1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
|
\documentclass[10pt,oneside]{report}
\usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}
\usepackage[english]{babel}
%%%%%
% Make 1.0" margins on all sides
\usepackage[top=1.0in,bottom=1.0in,left=1.0in,right=1.0in]{geometry}
%opening
\begin{document}
\title{Maze of Light}
\date{December 25, 2005}
\author{Lightning on the Wave \and Assembled in \LaTeX \\ by Tyler Davis \\ \texttt{tydavis@gmail.com}}
\maketitle
%\tableofcontents
% \textbf{Story:} Maze of Light\\
% \textbf{Storylink:} \url{https://www.fanfiction.net/s/2720074/1/}\\
% \textbf{Category:} Harry Potter\\
% \textbf{Genre:} Angst\\
% \textbf{Author:} Lightning on the Wave\\
% \textbf{Authorlink:} \url{https://www.fanfiction.net/u/895946/}\\
% \textbf{Last updated:} 12/25/2005\\
% \textbf{Words:} 6366\\
% \textbf{Rating:} K+\\
% \textbf{Status:} Complete\\
% \textbf{Content:} Chapter 1 to 1 of 1 chapters\\
% \textbf{Source:} FanFiction.net\\[2\baselineskip]\textbf{Summary:} AU,
% short story set in my Sacrifices universe. James Potter faces a choice
% that is either the answer to all his mistakes, or the worst one he's
% ever made. Oneshot.
\chapter*{Maze of Light}\label{chapter-1-maze-of-light}
% \textbf{Summary}: This is a short story taking place in the middle of my
% novel-length story{Comes Out of Darkness Morn}, but chronicling an event
% that's only referred to glancingly there. It probably won't make much
% sense if you haven't read CooDM and its prequels. James Potter faces an
% ancient artifact that will either grant him peace from his mistakes, or
% end them forever.
% \textbf{Warnings:} This is mostly gen, though James/Lily is referred to,
% but I suppose it requires a warning for emotional upset.
% \textbf{Disclaimer}: The recognizable characters, events, settings, and
% spells referred to in this story are the property of J. K. Rowling, not
% me.
% \textbf{Maze of Light}
James Potter halted outside the main hall of Lux Aeterna, and once again
checked the small bag slung over his shoulder. Yes, he had the mirror,
and the small silver knife, and the vial of poison in case something
went very badly wrong and he had no other way to escape the Maze. He had
confirmed that he had them in the old room he'd taken his for his own
quarters, and again on the stairs, and again now.
\emph{Stop stalling and get on with it, James.}
He bowed his head and shivered, even though the voice was nothing more
than the voice of his own thoughts. He'd become quite familiar with it
over the course of the last few months, as he stayed in the Potter
family linchpin, named for eternal Light, and tried to come to grips
with what he had done and what he had allowed to happen in the past.
He'd refused all letters from Dumbledore, read many others but not
replied, and sent only one of his own, to Remus. Remus was the only one
who might understand the storm that James found in his own thoughts
whenever he glanced at them.
\emph{I know I bloody well don't}, James thought, and then grimaced as
he felt the artifact in the main hall give out a sharp pulse of magic,
like sunlight on his face, even though the door between him and it was
closed. The Maze was awake, then, and sensed him. Now the Light magic
was waiting to see if he would come through, or turn his back and refuse
it.
He couldn't. He had refused enough in his life, and it had backed him
into this corner. He didn't want to hurt anyone else, but no matter what
he did---stayed here, or returned and confronted Lily and his boys and
his friends and Dumbledore---he would. The Maze offered death, perhaps,
but also a path out of this confusion.
He had no other choice, and for once, instead of closing his eyes and
huddling against the ground like a hare who'd just seen a threat in the
hopes that it would miss him, he was going to face it.
He took another deep breath, on the off chance that it might help, and
pushed open the door.
A flood of light greeted him, for all that it was night outside Lux
Aeterna. The Maze had supposedly come from some other world where it was
always day, part of the reason that it was able to continually shine.
