Title: One Blue Stone (1/1)
Author: Vera
Rated: PG
Pairing: Harry/Severus
Summary: Prompted to write
about his past, Harry writes of the desert,
the
ocean and the forest.
Disclaimer: They are not
mine. I make no money.
Feedback: Always always
always.
Notes: I wrote this in one
shot from
Hermione had told him to start with facts,
Ron had told him to start with what he felt, Sirius had told him to start where
he wanted to and Draco, surprised to be asked, told him to start with something
bloody.
It was only in the dark that it was
whispered, by another potent voice, tell the story you need to tell. That
worked.
)*(
Once, far away, there was desert. It
stretched for miles in every direction, sandy dunes and bright sun. In the desert, between two mountains of dust,
a thin naked boy squatted to study a lizard and is scurried for shelter. Once
it had disappeared, the boy remained and scratched idly at a healing cut, picking
at the scab.
Living in the desert was harsh, he had to
make do with what he could find. There was a trickle of water to be had in
plants, some small game that could be eaten raw without making him ill and in
the frozen nights, he would return to the small shelter he had made for himself
out of woven plant fiber. It was a harsh life, but it was all he had ever known
and it was good enough.
Nothing ever really changed, the scenery
endlessly monotonous and the company any scuttling creature that he wouldn't
eat. He did not keep track of days.
There wasn't much point. He endured.
Then today...
Today something strange had happened. He
was scratching words into the sand, a long fragmented sentence that strutted
over the dune, when a rock thudded down next to him. It wasn't a particularly
big rock, about the size of his palm, rounded and smooth. The ocean, he vaguely
remembered, did that. Made things smooth.
There weren't any rocks in his part of the desert. Only the endless
sand. It had blue tinge. When he picked
it up, it was astonishingly cool in his hands.
He had just held it for a long time,
turning it over and over in his hands, but it stayed cool. Curious and a little
afraid, he secreted it away in his shelter and went back to his only
entertainment, scrawling endless poetry into the sand.
The words were his greatest gift and he
used them as best he could. They made him feel real and alive. There was no one
else to talk to, so he talked to himself.
He wrote a longer poem then usual, it stretched the length of a dune and
scattered haphazardly down the entire height. It was about the strange
happening of the rock.
For dinner he picked at lizard scraps and
that night, curling into the shelter, he held the rock.
A red one fell into his lap in the next
morning. A green one in the late afternoon and then none for several days. He liked to rearrange them in the quiet
shadow of his shelter.
)*(
The parchment felt awkward underneath his
fingers and there was ink smudging the side of his hand. The story hurt. The isolation, remembered, was too terrible
to think about.
Keep going, smoky voice and the quill
twitched.
)*(
After a few sleeps and wakes, there were
still no more rocks, so the boy decided they were never coming back. It was
strange to have something to mourn, something that could be taken. Everything
had already been stripped from him and he had forgotten pain.
He wrote no poetry, ate only what he had
stored and stopped thinking for a long stretch of time.
When he woke to the blazing face of the
sun, an interminable time after the first stone had dropped, he moved from the
shelter to find the dune he wrote on covered in color. He approached cautiously and drawing closer,
found they spelled out words.
"Come Stay with Us."
Very carefully, he gathered every single
stone and built a sturdy wall around his shelter. It kept him cool in the days and warm at
night. He thought over his answer for a long time.
One night, it rained.
It washed away the dunes that had become so
familiar, it washed away most of the stones and the fibers that had protected
him. Trembling, he gathered those rocks
that remained and carefully spelled out YES, in the newly flattened ground. And
then he wept.
)*(
Why did you weep?
Because even though it was horrid, it was
what I knew.
When did you?
At night, late, so no one could comfort me.
Only for the first week and then I knew it was better.
But at first?
I lost everything I ever knew. It didn't
matter what it was.
)*(
They came for him. One at first, then another until there were
many. He wasn't sure what he had expected. They were all different shapes and
sizes. They were all loud. They were mostly friendly and well intentioned.
The first arrived, like the rocks, suddenly
and with cool ease. He was large, the first one, like a mountain and the boy
was afraid. Then the man handed him a
robe, he wrapped it around himself. Clothes. Yes. Take me with you.
