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Chapter 12 - Liberation

Dumbledore had been all but useless when Cassiopeia had

discussed her wayward great-nephew with the man. He had no idea

where Sirius may be hiding, or even how he may have escaped the

confines of Azkaban.

It was disconcerting to say the least, but Cassiopeia was not one to

give up so easily.

Her former Transfiguration professor may be willing to leave Sirius at

large. Cassiopeia, however, was not.

If he had indeed given up the Potters to the Dark Lord, he was a

threat to Harry, and so long as such a thing existed, Cassiopeia

would not rest until it was mitigated.

That was why she had come to the house she had grown up with, a

place she had no desire to ever see again.

Too many memories dwelled here, both good and bad, but none that

would bring her any amount of joy.

Her childhood with Arcturus and Dorea had been spotty at best, and

she had left Grimmauld Place shortly before the former had begun

his education at Hogwarts.

Cassiopeia had been an idealist back then; had found a cause and

leader she had believed in so wholeheartedly that she had

abandoned her already fracturing family in favour of greener

pastures.

Not that her pursuit on the continent had led to anything more than

further heartache and several subsequent decades living in isolation,

until Harry came along.

The thought of the boy filled her with worry.

Since he had learned of Sirius's bid for freedom only a few days

prior, he had been silent. The rage he felt towards the man

threatening to boil over.

Cassie didn't know what more she could do than what she was now,

and though she wished to be anywhere but here, for Harry, she

would face her demons.

"What a mess," she muttered, wrinkling her nose as she entered the

main hallway of the home.

It had been left to decay, and the smell of rotting wood and dust filled

the air.

Despite her feelings on her childhood home, it saddened her to see it

in such a state.

"Who's there?" an unwelcoming voice croaked from the darkness.

Cassiopeia lit the tip of her wand and turned towards it, scowling as

she found herself looking upon the most unpleasant elf she had ever

seen.

"Who are you?" she asked.

"Kreacher be the Black family elf," the elf replied, shielding its eyes

from the light of her wand. "Kreacher served Mistress Black and

Master Regulus proudly."

"Walburga?"

The elf nodded; its eyes full of reverence.

"Mistress was good to Kreacher."

Cassiopeia grimaced.

She had met Walburga on a few occasions and found the woman

lacking in every conceivable way with regards to the name she

carried.

A Black she was not.

She was brash and lacked any subtlety or political acumen.

"What about Sirius?" Cassiopeia pressed.

"Master Sirius was a blood-traitor," Kreacher spat. "He broke

Mistress's heart."

That wouldn't have taken much.

Walburga often complained about how disappointed she was in her

eldest son, not that she would be now, of course.

If the woman knew what Sirius had done, she would be most proud.

"What happened to Walburga?"

"Mistress died of the shame," Kreacher despaired. "Master Regulus

died, and there was none left to serve."

Cassiopeia could only shake her head.

Only Walburga would actually have died of the shame she had felt.

"What about Sirius?"

Kreacher's expression darkened once more at the mention of the

man.

"He is a filthy blood-traitor!" the elf spat, reiterating his earlier

thoughts.

"Have you seen him?"

Kreacher frowned at the question.

"Kreacher has not."

Cassiopeia believed him, but that didn't mean Sirius would not come

here to hide from the aurors.

Grimmauld Place was unplottable, after all, and he would never be

found so long as he remained within these walls, as derelict as they

were.

"Why have you allowed the house to fall in such a state?"

Cassiopeia demanded to know.

"Mistress told Kreacher to leave it."

"Walburga is dead," Cassiopeia pointed out. "You serve the house of

Black, and you have neglected your duties."

"Kreacher serves Mistress still," the elf replied defiantly.

Cassiopeia raised an eyebrow at him.

"You cannot serve someone who is dead."

Kreacher grinned as he beckoned Cassiopeia to follow him down the

length of the hall and paused as he reached a set of what had once

been rather luxurious curtains.

As the elf pulled them open, Cassiopeia felt a sense of uneasy wash

over at the sight of Walburga Black.

Kreacher had been serving a portrait and judging by the rather

unhinged look the woman sported, one that had taken leave of her

senses.

Walburga had always been erratic at best, had an overinflated sense

of self-import that often landed her in trouble when she spoke out of

turn, but the woman Cassiopeia found herself gazing at was

maniacal, a wild, feral expression that spoke of the madness that

plagued her.

