The Man who Disappeared
Chapter 2 of 21
Grace has VictoryThe quest to discover the fate of Caradoc Dearborn only reveals fresh mysteries.
CHAPTER TWO
The Man who Disappeared
Thursday 21 July Sunday 24 July 1983
Perthshire: Perth, Dunkeld, Pitlochry, Foss.
Rated PG-13 for explicit lycanthropy.
In fact they did not walk very far on that first day. Ivor and Hestia were virtually dancing down the pavements, but with a fine disregard for direction or route, and those who had risen early to take the Dundee bus wanted to set a more reasonable pace. Emmeline Vance was managing the map, but with so many frowns that in the end, Kingsley gave it a swift glance and announced that he would navigate. Sturgis Podmore was apparently enjoying his reunion with Remus and Emmeline, and he wanted to talk about the Order of the Phoenix, so Ariadne fell into step with Glenda Foster. Remus, although replying to Sturgis, never left her side; he seemed very happy to pay her so much attention and very glad of the excuse of her parents' orders to be able to do so. The Kincarden barn owl hovered discreetly after them, fluttering from tree to tree.
Glenda, however, was not in the mood for conversation, and Ariadne wondered if she were already regretting the melancholy excursion.
As they left the elegant Georgian streets of Perth, Hestia slowed down and stopped singing. She waited for Glenda, which gave Ariadne, who walked long distances every day at home, a chance to quicken to a more comfortable pace. It was almost amusing how Remus lengthened his stride to accompany her. But letting him see that she had noticed would remind him that she was his job. She asked him instead, "Remus, what were you doing on the day Caradoc disappeared?"
"Some of us from the Order spent the afternoon together. I remember it because it was the last time I saw James and Lily Potter before their son Harry was born."
Once again, she wondered what he was not saying. She wanted to ask him more about the Potters, but Sturgis appeared on her other side, saying, "Your memory is better than mine, Remus. Did any of us talk about Caradoc that evening?"
"Not that I remember. I didn't hear that he'd vanished until after Harry was born, so before this morning I never made the connection that Caradoc was killed on that day. Or night."
"Night? What was special about that night?" asked Sturgis.
"Nothing in particular. I just remember walking with Sirius Black who was still a friend in those days in the blinding rain, staring at the full moon, talking about James." Remus was looking at the ground as if he did not want either of them to meet his eye. "Obviously what I'm asking myself now is: how many of those people knew Caradoc had been sent into a Death Eaters' den?"
Sturgis swore loudly. The noise drowned out Ariadne's next question. Remus only looked politely at Ariadne so that she could repeat herself. "You're meaning did Sirius Black know where Caradoc had gone? Was he the one who tipped off the Death Eaters?" She had not realised that Remus had known the infamous Black, but it made sense if they had worked for the Order together.
"It probably isn't a helpful speculation," he admitted, "but the possibility is crossing my mind."
"Never mind speculation," Sturgis interrupted. "What about the danger now? If we'd realised this earlier... We're going to have to change the itinerary for this excursion. The original plan didn't include Macnair territory, and it has us camping up in the mountains on Sunday. It looks as if we're going to need to avoid open spaces on that night."
"We have no reason to believe that there is any danger," said Remus smoothly, "so don't go putting frightening ideas into your friends' heads."
"I still want the youngsters to be spending Sunday night with civilisation," said Sturgis. "It's starting to sound as if Pitlochry itself is nearer the mark anyway. That means slowing the whole thing down."
Ariadne did not know what Remus meant when he agreed that "loitering would be safer". However, Sturgis had a word with Kingsley, who, without checking the map, led them unerringly to a camping ground only a couple of miles out of Perth. Fortunately they were able to hire a site despite not having booked; Emmeline paid the manager in Muggle money, and they set up their tents by hand, since the site was full of Muggle campers. The Kincarden owl settled in a tree beside Emmeline's tawny and Ivor's Scops, all of them trying to look as if they had nothing to do with the campers.
The next two days were equally slow-paced. On Friday they only walked as far as Dunkeld. They left their bags inside their tents and spent the rest of the day walking through the larches, photographing the Hermitage, exploring the cathedral and the Ell House. On Saturday they made a very leisurely pace to Pitlochry, but instead of camping, they hired a cottage just outside the town.
At five o' clock on Sunday morning, Hestia pulled Ariadne's covers from the bed. She was not smiling. Glenda, obviously sleep-deprived, tip-toed to Emmeline's bunk. She hesitated, but Hestia encouraged her with a nod, and Glenda daringly pulled off Emmeline's covers. Emmeline began to mumble something cross, but then thought better of it.
