The Image of You | By : Andreas Category: Harry Potter > Slash - Male/Male > Harry/Draco Views: 1606 -:- Recommendations : 0 -:- Currently Reading : 0 |
Disclaimer: I do not own Harry Potter, nor any of the characters from the books or movies. I do not make any money from the writing of this story. |
2. Portrait of the Artist as a Young Wizard
‘What do you
mean, Malfoy’s dead?’ asked Hermione, lowering the book she’d been perusing as
Harry burst through the door of her room at the Hollow inn.
‘How do you
know?’ Ron asked, perking up from his sprawl across the sofa.
‘He’s here!’
said Harry, rummaging through his satchel.
‘Ew!’
exclaimed Ron. ‘I don’t want to see Malfoy parts; not together, and definitely not –
split up!’
Hermione
hugged the book to her chest, eyes widening. ‘What—?’
‘Did you have
to crumple
me?’ huffed the piece of parchment Harry pulled from his satchel.
Harry sneered
at the distorted image of Malfoy. ‘If I could erase your nose, I would! And I can
hardly punch a piece of parchment in the face, can I?’
‘Oh, do try.
Maybe you’ll get a papercut.’
‘Don’t push
it!’
‘Want me to
pull your leg instead?’
‘Want me to
stomp on you?’
‘Harry!’
Hermione barked. ‘What’s going on?’
Harry scowled.
‘He started it.’
Hermione
rolled her eyes. ‘Not that! Why would you say he’s – dead?’
‘He says he
is.’
‘And you trust
him?’ Ron exclaimed, jumping off the sofa. ‘Can’t you see the little sod is spying
on us? Burn the parchment now is what I say!’
Malfoy
snorted. ‘You mean that’s what you’re shouting at an incredibly annoying
pauper’s pitch? Just because burning parchment is the only way you can afford
to heat that dungheap you call a home, there’s no call for torching your
betters.’
‘BETTERS?’
shrieked Ron, going for the parchment as Harry surprised himself by blocking
his friend’s clawing attack. ‘LET ME AT HIM! Rat-faced little git! I’ll just
rip him a little
bit! Harry, come
on!’
‘RONALD
WEASLEY, calm down!’
Hermione’s
hands were on firmly her hips, also known as the launching pads for painful
slaps. Ron calmed down quickly, if with some blatant effort.
‘For one
horrible moment, I thought I heard “I’ll jus’ strip ‘im” there,’ Malfoy
muttered. ‘You keep that kinky kook away from me!’
‘Shut up!’
snapped Hermione, hands twitching.
‘Now, is that
any way to treat a dead person?’
‘You’re not
DEAD! I’m talking
to you, though I honestly don’t know why!’
‘And of
course, you’ve never talked to a dead person before,’ Malfoy drawled.
‘Well, you’re
just a talking picture! There are any number of reasonable—’
‘A talking
portrait who just insulted the Weasel with no small amount of wit, wouldn’t you
say, hm?’
Hermione
looked about to say that she wouldn’t, but then her face fell and she turned
white as a very blotchy sheet. Ron, focused wholly on Malfoy, didn’t notice.
‘I’d say
you’re a sneaky little bastard who likes tricking people!’
Harry nodded
in agreement, though he felt it wise to keep quiet on the subject of Malfoy’s
general state of corporeal animation. Hermione looked as if she was just about
to solve a particularly pesky puzzle, and Harry knew better than to interfere.
Malfoy’s left
eyebrow wavered as it rose past a crease in the parchment. ‘True, in a crude
sort of way, although I am a sneaky little magical portrait, and those only
come to life—’
‘—once the –
person is – dead,’ Hermione filled in.
‘But,’ said
Harry, ‘how do we know this isn’t just a – an ordinary picture, like a
photograph. They move.’
Ron nodded.
‘Yeah!’
‘But they
don’t talk,’ said Hermione.
‘Some do,’
said Ron, pouting slightly.
‘Only preset
phrases. They don’t think. They can’t be—’
‘Bastards?’
Harry offered.
Hermione
frowned, but nodded. Her eyes fell on the parchment, and her face, once again,
fell with them. ‘Oh, Malfoy!’
‘Oh, stuff it!
