wanted to thank you, Mister Black, for extending us an invitation to this event. I'd always wanted an opportunity to meet the inhabitants of the Manor socially, so to speak.'
'Ah, yes. It's a pleasure to meet you, too,' Sirius lied. 'Did you, er, meet Harry yet?'
'Yes, yes, young Draco introduced us. Harry Potter! Very exciting.'
'He's exciting all right,' Sirius agreed, deadpan. There followed at least a quarter hour of polite and slightly stilted conversation. The Mayor wanted to know if Sirius found the weather too severe; Sirius replied that it was quite pleasant to have a white Christmas. Lupin asked about the history of the town, and the Mayor shared some salient facts. The Mayor then opined that the fellow over in the corner in the black cloak was cheating at darts by using the Expelliarmus spell, and Sirius told him in confidence that the fellow in the corner was his distant cousin Dunforth who had a reputation for eccentricity and tended to grow violent when harassed. The Mayor sidled away, and the bailiff followed.
'And it only took fifteen minutes for you to scare them off,' said Lupin.
'A new record!'
'Bah,' said Sirius, and hid a grin. 'Sorry.'
'It's Snape you ought to apologize to,' began Lupin with mock severity, then broke off as a echoing crash sounded from outside the Inn. He blinked. 'What on earth was that?'
Sirius sat up straight, and stared. Out of some newly acquired paternal instinct, his eyes went immediately to the sofa by the fireplace to see if the boys were all right. The sofa was empty. 'I don't know,' he said.
'But…where are Draco and Harry?'
'How are you doing, Harry?'
'Fine. I guess.'
He didn't look fine. Draco felt anxiety stir in a knot underneath his ribcage. Harry was sunk down in the armchair beside him, staring vaguely at the fire. He seemed taut and strung up and feverish. Bright spots of color burned atop his angular cheekbones and his eyes were very bright.
There were three empty glasses on the table beside him.
'I don't think you should drink any more,' Draco said.
'I know,' Harry said. Draco noted with growing alarm that Harry was very flushed, and that his dark hair was pasted down to his forehead with sweat. 'It's just hot in here — because of the fire — ' Harry unknotted at the tie around his neck and tilted back his head as if he were having trouble getting enough air. 'Doesn't it bother you?'
'No. You just drank too much. It's the alcohol. Maybe you should go in the back and lie down.'
'I don't want to. I want to go outside. I need air.' Harry got to his feet, using the back of the armchair to brace himself. 'I need a walk.'
'You'll fall into the river,' Draco said.
Harry blinked. 'There's a river?'
Draco wondered if Sirius would notice them leaving, but he seemed to have fallen into a deep conversation with Lupin and the Mayor, and did not look up as they went out into the anteroom. Harry paused to pull down their cloaks from the rack, then pushed the door open. The fierce cold hit Draco so hard he was dazed for a moment, drawing his cloak on over his head hurriedly. When he emerged from it, the doorway was empty. He ran out onto the front steps, looking around for Harry, his feet skidding on the iced-over brick.
'I'm here,' Harry said.
He was down at the bottom of the path already, his cloak pulled awkwardly about his shoulders. He seemed to be staring at something just beyond the border of hedges. Draco went slowly down the stairs and joined him.
'What is it, Potter? What are you looking at?'
'It's beautiful,' Harry said. 'Isn't it beautiful?'
Draco looked at him in surprise, and then back at the winter landscape.
The moonlight had the clear unblemished purity peculiar to very cold winter nights. It lit the surrounding snow to white fire and silvered the dark air and the tops of the distant trees. Above the trees a mass of winter stars glittered with crystal flashes of vivid green and icy blue, while down at the bottom of the hill, Draco could hear the water of the river running underneath its shroud of ice. It was indeed a very beautiful night, although he doubted he would have thought to notice it if Harry hadn't pointed it out.
He turned to look at Harry. In the darkness he could see the other boy only as textures of light and shadow: dark hair, white skin, dark clothes.
His eyes had lost some of their smoky hollowed exhaustion and were alight behind his glasses.
'I want to fly,' Harry said.
'That's nice,' Draco said. 'We haven't got broomsticks.'
'I know where some are,' said Harry, and sat down on the frozen ground rather suddenly. 'Ouch,' he said. 'Help me up — I'll show you.'
'Potter — you're in no shape to do anything.'
'I'm not drunk,' Harry said very clearly. 'I'm just happy — let me be happy. It's been a long time since I last was.'
'Harry,' Draco protested. 'Don't.'
Harry took no notice. He had managed to get his legs back under him, and held up his hand. 'Help me up,' he said again.
Draco took the proffered hand and pulled Harry up to his feet. Harry smiled at him. It was a smile filled with light and happiness, and yet Draco knew that it was almost entirely artificial. Draco felt a little sick. 'What are we doing?' he asked.
'Come on,' Harry said, turning and starting off across the frozen lawn.
Draco followed him. He was getting used to this. It seemed to him that all he did these days was follow Harry various places. It was like having a toddler, albeit an oversized and crabby one.
The lawn sloped down behind the Cold Christmas Inn to the service road.
The carriages they had come in were lined up along the low kerb, in an orderly procession. Harry skidded sideways down the last of the incline and fetched up alongside Sirius' carriage. Draco saw him tap the boot with his right hand, and it popped open. Harry reached into and drew out two objects, both wrapped in colored paper. They were long and narrow, each flared at one end. The shape was unmistakable.
'Broomsticks?' Draco said blankly. 'What the hell…?'
'Our Christmas presents,' Harry said. 'I heard Sirius telling your mother he got us these. They're Cloudbursts. Brand new.'
'I know what Cloudbursts are.' The prototypes for the Cloudburst broom had been featured in the last issue of Quidditch World News. They had been designed by a well-known company and featured a number of experimental additions, the unremembered details of which were nagging at the back of Draco's mind in an annoying manner. 'I read the same Quidditch journals you do.'
'Good. So catch.'
Harry tossed one of the wrapped packages to Draco, who caught it instinctively. Harry turned his attention to ripping the wrapping paper off his own broomstick. It came away quickly under his swift fingers, and he looked up and grinned. The grin vanished when he saw Draco was still standing staring down at his own broomstick, without moving.
Harry made an impatient gesture with his right hand. 'Relasio,' he said, and the wrapping paper melted away from Draco's broom like snow under sunlight.
For a moment, Draco forgot all about Harry and the cold air and his burgeoning anxiety, and just stared in admiration. The Cloudburst was a sleek, narrow object that felt almost more like metal than wood under his hands, it was so dense and so smoothly polished. The shaft was black, the twigs at the far end jet-colored and banded with silver. It hummed when he touched it, a sound like the purr of a curious cat.
'You like it?'
