Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 157 - 157 from Harry Potter: The Healer, a Action novel by TheRedSpell.

Hogsade is an amusing little village, no matter how you look at it.

Moving under a light Notice--Not charm with our deep hoods pulled up over our heads, Daphne and I navigated through Hogsade, gradually approaching its outskirts, where it was just a stone's throw to the Hog's Head—only about three hundred ters slightly uphill to the top of a small mound where the tavern stood. Yes, exactly a tavern—it's incorrect to call this establishnt a pub.

Anyway, what was I talking about? Ah, right, Hogsade is an amusing village. There are quite a few different little shops here where you can buy absolutely anything. So might think the village survives solely on this—making money off students eager to part with their ringing coins. However, such people would be wrong. Yes, the village earns money from this, but it's more like a hobby, nothing more. It's full of working wizards or elderly folks living out their days. So thinking that students are the only source of inco for the village is a major misconception.

"What do your folks say about all this commotion?" I asked Daphne, who was walking beside , as we left the clearly defined boundary of Hogsade and moved up the hill, fighting a light breeze that kept trying to blow sharp but quickly lting snowflakes under our hoods, turning them instantly into slush beneath our feet.

"I have no idea."

"What do you an?"

"For a week now, all forms of communication have been monitored by the Ministry. Only Ministry-approved letters get through, so I only know my family's official stance. As I understand it, no one outside Hogwarts has received any information about the actual state of affairs."

"That's unfortunate. What about flying ho? Or taking the Floo from Hogsade, for example?"

"Sa story—monitored or blocked."

"And Apparition?"

Daphne turned her head toward , though the only sign of it was the shifting of the hood on her head.

"Even among adults, few have mastered that skill. Speaking of information, by the way, word around the house is that a couple of people have gotten detentions with Umbridge."

"From your house?" I was genuinely surprised.

"Yes."

"Unexpected. The result?"

"So far, just scratches on their hands—or so they say. Apparently, they even tried to provoke her, but Umbridge cleverly plays with words, leaving no room for unambiguous interpretation."

As we almost reached the tavern, completely unremarkable in appearance and completely unchanged over the past two years, I couldn't help but voice an observation:

"You are taking the 'Umbridge case' very seriously."

"She annoys everyone. But if it were only that... Her presence here brings nothing but downsides, problems, and injuries. Things don't escalate to such injuries even at ho during punishnts, and believe —so parents are more than capable of coming up with creative thods."

We approached the front door of the Hog's Head. Senses told —no unnecessary magic. I don't even know why I've beco so suspicious. Though, maybe it was because during my walk through Diagon and Knockturn Alleys with Mrs. Malfoy, I kept hearing that phrase out of the corner of my ear: The Hog's Head?

The door yielded easily, albeit with a faint creak, and we stepped inside.

The first thing that caught the eye was the gloomy and slightly unkempt-looking interior. Everything was in gray tones; the stone floor and even the rough wooden furniture had long lost their color, becoming a "gray" filler for the space around. The only non-gray things here were the flas in the fireplace and a white-and-brown goat that importantly clicked its hooves as it walked from the bar counter deeper into the room. The bartender, a large, burly man—who, while not young, seed decrepit only at first glance—looked at us with displeasure as he wiped his counter with a thousand-year-old rag. At least, that's what it looked like. But here's the funny thing—the longer I spend in this world, the more I realize the illusory and deceptive nature of appearances. Take that rag, for instance—it looks like it should have been tossed in the trash a hundred or two hundred years ago, yet I clearly sense that I couldn't find a more sterile object around, and it cleans perfectly. Not visually, but factually, guaranteeing "safety," so to speak. And this bartender strikes as an extrely powerful wizard, although I wouldn't have been able to say that about him during our first eting in my third year.

By the far window sat two figures in dark cloaks with deep hoods pulled over their heads, hiding their faces in shadow. In a far corner near the hearth sat a witch, slowly sipping sothing from a mug, and judging by the angle of her hood, staring out the window. Perhaps even staring thoughtfully. Though what one could possibly see through it, given the amount of soot on the glass, rlin only knows. However, Daphne and my true attention was drawn to the students sitting at the very farthest table. Hermione, Ron, and Harry.

"Looks like we're the first ones here," I smirked.

"They aren't even under privacy charms," Daphne shook her head disapprovingly, and we moved toward the table where the trio sat. Who, by the way, imdiately tensed up, which wasn't surprising.

"Hello, conspirators," I smirked, slightly revealing my face from under the hood. Daphne pulled a similar trick. All of this was strictly to show the trio who exactly had approached them, without revealing it to the rest of the room.

"He—" Hermione was about to express her surprise, but I cut her off with a wave of my hand, and instantly, a slightly distorted do of a complex privacy ward snapped into place around the table. Even Daphne gave a respectful glance. "—ctor?"

"Yeah, sis," I pulled out a chair for Daphne, and once she sat down, I took the seat next to her. "Didn't they teach you how to cast basic privacy and silencing charms?"

"I guess I got nervous," Hermione admitted guiltily, but seeing that the job was already done, she didn't fuss.

