FairyTales 版 (精华区)
发信人: yiren (雪白的血♀血红的雪), 信区: FairyTales
标 题: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban----6
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (2002年08月18日10:29:24 星期天), 站内信件
CHAPTER SIX
TALONS AND TEA LEAVES
When Harry, Ron, and Hermione entered the Great Hall for
breakfast the next day, the first thing they saw was Draco Malfoy,
who seemed to be entertaining a large group of Slytherins with a
very funny story. As they passed, Malfoy did a ridiculous impression
of a swooning fit and there was a roar of laughter.
"Ignore him," said Hermione, who was right behind Harry. "Just
ignore him, it's not worth it...."
"Hey, Potter!" shrieked Pansy Parkinson, a Slytherin girl
with a face like a pug. "Potter! The dementors are coming,
Potter! Woooooooooo!"
Harry dropped into a seat at the Gryffindor table, next to
George Weasley.
"New third-year course schedules," said George, passing then,
over. "What's up with you, Harry?"
"Malfoy," said Ron, sitting down on George's other side and
glaring over at the Slytherin table.
George looked up in time to see Malfoy pretending to faint with
terror again.
"That little git," he said calmly. "He wasn't so cocky last
night when the dementors were down at our end of the train. Came
runing into our compartment, didn't he, Fred?"
"Nearly wet himself," said Fred, with a contemptuous glance
at Malfoy.
"I wasn't too happy myself," said George. "They're horrible
things, those dementors...."
"Sort of freeze your insides, don't they?" said Fred.
"You didn't pass out, though, did you?" said Harry in a low
voice.
"Forget it, Harry," said George bracingly. "Dad had to go out
to Azkaban one time, remember, Fred? And he said it was the worst
place he'd ever been, he came back all weak and shaking.... They
suck the happiness out of a place, dementors. Most of the prisoners
go mad in there."
"Anyway, we'll see how happy Malfoy looks after our first
Quidditch match," said Fred. "Gryffindor versus Slytherin, first
game of the season, remember?"
The only time Harry and Malfoy had faced each other in a
Quidditch match, Malfoy had definitely come off worse. Feeling
slightly more cheerful, Harry helped himself to sausages and fried
tomatoes.
Hermione was examining her new schedule.
" Ooh, good, we're starting some new subjects today," she
said happily. villains are these, that trespass upon my private
lands! Come I. scorn at my fall, perchance? Draw, you knaves,
you dogs!"
They watched in astonishment as the little knight tugged his
sword out of its scabbard and began brandishing it violently,
hopping up and down in rage. But the sword was too long for him;
a particularly wild swing made him overbalance, and he landed
facedown in the grass.
"Are you all right?" said Harry, moving closer to the picture.
"Get back, you scurvy braggart! Back, you rogue!"
The knight seized his sword again and used it to push himself
back up, but the blade sank deeply into the grass and, though he
pulled with all his might, he couldn't get it out again. Finally,
he had to flop back down onto the grass and push up his visor to
mop his sweating face.
"Listen," said Harry, taking advantage of the knight's
exhaustion, "we're looking for the North Tower. You don't know the
way, do you?"
"A quest!" The knight's rage seemed to vanish instantly. He
clanked to his feet and shouted, "Come follow me, dear friends, and
we shall find our goal, or else shall perish bravely in the charge!"
He gave the sword another fruitless tug, tried and failed to
mount the fat pony, gave up, and cried, "On foot then, good sirs
and gentle lady! On! On!"
And he ran, clanking loudly, into the left side of the frame
and out of sight.
They hurried after him along the corridor, following the sound
of his armor. Every now and then they spotted him running through
a picture ahead.
"Be of stout heart, the worst is yet to come!" yelled the
knight, and they saw him reappear in front of an alarmed group of
women in crinolines, whose picture hung on the wall of a narrow
spiral staircase.
Puffing loudly, Harry, Ron, and Hermione climbed the tightly
spiraling steps, getting dizzier and dizzier, until at last they
heard the murmur of voices above them and knew they had reached
the classroom.
"Farewell!" cried the knight, popping his head into a painting
of some sinister-looking monks. "Farewell, my comrades-in-arms! If
ever you have need of noble heart and steely sinew, call upon
Sir Cadogan!"
"Yeah, we'll call you," muttered Ron as the knight disappeared,
"if we ever need someone mental."