"Today's the day, then?" said Ariadne.
Hestia nodded. Five minutes later they were dressed and hammering at the door to the other bedroom. Sturgis's voice called out something that sounded like a complaint, but Ivor's voice reminded him, "Lay off. Today's the reason we came here."
They were all out of the cottage before six. Hestia and Glenda led the way, not speaking to anybody else, although Ivor tagged closely behind them. Ariadne and the others lagged a respectful distance back. Kingsley, who had taken charge of all the maps and memorised them, pretended to consult one about the route. But they all knew that the only possible plan was to follow the River Tummel until they reached Macnair Castle unless they first encountered anything that looked like a Death Eater meeting place.
The silence was almost deathly; they could hear every rustle of the leaves, every fall of their own feet. Their owls were silent. They passed no human settlement. They met neither hikers nor fishermen. There was not even a sign of past tourists, a footprint in the mud or a cigarette butt. Yet the light was so strong almost blinding, despite the shade of the trees that it was difficult to imagine that anything Dark had ever happened here, or even to remember that "Dark" was only a metaphor and that Death Eaters might kill in open sunshine.
"What are we expecting to find?" Emmeline murmured. "The grass scorched where the Death Eaters passed?"
"Skulls in the river?" offered Kingsley.
"Trees carved with the Dark Mark?" added Sturgis.
"It's three years since Caradoc came this way if this is the way he came," said Emmeline. "And two since the last Death Eater meeting."
Remus had said nothing. He was keeping so close to Ariadne that she felt he would have held her hand if she had let him. She knew he was worried about the day's excursion, and it was obvious why.
They had ambled along the riverbank for about three hours when Hestia pointed upwards and left. "That's it!"
Ariadne saw nothing for several paces more, and then suddenly it snapped into view: a huge Gothic castle with a yawning portcullis, and pinnacles and turrets clinging to the rose-beige walls at impossible angles, doubtless held in place by Dark spells. A spine-shivering chill had invaded the summer air, and she could see a face through a lancet window...
A face. Although wrapped in a wimple, complete with thirteenth-century filet cap, the face was not at all ghostly. It was young, female, and very much alive, with huge haunted eyes...
"Stand back!" Remus had a hand on her shoulder and was pulling her away, but she was hardly aware of him. She was still staring at the face high up in the window, sure that the stranger was staring back at them. "Ariadne!" Remus was speaking more urgently now. "Come away from the castle."
It was the first time she had ever felt angry with Remus. The longer she stared at the girl in the window, the more distinctly she could see the face. It was a face she had never expected to see again. When Remus's hand tightened on her upper arm, she wrenched her eyes away and saw that he was terrified.
To oblige him, she began to step backwards. Instantly, the castle vanished and the air was warm again. She looked exactly where the castle had been, but all she could see was trees, hillside, and then a ruined kirk beside a cluster of houses that announced themselves to be the village of Foss.
"The castle is invisible," she breathed, "unless..."
"Everyone stand back!" Kingsley had latched on, and his voice cut into her thoughts. He grabbed at Glenda Foster, none too gently, and said, "We'll talk later stand back from the castle." Suddenly everybody was taking notice of him, and they all scuttled backwards. "Keep walking," said Kingsley, "we need to move."
After they had moved a hundred yards back the way they had come, they stopped and sat down at the bank. Glenda, despite all attempts at nonchalance, was in tears, and Hestia had buried her face in Glenda's shoulder. Remus did not budge from Ariadne's side, but he addressed the whole group.
"It isn't safe to investigate that castle any more. Whatever it is, it's Dark magic."
"But we didn't actually go near it," said Ivor. "It was like telescope vision. We could see every detail the cracks in the bricks, the faces at the windows but we weren't in fact very close to it."
"We were too near," said Kingsley soberly. "We couldn't see it at all until we crossed some kind of boundary. Then we saw everything. We must have stepped over some kind of magical territory marker Ariadne, do you still think it's Macnair's territory?"
"I do; the village of Foss was clearly marked."
"I suspect a Muggle tourist would see Foss and nothing else," said Emmeline. "Only wizards who step inside the Macnair border could see the castle. Which means that if they saw us seeing them they would know we are wizards. That would put us in danger of retaliation even if we had innocent intentions. Which we haven't, exactly."
"I think we should have lunch in Pitlochry," said Remus. Sturgis gave him a significant glance, which he ignored, and nobody argued.
