May 2, 1998
Draco found Snape's body in the Shrieking Shack. It hadn't been difficult after listening to a tired Harry Potter blather on about his heroics to anyone and everyone within hearing.
Draco hovered in the doorway, staring, hesitant. He'd never seen a dead body before, not like this. Dumbledore toppling off the tower was one thing, but Snape was - lying in a pool of his own blood. He was even paler than he'd been in life, looking as if he'd been carved of stark white wax. He didn't look anything like the teacher, the Death Eater Draco had looked up to. Except he hadn't really been a Death Eater, had he?
Draco crept close to the body, unfastening his cloak as he went. He had to cover Snape somehow, make the body look more presentable for when the Aurors broke down the door and dragged him away, threw him on the pile of other Death Eaters. Then Potter would give another heroic speech so Snape would be buried with more fuss than he'd ever cared for in life.
Draco's boot slipped in the blood, and he gave a little yelp. Once he recovered his balance, he went to settle his cloak over the body - and saw that Snape was breathing. Faintly. And the wounds in his neck were closing. Slowly.
"He has potions in his pocket," someone said.
Draco spun.
The ghost of Remus Lupin hovered in the corner, over the tattered old bed. In death he looked - young. Younger than Draco had ever imagined a teacher could be. He must have been a Fifth or Sixth Year, judging by the more delicate lines of his face. Despite his scarring, he even looked a bit - handsome.
"He was muttering about them before he passed out," Lupin said, and shrugged apologetically. "I'm not a poltergeist, so I can't touch anything. You have to give them to him in order, I think. First the blue, then the red, then the green, then the dark blue, then the brown."
Draco stared. "How do I know you don't want him poisoned?"
Lupin actually laughed. "I never hated him nearly as much as he hated me." Then he gestured toward Snape. "Better do it quickly, before someone else arrives and takes him away."
"What will I do with him, once he's all right?" Draco asked. He kept a wary eye on Lupin, then reached into Snape's cloak. Five potions, in vials, in just the colors Lupin had described.
"I don't think he'll be all right even after you give him the potions," Lupin said. "He was bitten by a great snake and had most of his memories taken. He'll be weak and disoriented."
Draco cradled Snape's head on his lap. Any other time, he would have whined and complained at the stickiness of Snape's blood-soaked hair, but right now that didn't matter. What mattered was saving the man who'd sacrificed everything to save him. He unstoppered the first vial, poured its contents down Snape's throat. Waited. The wounds began to close a little faster. The second potion, and Snape began to take on some of his usual color; a blood-replenishing potion, then. The green potion, and then Snape was breathing more easily. Draco glanced at Lupin, but the ghost just hovered in the corner, watching, face impassive. The dark blue liquid went down a little easier, but best as Draco could tell, it had no visible effect. The last potion was a murky brown that must have tasted horrible. Luckily for Draco, his patient was asleep.
Or not. Snape came awake abruptly, rolled onto his side, and retched violently. Then he passed out again on Draco's lap.
"What in Merlin's name...?"
"The poison's out of his system," Lupin said mildly.
Draco stared helplessly down at Snape. "Now what?"
"I don't think you ought to leave him here. The Aurors haven't caught all the Death Eaters, I suspect, and there are probably spies and sympathizers still hidden among the general population who would do him harm." Lupin sank down on the bed, and he wore a sad smile. "I don't think that, even if Harry were to tell the world that Severus is a hero, he would be treated well. You should take him away from here."
"Where?"
"Can you Apparate?"
There was a gleam in Lupin's eye that Draco thought a ghost shouldn't have. "Yes."
"Will you do everything I say without question?" Lupin rose up.
Draco hesitated, then looked down at Snape. "Will he be safe, where you're sending him?"
"No Death Eaters will find him there, and the Ministry will be hard-pressed to do the same." Remus drifted toward the door.
Draco cast a levitation charm on Snape, then draped the cloak over him. He started to follow Lupin, then paused. "Wait a moment - can you even leave this place?"
"I didn't die here," Lupin said.
Draco blinked. "Oh. Then - what were you doing here?"
"I came here, as a student, to endure my changes," Lupin said. "I thought I'd revisit the place one more time before I follow the others and join Dora, and I found Severus here."
"Dora?" Draco asked.
"Your cousin," Lupin said. "We had a son, but I'm sure you know that. You ought to visit him. Make sure he grows up with the better influences in his family."
"Somehow I doubt anyone else thinks I'm one of the 'better influences' of any family." Draco flicked his wand, and Snape began to trail after him, suspended in midair.
"Perhaps," Lupin said, "but then you're the only one who's here."
Here with the body, Draco thought.
"Now, can you find the nearest muggle village?" Lupin asked.
"I'm not abandoning him with muggles," Draco said.