They climbed the last few steps and emerged onto a tiny landing,
where most of the class was already assembled. There were no doors
off this landing, but Ron nudged Harry and pointed at the ceiling,
where there was a circular trapdoor with a brass plaque on it.
"'Sibyll Trelawney, Divination teacher,"' Harry read. "How're
we supposed to get up there?"
As though in answer to his question, the trapdoor suddenly
opened, and a silvery ladder descended right at Harry's
feet. Everyone got quiet.
"After you," said Ron, grinning, so Harry climbed the ladder
first.
He emerged into the strangest-looking classroom he had ever
seen. In fact, it didn't look like a classroom at all, more like
a cross between someone's attic and an old-fashioned tea shop. At
leasttwenty small, circular tables were crammed inside it, all
surrounded by chintz armchairs and fat little poufs. Everything
was lit with a dim, crimson light; the curtains at the windows
were all closed, and the many lamps were draped with dark red
scarves. it was stiflingly warm, and the fire that was burning
under the crowded mantelpiece was giving off a heavy, sickly sort
of perfume as it heated a large copper kettle. The shelves running
around the circular walls were crammed with dusty-looking feathers,
stubs of candles, many packs of tattered playing cards, countless
silvery crystal balls, and a huge array of teacups.
Ron appeared at Harry's shoulder as the class assembled around
them, all talking in whispers.
"Where is she?" Ron said.
A voice came suddenly out of the shadows, a soft, misty sort
of voice.
"Welcome," it said. "How nice to see you in the physical world
at last."
Harry's immediate impression was of a large, glittering
insect. Professor Trelawney moved into the firelight, and they
saw that she was very thin; her large glasses magnified her eyes
to several times their natural size, and she was draped in a gauzy
spangled shawl. Innumerable chains and beads hung around her spindly
neck, and her arms and hands were encrusted with bangles and rings.
"Sit, my children, sit," she said, and they all climbed awkwardly
into armchairs or sank onto poufs. Harry, Ron, and Hermione sat
themselves around the same round table.
"Welcome to Divination," said Professor Trelawney, who had
seated herself in a winged armchair in front of the fire. "My name
is professor Trelawney. You may not have seen me before. I find
that descending too often into the hustle and bustle of the main
school clouds my Inner Eye."
Nobody said anything to this extraordinary
pronouncement. Professor Trelawney delicately rearranged her shawl
and continued, "So you have chosen to study Divination, the most
difficult of all magical arts. I must warn you at the outset that
if you do not have the Sight, there is very little I will be able
to teach you.. Books can take you only so far in this field...."
At these words, both Harry and Ron glanced, grinning, at
Hermione, who looked startled at the news that books wouldn't be
much help in this subject.
"Many witches and wizards, talented though they are in the area
of loud bangs and smells and sudden disappearings, are yet unable to
penetrate the veiled mysteries of the future," Professor Trelawney
went on, her enormous, gleaming eyes moving from face to nervous
face. "It is a Gift granted to few. You, boy," she said suddenly to
Neville, who almost toppled off his pouf. "Is your grandmother well?"
"I think so," said Neville tremulously.
"I wouldn't be so sure if I were you, dear," said
Professor Trelawney, the firelight glinting on her long emerald
earrings. Neville gulped. Professor Trelawney continued placidly. "We
will be covering the basic methods of Divination this year. The
first term will be devoted to reading the tea leaves. Next term we
shall progress to palmistry. By the way, my dear," she shot suddenly
at Parvati Patil, "beware a red-haired man."
Parvati gave a startled look at Ron, who was right behind her
and edged her chair away from him.
"In the second term," Professor Trelawney went on, "we shall
progress to the crystal ball -- if we have finished with fire omens,
that is. Unfortunately, classes will be disrupted in February by a
nasty bout of flu. I myself will lose my voice. And around Easter,
one of our number will leave us forever."
A very tense silence followed this pronouncement, but Professor
Trelawney seemed unaware of it.
"I wonder, dear," she said to Lavender Brown, who was nearest
and shrank back in her chair, "if you could pass me the largest
silver teapot?"
Lavender, looking relieved, stood up, took an enormous teapot
from the shelf, and put it down on the table in front of Professor
Trelawney.
"Thank you, my dear. Incidentally, that thing you are dreading --
it will happen on Friday the sixteenth of October."
Lavender trembled.
