| yura_slash ( @ 2008-06-30 18:43:00 |
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| Entry tags: | harry potter, snape/harry |
snarry_games Fic: The Upper Air Burst into Life, part 1
Title: The Upper Air Burst into Life
Author: yura_slash
Pairing: Snape/Harry
Team: Phoenix
Genre(s): Postwar
Prompt(s): Spilling Fire, Forgiveness
Rating/Warnings/Kinks: masturbation, voyeurism, oral sex, sex, cursing
Word Count: 15,700
Summary: Harry can forgive Severus, but can Severus forgive himself?
A/N: Thanks to Team Phoenix for offering outstanding support, especially to
iulia_linnea,
fuschia, and
fenghuang_jin for their various beta readings :)
Disclaimer: I do not own Harry Potter.
And soon I heard a roaring wind:
It did not come anear;
But with its sound it shook the sails
That were so thin and sere.
The upper air burst into life!
And a hundred fire-flags sheen,
To and fro they were hurried about!
And to and fro, and in and out,
The wan stars danced between.
And the coming wind did roar more loud,
And the sails did sigh like sedge;
And the rain poured down from one black cloud;
The Moon was at its edge.
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
The Upper Air Burst into Life
In a damp cellar beneath a dark and lonely house, a sick man coughed into a crumpled handkerchief. His thin shoulders, covered by a faded and frayed cloak, shook with the violence of his unrelenting hacking, and long pieces of lank, dark hair swung forward to obscure all of his face except for a pale, hooked nose. The coughing went on for some time.
Finally, after what seemed like hours but was surely only minutes, the harsh upheaval came to an end. Specks of blood now decorated the white square of linen in the man’s hand, and he scowled at the handkerchief darkly before stuffing it in his trouser pocket and turning back to his work.
One may have noticed that the man was horribly thin and might have hoped that the cauldron he bent over was full of a soup or hearty stew, but that was not the case. No, the man turned back to the potion he had been attempting to brew before the fit of coughing had overtaken him. With narrowed eyes, he noted that the potion’s viscosity was off by several degrees, and its colour and temperature were fluctuating wildly from moment to moment. In a fit of rage, he knocked the cauldron off its stand and sent it clattering to the cold, dirt floor. The slop inside of it splattered every which way, and the man watched with cold fury as it ate like acid into the earthen wall of his self-imposed prison.
This had to end. And soon. The man’s eyes darted around the dark cellar, taking stock of his situation as best he could: his throat was raw with the constant coughing, and it was obvious that no amount of brewing would help him; unable to gain access to any of his personal belongings made finding a cure next to impossible, but now his magic was unreliable and prone to ruining whatever projects he attempted to start; the food stores that had been kept on the cellar’s simple wooden shelves had dwindled to one lone potato and a near-empty jar of preserved peaches; and no matter where he turned, the answers to his problems were not to be found in the hidden cellar of his childhood home. His eyes landed on a recent issue of The Daily Prophet, and his expression hardened for a moment before he walked briskly towards the spilled cauldron, having made the most difficult decision of his life in the space of a moment.
The man picked up the cauldron with stiff fingers and moved back to his worktable, where he doused the flames beneath the cauldron stand and began to pack up his meagre belongings. He focused his attentions on the cauldrons and other lab equipment that he needed to pack, but his eyes darted back to the newspaper periodically, as if he were afraid that the words emblazoned across its top border might change.
The words remained the same as he emptied glass tubes and packed them away in a patched and mouldy duffle bag that he’d found in a corner of the cellar. He used a spare cloak as padding, as he couldn’t rely on his magic to safeguard the glass and lab equipment. Finally, when the room was empty of all personal effects, he gave the damp, subterranean room where he had spent the last two months one last contemptuous look before closing his eyes tightly. He sent one silent appeal to Merlin and then left the cellar the only way possible, by turning on his heel and Apparating. The only thing he left behind was the newspaper, its headline still reading:
“Saviour of the Wizarding World Pleas for Pardoning Deceased D.E. Severus Snape!”