"You are following the orders of a portrait?" she asked the elf, who

nodded proudly.

"Mistress has never left Kreacher."

Cassiopeia turned her attention towards the painting once more, the

grin that Walburga sent her way being rather disconcerting.

"Why does it not surprise me that you found a way to cling on to an

existence of sorts," Cassiopeia snorted. "Portraits are reserved for

heads of the of the family."

"I was the last of us!" Walburga spat.

Cassiopeia shook her head.

"I yet live," she pointed out. "As does Bella, Andromeda, and

Narcissa. Even Sirius."

"Do not mention that boys' name in my house!" Walburga hissed.

An amused grin tugged at Cassiopeia's lips.

She never could resist getting a rise out of Walburga.

"Well, it seems as though you got your wish in the end," she sighed.

"Sirius will never be the head of the family."

Walburga positively beamed at the revelation.

"So, it will fall to one of the other's children."

Cassiopeia shook her head.

"Bella is in Azkaban, childless, and will never see the light of day,"

she explained, much to the chagrin of Walburga. "Andromeda…"

"Is a filthy whore who married a mudblood!"

Cassiopeia nodded.

"Narcissa has a son with Lucius Malfoy."

"He comes from fine stock," Walburga mused aloud. "He will make

for an excellent lord."

Once more, Cassiopeia shook her head.

"He is not the heir of the family," she said with no small amount of

glee. "It seems that Sirius did something right."

"What did the boy do?" Walburga growled.

"He chose a suitable heir," Cassiopeia replied with shrug. "Before he

chose to do what he did, he left everything to his godson, including

the title he should have inherited."

"He can't have done," Walburga denied. "You cannot leave the Black

lordship to any who does not satisfy the needs of the position."

"My Harry does," Cassiopeia returned proudly.

"Your Harry?"

"Well, Dorea's Harry," Cassie corrected. "He is her grandson."

Walburga frowned thoughtfully for a moment whilst she attempted to

piece the puzzle together, a frown that morphed into a scowl.

"He is a Potter!"

"And a Black," Cassiopeia pointed out. "He is a fine boy that I have

raised, and one that will see the family right, though I do not believe

he will be pleased by the state of his ancestral home. Kreacher, you

will fix it on behalf of the Lord Black, or I will have you replaced with

an elf that will. Do you understand?"

"Kreacher, you will do nothing!" Walburga commanded. "There will

be no filthy mudblood lord of our family."

Cassiopeia chuckled to herself.

"What do you intend on doing about it, Walburga?" she questioned.

"You are nothing but an essence of what you once were, and even if

you were alive, there would be nothing you could do to prevent it.

Now, if you wish to remain intact, I suggest you shut up or I will

reduce you to nothing but a pile of ashes to be blown away in the

wind."

Walburga glared balefully at Cassiopeia, but the woman no longer

had any power or influence here.

She could rant and rave all she wished, but it would change nothing.

"Well, what are you waiting for, Kreacher?" Cassie snapped.

The elf looked towards the portrait of the woman he revered so much

before disappearing with a pop.

"As for you," Cassie continued, addressing the portrait, "I think it is

best that you remain silent for the time being. I will not have you

interfering with the elf's work."

With a wave of her wand, and before Walburga could protest, Cassie

cast a series of charms over the portrait to ensure the woman could

no longer speak or interact with anyone that may enter the house in

her absence.

It would not do for Sirius to be made aware of her visit.

When she had replaced the curtains, Cassie shook her head in

frustration.

She had been convinced that Sirius would be here, and not knowing

the man intimately in any way, she was at a loss as to where he

could be.

Still, she would not give up her search.

He would surface eventually, and when he did, she would be ready

to ensure that he posed no threat to Harry. Though having spent

more than a decade in Azkaban, she doubted he was much of a

threat to anyone.

If anything, she was more concerned that Harry would take it upon

himself to look for Sirius, and though the man would deserve

everything he had coming to him, Harry was only thirteen years old.

The burden to find Sirius should not be on him, not when he had

Cassiopeia to carry out whatever fate he wished for his godfather.

Harry watched interestedly as the small bolts of lightning danced

across the tips of his fingers. Whilst he had been trying to come to

terms with the latest of his inner turmoil, he had discovered that his

affinity for the element responded more readily to him during periods

of heightened emotion.