Those who could not Apparate held on to those who could, and they relocated themselves to the cottage. Ariadne had not expected Side-Along Apparition to be so disorienting; her head was spinning as they walked across to the lawn outside the Festival Theatre and sat down to recover from the long hike.
Ariadne was thinking about the face she had seen at the window. She had met most of the Macnair clan at one time or another (and had not liked any of them), and this had not been a Macnair face. Obviously, they would not be living there alone; there would be all kinds of employees and visitors. Yet, despite the quaint costume...
"The face at the window... It looked so exactly like somebody..."
"A ghost?" offered Sturgis.
Remus accepted Ariadne's assertion that it was definitely not a ghost, but suggested, "An illusion? We're dealing with magical vision here, so don't assume that anything you saw was literally real."
"But it was not just the face. The expression. It was so... so like a person I used to know." As long as everybody else was concerned with Dark wizards and Caradoc Dearborn, it seemed wrong to throw another mystery into the composition. If the face were not literally real, then was it a specific torment designed for herself? But why would Walden Macnair bother with such a weak and random ploy? She could not make herself think about Uncle Macnair. Perhaps she should, but her imagination was entirely taken over by the image of the very familiar face in that very foreign place.
The face of Veleta Vablatsky, who had died three years ago.
Nobody was very talkative, and in the end it was Glenda who said, "We can't mope. We should do something with the rest of the day. How about Blair Castle?"
"I've had enough of castles," said Sturgis. "And enough outdoor hiking. How about the salmon ladder, or the distillery?"
They made a list of the tourist traps and visited them at a very leisurely pace, between long hours of sitting on the grass. Oddly, Hestia and Glenda seemed to be avoiding each other. Hestia clung to Ivor's hand, showing very resolute enthusiasm for salmon and whisky, and even some genuine laughter at Ivor's jokes. That left Ariadne to seek out Glenda, who clutched at her arms and seemed unable to speak.
"It's been a frustrating morning," Ariadne offered. "We're yet none the wiser."
"But I think we are." Glenda steered Ariadne down the street. "I'd never heard of Macnair Castle until you mentioned it. And now it just reeks of Caradoc's last hours. I was thinking about it all morning, wondering how far he went before they caught him, and whether he was aiming for the castle or some spot in the open countryside, and whether he walked along the river-bank or left it to cross the fields... I'm feeling I want to survey the area on a broomstick. Yes, I know, it's stupid. Looking for a sight of burned grass."
"It all has to be exquisitely painful for you."
Glenda nodded as if she found this hopeless statement comforting. She kept close to Ariadne all day, alternating among wanting to talk about Caradoc, wanting to talk about looking for him, wanting to talk about Pitlochry, and wanting to be left in silence.
Ariadne found herself not only walking with Glenda, but thinking her thoughts, feeling her feelings, missing Caradoc in his absence, living the frustration of never being quite certain that he was really dead. When Glenda lapsed into another silence, it took Ariadne a moment to remember that she had never actually known Caradoc; he'd just been the Prefect in her first year at Hogwarts, a mere name to a face.
She looked around for Remus, realising that he had finally eased up in his vigilance in order to mingle with Sturgis, Emmeline and Kingsley. Just as she began to hope that he had finally let himself forget that she was his job, he turned his head to meet her eyes, then nodded, acknowledging that she was with Glenda and safe. He was still marking her every move. He did not consider himself to be on holiday at all.
So she was very surprised over dinner when Remus announced that he had an appointment in Hogsmeade. "I can't avoid it gracefully. I'm putting Sturgis in charge of you, Ariadne. Just in case any Dark wizards decide to attack in front of the Muggles." He was smiling, but she thought he sounded grim. "Have her back at the cottage by dark."
"But we're going to the Festival Theatre tonight," protested Hestia. "The play doesn't end until after ten."
"Not tonight." Remus sounded almost sharp. "Tomorrow perhaps. But Ariadne is not to be out after dark tonight. Give me your word on that, Sturgis, or I will Apparate her back to Inverness-shire now."
Ariadne had never heard such desperation over a simple appointment. "It's all right," she said, "I'm tired. Why do we not go to the theatre tomorrow when Remus can come too?"
Several of her companions looked as if they would like to protest further, but nobody did. After dinner they walked through Pitlochry even the evening air was warm back to their cottage. Remus frowned at the door, bolted it, and Disapparated.