So they went, just walking, but walking had
never gotten the boy anywhere before and now they were leaving. The desert had
an end. It ended in the ocean, a vast glittering water that made the boy want
to drink until he drowned. Instead, the large
man took him to a house that was filled with other children.
The other children gazed at him oddly.
"Hello." He said softly to the
one who was the bravest. Another boy like his own self, expect this boy looked
fiery instead of beaten earth.
"You're the Untapped One."
"Am I? Who are you?"
"Ron."
"Oh...I'm...." He searched, eyes
closed, one hand clenching at thin air to pick it out. "Harry. I'm
Harry."
And he was. At that moment, he was. And he
was the Untapped One and
Ron was a friend. The elderly man, who ran the house came down
to greet him then and drew him upstairs and gave him endless drinks of water
and told him who he was.
Like a poem scribbled into the sand dunes,
Albus wrote a story into Harry's blank canvas.
Told him he once had parents, but no more, that they had been special
and that had gotten them killed. He'd lived, by some act that no one could
explain. Secreted away in the desert to keep him from harm and now here, to
learn to defend himself.
"Who?" He asked. "Am I
defending myself from?"
"A bad man."
But that was a lie. The biggest lie that
Albus ever told the boy. If he had
stayed in the desert, he would never have had to defend himself from the bad
man. He had to learn to defend himself
from everyone. Even people who weren't bad.
Like Ron. Who was the best friend that a
lonely desert scarred boy could want, but who couldn't be trusted in the worst
times. Like Hermione, who came a little later and was so painfully smart, who
didn't always know when to stop asking questions and when to start listening
for the answer in the silence. Like his teacher, McGonagall, who loved him and
treated him well, but never quite understood what he needed to be understood.
He defended himself from them. Kept the
real, the soul of himself, in the one blue rock, the first, that he had taken
with him when the large man came for him. In the day time, it stayed in a safe
place, a hidden place, but at nights, he took it out and turned it over and over
in his hands. It was smooth.
)*(
What's the stone?
I don't know...it just fit in the
story.
So it comes from no where?
Nothing comes from no where.
The stones did at first.
But they did come from somewhere, he just
didn't know where.
And neither do you.
Silence.
)*(
Defense wasn't all Harry learned. There were endless lessons of all different
types, but after years of the desert, Harry longed to be outside and they meant
very little to him. He did well enough
to please most of the teachers and he learned the slippery nature of truth.
There was one teacher, who did not waver or
bend, who could not be coaxed or convinced. The man was tall, dark, stopped a
little from years bent over a desk. He was angry when what he taught was not
learned. He hated Harry.
The hate was so intense, that Harry never
questioned it. Oh, he wondered at it's source, resented it and was afraid of
it. But he never questioned the hate. He
accepted it as he had everything else. Defended himself against it as best he
could and lived with it.
The changeling child too, was to be
defended from. Draco, the wildest of the
wild bunch who lived in the rambling house by the ocean, he was pale under the
strongest sun and harsher then any wind storm.
Again, Harry accepted the adulterated anger directed at him, built a
wall of rock in his mind and moved on. There were those that were there to
help, those to hinder and those to sabotage. The three categories were all
Harry needed and he kept on, kept on.
)*(
Was he happy?
Sometimes.
But mostly, he went on.
)*(
The Familiar. The bad man. The ugly one,
the scarred one, the hideous one, the one who they all lived in fear of....
Harry was sent back to the desert in fear
of him. Sent back at regular intervals with his old shelter and his dune to
keep him company. It was horrid, it was lonely, the poems he wrote abstracted
and harsh.
When they would come to reclaim him, take
him in, feed him, water him, talk to him, late in the night he would weep for
the sand and not understand it, but accept it. Easier to accept then
question. The blue stone rested against
his cheek in the night. The already smoothed stone became silky to the touch
and as he wept it pulsed a reassuring coolness across his cheek.
The Familiar...
The desert. After six years, he still
returned there. Was sent. He had
accepted in, quietly mourned his comings and goings. There were no roots in the
desert, just as there were none by the ocean. Constantly swept between two
impossible infinities.