It was quite the breakthrough for the boy, but he could only compare

it to his studies in the Dark Arts, though he was pleased to learn that

the lightning did not leave him experiencing any ill-effects.

The Dark Arts, as incredibly complicated as they were proving to be,

thrived on the emotion of the caster, and would allow themselves to

be wielded so seemingly freely, but using them was far from being

so.

Acting emotionally denoted a weakness that the magics would

eventually exploit, addling the mind and even leaving their marks on

the body.

Mastering them without experiencing such unwanted repercussions

was no minor feat.

To do so, the practitioner must first master their emotions and act

without their influence.

Wielding them whilst being fuelled by anger, hate, even the notion of

greed, and almost all things that elicited a sense of euphoria would

only end in disaster.

The magic feasted on these things, used them as a focal point to

embed itself within the caster, and would fester, and continue to feed

the more it was called upon in such a way.

Harry had learned that the Dark Arts truly were intoxicating, a power

that should never be abused, nor allowed to corrupt.

He was still learning how to prevent that, something he would

continue to do when he returned to Durmstrang in only a couple

weeks.

He dragged his eyes away from the pulses of energy he was

creating and focused them on the unopened envelope that had

arrived an hour or so prior.

The missive inside would determine his future at Durmstrang, what

he would and wouldn't be able to continue to study, and though

Harry wasn't truly nervous, he had found a moment of bliss in being

ignorant.

Shaking his head and releasing a deep breath, he picked it up and

broke the Durmstrang seal on the back before removing the thick

wad of parchment from inside.

Dear Mr Potter,

Please find enclosed your academic report from the school year

1992-1993.

We look forward to welcoming you back to Durmstrang shortly.

Professor Igor Karkaroff

Headmaster

Professor Misha Sidorova

Head of Second Year

Grades

Your grades are awarded based on the system outlined below. If you

wish to discuss them in further detail, please arrange an appointment

with Professor Sidorova who will be happy to do so.

Grading System

Grades are given based on expected levels achieved for the

academic year you have completed.

Each year, the grading boundaries and expectations change as you

progress through a subject.

Grading Classes

First Class* - The highest attainable grade at Durmstrang. You are

working considerably beyond what is expected at the level of study.

First Class – You have accomplished beyond what is expected at

your level of study.

Second Class – You have achieved all that is expected of you at

your level of study.

Third Class – You have not achieved all that is expected of you at

your level of study. Your performance will be closely monitored

throughout the next year.

Unattained – You have not reached an acceptable level of

progress/completion of the subject matter. You are no longer eligible

to continue studying the subject.

Results for Harry James Potter

Academic Year: 1991 – 1992

Arcane and Esoteric Magicks – 1st Class*

Blood Magic – 1st Class*

Charms – 1st Class*

Dark Arts – 1st Class*

Defensive Studies – 1st Class*

Elemental Magic – 1st Class*

Enchanting – 1st Class

Herbology – 1st Class

History of Magic – 2nd Class

Magical Languages – 1st Class

Magical Mathematics – 1st Class

Potions – 2nd Class

Runic Studies – 1st Class*

Study of Magical Creatures – 1st Class

Study of Wandlore – 2nd Class

Transfiguration – 1st Class*

You continue to impress me deeply, Harry. You should be very proud

of what you have achieved thus far at Durmstrang.

Although you have more than met the criteria to continue with all of

your subjects, we recommend that you select between 8-12 to

pursue for the rest of your time at Durmstrang.

Please select these by return post at your earliest convenience.

Congratulations, Harry, and I look forward to continuing to watch you

progress.

Professor Sidorova

Harry already knew what subjects he would selecting and put a tick

next to 12/17 he was eligible for, the ones that would be most useful

for him, and the ones he enjoyed most.

He would be dropping History, Wandlore, and Magical Mathematics

to begin with.

The former of the three provided him with nothing of note other than

knowledge of the recent war on the continent and the Goblin

rebellions of old.

Wandlore seemed to be a subject that someone who wished to

pursue it needed to have an affinity for the art, and although Harry

had come to appreciate the complexity of the art, he would never be

a wandmaker.

Magical Mathematics was interesting, but mostly useless unless

someone wished to either create spells or analyse established

magics, something that Harry doubted he would ever delve into.