It had been a long day, yet somehow nobody really wanted to go to bed. The Kincarden barn owl was looking reproachful at not having been given any work, so Ariadne wrote a quick note to her parents to say that everything was going well, despite her own lurking suspicion that something was about to go very wrong. They played several rounds of Exploding Snap, but nobody's mind was on the game. After a while they put the cards away and talked. At first they avoided the subject of Caradoc. Then they could only talk about Caradoc. They stopped to watch the sunset, and Ariadne wondered where Remus really was. He might well be in Hogsmeade for all she knew it was not in fact very far away but she knew that this was another of his mysterious "appointments". She also wondered what impenetrable danger he feared outside in the dark something about which Sturgis and Emmeline apparently knew but were unwilling to discuss with the rest of them.
At sunset they felt justified in lighting a fire, even though it was only a standard hearth and not a camp fire. Kingsley made a very good blue flame "in honour of North Sea gas", and he turned it orange and then pink at the flick of a finger. Emmeline conjured a toasting fork and began to make raisin toast from a loaf she had bought in town. Ariadne guessed that Hestia and Glenda were still restless about Caradoc; but her own mind could not leave the subject of Remus. She wondered if Sturgis and Emmeline had some good reason to worry about him and his "appointment".
Then they heard it. A long, low-pitched, lonely howl.
Ariadne froze to the floor, trying not to hear the message that the howl was bringing. Glenda murmured something about "someone tormenting a dog", but Ivor was already suggesting, "A wolf."
"It can't be a wolf," said Kingsley. "Wolves have been extinct from Scotland for three hundred years."
Ariadne glanced instinctively beyond Kingsley to the window, where a huge moon, unquestionably full, was clearly visible on the horizon. Hestia followed her gaze and asked, "What about a werewolf?"
The animal howled again. Emmeline leapt to her feet and said, "He's in trouble." Sturgis, also pulling to his feet, said, "Not necessarily," but Emmeline persisted, "We have to look."
Ariadne's head was pounding. Remus had wanted her indoors tonight. He must have remembered it was the full moon. And she remembered his words: in the blinding rain, staring at the full moon. The night when Caradoc disappeared. Remus had been trying to tell Sturgis, without upsetting anybody else, that Caradoc had disappeared on the night of the full moon. Caradoc... at the jaws of a werewolf?
"Friends," said Sturgis, "we have to go out and check this 'werewolf', just on the off-chance that it isn't someone's mistreated dog and it isn't properly restrained."
"You're leaving us?" asked Glenda.
"You're in charge, Glenda," said Emmeline. "Don't for any reason allow any of the others to leave the cottage."
Had Remus known that there was a werewolf in the area? Or was he just being cautious? He had taken his task of protecting her on this holiday very, very seriously. But if caution were so important tonight of all nights, why had he persisted in keeping his appointment in Hogsmeade? Those appointments... had not Janet written that they happened once a month? Something was forcing itself into her mind, something so fantastic that she felt stupid for considering it.
Glenda nodded soberly. Horrid imaginings were apparently entering her own mind as she opened the door for Sturgis and Emmeline and then barred it behind them. But Ariadne was not thinking about Caradoc. She would not, would not, imagine anything so horrible about his fate until she knew for sure that there had been a werewolf in the area on the night he died.
"Do you know any good Stunners?" That was the last they heard of Sturgis's voice, floating through the moon-flooded night. "Good, we'll Apparate towards the sound, a hundred yards at a time..."
But Remus has a secret. The voice took over Ariadne's thoughts as soon as she had withdrawn her mind from Caradoc. Not a guilty secret, but certainly a painful one. That evening in November when she had been home from school, and he had insisted that he had to keep his appointment... he had followed her outdoors, he had Disapparated... She had walked around the farm, doing his jobs for him in the dusk, doing no end of out-of-school Charms, or coaxing William to do them for her... it must have been dusk it had been after four o' clock but it had actually been quite light, because...
Because it had been a full moon that night.
Every full moon, Remus went out to keep his "appointment". And every morning after, he was sick and wasted with an illness that nobody recognised.
Ariadne sat down on the sofa, holding her head in her hands. Glenda, who obviously believed that Ariadne shared her images of Caradoc's horrific end, sat down next to her and threw her arms around her shoulders. Ariadne hugged her friend back, but did not admit that she was not thinking about the man whom she had barely known. She was not thinking of the victim at all, but of the attacker.
Her whole mind was emblazoned with the horror of being... the assailant, the destroyer, the mindless monster... knowing day after day that month after month one would lose all human control to the bloodthirsty predator inside, would become the vessel of its acts of carnage... She sobbed bitterly.