James blinked and shielded his eyes as he paced slowly forward,
confirming his childhood impressions of the Maze as he moved.
Yes, it still looked the same: silvery folds of walls and tunnels that
nearly filled the room, blending and rushing into each other like water
or foam, but undeniably sharp. The edges glittered like diamond. Light
radiated from them, and from the heart of the Maze, which James couldn't
see. \emph{Trying} to see it only resulted in afterimages. It was too
much a mixture of silver and gold and white and the sun shining off
polished glass. James blinked and looked away, and then took the mirror
from his bag and held it up in front of him.
He felt the heat glow through the mirror's polished silver and into the
wooden frame, and then into his hands, as the Maze recognized his
intention to enter it. The light abruptly dimmed, and then surged again.
His request was granted.
James sighed. \emph{Another excuse to hide taken away,} he thought, as
he laid the mirror down on the floor and then removed the knife from the
bag. A quick cut to the side of his right arm, and he dripped three
drops of blood on the floor.
His grandparents had declared themselves Light wizards and abandoned
many of the old pureblood dances that favored the strong and bred people
more likely to break than bend, but some of the ancient rituals were
still essential for things like this, James's father had taught him. The
Maze had once belonged only to itself, but it had resided in Lux Aeterna
for generations now. It needed to know that the one facing it was really
a Potter before he had a chance of surviving. There had been a nasty
surprise a few generations back when it turned out James's
several-times-great aunt was not, in fact, a Potter, and she had tried
to enter the Maze anyway.
There was no problem here, of course. Some of the protective glow
diminished, and James could move nearer for the first time. He sealed
the wound with a swipe of his wand and let the knife drop behind him. He
realized that he was breathing lightly, so lightly he could hardly hear
it himself, and that his chest felt tight and too warm.
\emph{Another barrier passed.}
And now there was only the Maze, and the tunnel in front of him, like a
tunnel into the ocean, complete with a white edge that reached out and
swept up to his feet like foam.
James shivered.
Light and Dark magic were divided by several differences, but only one
mattered to the Maze. Dark wizards often relied on deception and
subterfuge; almost every glamour had come from the wands of
experimenting Dark wizards. Light relied on truth. The Maze would show
him the results of his mistakes, force him to face, in brutal honesty,
every rationalization he had made about them, and test his acceptance of
them in the meantime. If he was unable to accept that he had made these
mistakes and needed to change, the Maze would kill him, or perhaps trap
him in limbo. Hence the vial of poison.
Once he entered the Maze, he was honest, or he was dead.
James closed his eyes, and remembered the expression on Lily's face the
night he had left Godric's Hollow, the sudden devastating realization
that had followed his first realization of the night---that a pureblood
justice ritual had heard Harry's plea to take her magic, and
\emph{listened} to it, and obeyed him. She had deserved to lose her
magic, according to the ritual's impartial judgment.
And he had been part of the reason that that had happened.
He had no choice, not if he loved his family.
James moved forward, and entered the Maze.
\begin{center}\rule{0.5\linewidth}{\linethickness}\end{center}
James bowed his head and shut his eyes.
He had faced the minor mistakes of his childhood, and accepted them
easily enough. For the most part, he had made peace with them long
since. It had been a mistake, in many ways, to train to become an
Animagus when he learned of Remus's lycanthropy, and to teach Sirius
when he asked, and to tease and cajole Peter until he went along with
it. There were the mistakes that had caused his parents pain before he
came to Hogwarts. There were the common pranks in Hogwarts, the times he
had cheated on exams, the times when he had earned, and deserved,
detention for his cruel remarks about the Defense professor's
deformities. For the most part, they were old regrets, and James could
put them aside.
Not so easily this one. The scene waited for him on the Maze's wall,
with infinite patience. It would go on waiting until the Maze decided
that he would never accept it, and then he would have death one way or
the other.
James raised his head and opened his eyes.