"Now, I want you all to divide into pairs. Collect a teacup
from the shelf, come to me, and I will fill it. Then sit down
and drink, drink until only the dregs remain. Swill these around
the cup three times with the left hand, then turn the cup upside
down on its saucer, wait for the last of the tea to drain away,
then give your cup to your partner to read. You will interpret
the patterns using pages five and six of Unfogging the Future. I
shall move among you, helping and instructing. Oh, and dear" --
she caught Neville by the arm as he made to stand up -- "after
you've broken your first cup, would you be so kind as to select
one of the blue patterned ones? I'm rather attached to the pink."
Sure enough, Neville had no sooner reached the shelf of teacups
when there was a tinkle of breaking china. Professor Trelawney swept
over to him holding a dustpan and brush and said, "One of the blue
ones, then, dear, if you wouldn't mind... thank you. ... "
When Harry and Ron had had their teacups filled, they went back
to their table and tried to drink the scalding tea quickly. They
swilled the dregs around as Professor Trelawney had instructed,
then drained the cups and swapped over.
"Right," said Ron as they both opened their books at pages five
and six. "What can you see in mine?"
"A load of soggy brown stuff," said Harry. The heavily perfumed
smoke in the room was making him feel sleepy and stupid.
"Broaden your minds, my dears, and allow your eyes to see past
the mundane!" Professor Trelawney cried through the gloom.
Harry tried to pull himself together.
"Right, you've got a crooked sort of cross... " He consulted
Unfogging the Future. "That means you're going to have 'trials and
suffering' -- sorry about that -- but there's a thing that could
be the sun... hang on... that means 'great happiness'... so you're
going to suffer but be very happy...."
"You need your Inner Eye tested, if you ask me," said Ron,
and they both had to stifle their laughs as Professor Trelawney
gazed in their direction.
"My turn..." Ron peered into Harry's teacup, his forehead
wrinkled with effort. "There's a blob a bit like a bowler hat,"
he said. "Maybe you're going to work for the Ministry of Magic...
He turned the teacup the other way up.
"But this way it looks more like an acorn.... What's that?" He
scanned his copy of Unfogging the Future. "'A windfall, unexpected
gold.' Excellent, you can lend me some... and there's a thin,
here," he turned the cup again, "that looks like an animal... yeah,
if that was its head... it looks like a hippo... no, a sheep..."
Professor Trelawney whirled around as Harry let out a snort
of laughter.
"Let me see that, my dear," she said reprovingly to Ron,
sweeping over and snatching Harry's cup from him. Everyone went
quiet to watch.
Professor Trelawney was staring into the teacup, rotating it
counterclockwise.
"The falcon... my dear, you have a deadly enemy."
"But everyone knows that, " said Hermione in a loud
whisper. Professor Trelawney stared at her.
"Well, they do," said Hermione. "Everybody knows about Harry
and You-Know-Who."
Harry and Ron stared at her with a mixture of amazement and
admiration. They had never heard Hermione speak to a teacher like
that before. Professor Trelawney chose not to reply. She lowered
her huge eyes to Harry's cup again and continued to turn it.
"The club... an attack. Dear, dear, this is not a happy cup....
I thought that was a bowler hat," said Ron sheepishly.
"The skull... danger in your path, my dear...."
Everyone was staring, transfixed, at Professor Trelawney,
who gave the cup a final turn, gasped, and then screamed.
There was another tinkle of breaking china; Neville had smashed
his second cup. Professor Trelawney sank into a vacant armchair,
her glittering hand at her heart and her eyes closed.
"My dear boy... my poor, dear boy no it is kinder not to
say.. . no... don't ask me...."
"What is it, Professor?" said Dean Thomas at once. Everyone had
got to their feet, and slowly they crowded around Harry and Ron's
table, pressing close to Professor Trelawney's chair to get a
good look at Harry's cup.
"My dear," Professor Trelawney's huge eyes opened dramatically,
"You have the Grim."
"The what?" said Harry.
He could tell that he wasn't the only one who didn't understand;
Dean Thomas shrugged at him and Lavender Brown looked puzzled, but
nearly everybody else clapped their hands to their mouths in horror.
"The Grim, my dear, the Grim!" cried Professor Trelawney, who
looked shocked that Harry hadn't understood. "The giant, spectral
dog that haunts churchyards! My dear boy, it is an omen -- the
worst omen -- of death!"
