Аннотация: Просто для себя. Никак не могу дочитать из-за технических проблем. Снейджер на английском, Снейп изгнан из магического мира и начинает новую жизнь.
Ссылка:
https://www.fanfiction.net/s/6010521
Автор:
coffeeonthepatio
Фандом:
Harry Potter
Статус:
Закончен
-Hand over your wand. It is to be snapped and you're exiled from the Wizarding World from this day onward.- Severus has to deal with his life without magic. A story about Mugglishness, well-meaning neighbours, well-meaning students and Linguistics.
1. Sentence
I don't make any money with this story, nothing belongs to me, I'm just having fun and playing a little for your, and my, entertainment.
xx
Semantics is the study of the meaning of words, phrases and sentences. In semantic analysis, there is always an attempt to focus on what the words conventionally mean, rather than on what a speaker might want the words to mean on a particular occasion. This technical approach to meaning emphasizes the objective and the general. It avoids the subjective and the local. Linguistic semantics deals with the conventional meaning conveyed by the use of words and sentences of a language.
(Yule, 1985)
.
The wizened wizard with the beetled eyebrows stared at Severus Snape, former Death Eater, former Potions Master of Hogwarts and murderer of Albus Dumbledore. There had been a vote. It had all happened more or less democratically, and while the heroes of the Light, amongst them the newly dubbed Golden Trio, all spoke more or less highly of him, praised his bravery, it did not seem to impress the old and revered body of the Wizengamot. This little figure in black, most of them thought, sitting erectly and proudly in the middle of the huge, dark room, surrounded by them, had killed their former Chief Warlock. The current Chief Warlock, the wizened wizard with the beetled eyebrows, was an ancient person called Adalbert Tremlett who had spent the years during Lord Voldemort's reign in Norway, away from the war. That one person cleared his throat and as he still looked and tried to find a way into Severus Snape's mind, he knew he would have to go against the wishes of most of those other witches and wizards in the Wizengamot who wanted that lone, dark figure to receive the Dementor's Kiss. He could not let this happen to that man and so, he quickly decided to go against the rest of them.
But punishment had to be, and this way, he might be able, he thought, to soothe the body of the Wizengamot.
"Your punishment, Severus Tobias Snape..." said Adalbert Tremlett slowly. "Hand over your wand. It is to be snapped and your exiled from the Wizarding World from this day onward. Any re-entry into our world will result in the Dementor's Kiss!" He had to shout the last part. It was idiotic to lose such a bright mind and such a brave man, but it was better than to leave him to rot, soullessly, in a dark pit of Azkaban. But he could not be a wizard. He had committed a sin, he had to be punished. "You will be tracked, much like an underage wizard. Any use of magic and you will receive the Kiss. Now, hand it over and then just...disappear."
The dark, lone man seemed to wear shoes made of lead and he seemed weak as he shuffled forward, his eyes downcast. He produced a beautiful wand, made from dark wood out of the folds of his robes and gave it, reluctantly, to a clerk, who in turn, gave it to the Chief Warlock with a flourish.
It was the oddest noise, like twigs reluctantly creaking, like wood not wanting to be broken and the snapping sound seemed to be a long time coming but there it was. A crack, and Severus Snape's wand was no more.
.
Even though there was no one but the Wizengamot allowed when they passed the sentence, there were two people hidden underneath an Invisibility Cloak on the topmost, empty, visitor stands. It was cramped underneath the cloak and the air was so thick, it was maybe possible to cut it with a knife but both young ones hidden there listened with rapt attention.
"Can they do that?" asked the female.
"It's unfair," muttered the male.
"That's what I mean. Can they do that?" hissed the female.
"I s'pose," replied the male.
"Can't you ask someone? Can't we change it?"
"He's lucky he didn't end up with the Kiss," the male muttered angrily. "That's what Arthur said."
"But he's a hero," shrieked the female. Quietly. As quietly as you could shriek.
"I think they see him more as a murderer," the male said darkly.
"Preposterous."
"Agreed."
.