Being dead is depressing enough without your faked sentiments, Granger!’
Ron snorted
and turned to Hermione. ‘Who the hell would paint a portrait of that prat? He’s
lying!’
‘I
would,’ said Draco. ‘And I’m not. Though conning you wouldn’t take much effort,
I admit.’
‘What? You
expect us to believe you painted your own portrait? Yeah, right!’
Harry believed
it. Just the sort of thing that prissy sod would do. But Harry wasn’t one to
impose his beliefs on others. Not unless he was just passing them along.
Harry’s mind
welcomed the interruption of this particular train of thought by Malfoy,
speaking up from halfway under Harry’s twitching thumb.
‘I’m quite
good with a brush, actually. Or,’ a strange shadow passed over the parchment,
‘I was
good at it.’
Ron snorted,
and then the past tense of that second sentence hit him, as it had already hit
Harry. There was a moment of awkward silence. Then Hermione, ever the
knowledge-seeker, said, ‘But how—’
‘—did I die?’
Malfoy finished. ‘That is what I’m hoping to find out.’
‘You don’t know?’
said Ron, eyes wide.
‘Of course I
don’t, you imbecile. Last thing I remember is imprinting my – self on the
canvas. That’s how it works!’
Ron and Harry
looked as one towards Hermione, eyebrows rising in unison.
‘Really,
Potter, you and the Weasel should look into whether Granger here is some sort
of cerebral vampire, sucking your last remaining braincells out so that she can
use you both as mindless sex toys.’
As Ron
produced an inarticulate sound of outrage somewhere deep in his throat, Harry
purposely ignored the worrying look of interest underlying Hermione’s
impressive blush of utter mortification.
‘Ehm. I. Well.
Yes. That’s how it – works,’ Hermione stuttered, recovering rather too quickly
for Harry’s liking. ‘Usually, the witch or wizard imprints new memories – or
brain configurations, really – at regular intervals. But unless he was killed
when making the new imprint, the memory of his death would never be copied.
It’s not a ghost, just a – very complex portrait.’
‘So,’ said
Harry, ‘it’s not really him, then?’
‘Not really,
no.’
At this, Ron
perked up a bit. ‘So he’s not even a person? Just a picture?’
‘Well,’
Hermione hesitated, ‘technically.’
‘Oh, great set
of values there, Granger. You fight for house elves who just think you’re crazy
for bothering, but you tell me I’m not a person. Thank you very much.’
Ron, utterly
unmoved, sniggered. ‘And you call me stupid. You haven’t even got a brain!
Besides, you’ve always been a loser. Just look at the mess you made of your
first little Death Eater job—’
‘I was clever
enough to outsmart the lot of you,’ snapped Malfoy. ‘Even with Potter’s
bloodhound act. I swear, he’s like that bloody Black reborn.’
Harry’s
fingers dug into the parchment. ‘Watch it, Malfoy! Parchment’s easily ripped!’
‘See? Like a
rabid, homicidal dog! And this is your Chosen One? Maybe I should
shift allegiances again.’
‘Maybe you
should go to hell in an origami basket.’
‘Harry!’ cried
Hermione, pushed into full pity-the-dead-guy mode by Malfoy’s pointed house elf
comment.
But Harry
wasn’t listening. ‘Wait a minute. What do you mean, shift allegiances again?’
Malfoy sniffed.
‘I hardly expect you to help me out of the goodness of your little Gryffindor
hearts, you know. Or, actually,’ he frowned, ‘I do. But I suppose some
sentimental part of me hoped there would be a little Slytherin in you after
all.’
Harry leaned
closer to the parchment, sneering. ‘Wish granted.’ His thumb twisted the
parchment further. Hermione glared. Malfoy raised an eyebrow.
‘I offer you –
information.’
‘About how it
feels to watch paint dry?’
‘It’s
riveting, but no. If you help me find out what happened to me, I’ll help you
find a way to Voldemort’s heart, in the non-figurative sense. Which really, for
me, is a win-win situation. I get closure and, through you, revenge.’
Harry blinked.
‘Voldemort killed you?’
‘Much as I
hate to admit it, I think he delegated. But in principle, yes.’
‘But,’ said
Hermione, ‘why?’