If he did develop an interest for it later in life, he could look into it

further at his leisure rather than spending three hours a week

studying it in a classroom.

Herbology was the next topic he had chosen not to continue with.

As useful as it could be, there was little he couldn't learn from

referring to a text as he had no ambition to grow his own crop of

magical plants.

It was simply something that offered him no stimulus.

Much to his own surprise, the final topic he would be forfeiting was

his studies in Elemental Magic.

Having identified what he had an affinity for early on, he needed only

to continue practicing with summoning and controlling it.

There was little more that Larsen could do for him as he had to figure

the rest out for himself.

He had already discussed it with the professor before he had left for

the summer, and she agreed that his time would be better spent

studying something else but had also assured him that she would be

available if he required further assistance.

It was somewhat reluctantly that he had made the decision, but the

only other subject he had been able to consider leaving behind was

Enchanting, and it was far too intricate to abandon when it could

prove to most useful to him in the future.

Harry knew that Voldemort was an expert in the art, and though he

may not need to enchant anything, he may need to know how to

break such creations.

As such, his final decision had been made, and he would be

pursuing the 12 he had eventually decided upon.

Releasing a deep sigh, he placed the piece of parchment into the

provided envelope and made his way to where Callidora would be

resting.

With it being milder weather, the journey to Durmstrang would not be

detrimental to the owl who would enjoy the long flight at this time of

year.

"I have something for you, girl," he murmured before fixing the

missive to her leg.

With a loud bark, Callidora took flight and Harry watched her from

the window of Cassie's office, his mind inevitably drifting back to his

escaped godfather.

Every part of Harry wanted the man to suffer for what he had done,

for Sirius to live every last second of what remained of his life in

abject misery, and Harry wanted to be the one to ensure that

happened.

He had never felt such anger towards someone until he had read the

article announcing Sirius's escape from Azkaban.

Harry clenched his fist at the audacity of the man that had betrayed

his parents.

Given the chance, he wouldn't even need a wand.

He would throttle his godfather, squeeze the life from him and watch

with no small amount of glee as the light left his eyes.

Harry took a calming breath.

As much as he desired it, he knew that the chance was unlikely to

come.

Cassie would see to that, and Harry trusted that she would punish

Sirius suitably before either ending him or handing him back to the

Dementors.

Although Harry despised the very thought of the creatures, no fate

was too unkind for Sirius Black.

With a shake of his head, Harry left the study and headed outside.

He had heard the saying that the devil made work for idle hands, and

were his to remain so for any longer, he would be unable to ignore

the impulse to conduct his own search for his godfather.

No, he was much better continuing with his efforts for the wars

ahead, but if he did ever happen across Sirius on his travels, he

knew that what little restraint he was exercising would no longer be

enough to hold him back.

Sirius Black had better be hoping and praying that such a meeting

between them was never to occur.

It would end badly for the man. Of that, Harry had no doubt.

Severus watched as Lupin entered the office, his lips curling into a

sneer at the sight of the man who looked completely out of place

here. The werewolf's robes were shabby, his hair liberally marred

with strands of grey, and his skin was heavily scarred from years of

torturous transformations.

It was not the potions master's prerogative to have one of his former

childhood nemesis's here, but Dumbledore's, who was looking to

employ the man due to recent events.

"Thank you for coming, Remus," the headmaster greeted the man.

"Do take a seat."

Lupin did so, his eyes darting around the room in discomfort.

"I expect that you have heard of Sirius's escape?" Dumbledore

pressed.

Lupin nodded, his jaw tightening at the mention of his former friend.

"I have."

Albus released a deep sigh as he leaned back in his chair.

"I would like for you to take on the Defence Against the Dark Arts

post," he said without further preamble.

Lupin shook his head.

"You know I cannot do that. My condition…"

"Can and will be catered for," Albus cut in. "Severus will prepare the

Wolfsbane potion for you and will cover any lessons you require. The

Shrieking Shack will also be available for you to use."

Lupin's gaze drifted towards Severus who merely offered him a

single stiff nod in confirmation.

"Is this about Sirius?"

"Yes, and no," Albus answered. "I will admit that his escape is

unsettling, but it is no secret that you are a most competent

practitioner of Defence, something that is sorely needed after our

previous instructor."