In the mirror, he watched himself bite his lip and shift anxiously back
and forth on his bed in the sixth-year Gryffindor boys' room. Sirius was
lying on his own, his gray eyes brilliant. Sirius had been happier than
James had ever seen him that year, in the months after he finally fled
his family and came to live with James instead. But the happiness often
translated itself into glass-edged recklessness, deadly as the Maze's
edges in its own way, and this was a time it had.
``Come on, James,'' Sirius coaxed. ``It'll be fun.'' He paused---for
effect, James realized, viewing this scene from the outside. ``I don't
usually have to explain to \emph{you} how much fun something is,'' he
said, a whinge creeping into his voice. ``Peter, sure. And you know how
Remus needs to be prodded along. Come on. What's eating you?''
The adolescent James lay back and folded his arms behind his head. ``I
don't know, really,'' he said slowly. ``After all, it's just a more
intense version of what we've always done.''
The adult James flinched as the Maze made sure the words echoed in his
ears. \emph{There's my first rationalization. And Merlin, of course it
matters. We're talking about someone else's} life \emph{here, not his
pride, and I've known since I was a child which one matters more.}
``But I just don't think it's right.'' James bit his lip again.
Sirius snorted. ``Come \emph{on}, James. It's \emph{Snivellus.} He
deserves a good scare, especially after what he did to Peter the other
day.''
The Maze stilled the scene, and James sighed. ``I know,'' he whispered.
``Sirius was only using that to butter me up. I know he didn't care all
that much about what had happened to Peter.'' One thing the Maze was
making sure he understood was how much Peter had seemed like a tag-along
to his friends, more tolerated than welcomed. Of course, his fawning
attitude played into that, but if James and Sirius were really as much
moral paragons as he had thought they were in Hogwarts, they should have
been able to forgive him through their superior understanding of human
nature.
But the James on the wall nodded, and then said, ``I can see that, I
guess. When? Which night Remus transforms?''
The scene blurred into fog, which coalesced into the younger James
hurtling across the grass towards the Whomping Willow. He threw a rock
that hit the knot precisely, hurried under the suddenly still branches,
and ducked into the tunnel at its base, then thrashed through the
darkness until he reached the door into the Shrieking Shack. He could
hear Sirius barking joyfully, and the snarls of the beast Remus had
become, and Snape's terrified screams.
James threw the door open. He cast a Stunning Spell at the werewolf.
Werewolves were usually better-equipped to resist them, but Remus had
let his friends in on a secret: just after his transformation, he was
still woozy, and could be taken down by a number of spells that
otherwise wouldn't work on him. Now, he staggered and fell.
James also Stunned Sirius, who was in his dog form, just to make sure he
wouldn't interfere, and then grabbed Snape and pulled him out of the
Shack. Snape said nothing at all until they were almost out of the
tunnel.
``Why, Potter?'' he whispered.
``I couldn't let them kill you,'' said James, and then stopped. That
sounded stupid even to himself, and he didn't say the words that burned
on his tongue, because they were even more stupid. \emph{Lives are worth
more than that. We've hurt each other, but it was just stupid school-boy
stuff. This was worse.}
The adult James bowed his head. He should have said them. Things might
have been different if he had.
Snape, though, sneered and wrenched himself away from James. ``You knew
about it,'' he said. ``You knew about it, and you decided to come and
stop them from killing me at the last minute.''
``Yes,'' said James. And then, because he could, and Snape's sneer
irritated him, ``And now you owe me a life debt, Snivellus, which you'd
better not forget.''
Snape threw him a glare full of poison, and then turned and stalked out
of the tree. The adolescent James stepped free of the Willow, waited
until he was sure Snape was gone, and changed into his stag form. Remus
and Sirius would be coming out soon, and it would be better if he didn't
look like the human who had Stunned the werewolf.