‘As the Weasel so eloquently put it, I made
a bit of a mess of things,’ drawled Malfoy, and there was a peculiar firmness
to the closing of his mouth. There would be no more said on this subject. At
least not by him. Harry sighed.
‘So you want
to help us?’
‘Want is such
a strong word.’
=
‘What an
extraordinary likeness! It’s that pointy-faced Malfoy runt! I say!’ exclaimed
Horace Slughorn when Harry held up the Malfoy parchment for inspection.
‘You say too
much,’ snapped Malfoy. ‘I’m as tall as Potter and my face is chiselled!’
Slughorn
bobbed backwards. ‘I say! It speaks!’
‘And thinks
before it does so,’ muttered Malfoy.
‘It’s a
magical painting,’ Hermione filled in, moving up beside Harry. She’d been the
one to insist they head for Hogwarts without delay to verify Malfoy’s story.
Harry and Ron had both agreed, eventually, to brave long-distance
Disapparating, the latter to verify Malfoy’s death for entirely selfish reasons
and the former to prove Malfoy a liar. Harry knew that Malfoy always lied, and
tricked, and cheated. This death thing would be no different.
‘But,’ said
Slughorn, squinting at Malfoy, ‘that would mean…’
‘I’ve kicked
it, yes. And now I can’t kick much of anything. I’m not even sure I have any
legs.’
‘Indeed? How
extraordinary!’
‘I can see
you’re all torn up about it.’
Harry turned
the parchment around and glared. ‘You’ll
be all torn up if you don’t keep quiet!’
‘Well, well,’
Slughorn rubbed his hands together and turned around, ignoring the sniping
behind him, ‘this must be researched, examined, thoroughly looked into! You’ve
come to the right man, Harry my boy, the right man!’
=
‘It took my dying to make him notice me,’
sniffed Malfoy as Slughorn bounced from shelf to shelf, browsing the massive
collection of books that took up most of his Hogwarts workroom. ‘How very
Slytherin.’
‘You never stopped taking notice of us,’ said Ron, being charged with keeping
an eye on Malfoy while Hermione and Slughorn researched and Harry was busy
scowling. ‘What does that make you? An insane Hufflepuff in Slytherin
clothing?’
‘He’s really just paying attention to me as
Potter’s tag-along though,’ said Malfoy, contemplating the ceiling.
‘He does
that,’ Ron muttered.
‘Shut up. I
refuse to have anything in common with you
… you commoner.’
‘Feeling’s
mutual.’
‘Now what did
I just say? No ‘mutual’, no ‘in common’, no ‘shared hate’! No abstract nor
physical thing shall ever touch the both of us! Get it?’
Ron appeared
deep in thought, then said, ‘Not if you’ve got it.’
‘There’s a
good Weasel.’
‘Ferret.’
‘Same family
of small, nasty animals. Too close. You will henceforth refer to me as—’
‘Doodle?’
‘I hate you.’
=
‘You’re
definitely dead,’ said Slughorn, sitting in an oversized armchair with Malfoy
propped up against a three heavy tomes opposite him. ‘There has been no
recorded case of a magical painting being animated before the death of its
subject.’
Hermione
shifted uneasily on the couch next to Harry whose stomach churned with
disappointment that Malfoy hadn’t told a lie, because that clearly mattered
more than his being actually dead and gone forever save one enervating,
perfectly crappy painting.
‘You don’t
say,’ drawled Malfoy, and his bored glance was met with steely glares from both
Harry and Ron. Slughorn cleared his throat.
‘But there was
also the matter of your turning up in this particular piece of parchment.
Magical paintings of your type can usually only move between paintings
featuring the same subject plus, in some cases, others that have been magically
linked together. I would certainly love to hear how you managed to find
Potter.’
Malfoy
blinked. ‘I . . . was stuck, for a long while. And then there was an . . .
opening. Something else. I went there and found Saint Potter staring down at
me. Thought I’d come to Hell at first.’
‘Then,’ said
Slughorn as Harry snorted behind him, ‘there’s only one explanation.’ Hermione
leaned forward. ‘Your image was already on the parchment.’
