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Disclaimer: Not mine. If it were mine, this would be in a bookstore,
and you'd be paying to read it. See the difference?

Warning: This chapter PG13 for language and themes. Or maybe R.


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Worksheet #8: Consumer Tendencies of Corporate America
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The GAP was ridiculously American, even though the pretty girl just inside the door 
greeted him with an English accent and an English smile: the walls were plastered 
with actors and models in the upper-middle-class clothing, as though the building 
itself had achieved pretension. The employees wore nearly the same exact outfits, 
and all grinned as though the world outside didnt exist. At just after nine in the 
morning, the attitude grated.

He dodged around a trio of headless mannequins, briefly eyeing them for ideas 
even as he carded one hand through damp black hair to feel gingerly for torn-edged 
skin. The change of clothes, just as overlarge as the rags hed been forced to discard, 
would continue to mark him in this city, mark him until the same thing happened again.
Hence his shopping trip.

"Can I help you find anything?" Another girl asked, lips curved gently, hands clasped 
before her in a patently helpful gesture. He shook his head, managed a quiet "Thanks, 
no," and turned back to the sheer wall of denim before him. He probably did need help, 
as hed no inkling of his size, but the endless smiling was making him nervous.

"Well, denim is ten dollars off today, if youre interested," the girl continued, before 
floating away to accost another customer. 

Harry grinned wryly to himself. At least hed happened upon a sale. Bloody fantastic.

Half an hour and ten pair of Boot Fit Vintage wash jeans later, he was no longer so 
sure about needing help, especially as that same girl kept following him with worried 
eyes, as though she were absolutely desperate to sell him something. Okay, to be 
fair, she hadnt started hovering until hed tried to use the "Employee Only" ladder. 
Bit of a mistake, that.

"Can I find you a size?" She asked hesitantly, swooping in (not quite magically) to 
once again re-appropriate the pair of jeans he was trying to fold. He grimaced, 
looking down to his shoes for inspiration.

"Well, er, I dont actually know what size I wear," he admitted, becoming extremely 
irritated that something so seemingly simple as clothes shopping was taking so 
infernally long. Just because hed never done this by himself . . .Okay, that was 
admittedly a point.

The girl was laughing. "I can see that," she said with an honest grin. In spite of his 
embarrassment, he smiled. "Do you know your height and weight?"

"Er, five-six. Not sure about the weight," he waffled, honestly unsure, having never 
been allowed near the Dursleys scale. 

"Right," she said slowly, apparently sizing him up with her eyes. "Id say youd take 
a twenty-eight thirty, maybe thirty-one. And Boot Fit is all wrong for your legs," she 
continued as she worked through several stacks of denim. "Lets put you in Loose 
and maybe Standard, and go from there."

Ah, the names! he wanted to scream as the unfamiliar nomenclature washed over 
him, and he was promptly chivvied away with an armful of denim. He didnt even want
to *think* about how he was going to find a shirt.

In the end he walked out wearing a rather nice pair of jeans --having deliberately 
repressed any and all style information to preserve his fragile sanity-- and a grey polo 
layered over a blood red Henley. With a jean-jacket slung over one shoulder, Harry 
felt ready to face the oncoming English autumn, at least for a time. 

The credit card had worked perfectly, and the lady behind the cash register actually 
seemed charmed when he said his father had sent him into town as a back-to-school 
treat. Pun intended. Well, at least he had clean clothes again.

So. Shoes. Harry resettled the much-heavier backpack on his shoulders, and looked 
up and down the crowded street, trying to pinpoint a recognizable shoe store and idly 
wondering if the clerk would be able to guess his shoe size. The crowd actually 
streamed around him, and he garnered a few friendly smiles from a maternal woman 
or three. Perhaps the clothes really did make the man . . .

His musings were interrupted by a brief flash of pain, centered in his scar.

He hissed, hand going to his forehead as the world reeled. Great, first a probable 
concussion, and now Voldemort was about. Or plotting. Merlin, did his scar *ache*. 
But it was imprecise, inexact. Voldemort could be around the corner or off killing 
muggles, his scar didnt differentiate. 

Oh Merlin. This wasnt going to work. Harry felt an unfamiliar flush of panic. One that 
said he *wasnt* helpless, *wasnt* trapped. This time, he could run.

So run he did.

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Worksheet #9: Self-Help vs. Group Therapy 
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Moonlight silvered the slate-shingled roof, and limned the jutting chimneys and the odd 
weathervane. The picture-perfect towers broke the night sky like eerie, out-reaching 
hands. A single, yellow light flickered in an upper-story window. Wind howled down the 
night sky with a lonely shiver.

The pea coat might have been the more appropriate purchase, after all.

The broken path had been, curiously, unguarded, affording him easy access to the 
old mansion; only the family totem served to ward the cobbled walk. He shivered his 
way to the front door, feeling oddly hesitant for all his days of argument and self-convincing. 

"It wont be all that bad," Harry muttered to himself, climbing up the stone stairs with a 
cringing sort of certainty. "And really, where else would you go," he said to finally clinch
the argument, raising one hand to the large, extremely cliched brass knocker--

--and stumbling forward as the door swunng inward before his fist could connect. He 
staggered into curtains of black wool, yelping as he tangled and hit the floor, his 
backpack rolling into the wall with a clank.

"Potter," Severus Snape sneered, sounding not at all surprised. "Whatever possessed 
you to come *here*, of all places?" the Potions Master continued, grabbing Harrys 
elbow and wresting him to his feet. 