James let out a shaky breath and scrubbed a hand over his eyes. \emph{I
have no one to blame but myself for that part. I could have stopped
Sirius when he was setting the prank in motion. I could have made up my
mind to interfere earlier, so that Snape didn't almost die. I could have
told Dumbledore if Sirius wouldn't stop, and he would have prevented the
whole thing from happening. And then maybe Snape wouldn't hate me so
much, and if he did end up becoming as important to Harry's life as he
has, then he might not fight me as bitterly as I think he will if I try
to take Harry back. And I wouldn't have wronged Remus as bitterly as I
did, almost making him into the murderous beast that he worked so hard
to avoid becoming.}
But he hadn't said the words he should have. He was too much afraid of
looking stupid, when a true Gryffindor would have risked it.
The Maze let him go abruptly, and James moved on up the tunnel,
shivering. He thought he knew when the next profound mistake would
appear, and he was looking forward to facing that one even less.
\begin{center}\rule{0.5\linewidth}{\linethickness}\end{center}
``No!''
The Maze echoed with his shout, and it waited. James could feel the
profound magic at the center of it, watching him without pity. The Maze
was interested in justice and redemption, not mercy. If he refused now,
then it would kill him, and give him no second chances.
\emph{I have to live,} James thought. \emph{I have to see this.}
Shaking, he opened his eyes.
He saw himself standing in front of a fire, turned towards it. Behind
him, in one of the chairs of the comfortable sitting room at Godric's
Hollow, waited Dumbledore. He had been silent for some time, but now he
spoke, his voice the gentle, implacable one of the Light's fabled
leader, the one who coaxed even his political enemies into agreeing
reluctantly that this was the best, the \emph{only,} course of action.
``James.''
The younger James in the image straightened his shoulders and turned
around slowly.
``It is the only way,'' Dumbledore said quietly. ``You know that the
prophecy \emph{must} come true. Voldemort cannot be defeated otherwise.''
The younger James winced at the Dark Lord's name, but nodded. ``And if he
strikes at someone else, we may never know who that person is. We
certainly will not be able to keep him safe and protect him as we should
do, nor the person who, according to the prophecy, will be his shield
and the one who loves him.
If Voldemort strikes at your boys, then I believe the prophecy will
come true through them. I have thought this ever since Lily had twins at
the end of July. You know the prophecy speaks clearly of a younger and
an elder. The younger boy would be Connor, destined to defeat Voldemort,
and the elder Harry. But, to defeat Voldemort, Connor \emph{must} be
marked, according to the terms of the prophecy. The Fidelius must be
released. Voldemort must be encouraged to attack your sons, and not the
Longbottoms or anyone else who might conceivably fit the prophecy. He
knows only a few lines of it, not the whole thing, and this way we can
deceive him.''
``And you know that you and Lily would be able to make this sacrifice.
You are both Gryffindors, brave and strong and devoted to the Light. You
have both escaped Voldemort three times. You are the perfect
candidates.''
James in the image closed his eyes and swallowed. James, as himself, did
the same things. The logic sounded horribly convincing, even now. What
were his sons' lives against the fate of the world? Against the chance
to attack Voldemort?
But now he knew, he knew, what that bargain had cost Harry and Connor
both. And it was about to cost another person nearly as much.
James opened his eyes and watched.
``But does Peter really have to go to Azkaban?'' his self in the image
whispered. ``Couldn't we just lure Voldemort here and then explain what
we did?''
Dumbledore shook his head, his face kind but stern. ``We cannot, James.
It is necessary that the Ministry and the rest of our world trust
absolutely in the Light, and many people would see us as bating a trap
with innocent children---''
\emph{Which is what we did,} James thought.
``---if we told them what was happening. Instead, we must make it seem a
simple betrayal, and then tuck the traitor away where no one can
question him. And you know that only Peter has the strength to go
willingly to Azkaban. Sirius's mind would tear apart. Voldemort has
already almost torn it apart, making him suffer as he tortured Regulus.