Taking a quick glance at the trio, dressed in standard warm autumn clothes, I wondered to myself: "I really wonder where all this is going to lead?"

"What are these snakes doing here?" Ron indignantly demanded, glancing at Daphne without much approval.

"If I hear one more insult," I said without visible aggression, my voice completely calm, "your words will be shoved right back into the place they have the unpleasant habit of flying out from. Along with your teeth."

"Hector!" Hermione gasped in outrage.

"And you," I smirked at my sister, ignoring Ron's disgruntled huffing and Potter, whose look made it clear he was ready to defend his friend. "Did you really not tell your friends that you invited Slytherins too? Well then, I will gladly watch how you handle potential conflicts if anyone else from the snake house shows up."

"Hey!" Ron protested. "So you're allowed to call them snakes, but I'm not?"

"Depends on the context and the intent behind the words. I can call you a redhead, but depending on how I do it, I've either insulted you or simply stated a fact."

"Knock it off, will you?" Potter exhaled tiredly, looking at us through his round bicycle-wheel glasses. "Things are sickening enough as is."

"Did sothing happen?" I politely inquired.

"We have a problem with teachers," Potter nodded.

"And I keep telling you," Ron turned to his friend, using the excuse to sit sideways to us and avoid unpleasant topics, "that you need to teach us. Look at last year—how many spells did we learn just to spy on Durmstrang?"

"Yeah," Harry nodded. "But we still got our asses handed to us."

"With enviable consistency, it's worth noting," Hermione smiled, and Daphne and I exchanged a glance.

"Let's just hope," Daphne spoke up, smirking with the corner of her lips visible from under her hood—neither she nor I was in a rush to take them off—"that having co here for knowledge and skills, we don't end up having to beco the teachers ourselves."

"Oh, please..." Ron wanted to keep complaining, since that was his favorite pasti, but at that mont, the front door opened.

"Looks like," Potter stared dumbfounded over our shoulders, "we have company."

I didn't need to look; after a whole year of Quidditch training, my sensory awareness of objects around had essentially beco my sixth, or seventh, or whatever number sense, which was constantly active. Simply put, there were a lot of people out there.

The kids filed into the tavern one by one. The bartender frowned, seeing their sheer numbers. The patrons by the window quieted down—the mild irritation from the loud chatter, which strongly contrasted with academically pure proper English, vanished. Potter's and Ron's eyes widened in surprise, and Hermione even looked embarrassed.

"Two or three people, yeah..." Ron drawled. "You, my friend..."

"I'm not your friend," Hermione cut him off.

"But I apologized! So many tis."

"A lot of good that did. You shouldn't have just apologized; you should have changed."

"Bloody hell..."

"What's wrong, Ron," I smirked as the crowd of students grew behind Daphne's and my backs, rushing to approach us, looking for places to sit, and generally expecting so sort of action already, for rlin's sake! "No one left to copy howork from?"

The redhead didn't answer. With an imperceptible gesture, slightly twisting my wrist, I expanded the privacy do so that everyone was inside it, even grabbing a bit more space. Although... the "do" was just a factual designation of the coverage area. If you looked from the outside, you'd have to squint to see the slightly shimring border of this area—like hot air over asphalt on a blistering sumr day.

"Well, look at this," a familiar voice, familiar intonations, lazily drawled words. "Professor Weasley, Professor Potter... what an honor has been bestowed upon us all."

"Malfoy..." Ron groaned, and for a second I thought a very specific Russian expletive characterizing total collapse and inevitable disaster was about to escape his lips.

"And why not Professor Granger?" I turned to the newcors.

"Oh, you're here too," Draco smirked, taking off an expensive fur hat and brushing nonexistent snowflakes from his black coat. "Because that was irony."

"I suppose," Hermione started fussing, "everyone needs a place to sit."

"We'll sort it out," a few of the guys nodded and quickly began bustling about arranging seats—dragging tables and chairs together.

"Hi," Hannah waved to ; all the Hufflepuffs from our year were standing next to her.

"I see you all decided to co here," it wasn't a question, but a statent of fact.

"Well, it's interesting, and quite important," Ernie nodded with a smile. "Though, I do have a couple of questions about the situation..."

"As do I..." Zacharias nodded without any joking around, untying a scarf in our house colors.

---------------

Give Powerstones if you like the story.

If you want to read 60 advanced chapters, you can do so on my Patreon.

Patreon(.)com/TheRedSpell

You are reading Harry Potter: The Healer Chapter 157 - 157 on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Timeless Assassin cover
Trending now

Timeless Assassin

RajShah7152 ·Action

Leoawakensinaworldhedoesn’trecognize,withnomemoryofwhoheisorwhyhe’sthere.Allheknowsisthatsurvivalisn’tjustanecessity—it’shisonlychancetouncoverthet...

I Have a Golden Crow cover
Trending now

I Have a Golden Crow

Great Yu ·Eastern

DuYuhasnoclueabouthowhehastransmigratedtoaworldofdemontaming.HeisalsoinastateofconfusionwhenhecontractstheGoldenCrowthatwasliterallyasun.“Areyoufro...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.