It seemed almost ironic, Severus Snape, newly made Muggle, thought, that he would be led out of the Ministry of Magic, straight into Muggle London, by one of his former students, Michael Singh, a Hufflepuff who had received more detentions for melting cauldrons than any other. It was truly ironic, Severus Snape thought, that this Michael Singh, still trembled under his gaze and seemed afraid. And he had no power whatsoever anymore. He had been tried and sentences for his deeds done, for the sins he had committed, for all his transgressions. He was lucky to be alive, he was lucky to have the rest of his crippled soul. And then he stood there. On a little street, a bit off, he knew, from Charing Cross Road. If he wandered down that street, he'd be on Shaftesbury Avenue. And from there, he could easily find his way towards Piccadilly Circus. With the fifty Pounds the Ministry had so graciously given him. They probably did not want him stranded somewhere in the middle of England. If they had known he'd had the foresight of actually withdraw all his money from Gringotts, had it changed into Pound Sterling and that it was stacked away inside the mattress of his bed in Spinner's End, they probably would not have been so gracious. But he could get the Tube from Piccadilly Circus, the train up North from Euston or St Pancras. If he got to his dingy Spinner's End house, he would be alright. The money there would last until he had a plan.
He needed a plan.
His entire life had been turned upside down. He had suspected to be Kissed. Or at the very least, he expected to spend the rest of his life in Azkaban. He had not expected to be cast out of the Wizarding World. He had not expected to be free.
Free. He did not know what that meant. And now he was free - whatever that meant - without a wand. Without the ability to use magic. Being made a Muggle and that almost, almost seemed like poetic justice. Being turned into that which people, the general public, thought he was so against. He had to admit that it had not sunk in yet. And after the almost six months he had spent in Azkaban, just to breathe the dirty, smog-filled London air, was wonderful. Severus Snape let his head fall backwards and looked up to the sky, the greyish clouds rushing by, a few drops of rain falling on his face. He was hungry and he was thirsty but those meandering thoughts in his mind, back and fro and back again. That morning, his head had been clear in his cell in Azkaban. He had known that he would, at best, die. At worst, would suffer worse than death. Six months that he had time to wonder about the effects of a Dementor's Kiss, and while they weren't kept to be guarding the prison anymore, they were still there, around, kept to carry out Kisses. Some nights, he had been able to feel them. Or maybe that had just been the overwhelming despair inside himself.
He had never expected to survive and from what he knew, he had been on the brink of death, knocking on Death's door for around three weeks. Three weeks during which medi-witches and -wizards at St Mungo's had fought for his life, only to be put to Azkaban after another six weeks of convalescence. They should have just, he had thought so many times, let him die. It would have spared the Wizarding population of the United Kingdom a lot of expenses. The overly long trial. His extended stay at Azkaban and now the £ 50.
He could nevertheless not deny the relief he felt as the rain fell on his face and on his greasy hair and he did not even care that he wore his old robes, the ones he had been found in and the ones that had only been mended slightly. He had other clothes back home. Old clothes of his father's but clothes, nevertheless. He could not just transfigure his robes now. He could not just apparate. He would truly have to watch himself, would have to make sure not to brew potions and not to do some accidental, wandless magic. They would know. No doubt about it. Or maybe his brain was too muddled by those sudden turn of events, that he could not think.
He had slowly begun to walk, down Shaftesbury Avenue, black cabs and other cars rushing by, some other pedestrians passing him, not caring about his clothes when the rain got heavier. And this was London. People could dress strangely in London and get away with it. And back home, he had his father's old clothes. He would have to stay there for the time being until he sorted out his thoughts. Until he knew what to do.
All the thoughts - no means of income without magic, no way of earning money - were pushed aside when he bought a ticket for the Tube and was suddenly surrounded by people, lots and lots of people. He had to focus on his breathing, knowing exactly that a crowd could always mean trouble - and he was without any kind of defence, without his wand. He missed it, his sleeve was empty, his pocket was empty. He felt almost naked and in the middle of a crowd, in the middle of a lot of people, he found he had difficulties breathing. He had difficulties finding his step on the stairs and he kept to the utmost left, almost clinging to the handrail. He didn't dare to touch it - but it was there and he knew it was there. Something to hold on to if he needed it. And he followed the crowd, trying to breath and felt himself swept into the Tube.
.
The house looked the same, however, the last time, he had been in there, the last time, he had gone out, he had added wards upon wards upon wards. He had no wand now. He couldn't get into his own house. Not in the regular way. However, he hoped that the house recognised him still and so he went around to the back and stared, for long, long minutes, at the glass of the window and for a moment, he wondered, then made a fist slowly and his hand broke the glass. Nothing happened apart from the glass shattering, his hand bleeding and aching, a tiny shard of glass sticking between his knuckles. He pulled it out, first, before he carefully stuck his hand inside and turned the handle. He felt absolutely no wards in place. Nothing. Maybe they had fallen when they had snapped his wand, maybe they were still there and he couldn't feel them. He wasn't sure but he could get into his own house. He could get in and realised that it felt, a little bit, like home.