So six years and he was tired of all of it,
tired of the sea, tired of the desert, tired of defending and tired of being
afraid.
He called the bad man to him. Called him by his true name and coaxed him
from the depths. Getting him there was
the hardest part.
When he rose from the dust, part of the
land itself, it wasn't hard to finish. They moved in circles around each other,
gazes locked and the Familiar, red eyes flashing, properly skeletal hands
moving with deadly precision, struck.
But Harry was too well trained, he knew how
to shield himself. The Familiar struck again and again, becoming tired quickly
and afraid. Soon Harry found a weak spot and he hit it with all the compassion
he had for his meals. The Familiar
dropped, his breath stopped, the light went from his eyes. Dead.
It was three weeks before they came to
retrieve him and found him calmly eating pieces of the body cooked over a fire
he wasn't supposed to make. The stares
were harsh, but he'd built up all the right walls and they didn't bother him at
all.
People said he was a hero. They said he had
helped the whole world. He did all the
right things, smiled at the right time and shook hands, but inside, he knew he
had only done what was right for himself. Albus, Ron, Hermione, McGonnagal,
they mattered to him. Even Draco did, in a strange abstracted way, but he
hadn't done it for them.
"I wanted to live." He told the
rock in the wee hours. "I don't know why, but I did."
Things were less and more complicated after
the death. Less because no one was quite
sure what to expect next from him, and there was no need for him to return the
desert. More because he didn't know what to do and had to figure it out fast.
The house by the sea could no longer be a refuge. Ron and Hermione were getting
married and building a home along the shore.
They told him he could stay, but he was tired of the endless ocean that
glittered with promise.
So he went for a walk. It may have been the
longest walk he had ever attempted and his life had been one filled with
journeys. He walked until his feet
cracked and bleed, he walked until the ocean was a distant memory. He walked
until he had to sleep, so he just dropped and curled into the warm, sweat
soaked cloth of his best robe and slept.
He woke in the forest. It had it's own
rhythm, it was filled with shadows. He
walked a little farther before he reached a large empty space, where the trees
had unaccountably not grown by a brook shore.
He had a knife in his pocket, a gift from Draco, as strange, sharp and
unexpected as the act of the giving itself. Into the dirt he cut a giant muddy
word. HOME
)*(
The woods?
Quiet, safe.
Not *the* Forest.
No. Another one. Not nearly as dark.
Ah.
)*(
With good-byes all around, Harry built a
house over the word. His friends helped him build it and it was good sturdy
house. It was his. When they all left,
retreating the quiet, Harry sighed gently, went inside and cried on the blue
stone, rubbing it softly with his fingers.
For work, besides the general upkeep of his
house, Harry made things. Furniture,
utensils, baskets and carved words in them. He was good at it. Good with his
hands after years of living by them. He
wrote good words in them, solid words and sold them off to people who really
liked them, instead of people who wanted something made by the Tapped One.
It was only late at night, when there was
only the stone and the wildlife around him that he felt lonely. The stillness undid him. His friends still
visited and they left behind traces of themselves, memory trails, but it wasn't
enough.
Just when it seemed that there was nothing
to be done, but leave his quiet home in search of a companion, Albus contacted
him. The old man seemed drawn, tired, in
a way he hadn't in many years.
"Please, Harry, I know you need to be
alone now, but solitude may be what's best for him..."
"Who?"
"He's been so distracted lately, out
of sorts and then fainting like that..."
"Please, Albus, tell me what's going
on."
"During the troubled times, Severus
was a spy, he saw some ugly hard things, Harry and I think now they've finally
come to haunt him. He can't stand to be
touched, never did before, but it's worse now. He fainted when one of the
children popped a balloon...I'm making him take a leave of absence..."
"He can come." The words came
without check. His teacher, who hated him, despised him, but needed him. After
years of it, Harry had learned to like being needed.
The black shadow that arrived was a sliver
of the former passionate, fiery man he had once resented. Wiry and so white that it could not even
decently be called pale, the man allowed himself to be led to the spare bed
that Harry had built himself the week before. He'd carved Protection into it's
base, hidden away, but large enough to satisfy himself.
