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Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets [81]

By Root 3281 0
What a lovely game, I don't think!"

 "Who threw it at you, anyway?" asked Harry.

 "I don't know ... I was just sitting in the U-bend, thinking about death, and it fell right through the top of my head," said Myrtle, glaring at them. "It's over there, it got washed out ..."

 Harry and Ron looked under the sink where Myrtle was pointing. A small, thin book lay there. It had a shabby black cover and was as wet as everything else in the bathroom. Harry stepped forward to pick it up, but Ron suddenly flung out an arm to hold him back.

 "What?" said Harry.

 "Are you crazy?" said Ron. "It could be dangerous."

 "Dangerous?" said Harry, laughing. "Come off it, how could it be dangerous?"

 "You'd be surprised," said Ron, who was looking apprehensively at the book. "Some of the books the Ministry's confiscated Dad's told me - there was one that burned your eyes out. And everyone who read Sonnets of a Sorcerer spoke in limericks for the rest of their lives. And some old witch in Bath had a book that you could never stop reading! You just had to wander around with your nose in it, trying to do everything one-handed. And -"

 "All right, I've got the point," said Harry.

 The little book lay on the floor, nondescript and soggy.

 "Well, we won't find out unless we look at it," he said, and he ducked around Ron and picked it up off the floor.

 Harry saw at once that it was a diary, and the faded year on the cover told him it was fifty years old. He opened it eagerly. On the first page he could just make out the name "T M. Riddle" in smudged ink.

 "Hang on," said Ron, who had approached cautiously and was looking over Harry's shoulder. "I know that name ... T. M. Riddle got an award for special services to the school fifty years ago."

 "How on earth d'you know that?" said Harry in amazement.

 "Because Filch made me polish his shield about fifty times in detention," said Ron resentfully. "That was the one I burped slugs all over. If you'd wiped slime off a name for an hour, you'd remember it, too."

 Harry peeled the wet pages apart. They were completely blank. There wasn't the faintest trace of writing on any of them, not even Auntie Mabel's birthday, or dentist, half-past three.

 "He never wrote in it," said Harry, disappointed.

 "I wonder why someone wanted to flush it away?" said Ron curiously.

 Harry turned to the back cover of the book and saw the printed name of a variety store on Vauxhall Road, London.

 "He must've been Muggle-born," said Harry thoughtfully. "To have bought a diary from Vauxhall Road ..."

 "Well, it's not much use to you," said Ron. He dropped his voice. "Fifty points if you can get it through Myrtle's nose."

 Harry, however, pocketed it.

 Hermione left the hospital wing, de-whiskered, tail-less, and fur-free, at the beginning of February. On her first evening back in Gryffindor Tower, Harry showed her T. M. Riddle's diary and told her the story of how they had found it.

 "Oooh, it might have hidden powers," said Hermione enthusiastically, taking the diary and looking at it closely.

 "If it has, it's hiding them very well," said Ron. "Maybe it's shy. I don't know why you don't chuck it, Harry."

 "I wish I knew why someone did try to chuck it," said Harry. "I wouldn't mind knowing how Riddle got an award for special services to Hogwarts either."

 "Could've been anything," said Ron. "Maybe he got thirty O.W.Ls or saved a teacher from the giant squid. Maybe he murdered Myrtle; that would've done everyone a favor ..."

 But Harry could tell from the arrested look on Hermione's face that she was thinking what he was thinking.

 "What?" said Ron, looking from one to the other.

 "Well, the Chamber of Secrets was opened fifty years ago, wasn't it?" he said. "That's what Malfoy said."

 "Yeah ..." said Ron slowly.

 "And this diary is fifty years old," said Hermione, tapping it excitedly.

 "So?"

 "Oh, Ron, wake up," snapped Hermione. "We know the person who opened the Chamber last time was expelled fifty years ago. We know T. M. Riddle got an award for special services to the school fifty years ago.

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