Harry's stomach lurched. That dog on the cover of Death
Omens in Flourish and Blotts -the dog in the shadows of Magnolia
Crescent... Lavender Brown clapped her hands to her mouth
too. Everyone was looking at Harry, everyone except Hermione, who
had gotten up and moved around to the back of Professor Trelawney's
chair.
"I don't think it looks like a Grim," she said flatly.
Professor Trelawney surveyed Hermione with mounting dislike.
"You'll forgive me for saying so, my dear, but I perceive very
little aura around you. Very little receptivity to the resonances of
the future." Seamus Finnigan was tilting his head from side to side.
"It looks like a Grim if you do this," he said, with his eyes
almost shut, "but it looks more like a donkey from here," he said,
leaning to the left.
"When you've all finished deciding whether I'm going to die
Or not!" said Harry, taking even himself by surprise. Now nobody
seemed to want to look at him.
"I think we will leave the lesson here for today," said Professor
Trelawney in her mistiest voice. "Yes... please pack away your
things...."
Silently the class took their teacups back to Professor
Trelawney, packed away their books, and closed their bags. Even
Ron was avoiding Harry's eyes.
"Until we meet again," said Professor Trelawney faintly,
"fair fortune be yours. Oh, and dear" -- she pointed at Neville --
"you'll be late next time, so mind you work extra-hard to catch up."
Harry, Ron, and Hermione descended Professor Trelawney's
ladder and the winding stair in silence, then set off for Professor
McGonagall's Transfiguration lesson. It took them so long to find
her classroom that, early as they had left Divination, they were
only just in time.
Harry chose a seat right at the back of the room, feeling
as though he were sitting in a very bright spotlight; the rest
of the class kept shooting furtive glances at him, as though
he were about to drop dead at any moment. He hardly heard what
Professor McGonagall was telling them about Animagi (wizards who
could transform at will into animals), and wasn't even watching
when she transformed herself in front of their eyes into a tabby
cat with spectacle markings around her eyes.
"Really, what has got into you all today?" said Professor
McGonagall, turning back into herself with a faint pop, and staring
around at them all. "Not that it matters, but that's the first time
my transformation's not got applause from a class."
Everybody's heads turned toward Harry again, but nobody
spoke. Then Hermione raised her hand.
"Please, Professor, we've just had our first Divination class,
and we were reading the tea leaves, and --"
"Ah, of course," said Professor McGonagall, suddenly frowning.
"There is no need to say any more, Miss Granger. Tell me,
which of you will be dying this year?"
Everyone stared at her.
"Me," said Harry, finally.
"I see," said Professor McGonagall, fixing Harry with her
beady eyes. "Then you should know, Potter, that Sibyll Trelawney
has predicted the death of one student a year since she arrived at
this school. None of them has died yet. Seeing death omens is her
favorite way of greeting a new class. If it were not for the fact
that I never speak ill of my colleagues --"
Professor McGonagall broke off, and they saw that her nostrils
had gone white. She went on, more calmly, "Divination is one of
the most imprecise branches of magic. I shall not conceal from you
that I have very little patience with it. True Seers are very rare,
and Professor Trelawney --"
She stopped again, and then said, in a very matter-of-fact tone,
"You look in excellent health to me, Potter, so you will excuse me
if I don't let you off homework today. I assure you that if you die,
you need not hand it in."
Hermione laughed. Harry felt a bit better. It was harder to
feel scared of a lump of tea leaves away from the dim red light
and befuddling perfume of Professor Trelawney's classroom. Not
everyone was convinced, however. Ron still looked worried, and
Lavender whispered, "But what about Neville's cup?"
When the Transfiguration class had finished, they joined the
crowd thundering toward the Great Hall for lunch.
"Ron, cheer up," said Hermione, pushing a dish of stew toward
him. "You heard what Professor McGonagall said."
Ron spooned stew onto his plate and picked up his fork but
didn't start.
"Harry," he said, in a low, serious voice, "You haven't seen
a great black dog anywhere, have you?"
"Yeah, I have," said Harry. "I saw one the night I left the
Dursleys'. "
Ron let his fork fall with a clatter.
"Probably a stray," said Hermione calmly.
Ron looked at Hermione as though she had gone mad.
"Hermione, if Harry's seen a Grim, that's -- that's bad," he
said. "My -- my uncle Bilius saw one and -- and he died twenty-four
hours later!"