Lupin arched one eyebrow. "Even though that wasn't precisely a question, I rather suspect you were questioning my orders."
"Orders?"
"Severus Snape almost gave his life to spare the muggles you despise so much. If you do nothing else, at least have the forthright mind to respect his decision and attempt to understand it before you judge it," Lupin said.
Draco flinched. Despite his youthful visage, Lupin still spoke with all the authority of a teacher. Much less mild than when he'd been an actual teacher, too. "Yes sir. Nearest muggle town. How will you follow?"
"The dead are capable of their own magic," Lupin said, and vanished.
Draco took a deep breath. He hadn't exactly taken the test for his license at the Ministry, but he was competent all the same. He reached out, tugged Snape's unconscious form against his side, and flicked his wand.
"Disappereo."
***
"What am I looking for?" Draco asked. The muggles were staring at him. He could feel it, but then he supposed he looked strange to them, in bloodstained robes, talking to no one. He'd cast a disillusionment charm over Snape's body; Lupin had been confident that the Ministry was too busy to bother with minor charms cast in the midst of muggle populations."A red telephone booth," Lupin said. "Like that one, right there."
Draco recognized the large metal contraption, similar to the visitors' entrance to the Ministry of Magic. He darted through the crowd of muggles, wand discreetly trained on Snape to tote him along, and slipped into the box before anyone could beat him to it.
"Take the receiver off the hook," Lupin said, and pointed.
Draco followed his directions hesitantly. He'd never been near muggle technology before; best as he understood, it was unpredictable and dangerous.
"I want you to dial these numbers," Lupin said, and began to recite them.
Draco was puzzled for a moment, then spotted the little numbered buttons. "Wait, start again."
Lupin did so, looking as patient and mild as ever, and Draco poked at the buttons. He jumped when they made noises, little semi-musical tones that formed a curious song.
"Now hold this bit to your ear and this bit near your mouth," Lupin said.
Draco obeyed, wincing. Who knew what horrible muggle germs had infected the thing; it was obviously some sort of public convenience. He heard a sound inside the black receiver-thing. Which was made of some smooth, cold, hard substance almost like glass, but opaque, lifeless. "There's a sound - like an alarm. Have I done something wrong?"
"No, that's just the phone ringing," Lupin said. "Alerting the people on the other end that someone is calling. When they answer, ask for Isabel Brightman."
Isabel Brightman? Who was that?
And then a voice said, "Hello?"
Draco froze. It was Snape.
Lupin's voice in his other ear prodded him. "Isabel Brightman. Speak normally - no need to shout."
"Hello?" the man said again. No. It couldn't be Snape – Snape was never that hesitant.
Draco glanced at the unconscious man suspended outside the telephone booth to make sure, then said, "I'd like to speak to Isabel Brightman, please."
"May I ask who is calling?"
"My name is Draco Malfoy," he said, and at Lupin's urging, "I'm one of Remus's old students."
"Oh. Of course." The man's tone warmed considerably. Then his voice faded, as if he were far away, and Draco heard him yell, "Mum, phone for you. One of Mr. Lupin's old students. Name of Draco Malfoy."
Mum? The man still lived with his mother?
And then a woman was speaking to him. "Hello? Mr. Malfoy? Is everything all right with Remus? It's been three years since we've seen him."
Draco darted a glance at Lupin and wondered if he could hear the conversation. Perhaps he could, because his expression became sorrowful. Draco didn't know how to do this, how to say it, but he tried. "I'm very sorry, Madam Brightman. I - Remus Lupin is dead."
"W-what?"
Draco repeated it, more loudly, in case Lupin was wrong and this muggle contraption was decrepit and the woman couldn't hear him. "Remus Lupin is dead."
"Remus Lupin – as in the Remus Lupin who was called a Marauder in school and was a prefect and has an awful collection of ratty cardigans?" The woman's voice was high-pitched, and for a moment Draco thought she might be near tears. He didn't know what a Marauder was, though, and he turned his questioning gaze on Lupin, who nodded. His sad expression deepened.
"Yes, that Remus Lupin," Draco said.
"Was it the disease? Or did - did others kill him?" The woman's voice quavered.
"He was murdered," Draco said softly. "But not because he was a - a werewolf." It was hard to say that, hard not to call him a mangy dog as Snape and his father had so many times. "It - there was a war."
"The Dark Lord - Remus said there were suspicions he'd risen again, that's why he'd gone away." The woman's voice was still shaking, but she sounded fairly steady. Draco wondered how a muggle woman knew so much about the wizarding world. "Was his death - quick? He'd told me that Death Eaters liked to torture, and --"
Lupin nodded at Draco, expression grave, and Draco said, "It was quick, yes. I'm so sorry to have to deliver the news like this."
"No. Thank you for calling me. It's just that -- how did you know to call me? Did Cho Chang tell you?"
