To prevent the destruction of the human world, fairies were cursed and turned into dolls. They must find human contractors with whom they share a heartfelt connection to break the curse. Originally...
Snape took the pudding he brought for Peacock and left quickly. When he left, the kitchen was instantly filled with screams.
Duoduo was also surrounded by other house-elves: "He altered a dress for you!"
"I should have been the one serving this wizard!"
"Duoduo! You treacherous elf! You should be ashamed!"
After Snape came out of the kitchen, he walked outside with Peacock. They had finished touring the castle, but there was still room outside.
Peacock still wants to go to the forbidden forest, but he can't do that now because it violates school rules. He has to go there secretly in the middle of the night.
They didn't wander around for long before they were called away. Professor McGonagall wanted to see him about something.
Snape knew without hesitation that it was he who stuck James and the others to the wall. It was probably because the students discovered their miserable plight. Most of the senior students had gone to Hogsmeade, so they had to ask the professor to remove the curse.
When he went over, the four men were standing in Professor McGonagall's office with the words on their faces still there. When they saw Snape come in, James and Sirius wanted to jump up and hit Snape.
"What's the matter, Professor McGonagall?" Snape asked seriously.
McGonagall didn't look at James and the others. She felt like laughing when she saw the words on their faces changing with their expressions. She looked at Snape seriously and said, "Mr. Potter, they said you glued them to the wall of Hogwarts and wrote on their faces. Is that true?"
"Yes, Professor, but the cause of the incident was that I was just walking down the stairs normally, and they jumped out and attacked me verbally. No one walked with me, and then they attacked me with magic. After I dodged the first magic, they found that I didn't bring my wand and attacked me more fiercely. I had no choice but to fight back." Snape admitted directly.
McGonagall first gave James and the others a stern look, then realized what Snape had said: "You don't have your wand?"
Snape nodded. "Yes, I left my wand in the dormitory. The portraits in the corridor can testify for me."
"I don't mean to doubt you, but you can cast spells without a wand?" McGonagall was shocked. Casting spells without a wand, what a terrifying talent.
"Yes." He had been taking classes for a week and naturally knew that it was difficult to do it silently and without a wand, but so what? There were always geniuses in the world.
The four people standing in the corner as punishment only then remembered that Snape not only did not have a wand, but also had not cast a spell.
"Okay, I get it, but casting a spell in the corridor is wrong. Since you were acting in self-defense, I won't punish you. As for them, I'll deduct five house points from each of them and give them detention after school. Mr. Snape, can you remove the words on their faces?"
McGonagall couldn't remove the words on their faces. She suspected that the method of removing the spell was wrong, but she tried several times without success. She was busy with other things and didn't have much time to try, so she had to ask Snape to do it.
She couldn't solve it simply because it wasn't magic, but was imprinted directly by Peacock's magical power. If she wanted to remove it, she could only use the magical power to erase the magical mark she left behind. In this world, there was no one else with magical power except Peacock and Snape.
"No way, why? That was the punishment they cast in the corridor, what does our counterattack have to do with it!" Peacock refused.
In Mag's eyes, this counterattack should stop in the corridor. They were stuck to the wall and laughed at by people coming and going. It was enough that the words on their faces could be removed.
Snape looked at McGonagall in silence. He didn't want to make Peacock unhappy because of them.
McGonagall wanted to sigh and glare at James and the others, but she held back when she remembered that she was already a teacher. They hadn't even started a fight yet, and now she had to clean up the mess. How embarrassing!
"Mr. Snape, you can write those words somewhere else, but not on your face." Writing on the face is too insulting.
Snape looked at McGonagall, who was equally determined, then at James and Sirius, who still looked defiant, Lupin, who looked worried, and Peter, who was frightened.
Peacock made an impatient "tsk" sound: "If you're not angry anymore, just take it off. The professor said so." She didn't want to embarrass Snape.
Snape reached out and wiped the words off their faces. "As for printing them elsewhere, there's no need. My original intention was to humiliate them, and printing them elsewhere would have no effect."
Mag: ...
"Okay, Mr. Snape can go back first. They were wrong in this matter. I will extend their detention for another week." McGonagall said.
Snape didn't care, but turned around and smiled provocatively at James and the others, successfully making them furious.