Once more, Severus's lip curled in distaste.

Lockhart had indeed been a buffoon, but evidently not as foolish as

he believed him to be.

At the news that Black had escaped Azkaban and Albus's revelation

that he may find himself here, Lockhart had terminated his

employment under the guise of being needed urgently in South

America.

He had given no further details but had left the castle within the hour.

"You think that he will come here," Lupin mused aloud.

Albus nodded sombrely.

"According to the Azkaban guards, he had been muttering in his

sleep the days leading to his escape. He repeatedly referred to

someone being at Hogwarts."

An expression of guilt formed on the werewolf as he looked towards

Albus tiredly.

"Harry?"

"I believe so."

Lupin deflated.

"How is he doing?"

Severus's jaw tightened, and he had to bite his tongue lest he lost

his temper with the man.

It had been almost twelve years that Lily was murdered, twelve years

since her son had been made an orphan, and no one had seen hide

nor hair of the werewolf.

"Quite well from what I hear," Albus answered.

"From what you hear?" Lupin questioned confusedly.

Albus could only nod.

"Sirius is evidently under the impression that Harry attends

Hogwarts."

"He doesn't?"

"He does not," Albus sighed. "He chose to go to Durmstrang

instead."

"Durmstrang!" Lupin gasped as he stood. "Was that your idea?"

Albus shook his head as he held up a placating hand.

"Indeed not," he assured the man. "Harry made the choice himself."

The answer only served to confuse the werewolf more.

"I don't understand," he murmured. "How did this happen?"

"I suspect that his guardian was very reluctant to allow him to attend

Hogwarts," Albus mused aloud, "likely to spare him from his fame,

and from my influence. She is not very fond of me."

"She?" Lupin pressed. "Who has been looking after him?"

Severus felt no small amount of amusement at seeing Albus

experiencing the slight discomfort the question gave him.

"Potter has been raised by none other than Cassiopeia Black,"

Severus answered.

Lupin scoffed in disbelief, but when he realised there was no jest

from either Severus or Albus, his confusion was replaced with a look

of horror.

"The Cassiopeia Black?" he choked.

Albus nodded.

"She claimed him as her ward," he explained. "There was nothing

that could be done to prevent it. She used the marriage contract

signed between Charlus Potter and Arcturus Black, and Sirius's

status as Harry's godfather. As Sirius's heir, Harry will be the next

Lord Black."

Lupin seemed to be experiencing a bout of information overload and

simply collapsed in his chair at the revelation.

"Is he okay?"

"According to what I have been told, and on good authority, Harry is

doing remarkably well."

Lupin shook his head.

"James and Lily would never have wanted him to go there."

"No," Albus agreed, "but it was Harry that made the choice, and

despite my misgivings and concerns of him being raised by such a

woman, she seems to be doing an admirable job."

"Bloody hell," Lupin muttered. "So, Sirius is going to come here,

attempt to break into the castle and murder Harry who will not be

here?"

"I believe that to be his intention."

Lupin released a laboured breath.

"He will not struggle to find his way in," he sighed. "There are many

hidden passages in and out of the school he could use."

"That is part of the reason I wish for you to come on board," Albus

replied. "I would like the entrances watched closely. I have little faith

that the Dementors will either be successful in capturing him or

deterring him from whatever plan he has made."

"Dementors?"

"By order of Cornelius, they will be stationed here until Sirius is

captured."

"What a stupid idea!" Lupin snorted humourlessly. "It is far too

dangerous to allow them free roam of the school."

For once, Severus found himself in agreement with the man.

"They will not be allowed onto the grounds," Albus said firmly, "but

they will be in Hogsmeade. Cornelius was very adamant about it."

The two men fell silent for several moments before Lupin spoke once

more.

"I'll do it," he agreed reluctantly. "To make sure no one is harmed by

him, I will take the job."

"Excellent!" Albus declared happily, shaking Lupin by the hand.

Severus offered no such congratulations, but instead took his leave

of the office.

The school year would be interesting to say the least with a werewolf

and Dementors around the place.

What could go possibly wrong?

There were too many things to choose only one, but the potions

master had little doubt that something would go amiss in the coming

months.

Still, he truly hoped it was him that found Black.

