by highsorcerer » Friday 2 July 2004 8:21:01am
James went alone to the staircase which marked the entrance to the headmaster's offices. Two gargoyles faced him and asked him for the password. James sighed out that he didn't know. The statues scoffed at him until Dumbledore himself appeared at the base. The statues snapped to attention, but Dumbledore focused his attention on James.
"Did you wish to see me Mr. Potter?" he asked. James nodded his head weakly.
"Jelly bean," said Dumbledore, and the gargoyles snapped to life, and a passage opened up, leading to a spiral staircase which both James and Dumbledore mounted. He staircase started to rotate, and James felt himself lifted to the top of it, where another door opened. Dumbledore entered, and motioned James in.
James was overwhelmed by the number of portraits in the room. He recognized a number of them from his chocolate frog cards, though others were a mystery to him. Dumbledore took a seat at his desk.
James was a bit afraid, and hardly knew how to begin. Finally, he asked his first question.
"You defeated Grindelwald, didn't you?" he asked.
Dumbledore merely nodded.
"Here at Hogwarts, right?" responded James.
Again, Dumbledore nodded.
"It's just that, well, me and my friends were thinking about it. You were a professor then, not an auror. I mean, it just isn't what we think of when we think of a teacher."
Dumbledore nodded again, and spoke. "James, the duty to fight evil and the dark arts is beyond that of what is expected of us in everyday life. A great muggle once wrote that all that was needed for evil to triumph was for good people to do nothing."
James swallowed heavily, then continued. "It's just that what myself and my friends found out, and what we suspected.... oh, I don't know... I mean, it's so, oh, I don't know." James sighed in frustration. "I mean, it may mean nothing, but it might mean something."
James looked at Dumbledore, and found almost nothing of what he expected. He thought Dumbledore would be stern and admonishing, and perhaps even angry. Instead he found a glimpse of curiosity and perhaps inquizitiveness in his gaze.
"Tell me James, no matter what you might fear," said Dumbledore. James hesitated for a moment, and Dumbledore continued. "I am not unaware of your transgressions of the school rules James. On the contrary, I am very well aware of them."
James looked up, and choked once again.
"Please relax James; I suspeect anything you might have done would pale against what you have to tell me. Besides," he added, with a slight grin, "Ravenclaw has already won the house cup. Please speak frankly."
James did. His tale went forth, and he couldn't even stop himself form mentioning his petty worries and frustrations, including being barred from a decent tryout for the Quidditch team. When he finished, though, Dumbledore didn't seem conererned about his transgression of the house rules.
Instead, Dumbledore asked him to follow him to the library. There he muttered spell after spell (though James believed it was the same spell each time, and the same one the mystery man with the snake had spoken; each shelf glowed yellow in turn. However, Dumbledore also made a sweep of the regular shelves, and found nothing either. He sighed, and led James back to his office.
He looked at James with a serious look; one more serious than James had ever felt before. "James, I believe you were right. A copy of 'Hogwart's, a History' had no business being in the restricted section. And the text you knew of... almost certainly Parseltounge, and a most ingenious way of encoding the book. I'm sure your research revealed Salazar Slytherin was a Parseltounge."
James nodded.
"Not a very common gift. Indeed, a very rare one. So rare that examples of it being spoken is rare enough. A wizard has to be born with the gift, like a metamorphmagus. Though not like a animagus. Indeed, I"m not surprised the Parseltounges kept the ability to make it a written language a secret. So few have the gift, and most of them had a reason to conceal it. "
Dumbledore went into thought, and James interrupted it. "Headmaster, if it's all true; Grindelwald returned it, and you destroyed him, and nobody could read it except a Parseltounge, I mean, wouldn't it be useless. Not only to Grindelwald, but to the wizard who stole it?"
"James, you may be an exceptional student, but there are many areas of magic you don't know of yet. Including divination. I've heard of seers saying well after the second World War that a Slytherin Legacy would return to once again be a meance to the world. I can't pretend that Salazar Slytherin's spellbook might have fit the description," Dumbledore sighed. "Indeed, evil might never die, just return in a new and more terrible form"
"But you would know Headmaster... wouldn't you?" asked James, but as he looked into Dumbledore's eyes, he knew a different truth.
"James, I believe evil will always find a way to reappear," he said. "But I also believe there will always be good people willing to fight it no matter what the cost."
"But what of Salazar Slytherin's spellbooks?" asked James. He was a founder of Hogwarts ;surely they don't contain dark magic?"
Dumbledore sighed. "Nobody really knows. Salazar Slytherin was a founder of Hogwarts, but he believed magic should only be taught be pure-blooded wizards. There are rumors he eventually took it to an extreme. Only his spellbooks or diary's would tell - and we don't have them - or the ability to translate in Parseltounge."
"But Headmaster, if that man with the snake did take the book, he wouldn't be able to use it either? Not unless he was a Parseltounge? I mean, is there any way to translate from it?"
But Dumbledore only remained thoughtful, and eventually dismissed James from his office.