Remus needs his friends too much. You need your family too much. Peter
is already apparently a Death Eater, and Voldemort believes him jealous
of you, to such an extent that he would betray his friends to their
worst enemy. Make Peter your Secret-Keeper, and you free both Sirius and
Regulus of their pain as well as insure the future of our world.''
``Very well,'' the James in the image whispered.
James remembered himself as having hesitated longer before agreeing. It
was somewhat humiliating to discover that he had not.
But it seared him more to be forced to remember, as he had forced
himself not to remember for years, that he had willingly given up Peter,
sent him to Azkaban and twelve years of insanity, and lied to his sons,
telling both Harry and Connor that Peter had simply been evil, and
jealous of his more talented friends. And then, when Peter had broken
free this summer, James had believed, in terror, that Peter had come to
take revenge on them for having sent him into living death.
Peter had not hurt Harry, despite having access to him several times.
\emph{I never thought he was good enough to be in Gryffindor. Instead,
he's apparently strong enough not to blame us, or at least not to blame
my sons for my mistake.}
Why had he despised Peter so much, anyway? Because he was small and fat
and not very clever?
\emph{A stupid bunch of reasons to send someone to prison for twelve
years.}
James sucked in a deep breath. ``I agree,'' he whispered. ``I \emph{will}
write to Peter, if I get out of here alive, and tell him I'm sorry.''
The Maze eased its hold on him. The younger James and Dumbledore wavered
and dissolved into mist. James moved forward, or perhaps backward; the
tunnels had a habit of shifting, and with his eyes blinded by tears of
guilt and shame, it was not always easy to tell where he was, or where
he had been.
\begin{center}\rule{0.5\linewidth}{\linethickness}\end{center}
James wiped his mouth carefully. He'd vomited several times, and now his
head and his stomach both felt extraordinarily light. He didn't have to
eat while he was in the Maze---the magic would keep him alive until he
chose to either refuse the Maze's revelations or take the poison---but
he felt emptier anyway, now that he had expelled most of the food he'd
come in here with.
He knelt there, and did not know if he could lift his head.
The images were waiting, there.
With a breath that he hoped would replace the lost food with courage,
James faced them again.
The Maze showed memories without a pause, without a break. It showed him
his sons growing up. Connor was mostly the way that James had remembered
him, sweet and innocent, his hazel eyes flashing like his father's when
he played a prank, his fringe occasionally bouncing up to reveal the
heart-shaped scar Voldemort's wand had left him with. Dumbledore's plan
had worked. Voldemort had come to Godric's Hollow, shot the Killing
Curse at the baby destined to defeat him, and been destroyed. Connor was
growing up with his parents, sheltered, locked tight behind isolation
wards to prevent any former Death Eaters from attacking him in their
dead master's name. Oh, he was lied to, in that James and Lily had never
told him the truth about the prophecy or Peter or how he was left open
to attack on the night Peter broke the Fidelius Charm on Dumbledore's
orders, but he was a relatively normal child.
It was Harry who was entirely different from his memories---and this
time, the Maze would not allow James to hide his head in the sand, or
turn his back on the obvious signs that he had forced himself to miss.
James in the images thought he had a perfect family. The Maze made sure
his older self knew he did not.
From the moment of the attack that both babies had survived, Connor with
his heart-shaped scar, Harry with the vivid lightning bolt on his
forehead and his magic inexplicably heightened after the confrontation
with Voldemort, Lily had trained Harry to shelter, guard, and protect
Connor, to be the shield standing between his brother and danger. She
had trained him in complex spells that no child of five should have been
able to master. She told him the tales of the First War, stories of
torture and rape and murder that no child should hear. She insisted that
he read histories of the wizarding world, to learn complex pureblood
rituals and dances that might be essential in winning Connor allies
someday, and practice the formalities until he could recite them in his
sleep.
