right. Doing it myself…" She shrugged.
He shook his head. No wonder Granger was so weird if her parents had raised her like that. "So, let's keep it as a possibility. I'd rather have some misaligned limbs that can be fixed at St Mungo's than become wyvern food."
Granger nodded, although a little reluctantly. "I would really prefer an alternative, though."
"Me too." He squinted - had the light grown even dimmer? He looked at the waterfall. "Oh, no!"
"What?" Granger looked around, then at the cave entrance.
"It's going to be evening soon," Harry told her.
"We can summon a coconut for dinner," she said.
"That's not what I meant," he explained. "Mum and Dad should've noticed that I'm missing - I should've been back home by now."
"So?"
"A Patronus Messenger should've arrived by now. They always send one if I'm not home by dinner." he said. "And if the sun is setting, then dinner was a while ago."
"Oh. We might be out of reach of the spell," she suggested. "The Ministry didn't register our spell-casting, either."
He snorted, but without any humour. "It's not the same. The Patronus Messenger should've reached me." Mum had told him that wherever he went, the spell would find him.
"We… we might be in the southern hemisphere, where it's winter and the sun sets earlier," Granger told him. "We can check the constellations… I mean, we could if we were able to leave the cave at night."
He nodded, but he didn't think that was the case. He felt hungry enough for dinner. And he thought enough time had passed, too. More than enough.
He sighed, swallowing, as he sat down, back against the wall.
His parents wouldn't be swooping in and saving them.
Harry closed his eyes and took a few deep breaths. They were alone here, on this island. Alone with a murderous wyvern. And no help was coming.
Damn.
"Uh… it'll be alright? There are other ways to find us?"
He looked at Granger, who was smiling weakly, very weakly, at him. "If a Patronus Messenger can't find us, then I doubt any other spells will work." He shook his head. This was… this was far worse than he had thought.
Granger sat down next to him, pulled her knees to her chest and rested her head on them.
They remained like that for a while.
*****