)*(
You put up wards?
Soaked them into the floorboards
practically.
Ah.
)*(
Severus barely ate, he slept in fits and he
trembled. Harry watched him under
cautious sooty lashes and prepared small, filling meals for the both of
them. In the night, when the screams
woke them both, he would traverse the space between their bedrooms like a cat,
swift and silent, to curl around him, lending warmth. Severus would twitch away
from him, but slowly, surely, he would return, needing the heat, withstanding
touch for it.
They barely spoke, Harry because he had few
words left to say, having spilled so many onto the sand all those years ago and
Severus, because a few would have caused an avalanche of them.
"Why do you hate me?" Harry had
asked once over a meal of bread and beans.
Dark heavy eyes fell on him.
"Why shouldn't I?"
Harry didn't sleep at all that night. Over
breakfast, eggs, he spoke carefully, measured,
"There are no reasons why you
shouldn't hate me. None why you should like me. I've thought about it and
you're right."
"Give me a reason." Severus said,
suddenly, desperately. The shakes and the nightmares had made him strange,
wild, his emotions which had always been fierce and sudden were out of his
control. "Give me a reason not to hate you."
"All right." Harry soothed, gently caressing one trembling
hand. "I'll try."
And he did. It was a new and complex
challenge. He thought of and discarded a thousand and one things. Too many
would only be seen as contemptible. Silly. While he thought, he began to build.
Like many times when he was creating something important and thinking, the
piece ran away from him, doing what it wanted.
Wood bent and gave way under his sharp
blade and his mind whirled itself into a dense set of knots. He made meals, he
kept an eye on his guest and he thought and he carved and sometimes he slept.
)*(
His fingers were tiring, aching, but it
needed to be done. It was coming
together. This was the part of the story he cared about, the ocean, the desert,
they were necessary for this. For the
pain that came from this, the joy. The emotion that had burst from him in a
hundred different ways.
He wrote it.
)*(
When the piece was finished, it was a
sculpture. Harry had never sculpted before, so it took him by surprise. It was a crude beginning to the medium,
grainy and strange. Severus in roughly
hewn truth, hair greased and spilling into deeply cut eyes, nose beaky and eye
catching, the mouth set in a thin, disapproving line. Every wrinkle sliced
into, every flaw alive for the looking. The figure sat on a spiked rock, book
open on his lap, stooped forward, eyes focused on some distant figure.
He set it gently aside and took up a solid
chunk of wood of a bit shorter and thicker then the first. It came from underneath his fingers faster,
finishing in hours instead of days. The image was stronger, easier; one's own
mind the closest. It was easy to make the squatting finger, leaning into the
dune, a finger in the shifting sands, writing out a single word, poised at the
end DESIRED. He situated the two figures on the porch where Severus would not
miss them.
Positioned them, so that wooden Severus
glared hard at the squatting boy and the boy stared back, his gaze one of
acceptance.
"Not good enough." Severus said
when he saw them.
"That wasn't the reason." Harry
said promptly. "That's what I did while I was working on the reason."
"You're very good at it. The
art."
"Yes."
"Do you have a reason?"
)*(
You are good. At the art.
Shh. I'm almost done.
It's late.
Yes.
I'm going to bed.
All right.
)*(
"Yes. Tomorrow."
It was Severus' turn not to sleep. He paced, quietly. Stared into the younger man's bedroom. Went
out onto the porch and sank into one of the rocking chairs. It was comfortable. The figures hadn't moved and staring at them
propelled him to revisit them. Slow, he approached and leaned over squatting
Harry to trace the spilled letters. Desired. Desire. He caught his own rendered
glare, saw his determination. Harry had carved him with a will to live.
)*(
It was harder writing the things that he
wasn't sure about. He didn't really know what had gone on in the man's head
that night, no matter what was said about it later. He could only guess. Safer
to leave it. Dipped the quill. Plowed on.
)*(
The sun rose and Harry went with it,
puttering around his kitchen. Severus papered the doorway, sank into the
chair.