Remus Lupin was a werewolf.
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Latest 25 Reviews for Crown of the North
45 Reviews | 9.27/10 Average
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. Oh, wait. I have just the emoticon...
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
/images/chairdance.gif" alt="" /> Prayer works. That's all I'm saying.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
I LOVE the emoticon! That's certainly how I felt when I was writing it. Remus and Ariadne are not the praying types, but the wizarding community is fairly small, and some things are just meant to be.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
/images/chairdance.gif" alt="" /> Prayer works. That's all I'm saying.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
I LOVE the emoticon! That's certainly how I felt when I was writing it. Remus and Ariadne are not the praying types, but the wizarding community is fairly small, and some things are just meant to be.
I think her self-doubt is easing up just a tad here. She's starting to doubt less but see rather that she has no solid proof to back it up. This chapter was filled with tiny tidbits I loved. From her friends forcing her to take some time off from forced labor to these girls naivite at what being invited up for coffee means. ROFL!
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Well, I think Sarah did know what "come up for coffee" really meant, but she took refuge in wilful naivety because her vanity enjoyed the drama and she knew she had magic to fall back upon. Deep down, she hopes to meet a man for whom a coffee is just a coffee, because he'd be a man worth marrying. There is no end to her egocentricity and no end to her generosity, and Ariadne is dealing with both in this chapter.Yes, Ariadne is getting on with life as she processes her grief, but of course she'll never be the same again.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Well, I think Sarah did know what "come up for coffee" really meant, but she took refuge in wilful naivety because her vanity enjoyed the drama and she knew she had magic to fall back upon. Deep down, she hopes to meet a man for whom a coffee is just a coffee, because he'd be a man worth marrying. There is no end to her egocentricity and no end to her generosity, and Ariadne is dealing with both in this chapter.Yes, Ariadne is getting on with life as she processes her grief, but of course she'll never be the same again.
And Remus mirrors Ariadne ... she doubts her instincts because of how he affected her, and he compares everyone to her. He's ruined for life for anyone else, and it's his own darn fault. I mean, I suppose you could say that it's Greyback's fault because if he hadn't been made a werewolf, he'd be more sure of himself. But then again, what someone does with a disability or a challenge is their own responsibility and the ball is back in their court.... Ah, age. It brings a truckload of wisdom you never asked for but tend to carry with you wherever you go, whatever you read, whatever you do.... I shall quietly slink into the next chapter now.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Nobody will ever be as guilty as Greyback, but there is such a thing as being over-responsible. Remus did the "sensible" thing in making Ariadne's decision for her. And I think we all know by this point that the sensible and "moral" decision was quite, quite wrong.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Nobody will ever be as guilty as Greyback, but there is such a thing as being over-responsible. Remus did the "sensible" thing in making Ariadne's decision for her. And I think we all know by this point that the sensible and "moral" decision was quite, quite wrong.
It is simply painful that Ariadne is doubting all of her "feelings" or instincts rather because of what Remus has done to her. I remember being young, though, and how something so devastating can make a lasting impression like that. Poor girl.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Thank you so much for feeling her pain. An older woman would have known that other explanations for the situation were possible, but Ariadne is still learning.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Thank you so much for feeling her pain. An older woman would have known that other explanations for the situation were possible, but Ariadne is still learning.
Beautiful wedding. Their friends are simply wonderful and prove that there are good people in the world who gravitate to other good people.I'm still afraid for the wedding night. A kiss on the lips is all well and good, but I'm afriad he might still feel the need to compromise.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Thank you so much for all your support and faithful reviewing. You will see in the sequel how the marriage progresses and whether they can ever leave the wolf behind.(As for the wedding night, I'm afraid I couldn't bring myself to play the voyeur on that one; but Remus will settle down to normal instincts eventually. In the meantime, remember that Ariadne doesn't know the difference.) GhV
Corrupt politicians exist everywhere unfortunately. It's a difficult lesson to learn. Makes you wonder sometimes why you even bother to vote since 'honest politician' is an oxymoron.Loved the relatives Floo-calling. Loved her sarcastic disappointment at never having to visit Malfoy Manor again. Loved Severus playing concerned friend. One of these days, he'll learn how to pull that stick out of his arse. (Or maybe not.)
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Voting is compulsory in Australia! I've given my vote to my under-age son before now, because I don't see why I should have to pick among the politicians in a foreign country. Anyway, I'm glad you enjoyed Ariadne's cousins. She has to admit to liking some of them more than others.