"Coincidence," said Hermione airily, pouring herself some
pumpkin juice.
"You don't know what you're talking about!" said Ron, starting
to get angry. "Grims scare the living daylights out of most wizards!"
"There you are, then," said Hermione in a superior tone. "They
see the Grim and die of fright. The Grim's not an omen, it's the
cause of death! And Harry's still with us because he's not stupid
enough to see one and think, right, well, I'd better kick the
bucket then!"
Ron mouthed wordlessly at Hermione, who opened her bag, took out
her new Arithmancy book, and propped it open against the juice jug.
"I think Divination seems very woolly," she said, searching
for her page. "A lot of guesswork, if you ask me."
"There was nothing woolly about the Grim in that cup!" said
Ron hotly.
"You didn't seem quite so confident when you were telling Harry
it was a sheep," said Hermione coolly.
"Professor Trelawney said you didn't have the right aura! You
just don't like being bad at something for a change!"
He had touched a nerve. Hermione slammed her Arithmancy book down
on the table so hard that bits of meat and carrot flew everywhere.
"If being good at Divination means I have to pretend to see
death omens in a lump of tea leaves, I'm not sure I'll be studying
it much longer! That lesson was absolute rubbish compared with my
Arithmancy class!"
She snatched up her bag and stalked away.
Ron frowned after her.
"What's she talking about?" he said to Harry. "She hasn't been
to an Arithmancy class yet."
Harry was pleased to get out of the castle after
lunch. Yesterday's rain had cleared; the sky was a clear, pale gray,
and the grass was springy and damp underfoot as they set off for
their first ever Care of Magical Creatures class.
Ron and Hermione weren't speaking to each other. Harry walked
beside them in silence as they went down the sloping lawns to
Hagrid's hut on the edge of the Forbidden Forest. It was only when he
spotted three only-too- familiar backs ahead of them that he realized
they must be having these lessons with the Slytherins. Malfoy was
talking animatedly to Crabbe and Goyle, who were chortling. Harry
was quite sure he knew what they were talking about.
Hagrid was waiting for his class at the door of his hut. He
stood in his moleskin overcoat, with Fang the boarhound at his heels,
looking impatient to start.
"C'mon, now, get a move on!" he called as the class
approached. "Got a real treat for yeh today! Great lesson comin'
up! Everyone here? Right, follow me!"
For one nasty moment, Harry thought that Hagrid was going to lead
them into the forest; Harry had had enough unpleasant experiences
in there to last him a lifetime. However, Hagrid strolled off around
the edge of the trees, and five minutes later, they found themselves
outside a kind of paddock. There was nothing in there.
"Everyone gather 'round the fence here!" he called. "That's it
-- make sure yeh can see -- now, firs' thing yeh'll want ter do is
open yer books --"
"How?" said the cold, drawling voice of Draco Malfoy.
"Eh?" said Hagrid.
"How do we open our books?" Malfoy repeated. He took out his
copy of The Monster Book of Monsters, which he had bound shut with a
length of rope. Other people took theirs out too; some, like Harry,
had belted their book shut; others had crammed them inside tight
bags or clamped them together with binder clips.
"Hasn' -- hasn' anyone bin able ter open their books?" said
Hagrid, looking crestfallen.
The class all shook their heads.
"Yeh've got ter stroke 'em," said Hagrid, as though this was
the most obvious thing in the world. "Look --"
He took Hermione's copy and ripped off the Spellotape that bound
it. The book tried to bite, but Hagrid ran a giant forefinger down
its spine, and the book shivered, and then fell open and lay quiet
in his hand.
"Oh, how silly we've all been!" Malfoy sneered. "We should have
stroked them! why didn't we guess!"
"I -- I thought they were funny," Hagrid said uncertainly
to Hermione.
"Oh, tremendously funny!" said Malfoy. "Really witty, giving
us books that try and rip our hands off!"
"Shut up, Malfoy," said Harry quietly. Hagrid was looking
downcast and Harry wanted Hagrid's first lesson to be a success.
"Righ' then," said Hagrid, who seemed to have lost his thread,
"so -- so yeh've got yer books an' -- an' - - now yeh need the
Magical Creatures. Yeah. So I'll go an' get 'em. Hang on... "
He strode away from them into the forest and out of sight.