Ignoring the dark and gloomy atmosphere, he went straight to the shower, stepped out of his clothes and decided, he would reactivate the old fireplace - to burn his clothes. He no longer belonged into a black frock coat and he no longer belonged in robes. He belonged in Muggle clothes. Not that it had sunken in yet. He was back at his dingy old home. It didn't feel like anything had changed - apart from his bleeding, hurting hand and the fact that he had not kept any potions in the house. Not that he could use them, probably.
There was nothing in his fridge, he had no plasters in the house. He needed a shower, he needed to go to the shops, he needed to figure out what to do with his life. If there was a life to be had without magic.
.
2. Features
The usual disclaimers apply.
.
Semantic features:
A component may be as general as 'animate being'. We can then take this component and use it to describe part of the meaning of words as either plus (+) or minus (-) the feature. So, the feature becomes +animate (=denotes an animate being) or -animate (=does not denote an animate being). This procedure is a way of analyzing meaning in terms of semantic features. Features such as +animate, -animate; +human, -human; +male, -male, for example, can be treated as the basic features involved in differentiating the meanings of each word in the language from every other word. [...] From a feature analysis like this, you can say that at least part of the basic meaning of the word boy in English involved the components (+human, +male, -adult).
(Yule, 1985)
.
The water in the shower had been cold. It was no surprise to him, truly, but he had wished for a little warmth after the coldness of the trains and the iciness inside his own home. He had, shiveringly, washed away all the grime and dirt and filth and grunge of Azkaban and the trains. He was clean, wearing underwear that was greyer than the skies outside and socks with more holes than fabric. He had tried on trousers of his father but those had slid down his thin, skinny, rawboned frame and he had no wand to resize them, no magic to make them fit. He had found a belt in the old, smelly closet and had tied it around himself, lashed the trousers on him. A horrid, brownish colour, the colour of week-old blood. The shirt wasn't any better, smelling of mothballs and old wood, a mustardy yellow. It was a huge shirt, his father's stomach, bloated off by too much ale and lager and gin and he would have fitted in it - twice. A button was missing, too, but since it was at the bottom, and since Severus had shoved the shirt into the massively huge trousers, nobody could see.
In a moment of clarity, he decided that he would have to buy clothes, any kind of clothes but that moment of clarity soon vanished when his eyes spotted his old bed, in his old room. Nobody had slept in it since he had returned from Hogwarts that last summer. Not even Wormtail. Nobody. There were no sheets, just a naked pillow and an old, ragged duvet but for that moment, when his clarity was gone again, it seemed like the most comfortable thing in the world and he couldn't resist the urge to put himself into that bed. Stretch his legs a bit. Food could wait, sleep - could not.
.
Hermione Granger was surrounded by people, chattering, loud, noisy people. But she, as the young man sitting next to her, was quiet. She did not feel like talking, she did not feel like listening. The image of Snape's wand being snapped, and her former Professer's impenetrable mask of neutrality on his face would not leave her mind. And it seemed that Harry Potter, the young man next to her, felt exactly the same way. She only had to close her eyes and she saw, in her mind's eye, the man being led away. Still proud, still awfully erect, still a bit stiff when he had just, moments ago, basically lost all that he was, all that he had ever been.
The chatter of the Weasley family could not chase those images away, the smell of food on the table, food in over-abundance, made her stomach churn and her pancreas work overtime. She could feel the stinging sensation of acid burning holes in her stomach wall.
"Excuse me," she whispered and left the table as quietly as she could but Harry, her friend, was on her heels immediately. He very possibly felt the same way she did, had not expected this outcome. The very last of the Death Eater trials. The very last verdict and they had both expected a little slap on the fingers for Severus Snape, they had both expected that he would have been hailed, in due time, as the hero he had been. But none of that.
"We have to do something," said Harry, walking slowly next to her, careful not to trod on any garden gnomes.
"I know," replied Hermione tiredly. "But what?"
"I think we should find him first and then we can, I don't know, there must be a way to convince them that this is wrong. Don't they know how many spells he invented? What he did?"
She sighed wearily. "It's the Wizengamot. That Tremlett person was not here when all of this happened. And Kingsley is probably happy to have him away."