Okay, if he compromises with a good-night kiss on the forehead when becoming bethrothed, it makes me fear for their wedding night. Silly, silly boy. He thinks he's so much older than her due to the war, but in relationships, he is vastly lacking in maturity. Ariadne needed to take control.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Werewolves fear losing control, and Remus is terrified of the way the sacrificial lamb has wandered into his clutches...
You know, I've worked for the type of family like the Jiggers. Getting out of there was the best thing that ever happened to me. Of course, Ariadne needs to take their crap to develop a career, whereas I simply needed the money at the time. But I do feel for her situation there.It's a chapter of hope that Veleta still lives, but I'm suspecting it's an empty hope.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Ugh, my condolences. I'd hoped the Jiggers were purely fictitious. But Ariadne can handle them if anyone can. As for Veleta, I'm keeping you guessing!
I'd have to say her final letter was well-planned. She worked up to that point, and knew she had him. The flowers were a perfect answer. He surrendered. *lol*
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
He's no match for her in terms of human nature. But that's hardly saying much.
Yikes. They are cutting it closer every month. It is almost like watching a train wreck about to happen. You see it coming; you just can't do anything about it.(I forgot: a couple chapters ago you mentioned the research on Velete and their attempt at alerting the authorities. That's another thing to be worried about, for it is most certain the Macnairs know who's behind the investigation. And if it truly was Veleta they saw, hopefully they won't take it out on her.)
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
While you're watching for the train-wreck, let me warn you that it will actually crash in from the opposite direction!Yes, the Macnairs know who is behind the investigation. In this universe, Walden's wife is the sister of Rufus Scrimgeour, so they have access to all kinds of "confidential" records. Be warned!
Response from notsosaintly (Reviewer)
My response in reading the first sentence: I closed my eyes and thought, "Ouch." I love suspense.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
While you're watching for the train-wreck, let me warn you that it will actually crash in from the opposite direction!Yes, the Macnairs know who is behind the investigation. In this universe, Walden's wife is the sister of Rufus Scrimgeour, so they have access to all kinds of "confidential" records. Be warned!
Response from notsosaintly (Reviewer)
My response in reading the first sentence: I closed my eyes and thought, "Ouch." I love suspense.
Poor Remus. He doesn't think himself worthy of anything just because he's afflicted with lycanthropy. Sure, it is a social stigma, but it has really affected his self-esteem. James and Sirius were so good for him. Ariadne is good for him, but he won't let himself see that, he's so embroiled in self-loathing. Remus is very frustrating. I think Ariadne should create a potion that helps him to see things clearer and to give him more confidence. That would have been more worthy than a bottle of shampoo Snape definitely needed but never would use.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Now, that's an idea! A Clear View of Reality Potion! Snape could use one too. I'm afraid any such potion would have ruined this particular story, but I'm sure it's a plot bunny for future reference. Just for the record, as I didn't have room to spell this out: Ariadne's shampoo does work, but only if you put it on your hair. It's completely useless if you leave it in the bottle.I think Remus probably does know that Ariadne is good for him, but he doesn't believe that he is good for her. His poor self-knowledge is one of the dramatic factors that influences canon, because it directs the way he will behave in PoA. So there is a limit to how far I can enlighten him in this story.Thanks for reviewing.
Response from notsosaintly (Reviewer)
"Poor self-knowledge" ... you are right. And I really did latch onto the 'he not being good for her' vibe from Remus. You know, I miss some things I want to say when I am reviewing multiple chapters this way. I am going to start writing my review at the bottom of each chapter as I read through it. That should help.Maybe if we hold Severus down and pour the shampoo on his head? That might work. He'd need to be Petrified. And we couldn't Obliviate him because you'd want him to remember how his hair got that way. (I'm imagining such a discussion between the seventh-year Gryffindor friends in the common room.) Unfortunately that is really out-of-bounds for this story. ;)
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Now, that's an idea! A Clear View of Reality Potion! Snape could use one too. I'm afraid any such potion would have ruined this particular story, but I'm sure it's a plot bunny for future reference. Just for the record, as I didn't have room to spell this out: Ariadne's shampoo does work, but only if you put it on your hair. It's completely useless if you leave it in the bottle.I think Remus probably does know that Ariadne is good for him, but he doesn't believe that he is good for her. His poor self-knowledge is one of the dramatic factors that influences canon, because it directs the way he will behave in PoA. So there is a limit to how far I can enlighten him in this story.Thanks for reviewing.