\emph{My grandparents tried so hard to get the Potters away from that,
to stop us from being ice-cold machines who would use the Killing Curse
without a thought,} James said to himself, not for the first time, as he
watched Harry go under the web at four that bound part of his magic
away, because he was so powerful that Lily was afraid he might harm
Connor. \emph{I was supposed to raise my children in peace and freedom.
And what happened? I allowed one of them to become pureblood at the
deeper levels, just because Lily thought it was necessary.}
He'd had time to notice. Lily could never have hidden this from him so
completely unless she had his willing cooperation. And James saw himself
give it. He convinced himself that Harry was just studious, that the way
he devoured books just meant he'd end up in Ravenclaw when he went to
Hogwarts. He walked in on Harry practicing wandless magic, and told
himself firmly that he must have been mistaken. He listened to Harry
discuss, in cold detail, the deaths caused by Voldemort's Black Plague
spell, and he scolded Sirius for scaring his son with horrible stories.
He turned away from every opportunity to realize that he didn't live in
a normal house with a normal wife and two normal children, but one
normal child, a wife so dedicated to the war effort that she had made
one of their sons a sacrifice, and one young man who hadn't been a child
since he began reciting the vows to defend Connor, save him, and hide
his talents, always, so that observers would think the miraculous
rescues and spells had come from Connor himself. He saw, for the first
time, how Harry's love for his brother was not natural, but obsessive
and cultivated, growing around him like a vine, twisting him into a
soldier before he was six.
He'd allowed that to happen. He should have been a better guardian, a
better father.
The Maze bound him with chains of shame and self-loathing, and held him
there as he vomited again over lost chances.
He watched through hazy eyes as Harry and Connor went to Hogwarts.
Connor went to Gryffindor. Harry, instead of going to Gryffindor as he
should have, went to Slytherin---in large part thanks to Lily's intense
training and the cunning he'd exercised in hiding that training from
anyone else. James saw himself ask the Headmaster, several times, if
Harry could be Re-Sorted, and Dumbledore regretfully refuse.
\emph{I should have either supported Harry wholeheartedly, or pushed
wholeheartedly to get him into another House,} James thought,
shuddering. \emph{Not this---this half-effort, this believing the worst
of Harry and then giving in the moment Albus told me I shouldn't push.
What kind of a father am I?}
A bad one, the Maze answered him, and dragged him on ruthlessly through
Harry's second year, when Harry had first broken his arm in a Quidditch
game and then had to remain at the school over Christmas, thanks to the
havoc that Tom Riddle, Voldemort's younger self, had managed to wreak on
his mind when he possessed Harry. Neither time had James visited Harry
in the hospital wing. Lily had been deep in the middle of persuading him
that Harry really was better off as a sacrifice, and that his seeing
Harry at the moment would just encourage a love neither of them could
afford, that the \emph{world} could not afford. They had to let Harry be
the sacrifice the prophecy said he had to be. James had slowly come to
agree with her. He'd let her make him agree with things he never should
have.
Then Harry had come home for Easter holidays, and Remus, convinced
something was wrong and unrelenting in the face of Lily's reassurances
that nothing was, had tried to kidnap Harry and take him somewhere safe.
James watched, sick, from the outside, as he pulled a silver knife on
one of his best friends, and forced Remus into going to Dumbledore.
Dumbledore, of course, had \emph{Obliviated} Remus, unable to take the
chance that he would disrupt the prophecy by trying to make Harry do
something other than live for his brother.
\emph{That's two apologies I owe Remus, then.} James swallowed thickly.
\emph{Or three.}
On the year turned, only this time James saw what had really happened.
Harry had cast the \emph{Fugitivus Animus} spell on him and Lily, which
made them forget for months that they even had a second son. Harry had
done it because of the mental upset caused by his battle with Tom Riddle
at the end of the year; if his parents had paid any negative attention
to him at all, he might have killed them. It was safer to make them
forget he existed, and to try to survive without their care.