"Why should he be?" asked Harry.
"I don't know. But now, they don't have to deal with him. If he had gone free, there would have been the question of how to treat him, how to...oh, forget it Harry, I'm talking rubbish. I don't know. It just seems so unfair," she ran a hand down her face, rubbing her eyes. "Can we do anything?"
"I'll talk to Arthur and to Kingsley. I'll try, Hermione," said Harry slowly. "But..."
"But?" asked Hermione, waving her wand and drying a spot of grass, warming it, too, and sat down.
"I doubt it will work. They've been harsh with the Death Eaters."
"Not with all of them. Malfoy?" she asked with arched eyebrows.
"Malfoy is a ... with more money than the rest of the Wizarding World put together. He doesn't count. He would get off with a slap on the wrist if he killed Merlin himself."
"But..."
"Hermione, it's the way it is. We all thought it would change but apparently, wars don't change the structure of the world. Or not that hugely. It's unfair."
"It is unfair," said Hermione darkly.
Harry shrugged and spelled another patch of grass dry and warm. It was mild for the beginning of December but it had been raining for weeks now. He sat down, wrapped his arm around Hermione's shoulder and let her rest her head against his shoulder. "Speaking of unfair," he began hesitantly, "what about..."
"Oh, don't talk about Ron," Hermione huffed and poked his ribs. "It's not unfair. You know how it went. There was no spark left by the time we could admit to wanting to be together. If he had gotten it together by fourth or fifth year, we might still be together but it was just too late. At least he realised it before I did, it wouldn't have worked."
"Must have been the first time that he realised something before you did," he huffed.
"Harry, really, it's fine..."
"And you're not just saying this and getting all worked up over the unfairness of the thing with Snape because you're at the Burrow for the first time since you almost got together?"
"I'm worked up over the unfairness of the thing with Snape because it's unfair and illogical and just completely, utterly stupid. I mean that was absolutely irrational. Take his wand away, put a tracking spell on him, take away all that's his. I don't think they've ever passed a judgement like that and I don't see why they should now. It just doesn't make any sense to me at all. And it's not about Ron. It was high time he found himself a girl and it's been six months, Harry. And we shared one, well, two kisses. No big deal. You always made it seem bigger than it was..."
"Because you were the only one who cried during the celebrations after the fall of Voldemort."
"We should have all cried. I didn't cry because of Ron and you know it. Stop worrying about me. Six months. Well, seven really. And you don't see me falling to pieces because he brought some girl to dinner with his family."
"Hmph. They will think so after you took off like that."
"I took off like that," she argued, "because I saw the snapping of Snape's wand over and over again. And the way he was led out. It's so disgusting."
"Yep, you're right," replied Harry and put his head gently on Hermione's. "We'll find a way, 'Mione, to help him. Wanna stay over tonight?"
"No Ginny?"
He shook his head. "Nah, not tonight."
"Then I'll stay the night," Hermione replied, smiling softly.
.
Severus stood, his stomach grumbling, in front of his parents' bed. His money was in there. It had been put in there with magic and now he had no wand with which he could get it out again. It was in the mattress and there was no other way to get it out but to slice the mattress open. But then again, he had slept well in his old, ancient bed and he did not fancy sleeping in the bed he had slept in during his last, dreadful days in this house - when Wormtail had slept outside in the coal shed.
It had made so much sense at the time to hide all his money in there - nobody could find it and he had thought, in the event of his demise (which he had taken for granted at the time), that this way, it would definitely not fall into the hands of the Ministry of Magic. He had not wanted them to get his entire fortune and his assets. It had seemed like a good idea - and it still, obviously, was. He was showered, he felt at least a tiny bit refreshed after his three-hour nap and now, he needed a knife. There was no way around it.
Slowly, on aching limbs, Azkaban still in his bones, he traipsed down the stairs, had left his old, scuffed boots upstairs and still the old, worn, wooden stairs creaked at every step. He had ignored the depressive, oppressive, dark atmosphere of the house he had grown up in but now that his eyes were open, now that his head was clearer, now that he had slept off some of the drudge of Azkaban and the trial, he noticed, for the first time in at least twenty-five years how rotten this house was. How dark, how little light came in through the dirty windows and how much light was swallowed by the dark furniture. By the books stacked everywhere. Magical books. Books on magic. Books that would not help him anymore. Books that he did not want to see anymore. Books he would have to take care off.