Severus carried his guilt, had inadvertently betrayed Lily to the Dark

Lord, but Black had done so willingly, had sold out a woman who

was supposed to be his friend, and for what?

It was a question that had plagued Severus for many years now, but

until he found Black, he would not get an answer, and when he did,

the man would die by his hand.

He sniffed at the scraps he had been able to gather from the bins in

the village; a veritable feast for a starving man that had barely seen

a meal in over a decade.

Sirius had managed to begin playing the part of a loveable stray, but

even with the lady who ran the pub and the jolly owner of

Honeydukes handing him morsels, it wasn't enough to build the

strength he would need for the task ahead.

Wormtail.

Just thinking of the name made his blood boil in his veins and a low

growl passed his canine lips.

It wasn't that the rat had managed to trick him resulting in Sirius

spending the past years in Azkaban that bothered the escaped

prisoner.

No, it was what he had done to Lily and James that angered Sirius.

He had been their friend, one of the four Marauders that had plagued

Hogwarts with their pranks for seven years, and the snivelling

coward had thrown it all away for Voldemort.

Sirius shook his head as he turned away from the food he had

scavenged, his hunger having left him.

He too had been foolish, and were James and Lily alive now, they

would both be unspeakably furious with him.

In his rage, he'd abandoned the one thing they would insist he

focused on instead of the vengeance he so desired.

Harry.

If the thought of Peter angered him, the thought of his godson left the

man feeling distraught.

He had promised them that he would care for Harry if the worst was

to happen, that he would protect the boy with his own life, a promise

he still wished to uphold.

He's at Hogwarts.

However, Wormtail was there too which meant that Harry was in

danger.

Learning of this had given Sirius the strength to slip past the

Dementors in his Animagus form and swim from the island prison to

the mainland.

He needed to save Harry.

His thoughts shifted to his godson, and Sirius wondered what Harry

was like.

Was he quiet and reserved like his mother, but passionate and

brilliant? Was he gifted in Transfiguration just like James, a brash

and mischievous boy?

Sirius remembered the babe he had held the very night Harry had

been born, the same moment that James and Lily had asked him to

be the boys' godfather.

He remembered crying from joy, vowing to be the best godfather

Harry could ever want.

Sirius had failed on that front.

Harry had grown up without his parents, and without the man that

should have been there for him when James and Lily couldn't.

It begged the question of who had raised him?

Sirius didn't know, but he hoped that it had been Moony in his

absence.

The werewolf would have made a fantastic guardian, despite his

furry little problem.

No one else came to mind as a potential parental figure for his

godson, but if not Remus, then who?

Sirius could only speculate, each person who came to mind as

unlikely as the last.

Whomever it was, he hoped they had told Harry all about his

parents, how amazing they were and how much they had loved him.

Although his appetite was all but absent, he forced himself to

consume the food he had gathered.

For Harry.

He hoped the boy would understand why he had done what he had,

and that he didn't truly believe that Sirius was the one to betray

James and Lily.

Sirius would have died before doing so, and still would for their son.

If only he could speak with the boy for a few minutes to explain what

had happened and who the traitor had been.

Such a thing was unlikely, however.

Having finished eating, he sat back on his haunches and whined to

himself pitifully.

Nothing would ever absolve him of the guilt he felt for abandoning

Harry in favour of seeking justice.

It was something he would always carry, even when he was

inevitably returned to Azkaban.

So long as Wormtail was dead and Harry was safe, Sirius would

gladly spend the rest of his days with the Dementors, content in the

knowledge that Harry was safe from the scum that had sold his

parents out.

He merely needed to get to the rat first and then it would be done.

"Have we done something to offend him?" Lucinda asked as Harry

left their cabin without saying a word.

He had been unusually quiet since they'd arrived to take the ship

back to Durmstrang, only speaking when spoken to, and his answers

short and lacking interest.

"Don't you know?" Eleanor questioned. "Don't any of you?"

Lucinda frowned confusedly as she looked towards the others.

Cain, Bruno, and Ana all seemed to be as clueless as her on the

matter.

"Know what?" she asked irritably.

Eleanor shook her head as she removed a Bulgarian newspaper

from within her trunk and handed it to Lucinda.

"Sirius Black?" she murmured. "Is he one of Harry's relatives?"

Eleanor nodded as she released a deep breath.