It was no wonder, James thought, numbly, from the middle of his shock,
that Harry had turned to Snape for guardianship and his best friend,
Draco Malfoy, for other kinds of understanding. They were the only ones
other than Dumbledore who knew what had happened to Harry, and certainly
the only ones who might have been able to help him heal. James and Lily
quite happily existed in the fantasy that they had only one son, while
Harry struggled to get his shredded thoughts and his vicious magic back
under control.
Then came Christmas, when Harry returned home to his family and removed
the \emph{Fugitivus Animus} from Lily, because he wanted his mother
back---and, in doing that, removed it from James as well, though he
hadn't known that at the time.
James put his hands over his eyes as he watched the confrontation
between Harry and Lily, but their voices still echoed in his ears. Lily
pretended to be sorry. Harry made plans for them to face the future
together, as a family.
Then Lily tried to bind Harry's magic again.
Harry called the ancient justice ritual and stripped the magic from
Lily, making her a Muggle, and vanished, along with a phoenix.
And James left for Lux Aeterna, once again too much of a coward to
confront Lily, or go after Harry, who had fled to the Malfoys', or do
anything but retreat and hide. He'd justified it as needing time to
think.
He saw it for what it really was now.
\emph{You were hiding from your responsibilities again, James. You
should have been a better husband. You should have been a better father.
You should have stood up, at some point, and told Lily that what she was
doing was wrong. Instead, you have one son who's never learned the
truth, and one son who's nearly died and teetered on the brink of
insanity} multiple \emph{times, and a wife deprived of magic by an
impartial ritual.}
\emph{Good show, James.}
Guilt perched on his shoulders and scraped them to the bone, but the
Maze was not satisfied with that. It would not allow him to wallow.
\emph{And why not?} James thought furiously, wiping at the tears on his
cheeks. \emph{Wallowing is better than vomiting. I} like
\emph{wallowing.}
Because it was not enough.
He would only hide in self-pity for the rest of his life if things went
on like this. The Maze would not allow him to hide there, any more than
it would let him hide inside itself. He was to be dragged forward into
the light of honesty and truth, unless he refused and died.
\emph{I have seen what I did that was so awful, mistakes piled on top of
mistakes.}
\emph{Now, what am I going to do about it?}
James took a deep breath, and opened his eyes.
\emph{Start by being a better father.}
\emph{I'll bring the boys here for the summer, rather than leave them at
Hogwarts, or in Lily's sacrificial care. I'll do what I should have done
all along, and teach them about their heritage, their family---play my
part in their education. I'll love them more, and tell them the truth.
My bonds with both of them are so fragile right now. Connor won't trust
me for hiding these last few months, and Harry won't trust me for hiding
all his life.}
\emph{I'll get them to trust me. No, more than that---I'll show them I
can be trusted.}
\emph{Lily\ldots{}}
\emph{I love her, but there's no way she can be trusted around either of
the boys right now. Connor would listen to her too much. Harry doesn't
want to see her ever again. I'll wait, and send an owl to her when I
can, to ask her to do something other than control them. I don't know
how hard it will be to get her to agree to that.}
\emph{I don't know how hard it will be to do any of this.}
For the first time in years, though, James thought that it might not
matter how hard this was. He had given up the life that held those
memories. He'd kept looking at the images even when they made him sick.
He'd already given up the temptation to back out when he stepped into
the Maze.
How could he ever have thought that he was unchanged, that he wouldn't
change until the final moment passed and the Maze released him?
Just by carrying through with the decision to step into it, he'd done
something that would have been incomprehensible to the versions of James
in these images.
He threw his head back and laughed.
The laughter had an immediate effect on the Maze. It bulged and rippled,
and the silver walls appeared to rise up around him like crashing waves.
James looked up, and saw himself reflected from half a dozen curves and
corners, then seven, then twelve, then thirteen, then dozens of them.
The Jameses were poised to fall on him, if he chose to continue. There
were still consequences of his mistakes that he needed to see. There
were still paths that he couldn't take without facing those
consequences. There were still non-obvious ripples from his actions that
would build into obvious ones in a short time.