‘What?’
exclaimed Hermione. ‘That’s not possible! How could Harry have wound up with
one of Malfoy’s discarded sketches?’
‘It would have
been a sketch, yes,’ said Slughorn, turning to Hermione, ‘but anyone could have
done it.’ His gaze slid over to Harry who couldn’t stop the redness creeping up
his cheeks.
‘I was . . .
working out my aggression. I . . . use them for target practice.’
‘Them?’ cried Ron, horrified. ‘More than one?’
‘Well,’
mumbled Harry, his eyes accusing the floor of most terrible misdoings.
‘You sketch me?’
‘Aggression.’
‘More like insanity,
you Potty pervert.’
‘Still,’ said
Hermione, more loudly than strictly necessary, ‘the important thing is that we
can be fairly sure this isn’t some trick. And however vile Malfoy is, he can
help us.’
Harry and Ron
felt moved to protest but were stopped by Hermione suddenly towering over them.
‘And we can’t waste time bickering!’ she concluded.
=
As the boys
prepared to follow the formidable Hermione into Hell and back, Professor
Slughorn called Harry to him.
‘May we speak
in private?’ Slughorn whispered, casting a glance over Harry’s shoulder.
Harry looked down at Malfoy who
narrowed his eyes and pursed his lips. ‘Granger’s already established me as a
non-entity. Just keep pretending as if I’m not here and have no feelings or
rights whatsoever—’ The rest was muffled by crumpling parchment, the swishing
of air, and the rather pathetic thud Malfoy made as he hit the back of Ron’s
head.
‘Take him
outside and … iron him.’
‘Rabid dog!’
rang loud and clear through folds of parchment.
‘Yes?’ said
Harry, turning back to Slughorn. He heard the door close behind him.
Slughorn was
quiet for a long moment, studying Harry’s face in a most disquieting fashion.
His forehead wrinkled. Harry squirmed from the waist down, hoping Slughorn
would stay focused on his face.
‘What are
your feelings for the Malfoy boy?’ Slughorn asked at long last.
‘What? I have
no feelings for him! What do you mean?’ Harry took two steps back, shoulders
hunched, brow creasing.
‘You’re a
powerful wizard, my boy, no questioning that, but to make a magical painting,
much less a magical sketch, takes . . . passion.’
‘I hate him
with a fiery passion.’
Slughorn
nodded. ‘Funny,’ he murmured, ‘his features were more chiselled than I
remember. Not as pointedly lifelike, or indeed deadlike, as one might have . .
. expected. Hm?’
Harry didn’t
care one bit for the look on Slughorn’s bloated face, turned on his heel and
stormed out.
------------------ And just to repeat myself:
A/N: I work as a teacher these days, so I have little time to spend on fanfic. However, I can tell the story if I don't bother too much about editing etc. The (short) chapter above is an example of something written rather quickly and not edited beyond what happens _during_ the writing of draft 0/1. Also, there's a distinct case of 'talking heads syndrome', partly because I'm currently writing a play for one of my English classes (see my Author page if you want to read it).
What I would like to know is: Do you think this is good enough, or should I simply cancel the story? Would you keep reading if this is the kind of material I post?
While AFF and its agents attempt to remove all illegal works from the site as quickly and thoroughly as possible, there is always the possibility that some submissions may be overlooked or dismissed in error. The AFF system includes a rigorous and complex abuse control system in order to prevent improper use of the AFF service, and we hope that its deployment indicates a good-faith effort to eliminate any illegal material on the site in a fair and unbiased manner. This abuse control system is run in accordance with the strict guidelines specified above.
All works displayed here, whether pictorial or literary, are the property of their owners and not Adult-FanFiction.org. Opinions stated in profiles of users may not reflect the opinions or views of Adult-FanFiction.org or any of its owners, agents, or related entities.
Website Domain ©2002-2017 by Apollo. PHP scripting, CSS style sheets, Database layout & Original artwork ©2005-2017 C. Kennington. Restructured Database & Forum skins ©2007-2017 J. Salva. Images, coding, and any other potentially liftable content may not be used without express written permission from their respective creator(s). Thank you for visiting!
Powered by Fiction Portal 2.0
Modifications © Manta2g, DemonGoddess
Site Owner - Apollo