"A cousin of sorts, but also his godfather," she explained. "He's the

one that betrayed Harry's parents to Voldemort. Black is the reason

Harry is an orphan."

"Bastard!" Cain growled as he snatched the newspaper away from

Lucinda to take in the image of the man. "How did he escape from

Azkaban, isn't that supposed to be impossible?"

Eleanor nodded.

"No one has ever done it before," she confirmed.

"So, he's escaped to kill Harry?"

Eleanor shrugged.

"It would make sense."

Lucinda's nostrils flared in anger, a rare feeling of protectiveness

washing over her.

Ana and Cain had a similar reaction, the latter's eyes flashing a

brilliant amber whilst Ana's hand flexed towards her wand.

"Well, if Black wants to try something, he'll have to get through me

and the others first," Cain declared before storming from the room;

undoubtedly to discuss what he'd learned with the other werewolves.

"And me," Ana muttered, her usually affable demeanour all but

absent.

Eleanor simply nodded her agreement with the sentiment, and

Lucinda stood and took her leave of the room also.

She had no need to plot with the other vampires.

She merely wanted to find Harry to make sure he was okay.

Having searched most of the ship before she came upon him, she

found the boy staring almost aimlessly out of one of the viewing

windows on the lowest deck.

Without saying a word, she pulled him into her arms and just held

him for a moment.

"Why didn't you tell me?" she asked, more firmly than she'd

intended.

Harry shrugged.

"It wouldn't have made a difference," he answered.

"Yes it would," Lucinda countered. "You don't get to just come back

like this, not when you don't deserve it. Black will be captured, and

he will spend the rest of his days rotting in his cell, or with a bit of

luck, they'll just execute him."

A slight smirk tugged at Harry's lips.

"Careful, princess, people will begin to think you care."

Lucinda narrowed her eyes at the boy before taking hold of his

earlobe.

"I do care," she hissed, 'but if you tell anyone that…"

"You'll drain me of every last drop of blood and allow the wolves to

have my corpse?" Harry interjected.

Lucinda nodded.

"Now you're getting it," she snorted amusedly.

"Ah, the joys of being friends with a vampire," Harry chuckled. "Are

all of you so sentimental?"

Lucinda shook her head.

"No, most of us don't care for your kind and often enjoy your

suffering."

"That sounds just like you," Harry replied.

Lucinda frowned thoughtfully before nodding.

"Maybe you're an exception, Potter," she conceded. "The difference

is, I only enjoy seeing you suffer when it is me administering it. No

one else is allowed that privilege."

Harry laughed heartily.

"I'm not sure if I should be offended, worried, or flattered."

"Why not all three?" Lucinda suggested. "Don't deprive yourself on

my account."

Harry offered her a genuine smile.

"Thank you," he said sincerely. "I suppose I'm just stuck in my own

head at the moment."

"And there's nothing wrong with that, so long as you don't get lost

there."

"I won't," Harry assured her.

"Good. Now, what are you planning on doing about him?"

"What can I do?" Harry returned. "He's somewhere in Britain, and I'm

on my way back to Durmstrang. As much as I want nothing more

than to hunt him down, it won't achieve anything. He did what he did,

and I want him dead for it. Maybe he will evade capture long enough

for me to be the one that kills him, and maybe not."

It was odd to hear Harry speaking about killing someone so casually,

but there was nothing about the tone of his words that made Lucinda

disbelieve him.

"You'd really kill him?"

Harry nodded.

"There are many that I would kill and one day may have to," he

answered with a shrug. "I've always known that, and it is something

I've come to terms with. It's not the life I or my parents would choose

for me, but we can only work with the hand we are dealt."

He spoke truly.

Although Lucinda didn't remember being mortal, she often pondered

what her life would be had her parents not turned her.

She didn't hate them for it, and didn't even dislike her existence, but

it certainly presented problems for her, even more so as she was

growing older.

For a moment, she simply watched Harry and allowed her thoughts

to wander.

"What are you thinking?" he asked curiously.

"Nothing," Lucinda denied with a sad smile. "Not anything that won't

keep. Come on, I think we've moped around enough down here,

don't you?"

Harry looked as though he was going to question her further, but

instead offered her his arm.

Lucinda accepted it, and the two of them made their way back

towards their cabin, each lost in their own rather maudlin thoughts.

Twelve

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