Chimera’s
Call
Chapter 4
I can’t remember
The first time when I fell
I can’t remember
When I first dropped off my cloud
You can’t imagine – I know
And I’m too weak to tell
I am alone again and silence screams too loud.
(Sylvia Hörner)
~*~
"Nothing?"
"No, nothing."
"I will kill Malfoy. I swear, Harry, I will." Ron
sat next to Hermione’s prone figure on the couch in front
of the fireplace in the Gryffindor common room when Harry returned.
Harry bent over the couch, looking at her anxiously. "Why
are you so sure it was Malfoy?"
Ron’s eyes flashed when he looked up. "He and his
watchdogs were the only ones not in Hogsmeade today, remember?
Didn’t you see that smirk on his face when he said, ‘Come
to look for your girlfriend, Potter? Too bad this won’t
be a fun night for you.’ Didn’t you? I told
you he was up to something!" His voice grew more agitated
with each word.
Harry replayed the scene in his mind. At that very moment, he
had been far too busy holding back Ron from throttling Malfoy
to actually think about the insult. That’s what he had
thought it then. An insult, nothing new, nothing to worry about.
He had thought Malfoy was referring to Hermione having caught
cold, after all.
But now . . . He looked down at Hermione, her face ashen and
twisted in fear, her knuckles white from clutching the couch
so hard. A fine trickle of blood was running from her nose and
kept returning, no matter how often they wiped it away. The
handkerchief in Harry’s hand was covered in dark red stains
already. They could not wake her. They’d been trying everything,
but she simply wouldn’t wake. She wasn’t petrified,
but somehow trapped in her dreams, which seemed to be getting
more unpleasant by the minute.
Ron was right. This time, that slimy git Malfoy had gone too
far. Still . . . "I wish we could send for a teacher."
Never before had Harry wished to be surrounded by all of Hogwarts
professors the way he did now.
The red-head nodded reluctantly. "You’re right, but
. . ." Ron trailed off, and Harry knew what he was referring
to. They’d heard Filch roaring after Peeves for clogging
the fireplaces with snow, and the Fat Lady had made it clear
that the floo network couldn’t be used. And they had seen
almost all of the professors down in the Three Broomsticks.
It would take a while until any of them could get here with
the raging blizzard outside. And the only ones left . . . Harry
didn’t trust Trelawney and surely Binns couldn’t
help, and Dumbledore . . . Dumbledore had stayed behind in his
office when they had left Hogwarts in the morning, but he wasn’t
there anymore. Harry had just tried to find the headmaster and
had failed. He could be anywhere in Hogwarts right now without
them standing a chance of finding him.
Ron muttered some intelligible curses under his breath and turned
back to Hermione. "Just when you really need them . . ."
Harry nodded mutely. His glance again shifted down to where
Hermione lay on the couch.
Had she ever looked more pale? More frightened? More vulnerable?
Harry looked up at Ron to see his expression mirrored exactly
in the face of his best friend.
"What do we do if she . . ." He trailed off, not daring
to voice his thought.
Red hair shone in the semi-darkness of the common room when
Ron shook his head. "Don’t even think that. She’ll
be all right. She’s Hermione." Harry fought a wistful
smile at the certainty that was in Ron’s voice. She was
Hermione. That simple. As though it were the cure for everything.
Ron had turned towards Hermione again, speaking low, as though
beseeching her. "You will, won’t you? You better
had, or I’ll . . . I’ll . . ." He scratched
his head, trying to come up with something truly horrifying
to threaten her with. "I’ll feed your books to Fang!"
Time for drastic threats, Harry thought wryly. If that didn’t
wake her up, he didn’t know what would.
Interlude II
Later on, Hermione couldn't recall what caused her to take up
the fight. But as soon as she felt the cold, gentle hand touching
her face she unleashed a scream even a banshee would've been
envious of. It didn't matter what she hit with her fists and
knees and feet. There was only one thought left in her mind.
Away from here, far, far away from here.
But no matter how hard she fought, she couldn't escape. Her
thoughts were racing incoherently and she went on fighting with
only the power of despair, forgetting everything she had ever
learned and falling back onto defence mechanisms that were probably
centuries old, embedded in her blood.
Finally the grip on her waist seemed to loosen a little and
she jerked forward. She heard something akin to a choked whimper
when she lost contact to the so-horribly well-known hands.
But she was free!
Not thinking clearly anymore, Hermione fled into the room. When
she finally hit a wall at a full run and a sharp pain shot through
her body, she collapsed on the floor.
'Wake up, Hermione. Wake up!' she told herself.
There was no other way to leave this horrible reality. When
she woke up, she would be in her bed. Safe.
Even though she knew it didn't make much sense, she closed her
eyes and tried to regain her composure. If she got up and went
along this wall, she might find a door. Doors in dreams always
were a way out. If she brought all this down to a rational level,
maybe the dream would end all on its own.
Her blood was still roaring in her ears. The only thing she
really heard was the pounding of her heart and the sound of
her breath.
'Just a moment,' she told herself. 'Calm down and
think. There has to be a way out of here.'
It took her all the strength she had to get up and make her
way along the wall. The task had sounded easy when she had planned
it. But she hadn't known that the path would be uneven. She
couldn't remember how many times she had fallen down, each fall
bringing new pain, worse than the one before. It felt as if
her whole body consisted only of one huge bruise.
She stumbled on. The pain was slowly subsiding; it was as though
her body was getting used to it.
When it finally came, the change in the rough wall was so sudden
that she nearly missed it. When she didn't find the change again,
she was bordering on complete and final panic. But she did find
cool metal under her fingers as she went a few steps back.
A doorknob.
Hope flared up in Hermione. She didn’t have her wand,
but maybe . . . 'Alohomora,' she whispered and turned the knob.
A soft scratching was audible, but nothing else happened. Hermione's
hopes were crashing down as fast as they had flared up so wildly.
'Don't let it be closed. Please don't let it be closed.'
Another time she heard the soft scratching noise, but again
nothing happened. "Come on!"
She had come this far and now the door was closed? Hermione
dropped her head against the cold metal and felt hysterical
laughter bubbling up. This was just fate's very own irony. She
would be standing in front of the door forever, waiting for
it to open up, never being able to leave this dream another
way. She had read all about dreams and especially nightmares.
Doors were a way out. If only this would open, she would never
ever lecture Ron and Harry about their homework . . .
A third time she tried -- a hopeless pulling on the knob, when
it finally turned. Waves of joy washed over Hermione. She would
be leaving the room that was dark enough to hide all the worst
fears of the world. She would return to a world that could be
analysed and understood. She would get out of here safely and
forget this place. She would wake up and go to breakfast with
Harry and Ron and everything would be all right again.
By the time she had finally mustered the strength to take the
final step it caught her and the door, her last hope for escape
and survival, closed. When it caused both of them to
fall, Hermione screamed like she had never screamed before in
her life.
***
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