Response from notsosaintly (Reviewer)
"Poor self-knowledge" ... you are right. And I really did latch onto the 'he not being good for her' vibe from Remus. You know, I miss some things I want to say when I am reviewing multiple chapters this way. I am going to start writing my review at the bottom of each chapter as I read through it. That should help.Maybe if we hold Severus down and pour the shampoo on his head? That might work. He'd need to be Petrified. And we couldn't Obliviate him because you'd want him to remember how his hair got that way. (I'm imagining such a discussion between the seventh-year Gryffindor friends in the common room.) Unfortunately that is really out-of-bounds for this story. ;)
To trust Remus so much to finally open up and tell him her true feelings … I think this is the first time she’s done so in this manner. I believe he will treasure this letter for a long time. Also, Kingsley … my God. Talk about one of JKR’s undeveloped characters. You’ve brought him to life, and I think I’m falling in love.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Thank you! Yes, this is a level of trust that nobody (except perhaps Veleta) has ever elicited from Ariadne.I've always felt that JKR implied Kingsley's crush-worthiness, even if she had no room to write much about him, and I'm surprised there isn't more fanfiction about him. There will be more about his love life, both tragic and comic, later in this series.Meanwhile, thank you for inferring the cyber-testosterone!
Response from notsosaintly (Reviewer)
Oh, it's there. It's definitely there. And it goes up a notch or two (in a later chapter I think?) when he exhibits a rebellion against McGonagall in support of his long-haired friend.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Thank you! Yes, this is a level of trust that nobody (except perhaps Veleta) has ever elicited from Ariadne.I've always felt that JKR implied Kingsley's crush-worthiness, even if she had no room to write much about him, and I'm surprised there isn't more fanfiction about him. There will be more about his love life, both tragic and comic, later in this series.Meanwhile, thank you for inferring the cyber-testosterone!
Response from notsosaintly (Reviewer)
Oh, it's there. It's definitely there. And it goes up a notch or two (in a later chapter I think?) when he exhibits a rebellion against McGonagall in support of his long-haired friend.
Ariadne is falling for Remus, but I think her upbringing is such that she doesn't allow herself to admit it to herself. Almost like it's forbidden, one of those things you don't "talk" about. Since it only concerns herself at this point, she's censoring her own feelings.And Remus is so transparent! It is obvious he likes her. And the fact that it pleases her is very promising.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Because of her upbringing, Ariadne perceives no need to verbalise the obvious. She does know her own feelings, therefore she assumes that Remus knows them too; but they don't talk about it because of the difficulties of the situation. It's forbidden; but she won't be dependent on her parents forever, so they can afford to wait.Unfortunately, the set-up is not as simple as Ariadne assumes, and the disaster is just waiting to happen.Thanks for reviewing.
Response from notsosaintly (Reviewer)
Just had to insert something personal as you mentioned 'verbalising the obvious'. It is funny because I am trying to weed out 'verbalising the obvious' in my 10-year-old. She keeps coming up to me and just making statements ... like I'm slaving away at rolling out dough and putting meat inside to fry them and am nearly done, not to mention she's been in the dining area the whole time, and she somes over to me and says, "So, you're making dinner?" Kids.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Because of her upbringing, Ariadne perceives no need to verbalise the obvious. She does know her own feelings, therefore she assumes that Remus knows them too; but they don't talk about it because of the difficulties of the situation. It's forbidden; but she won't be dependent on her parents forever, so they can afford to wait.Unfortunately, the set-up is not as simple as Ariadne assumes, and the disaster is just waiting to happen.Thanks for reviewing.
Response from notsosaintly (Reviewer)
Just had to insert something personal as you mentioned 'verbalising the obvious'. It is funny because I am trying to weed out 'verbalising the obvious' in my 10-year-old. She keeps coming up to me and just making statements ... like I'm slaving away at rolling out dough and putting meat inside to fry them and am nearly done, not to mention she's been in the dining area the whole time, and she somes over to me and says, "So, you're making dinner?" Kids.
Ooooh. Intrigue! I have my suspicions about what the Macnairs are up to with Veleta, but I wonder why she is a part of it, and how she came to have children. I can't wait to see what happens next!