Draco blinked and slewed a look at Remus. Cho Chang? Remus shook his head.
"Tell her the truth," he said.
Draco took a deep breath. It was bizarre, talking into this black device and knowing that someone far away could hear. "No - I, madam, I don't know what you know about wizards, or - Lupin's ghost. He told me. To call you."
The woman let out a little sob. In the background, Draco heard the man say, "Mum, what's wrong?"
Draco didn't think someone who sounded just like Snape would ever say such a thing, sounding so concerned.
"Remus's ghost. Right." The woman sounded as if she were trying to convince herself. Then she coughed, though it sounded more like another sob. "Tell him – tell him thank you, then," the woman said. "Is there anything else, Mr. Malfoy?"
"Yes. It's about Severus Snape."
The sound on the other end vanished abruptly. Draco turned to Lupin. "I think it's broken," he said. "I can't hear anything."
Then the woman said, "What about him?" Her grief had been replaced by something like - anger. Wariness. Fear?
"He is injured and needs a place to convalesce - somewhere away from wizards, who may wish to do him harm," Draco stammered.
There was another silence, and then the woman spoke again, louder. Definitely angry. "Can ghosts speak on the telephone? If they can, put Remus on right now. I'm so sorry that he put you up to this - you have no idea what's going on - "
Draco could only blink. He didn't know that anyone had ever sincerely apologized to him. For anything. Ever.
Lupin ducked his head and winced. "Look, I don't think ghosts can - so just tell her that I was wrong and she was right and Severus really was a spy but his old Death Eater comrades will want to kill him and someone will be round to collect him as soon as possible."
Draco dutifully repeated the message, and the woman went quiet again. Then he heard her say, in the background, as if to someone else, "Marcus, why don't you go round to Jamie's? In fact, take a few pounds out of my purse and go to the cinema."
"Mum --"
"Go. Have fun. Take your wand with you."
"What? But you said never to --"
"Go."
Draco felt oddly guilty for eavesdropping like this - which was unusual for him - but he was intrigued. So the man, Marcus, was a wizard.
"All right, Mr. Malfoy," the woman began.
"You don't have to call me that - that's my father," Draco said, and was horrified with himself. He was supposed to take respect wherever he could, whether or not he deserved it. "Call me Draco, really."
"Draco? Of course. Do you have a way to get to London?"
"Where in London? I can apparate," Draco said. He wasn't sure he could apparate somewhere he'd never been before, though.
"Ask her if she still lives in Barnham," Lupin said.
Draco obeyed. The woman said yes.
Lupin smiled sadly. "I can give you coordinates."
***
The house was small but cozy looking, warm light spilling out from behind lacy curtains. The door was painted a bright, cheery green, and plants drooped gracefully from planter boxes. Draco blinked and realized that some of the plants in the front garden were actually magical. Was this Isabel woman a muggle-born witch? How had Lupin known her?Draco darted a glance around him and noticed that the muggles were giving him a wide berth. He twitched his wand, and the disillusioned, unconscious Snape drifted closer to him.
After a moment, Draco realized what felt wrong. Lupin hadn't come with him. Did he not want to see his friends? Or was he unable to travel to London? Draco turned back to the door. It led to a muggle home. He'd never seen one before. Was he safe here? In the distance he could hair faint, strange noises: the sounds of a muggle city, almost like the constant din of Diagon Alley, but laced with different sounds. Muggle contraptions, no doubt. Draco wished, for the first time in his life, that Lupin was with him. Lupin or someone who could tell him what to do in a muggle zone. But it was just him and an unconscious Snape.
Draco took a deep breath, then ascended the steps, deftly avoiding the snatching tendril of a Friendly Leaf.
He rapped sharply on the door, then stepped back and waited. He knew he looked a fright in his robes - he hadn't thought to spell them clean or attempt to transfigure them into muggle clothes. All that mattered was that Snape would be safe. Draco turned and checked the man. He was still unconscious, and his breathing was still uneven, but his condition hadn't changed much.
The door swung open, and Draco spun around. "Good evening, madam," he began. Then he went still. The figure who stood in the doorway was not a woman but a boy Draco's age. Who looked exactly as Severus Snape must have at seventeen years old. The boy was striking, handsome even, and Draco thought he was hallucinating, because Snape was hovering beside him, on death's door. Then Draco realized the boy didn't have Snape's unfortunate nose.
"Mother, it's for you," the boy said. He stepped past Draco, trotted down the steps, and vanished into the shadows beyond the pavement.
"Draco, please, do come in," a woman said, and she stepped into the light. She was a lovely woman, her features delicate and graceful, and she had long dark hair and bright, dark eyes. She gestured for Draco to enter, and he did so, maneuvering Snape carefully through the doorway as he went.