"The reason is," He said softly
as he set a plate of toast in front of his silent companion, "that there
isn't a reason. You've got to decide what you feel. Nothing I do or so will
change it, if it's the way you need to feel. Eat your toast."
Mechanically, Severus ate. And thought.
"Why did you write Desired?"
"Because I want to be." Harry
answered promptly. "Because that's all that's missing from my life."
"Why are you naked?"
"Because that's how it was. Black
robes are too hot to wear in the desert. I slept on them, used them as blankets
at night."
It took a moment before Severus realized
that the other man meant it seriously. This had once been Harry's life.
"Ah."
"Can I show you something?" No
wait for an answer, Harry was off and when he returned, his hand curled
protectively around the round stone. It shone now, from years of stroking
hands. It remained cool.
"A rock?" Severus stared.
"It appeared first. There were others.
That's how I was invited to live in the house."
Severus reached out a hand and in a moment,
realized it was exactly the wrong thing to do. Harry clenched the stone closer,
until his knuckles went white, but right before Severus could retract the
silent question, he found his palm filled with the smoothed stone.
Harry trusted him with this artifact. This
was his most treasured possession and he handed it over without question. Dutifully, he handled it a moment, feeling
it's weight. Returned it. Harry took it
from him gratefully.
He didn't say it then, but he stopped
hating Harry in that moment.
They went on as before, but with less
silence. The avalanche that Severus had feared, arrived and when he started
talking, he couldn't stop. He let loose a barrage of words, his life, his
story, his pain, his joy, everything spewed forth and Harry sat, listened, fed
him and made him sleep when it was too much. The flood went on for four days
and as if in response, the brook overflowed it's shores, lapping at the front
steps.
In the end, when nothing was left. Harry
said softly,
"It's over now."
And it was. Everything that had come before
was over. What they had been, the lives
they had lived before had ended. It was time for something new. Something
clean.
Harry practiced rock carving for weeks on
any thing larger then a pebble. It was harder then wood, but in some ways more
rewarding. When he was sure he had it
down to an exacting precision, he took out the cool blue stone, his one
constant. It had soaked in every tear, heard every thought. Carefully, gently,
he carved a word.
"I want you to have this." It was
evening, they had been speaking in low tones about the traps Harry had made, if
they were efficient enough. Severus stared at him, silent. Waiting. The stone
filled his palm for a second time.
"Harry, I can't take this."
"Look at it."
Reluctant, Severus looked down.
"Harry..."
"Do you accept it?"
A careful finger ran over the chiseled
letters. HEART. Harry's heart.
"Yes. Yes."
"Good."
Severus kept the stone as close as Harry
once had. Never once did he loose it in all the long years after that night. It
was his, a gift, the best he had ever been given and nothing would make him
relinquish that.
That night, they slept in the same bed. The
one that Harry had carved PROTECTION into. Severus stopped shaking, Harry
started making larger meals. They lived
together instead of just with each other and over weeks, there were smiles
formed and finally, at long last, there was laughter.
)*(
There was, he realized, no way to end the
story. He didn't know what happened next.
He looked out his window. It was still dark, but just. The whole night
had been spent leaning over the parchment. His inkwell was dry, his back ached
and his hands were nearly black. Quietly, he slipped into the bedroom and
disrobed. He climbed into bed and curled up next to his lover.
In the morning, Severus read over what
Harry had written.
"It's good." He said slowly.
"It did not happen that way."
"No, but you said to write the story I
needed to write."
"Yes. Did it help?"
Harry leaned back against the counter top
and stared at his lover. Severus allowed, graciously ignoring the eyes flicking
over him.
"How did you know it would?"
"Because I know you. You aren't happy
until everything is hashed out. Better to do it on paper."
"Are you happy?" He still wasn't
always sure. It was hard. They were both toughened and angry so much of the
time it was difficult to believe it would ever get better. And other times....
"Yes."
Harry moved to, sank to the floor to rest
his head on one bony knee.
"Yes."
Three long fingers on his cheeks and he
sighed in contentment.
I have your heart, Harry Potter. Severus
thought dimly. And I will never release it.
-Finis-