James smiled. He thought it very appropriate, after so many years when
he'd hidden his own realizations from himself, that he hadn't realized
his own decision until just now.
``Yes,'' he said aloud, so the Maze would recognize it.
Down came the sides, and buried him in honesty, buried him in horrible
consequences to his sons, buried him in truth, buried him in Light.
\begin{center}\rule{0.5\linewidth}{\linethickness}\end{center}
James lifted his head, slightly dazed. He was lying on the floor of Lux
Aeterna's great hall. Behind him shimmered the Maze, gone back to its
silver, quiescent state, the wards around it that prevented casual
entrance burning. James stood slowly, and then shook his head as more
images played through it in a storm.
He'd seen Harry break free of the webs that held him prisoner, now and
forever, and seen how much that scared Connor. He would have to work to
heal not only the trust between him and his sons, but the bond that
Harry and Connor had once shared.
He'd seen Sirius, possessed by Voldemort, trap his sons in the Shrieking
Shack. He'd seen Voldemort delay too long, and Sirius break free long
enough to kill himself and take that bit of the Dark Lord with him. He'd
seen Harry and Connor learn the truth about what had happened at
Godric's Hollow the night that James and Lily abandoned them to their
fate, and he'd seen Harry kill for the first time. It didn't matter that
the kill had been a Death Eater; Harry would still need healing.
He'd been able, briefly, to send a letter to Remus, then, the Maze
transporting parchment and quill to him when it had felt his plan and
approved of it. He'd wanted to tell Remus that he would go to his sons
the moment he was free of the Maze.
And that moment was now. Never mind that it was the middle of the night
again, from the feel of the house's wards, and probably a few weeks
later than the time when he had seen his sons simultaneously
traumatized. Never mind that he had not yet properly mourned Sirius, or
come to terms with his death. James was going to Hogwarts. He was going
to retrieve his sons.
\emph{If they will have me. I know they might not.} And that was a fear
in him, a sickening fear, slamming against and biting at the inside of
his stomach.
But Gryffindors did not run from their fears. Gryffindors faced them,
and fought anyway.
James thought it was a truth he had forgotten for far too long.
He made his way smoothly towards the door from the hall, his mind
already working. One of the upper rooms had a Floo that corrected
directly to Hogwarts's hospital wing, a relic of the days when traveling
by the Hogwarts Express had been too dangerous for Potter children. He
would contact Madam Pomfrey and ask her if he might come through.
He would speak with his boys. He would speak with Remus. He would bring
them all back here, and do what he could to repair the bonds he'd
broken, or set new ones in place if the old ones could not be repaired.
And then\ldots{}
James's hand twitched. He'd faced his mistakes. He could help other
people heal, but just remaining in Lux Aeterna and showing his sons
their heritage and talking with his friends wasn't enough. His mistakes
had rolled down and affected other people, and he wanted to make up for
that, if he could.
The Maze had made him face the moment when he'd broken and tortured
Bellatrix Lestrange, likely sending her insane before she ever went to
Azkaban. He'd given up being an Auror because of that, come back to
Godric's Hollow and hidden his head in the sand. It was yet another step
in a long dance of being afraid, of giving up when he encountered
something that he didn't want to know, of turning away and refusing to
acknowledge reality.
James didn't think he could do that anymore.
A war was beginning. He had money, he had people who would listen to him
in the Ministry for his name and his deeds in the past, he had Auror
training. And he had his courage back, now, or at least the means to
stare his fear in the face.
When his boys went back to Hogwarts after this summer, he planned to ask
the Ministry if they could find any use for a Potter willing to fight
again.
He reached the door, spun, and bowed to the Maze, which glittered behind
him.
``Thank you,'' he said softly.
The Maze glinted, and did not answer, which was enough of one.
James walked through the door, his head high and his heart pounding with
terror on the edge of joy. Time to go meet Connor and Harry, and then to
go forward and meet the rest of his life.
\end{document}
|