"God, this place is going to the dogs," said Malfoy loudly. "That
oaf teaching classes, my father'll have a fit when I tell him
"Shut up, Malfoy," Harry repeated.
"Careful, Potter, there's a dementor behind you
"Oooooooh!" squealed Lavender Brown, pointing toward the opposite
side of the paddock.
Trotting toward them were a dozen of the most bizarre creatures
Harry had ever seen. They had the bodies, hind legs, and tails of
horses, but the front legs, wings, and heads of what seemed to be
giant eagles, with cruel, steel-colored beaks and large, brilliantly,
orange eyes. The talons on their front legs were half a foot long
and deadly looking. Each of the beasts had a thick leather collar
around its neck, which was attached to a long chain, and the ends
of all of these were held in the vast hands of Hagrid, who came
jogging into the paddock behind the creatures.
"Gee up, there!" he roared, shaking the chains and urging the
creatures toward the fence where the class stood. Everyone drew
back slightly as Hagrid reached them and tethered the creatures to
the fence.
"Hippogriffs!" Hagrid roared happily, waving a hand at
them. "Beau'iful, aren' they?"
Harry could sort of see what Hagrid meant. Once you got over
the first shock of seeing something that was, half horse, half bird,
you started to appreciate the hippogriffs' gleaming coats, changing
smoothly from feather to hair, each of them a different color:
stormy gray, bronze, pinkish roan, gleaming chestnut, and inky black.
"So," said Hagrid, rubbing his hands together and beaming around,
"if yeh wan' ter come a bit nearer --"
No one seemed to want to. Harry, Ron, and Hermione, however,
approached the fence cautiously.
"Now, firs' thing yeh gotta know abou' hippogriffs is, they're
proud," said Hagrid. "Easily offended, hippogriffs are. Don't never
insult one, 'cause it might be the last thing yeh do."
Malfoy, Crabbe, and Goyle weren't listening; they were talking
in an undertone and Harry had a nasty feeling they were plotting
how best to disrupt the lesson.
"Yeh always wait fer the hippogriff ter make the firs' move,"
Hagrid continued. "It's polite, see? Yeh walk toward him, and
yeh bow, an' yeh wait. If he bows back, yeh're allowed ter touch
him. If he doesn' bow, then get away from him sharpish, 'cause
those talons hurt.
"Right -- who wants ter go first?"
Most of the class backed farther away in answer. Even Harry,
Ron, and Hermione had misgivings. The hippogriffs were tossing
their fierce heads and flexing their powerful wings; they didn't
seem to like being tethered like this.
"No one?" said Hagrid, with a pleading look.
"I'll do it," said Harry.
There was an intake of breath from behind him, and both Lavender
and Parvati whispered, "Oooh, no, Harry, remember your tea leaves!"
Harry ignored them. He climbed over the paddock fence.
"Good man, Harry!" roared Hagrid. "Right then -- let's see how
yeh get on with Buckbeak."
He untied one of the chains, pulled the gray hippogriff away from
its fellows, and slipped off its leather collar. The class on the
other side of the paddock seemed to be holding its breath. Malfoy's
eyes were narrowed maliciously.
"Easy) now, Harry," said Hagrid quietly. "Yeh've got eye contact,
now try not ter blink.... Hippogriffs don' trust yeh if yeh blink
too much...."
Harry's eyes immediately began to water, but he didn't shut
thern. Buckbeak had turned his great, sharp head and was staring at
Harry with one fierce orange eye. "Tha's it," said Hagrid. "Tha's
it, Harry... now, bow."
Harry didn't feel much like exposing the back of his neck to
Buckbeak, but he did as he was told. He gave a short bow and then
looked up.
The hippogriff was still staring haughtily at him. It didn't
move.
"Ah," said Hagrid, sounding worried. "Right -- back away, now,
Harry, easy does it
But then, to Harry's enormous surprise, the hippogriff suddenly
bent its scaly front knees and sank into what was an unmistakable
bow.
"Well done, Harry!" said Hagrid, ecstatic. "Right -- yeh can
touch him! Pat his beak, go on!"
Feeling that a better reward would have been to back away,
Harry moved slowly toward the hippogriff and reached out toward
it. He patted the beak several times and the hippogriff closed its
eyes lazily, as though enjoying it.
The class broke into applause, all except for Malfoy, Crabbe,
and Goyle, who were looking deeply disappointed.