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Your suspicions only scratch the surface. All will be revealed, but, for the time being, Ariadne's nightmare suspicions must lie dormant.Thanks for reviewing,GhV
So Ariadne still keeps some secrets from Remus. Interesting. :)I wonder if they'll ever find out what happened to Veleta.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Dear
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
,Glad you noticed the ongoing theme. Ariadne never tells everything she knows. The reader might guess what's in the yellow folder, but Remus never will.As for the red folder, it's about to grow larger.Thanks for reviewing,GhV
Response from Raira (Reviewer)
As you might have guessed, I am particularly enjoying this story, as I did Moons of Deceit. I always enjoy hearing that people like reading my stories, and I think it's important to say so when I enjoy someone else's. :)I can hardly wait for the next chapter.
Oooh, I wonder what he said in his note.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
So does Ariadne!She is very grateful for all your support.GhV
*giggle*Gotta love Remus. He didn't even consider he might meet Ariadne there. I love the way you've portrayed him as taking on a teaching role with the Muggles too.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Dear
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
,Remus cannot help teaching. It just happens naturally.He THINKS he didn't consider that he might meet Ariadne there. But, really, could it never have crossed his mind? Does he ever pass an hour without thinking of her? And has he never deceived himself before or since?Thanks for keeping up the reviews,GhV
Ooooh, intrigue and mystery!
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Dear
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
,Keep a long memory - there are some important clues in this chapter.GhV
I really enjoyed that chapter. I hope Remus is going to reunite with Ariadne.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Dear
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
,So does she! But she can't waste her life in empty hoping - she has more important things to do.GhV
How sweet. I can hardly wait to see what happens next.Remus is such a dreamboat.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Dear
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
,How could anyone not love Remus? How could any woman resist writing to him? Or about him, if it comes to that?I hope someone is sending you flowers,GhV
I am so glad that Ariadne is confident in her ability to trust her own judgement again. And does this mean that Remus is open to friendship at the very least now? I thought Ariadne's responses to his objections were very well worded. And hard to refute!
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Dear RR, Thanks for going to the trouble of reviewing on top of all your proofing work. Yes, Remus was uable to refute her arguments, therefore (logically) he has to allow friendship. Just what he means by "friendship" we will not enquire too closely - after all, we wouldn't want to scare him off. Suffice that Ariadne will never fail to be a friend to him. Regards, GhV
Remus is so self-critical isn't he? He tortures himself so much. He is the instigator of a lot of his own problems, and it's sad that he knows that, but has no idea which ones.I do adore him.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Remus is an Arian heretic. This is a cautionary tale about the perils of bad theology if ever there was one! How could anyone not love a man in such ardent quest of redemption - even if he is seeking in all the wrong places?GhV
Remus is so blind, isn't he? He can't comprehend that Adriane must love him as he does her, to do all these things for her.What a night she must have had; delivering the lamb, shivering in the cold, and worrying about him.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
There are none so blind as those ...Remus has a vested interest in not working it out, as you will see in the next chapter.Inevitably, Ariadne does not perceive it as "doing things for him"; his happiness is necessary to hers, so to her it's a simple matter of self-preservation.Thanks for reviewing,GhV
Poor Remus, still having to hide everything; it's interesting that he's been placed in a position of having to conceal the relationship without her parents being aware of the lycanthropy. It seems sadly inevitable that they will be found out. I hope not though. :(
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Dear
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
,I think it's one of the subtleties of Remus's situation (this is JKR, not me) that the lycanthropy affects so many other things that even people who don't specifically know about the lycanthropy know that there's something wrong with him. Why is he such an under-achiever? Why doesn't he have any pure-blood connections? Remus, with all his faults and eccentricities, doesn't really fit anyone's stereotype of a werewolf, so the MacDougal family will make many wrong guesses before they finally work it out.I hope your own writing is going well,GhV
Shampoo! *laugh*Your characterisation of Snape is spot on, and I really enjoyed the rest of the chapter. Adriane is very sneaky and devious (and also virtuous, since the times in Remus's hut are actually used for homework). I like her.
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
Dear
Response from Grace has Victory (Author of Crown of the North)
,Snape is a wonderful character. When I want to know what he'll do next, I just appeal to my own inner Snape. I didn't expect him to make a Right to Life speech, since I just can't see him caring about either pregnant women or unborn babies, but there is no question that he definitely enjoys embarrassing his students.Ariadne is surprisingly complex for a person who never tells a direct lie (track this one ... she doesn't) and her virtue is the germ of her downfall. I am so happy that you have recognised all the important points in my story!Thanks for keeping up the reviews,GhV
Response from Raira (Reviewer)
Thanks for keeping up the writing! I've gotten a bit behind, working on a few of my own projects, but I'm enjoying the knowledge that I have a few chapters in store for me. :D