But his stomach grumbled and he needed money first. He needed his money from the mattress and he needed it soon. It would have been so simple if he had a wand. If he could use magic. If he could only find a knife that was sharp. In the kitchen drawer were knives, yes, and he pulled one out, the one that seemed least blunt and slowly walked back up again, staring, once more, at the greying mattress. Why was everything in this house dark or grey? Everything that he owned now - dark or grey? It didn't matter. Not now. Now mattered the coloured bits of paper inside the mattress and he attacked, viciously, the heavy, stiff material, broke through it, panting, exhausted. He had no strength left after his stay at prison. He stabbed the mattress, he sliced, he cut, he cursed silently. He had to get deeper inside. Had wanted his money safe from Wizarding folk. Had rather wanted it all to be thrown out, or to rot in this mattress and now, he couldn't get to it.
He did, however, get to the stack of bank notes after long, sweaty minutes. There were around £12 540 in there. It would be enough - even though he had no idea how expensive things were in this world. He had not been shopping since 1974. Not in a Muggle shop. But, just to be on the safe side, he took out three fifty Pound notes and stuffed them into his pockets. He knew there was a shop at the end of Lancaster Close. Not far. It was one of those big ones and he would have to walk there. And back. Would be about twenty minutes each way, he supposed. But he needed food. He needed plasters for his hand - which had begun to bleed again during his attack of the mattress. He needed - he wasn't sure. The last time, he had been shopping had been in 1974. With his mother.
Still, he would have to go and he had found an old Mackintosh in the closet. It was large as well and he knew, objectively, that he looked like someone who lived on the streets, but maybe that huge, grand shop had some clothes. He doubted it, but then he would have to go find some clothes. In another shop. After he had something to eat. Food came first. The rest later. Everything else later.
There was a key on the little table in the hall and he took it, and if someone cared to break in through the broken glass in the back, they were welcome to take everything, even the old television set. And all his books. He would burn them later anyway. There was no use having something he could not bear to see every day. There as no use having something he could never use again. And they would make a good fire. It would keep him warm for a while. And after that, he could burn some of the oppressive furniture. Warmth was more important. Winter was just beginning. Food and warmth. Just the basics. He needed those.
.
Hermione sat and talked with Harry over a bottle of elf-made wine. He, like she, couldn't get Severus Snape out of his head. And even there, in the cleaned up, now cosy atmosphere of Grimmauld Place, she shivered when she remembered how he walked out of there. They didn't know where he had gone and how to stop that verdict. Maybe it was no use. Maybe there was a time to give up, like she had given up on S.P.E.W. back then. The Wizengamot was a revered body, their decree was absolute. It was the ultimate decision making instance.
But maybe, they could make his life simpler. Maybe they could find him and help him find his way around. Help him find a job, help him with the daily life.
She sat on the plush carpet, opposite Harry, her eyelids dropping. "We have to find him, Harry," slurred Hermione.
"We will," he slurred back. "More wine?"
"No. But we will have to help him, Harry. He's saved us so many times."
"We will. And he did. He really did."
.
The bright lights had made his eyes hurt and the smells had overwhelmed him and the bags were heavy and he had no way of lightening them. His arms hurt awfully by the time he got home and he had not bought any kind of pain medicine, only plasters and canned foods he knew and a bit of bread, a bit of butter. Surprisingly enough, there had been clothes. Loads of clothes and he had just picked two shirts, a pair of jeans, socks, underwear. White underwear, black socks, blue jeans, blue shirts. He would get through it for the time being. As long as he could figure out how to use the old washing machine. Which, he noticed then, would take another trip to the shop, buying washing powder.
Severus felt like a little child that, for the first time, has to learn how to take care of himself. He had done the washing before - he would just have to remember. And the remembering would begin soon - Occlumency was magic after all and he couldn't push anything back. Already images came rushing back to him, things he had never wanted to remember.
But maybe, if he waded through all the bad memories, he would be able to make himself remember how to work the washing machine and how to cook the basics.
3. Productivity
Productivity:
It is a feature of all languages that novel utterances are continually being created. A child learning language is especially active in forming and producing utterances which he or she has never heard before. With adults, new situations arise or new objects have to be described, so the language-users manipulate their linguistic resources to produce new expressions and new sentences. This property of human language has been termed productivity (or 'creativity', or 'open-endedness'). It is an an aspect of language which is linked to the fact that the potential number of utterances in any human language is infinite.