"Righ' then, Harry," said Hagrid. "I reckon he might' let yeh
ride him!"
This was more than Harry had bargained for. He was used to a
broomstick; but he wasn't sure a hippogriff would be quite the same.
"Yeh climb up there, jus' behind the wing joint," said Hagrid,
"an' mind yeh don' pull any of his feathers out, he won' like
that...."
Harry put his foot on the top of Buckbeaks wing and hoisted
himself onto its back. Buckbeak stood up. Harry wasn't sure where
to hold on; everything in front of him was covered with feathers.
"Go on, then'" roared Hagrid, slapping the hippogriffs
hindquarters.
Without warning, twelve-foot wings flapped open on either side
of Harry, he just had time to seize the hippogriff around the neck
before he was soaring upward. It was nothing like a broomstick,
and Harry knew which one he preferred; the hippogriff's wings beat
uncomfortably on either side of him, catching him under his legs and
making him feel he was about to be thrown off; the glossy feathers
slipped under his fingers and he didn't dare get a stronger grip;
instead of the smooth action of his Nimbus Two Thousand, he now
felt himself rocking backward and forward as the hindquarters of
the hippogriff rose and fell with its wings.
Buckbeak flew him once around the paddock and then headed back to
the ground; this was the bit Harry had been dreading; he leaned back
as the smooth neck lowered, feeling he was going to slip off over the
beak, then felt a heavy thud as the four ill-assorted feet hit the
ground. He just managed to hold on and push himself straight again.
"Good work, Harry!" roared Hagrid as everyone except Malfoy,
Crabbe, and Goyle cheered. "Okay, who else wants a go?"
Emboldened by Harry's success, the rest of the class climbed
cautiously into the paddock. Hagrid untied the hippogriffs one
by one, and soon people were bowing nervously, all over the
paddock. Neville ran repeatedly backward from his, which didn't
seem to want to bend its knees. Ron and Hermione practiced on the
chestnut, while Harry watched.
Malfoy, Crabbe, and Goyle had taken over Buckbeak. He had bowed
to Malfoy, who was now patting his beak, looking disdainful.
"This is very easy," Malfoy drawled, loud enough for Harry
to, hear him. "I knew it must have been, if Potter could do
it.... I bet you're not dangerous at all, are you?" he said to the
hippogriff. "Are you, you great ugly brute?"
It happened in a flash of steely talons; Malfoy let out a
highpitched scream and next moment, Hagrid was wrestling Buckbeak
back into his collar as he strained to get at Malfoy, who lay curled
in the grass, blood blossoming over his robes.
"I'm dying!" Malfoy yelled as the class panicked. "I'm dying,
look at me! It's killed me!"
"Yer not dyin'!" said Hagrid, who had gone very white. "Someone
help me -- gotta get him outta here --"
Hermione ran to hold open the gate as Hagrid lifted Malfoy
easily. As they passed, Harry saw that there was a long, deep gash
on Malfoy's arm; blood splattered the grass and Hagrid ran with him,
up the slope toward the castle.
Very shaken, the Care of Magical Creatures class followed at
a walk. The Slytherins were all shouting about Hagrid.
"They should fire him straight away!" said Pansy Parkinson,
who was in tears.
"It was Malfoy's fault!" snapped Dean Thomas. Crabbe and Goyle
flexed their muscles threateningly.
They all climbed the stone steps into the deserted entrance hall.
"I'm going to see if he's okay!" said Pansy, and they all
watched her run up the marble staircase. The Slytherins, still
muttering about Hagrid, headed away in the direction of their
dungeon common room; Harry, Ron, and Hermione proceeded upstairs
to Gryffindor Tower.
"You think he'll be all right?" said Hermione nervously.
"Course he will. Madam Pomfrey can mend cuts in about a second,"
said Harry, who had had far worse injuries mended magically by
the nurse.
"That was a really bad thing to happen in Hagrid's first class,
though, wasn't it?" said Ron, looking worried. "Trust Malfoy to
mess things up for him...."
They were among the first to reach the Great Hall at dinnertime,
hoping to see Hagrid, but he wasn't there.
"They wouldn't fire him, would they?" said Hermione anxiously,
not touching her steak-and- kidney pudding.
"They'd better not," said Ron, who wasn't eating either.
Harry was watching the Slytherin table. A large group including
Crabbe and Goyle was huddled together, deep in conversation. Harry
was sure they were cooking up their own version of how Malfoy had
been injured.