Harry stood quiescent in his grip, staring beyond the taller man into the depths of his 
home.

It looked . . . normal.

A fire burned in a low hearth in the far wall, framed by a matching sofa and loveseat
in brown corduroy; there was an old, leather chair cattycorner to the couch, and a 
framed family portrait above the mantel.

Snape apparently decided that Harry was in shock, as he led him with surprising 
gentleness to the sofa and eased him into the plush cushions. Harry found himself 
gazing blankly at the fire, now, as Snape took a pensive seat in the old leather chair.

"Youre looking . . . well, Potter," Snape said begrudgingly, staring at the boy with 
something approaching worry in his black eyes. "So . . . why here?" 

"You always did get right to the point," Harry muttered, quoting an old favorite rather 
than stating an obvious untruth. "Not even a Why ever did you run away from home, 
Harry? or a How did you survive?, professor?"

Snape blinked at him for a moment.

"Unless you have mistaken me for Dumbledore, *Harry*, then I fail to apprehend the 
relevance of said questions to your arrival at *my* home," Snape said coldly. "But in 
answer, were I you I would have run away long ago, and you obviously survived through 
thievery of some kind, not very Griffindor of you, I must say--"

"I am not a *thief*!" Harry growled, finally turning away from the fire to pin Snape with an 
emerald glare. "And to answer *your* question, I came here because anyone else would 
turn me in before hearing me out, thinking it for my own good. *You*, professor, hate me 
just enough to delay. Not forever, I know," Harry said, reading Snapes glare. "But long 
enough to hear the why."

Snape sat back, meeting Harrys eyes coolly, having used the boys speech to regain 
his aplomb. He crossed his legs, folded his hands into his robes, and glowered. Harry 
didnt flinch. Snape sighed.

"Alright, Potter," Snape said with a jaded purr. "Im curious. What is this latest adventure 
of yours and why should I care?"

Harry was silent for a moment, staring at his trembling hands where they were clasped
together.

"First, answer me something."

Snape nodded, a bit impatient now.

"You said you would have run away?" Harry asked, looking for the confirmation in 
Snapes eyes. "How do you know? I dont think Dumbledore knows."

"That the Dursleys are the worst Muggles imaginable?" Snape laughed incredulously. 
"I knew Lily. Oh, we werent friends, boy," Snape continued, crushing the hope in Harrys 
emerald eyes before it could fully form. "But I knew of her. She was your fathers girl, 
later his wife. Of course I knew. And word got around; Hogwarts hasnt changed in that, 
at least."

"Word about what?" Harry asked hesitantly, dreading the answer.

"Her sister," Snape said ingenuously, with a wicked smile for effect. "Petunia. Little 
bitch used to mutilate cats and birds, trying to make her own magic." The Potions 
Master chuckled darkly. "If shed had a drop of magic blood in her, she wouldve fit 
right in with the Death Eaters."

"She *wanted* magic?" Harry asked. "But she *hates* magic, *anything* magic."

"Of course," Snape said with a small, superior grin like papier-mache: hollow. "We 
always hate what we cannot have."

"Like you hated my father?" Harry asked softly.

Snapes face went still as stone, a bleeding-away of expression. He nodded.

"Like I hated your father."

The fire crackled as a log shifted, making them both jump.

"Do you hate him still?" Harry asked into the new silence.

"No," Snape said, sounding weary and a bit surprised. "I understand him more, 
now." He passed a hand over his eyes. "Why are you here, Harry?"

Harry blinked. He then decided not to bring up the use of his name.

"I was given some information about my mother," Harry began slowly.

"You didnt pay too much for it, I hope," Snape sneered. "Anything you wanted to 
know you could have simply asked Hagrid or--"

"Shes alive."

Another log popped, loud as a sudden Disapparration.

"And what exactly do you want me to do about it?" Snape asked coldly.

"Help me," Harry said, pinning Snape with feverish eyes. "Help me find her, and 
ask her why she's been gone."

It was said as though Harry were discussing the weather; in spite of the nervous
gleam in his eyes, his voice was a near-monotone. A little too calm. Snape stared 
at him for a long, silent moment. He swallowed.

"You want to--"

"Help me," Harry interrupted. "No one else will."

"I . . ." Snape said helplessly, still staring at those eyes. Voldemort had looked 
like this once, when he was known as Tom Riddle. Snape swallowed again. "I'll 
do what I can, Harry." Thinking sooth him, calm him. Humor him.

Harry slumped back into the couch, the light going out of his eyes and the tension
bleeding out of his limbs; he moaned, and for the first time Snape looked past the
new clothes.

"You've been hurt," Snape said slowly. Harry nodded.

"Fucking paid for my clothes, though," he muttered, letting his head drop back.

"Not a thief . . ." Snape murmured to himself, letting the boy drift into sleep, and 
drawing a number of wrong conclusions as he tried to decide on whom to call:
Dumbledore, or St. Mungo's.
***

A/N umm, no offense to the GAP. Really. :) 

Lots more Snape next time, and some Lily. Yes, actually Lily-presence, in person
and everything. Beginning to think I'd forgotten her, hadn't you. :)

Oh, and everything that isn't explained here will be explained later, unless I
forget. So feel free to ask questions/criticize.

Worksheets #10 and #11 are being held hostage for forty reviews. That's
not so much to ask, is it?

Text file Source (historic): geocities.com/gwendolyn_flight


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