(Yule, 1985)
Severus Snape stared long and hard at the cold and empty fireplace. He had memories of that fireplace and nothing to hold them back. His mind was swimming in those days in the past when he had sat in front of it to get the chill from his youthful bones after a day of being outside, or when he had sat in front of it when it had been just as cold as it was now. The nook he had hidden in when his parents had argued wasn't far away either. He was sure, if someone would look closely, they could see a permanent dent where his childish body had pressed itself tightly against the wall. He didn't look closely. He was entirely focused on the fireplace, on the rickety chair he had found in the kitchen and the matches he had bought, as well as the stack of books he had carried, after his luxurious meal of lukewarm beans on hard, burned toast, inside the living room. He didn't dare to look at the titles. He didn't want to look at the titles. He did not want to think about the fact that most of his income had been spent on these books. He did not want to think about the treasures that lay hidden in the frail pages. He could not bear to see them, and he could bear even less to think about them. To think about how much they had meant to him, how much solace they had given him, that at times, they had been his sole company. He couldn't.
With his foot in the brand new socks, he kicked the chair and miraculously a leg fell off already. Another kick, and the chair was in pieces. Pieces which he stacked, carefully, in the fireplace. He threw the books in, couldn't truly bring himself to look at them and struck a match against an open page of yet another book, watched how it began to shrink under the heat, how it turned into licking flames, how the book seemed to be consumed by the growing flame. This book, and he caught a glimpse of it, definitely Potionery through the Ages, he put gently in top of the rest in the fireplace, then turned away. He could not watch.
He turned away, walked out of the living room, hoped with all his being that this would all catch fire, that he did not have to relight it, that it would just burn and went to the kitchen. It still smelled like burned toast and lukewarm beans and he felt something bubbling inside himself. Something he had not felt since that first night he had been brought to Azkaban, since the had dragged him off from St Mungo's. It was bubbling, burning, raging. It was a torrent and all he could do was wait for it to end. There was nothing he could do, no Occlumentic technique he could employ. He felt beside himself, felt, almost, as if he was watching himself. Watching himself in the oddly matching, oddly fitting, oddly strange Muggle clothing raging in the kitchen, his feet, his fists, his arms, his legs flailing around, destroying everything in their reach. Another rickety chair lost its legs and flew through the little kitchen, the kitchen table was thrown against the wall, another chair fell against the stove, pots and pans came crashing to the floor, tiles broke underneath them.
He watched himself, he heard himself shouting and crying out and making guttural noises that animals would be proud of it and he wished, he wished he had his wand, or his Occlumency or anything, really. Or... He wished he was dead.
.
"Hermione?" someone said, shaking her by the shoulder and she tried to blink her eyes open, tried to push the masses of frizzy, uncooperative hair from her face.
"Mpfhglr," she replied, doing her best to form words - or see how was waking her.
"I've talked to Kingsley, Hermione," said that someone - and her head, slowly, very slowly, registered the words. Harry. Severus Snape. Loss of wand and magic.
"What?" she sat up, insistently pushing her hair back.
"I talked to Kingsley," repeated Harry slowly.
"Yes, yes," she answered impatiently, "and?"
"And," he sat down on the edge of the bed, "it seems someone was over-eager, and someone...Kingsley suspects it was one of the Malfoys but there is a sort of ban on Snape. It's irreversible that's why it was made illegal and it's old magic, so..."
"Get to the point," she snapped.
"There is a sort of spell on Snape. More like a curse, I'd say, or a jinx. Well, a..."
"Stop with the Semantics already, what did they do? What happened? What did Kingsley say?" she shouted.
"Severus Snape cannot do magic. He's basically not magic anymore and if he tries, really hard, to get through this jinx, curse, spell, whatever, he'll die, or if someone else does, for that matter. It's like an overdeveloped Unbreakable Vow. Kingsley found the entire matter just as ridiculous as we...
"He what?" she hated to be woken like this. She hated getting bad news first thing in the morning.
"He cannot use magic anymore. Someone must have been in the courtroom with us as well, or it was one of Malfoy's lackeys in the Wizengamot. They know it wasn't on him when he was brought into the courtroom. You know they check for Polyjuice and stuff like that now and for curses and jinxes and spells and there was nothing on him. But Kingsley checked on Snape..."
"Can he do that?" interrupted Hermione.
"Apparently," sighed Harry, "and he's effectively a Squib. No, a Muggle. Or a half-Muggle. Or whatever the..."