"Well, you can't say it wasn't an interesting first day back,"
said Ron gloomily.
They went up to the crowded Gryffindor common room after dinner
and tried to do the homework Professor McGonagall had given them,
but all three of them kept breaking off and glancing Out of the
tower window.
"There's a light on in Hagrid's window," Harry said suddenly.
Ron looked at his watch.
"If we hurried, we could go down and see him. It's still quite
early..."
I don't know," Hermione said slowly, and Harry saw her glance
at him.
"I'm allowed to walk across the grounds, " he said
Pointedly. "Sirius Black hasn't got past the dementors yet, has he?"
So they put their things away and headed out of the portrait
hole, glad to meet nobody on their way to the front doors, as they
weren't entirely sure they were supposed to be out.
The grass was still wet and looked almost black in the
twilight. When they reached Hagrid's hut, they knocked, and a voice
growled, "C'min."
Hagrid was sitting in his shirtsleeves at his scrubbed wooden
table; his boarhound, Fang, had his head in Hagrid's lap. One look
told them that Hagrid had been drinking a lot; there was a pewter
tankard almost as big as a bucket in front of him, and he seemed
to be having difficulty getting them into focus.
"'Spect it's a record," he said thickly, when he recognized
them. "Don' reckon they've ever had a teacher who lasted on'y a
day before."
"You haven't been fired, Hagrid!" gasped Hermione.
"Not yet," said Hagrid miserably, taking a huge gulp of
whatever was in the tankard. "But's only a matter o' time, i'
n't it, after Malfoy..."
"How is he?" said Ron as they all sat down. "It wasn't serious,
was it?"
"Madam Pomfrey fixed him best she could," said Hagrid dully,
"but he's sayin' it's still agony... covered in bandages... moanin'..
"He's faking it, " said Harry at once. "Madam Pomfrey can mend
anything. She regrew half my bones last year. Trust Malfoy to milk
it for all it's worth."
"School gov'nors have bin told, o' course," said Hagrid
miseribly. "They reckon I started too big. Shoulda left hippogriffs
fer later... done flobberworms or summat.... Jus' thought itdmake
a good firs' lessons all my fault...."
"It's all Malfoy's fault, Hagrid!" said Hermione earnestly.
"We're witnesses," said Harry. "You said hippogriffs
attack if you insult them. It's Malfoy's problem that he wasn't
listening. We'll tell Dumbledore what really happened."
"Yeah, don't worry, Hagrid, we'll back you up," said Ron.
Tears leaked out of the crinkled corners of Hagrid's
beetle-black eyes. He grabbed both Harry and Ron and pulled them
into a bone-breaking hug.
"I think you've had enough to drink, Hagrid," said Hermione
firmly. She took the tankard from the table and went outside to
empty it.
"At, maybe she's right," said Hagrid, letting go of Harry
and Ron, who both staggered away, rubbing their ribs. Hagrid
heaved himself out of his chair and followed Hermione unsteadily
outside. They heard a loud splash.
"What's he done?" said Harry nervously as Hermione came back
in with the empty tankard.
"Stuck his head in the water barrel," said Hermione, putting
the tankard away.
Hagrid came back, his long hair and beard sopping wet, wiping
the water out of his eyes.
"That's better," he said, shaking his head like a dog and
drenching them all. "Listen, it was good of yeh ter come an' see me,
I really --
Hagrid stopped dead, staring at Harry as though he'd only just
realized he was there.
"WHAT D'YEH THINK YOU'RE DOIN', EH?" he roared, so suddenly
that they jumped a foot in the air. "YEH'RE NOT TO GO WANDERIN'
AROUND AFTER DARK, HARRY! AN, YOU TWO! LETTIN' HIM!"
Hagrid strode over to Harry, grabbed his arm, and pulled him
to the door.
"C'mon!" Hagrid said angrily. "I'm takin' yer all back up ter
school, an' don' let me catch yeh walkin' down ter see me after
dark again. I'm not worth that!"
--
仙灵岛上别洞天,池中孤莲伴月眠
一朝风雨落水面,愿君拾得惜相怜
※ 来源:·哈工大紫丁香 bbs.hit.edu.cn·[FROM: 202.118.170.247]
※ 修改:·yiren 於 08月19日09:18:02 修改本文·[FROM: 202.118.170.69]
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