If you are prepared...
======================
"Severus," said Dumbledore, turning to Snape, "you know what I must ask you to do. If you are ready.. If you are prepared..."
"I am." said Snape.
They had talked about it after the business with Quirrel and the Stone. Late of an evening in the Headmaster's study.
"He was not destroyed Severus" said the Headmaster, staring into the fire. "And if he did it once..." The words trailed off into the silence.
"It must have been sheer luck he found Quirrel. And a broken reed that was. What are his chances now?" said Snape, not really wanting to think about the Dark Lord and what Albus was going to ask for.
Did ask for. "If he came back, if he found a better vessel, we would need some way of tracking him. Some way to know where he is, what he is planning. "
Severus Snape had been just one of many, branded for what he was, a soldier in a Dark army. Most of them only ever saw Voldemort when they were Marked, or at one of the very few big gatherings held when he was at the height of his power and about to topple a world.
He'd had more contact with the Dark Lord than most footsoldiers, which was not something he saw as a distinction. The first of course, was the burning of the Mark into his skin and the casual dispensation to study Chemistry. But there had been others here and there, orders for certain potions, him being sent up with reports of actions when his cell leader needed an errand boy.
And that once, when he'd been given a lesson about how you obey orders, you do not question, you do not weaken, you do as you are told and keep your damn mouth shut.
That had been his first, although not his last, experience both of Cruciatus and of the way that the Dark Lord could wrap your soul around his little finger, and make you believe he would give you everything you wanted, while he ground your face into the dust.
He'd remembered that, here in this office, so long ago, when Dumbledore had asked him to go back to the Dark Lord, to spy on him, to help bring him to justice. Remembered it, nearly thrown up with the fear and with the shame of the longing for the voice and what it promised. But there was no choice, not really, not given his other memories, not given the reality of the promises.
And now here he was, 12 years later, and the same question was going to be asked, the same sacrifice...
"I was not of the inner circle Albus. And while I did see more of the Dark Lord than most, I am not on his list of intimates and I most certainly don't want to be on that list! Besides, he knows I'm no longer with him, he knows I've rejected him. I would be walking to my death if I went."
He knew the Headmaster realised this. But it had to be said. If Voldemort returned, Albus wouldn't be the only one wondering if a former spy could become a current spy.
That's as far as they got that night, but the following year they discussed it again, still stunned from the events in the Chamber. And he damned himself thrice over that night, for no reason he could determine. Except perhaps the Weasley girl's face, Granger stone cold on the floor, and the terrible feeling of violation. Riddle had got into his sanctuary, hiding wasn't possible any more.
"I couldn't just walk up to him Albus. even if I knew where he was, even if he decided to call me, a minor player, instead of consolidating the inner circle." A pause as he tried to talk himself out of saying it.
"But there is another possibility."
He'd found it by accident almost, when he'd been wondering about a detector for the use of Polyjuice. He'd been drawn into a side alley associated with True Appearance and Plotting, and the possibilities had intruded themselves upon him.
He had a connection to the Dark Lord burned into his arm. Not very visible now, but he knew it was there. He could perhaps use it as a guide. A connection to travel along. Not in person, but remotely. A technique related to both Pensieve and scrying pool, where remote feelings, words, memories were projected along the link, controlled (he hoped) by his own desires to see what he needed to see.
He had no idea if it was practical. But there were precedents, rather well known ones. Not that you would cite Grindelwald and his use for his slaves in an academic paper, but this was hardly material for Ars Alchemica.
Do not enquire too closely into previous uses for these techniques, and most definitely do not enquire too closely as to whether the flow from source to end point on his arm was as strong as the flow from endpoint to source, do not enquire if the connection could flow either way and the monster he watched could watch him. Was watching him.
They discussed it. The spells needed. The physical objects to be ensorceled. The potion to draw the essence from the mark, free his mind to take the path, and to allow him to remember what he saw. They did not discuss the possible consequences. The chances of death or insanity from the procedure, the chances of death or insanity if he were caught.
He didn't know why Albus never brought it up, he didn't because if he did, he'd lose what courage he had. So they discussed everything but the consequences. Discussed it as a potential tool, as a possible response to Voldemort's return. Both of them hoping he'd never have to do it.
It wasn't until the Dark Mark hung over the World Cup match that it came home to him that he really would have to do it.
So here he was, preparing it. The crystal scrying bowl had been enchanted months before, tested with Albus's own blood, it would do what was asked of it. He just had to ask the right questions, provide it with the right information, drawn from the Mark on his arm. And generate the power to make and drive the connection.
The potion was, unfortunately, quite quick to brew. Most powerful things were finicky and took forever, this was finicky, took a lot of power and concentration, and was ready far too quickly for his taste.
He worked his best shield charm then, just in case some fool would take it into their head to come all the way down here, questing for him, their unguarded thoughts muddying the picture, breaking the thread that kept him anchored. Never mind that it would shield him from help, there was no one who could help him do this.
Sit in the chair, put the scrying bowl on the desk, breathe deeply of the fumes from the goblet to start the process, cut into the not-skin of the raised black mark, watch blood run over it and fall drop by drop into the bowl.
As the liquid swirled, resenting the invasion, he poured the draught down his throat, long experience of such things allowing him to ignore the taste and the way it seemed to claw its way down his gullet and sit sullenly in his stomach before it tore at his frontal lobes, muttering.
Chanting softly to focus his mind and his power, feeling the ache start behind eyes and heart, he stared into the bowl, seeking the Lord he had sworn to serve, who had promised him heaven and given him hell, who some part of him still wanted to grovel before if only he could hear that voice talking of all the sweet world as he desired it.
Funny how it wasn't possible to tell people about that. Everyone who described the Dark Lord described him as repellent, which he was. But he could speak to your soul and you would cast an Unforgiveable on yourself to hear him again.
He ignored the funeral drum in his head, the jerking of his heart, the bonedeep ache in his arm, ignored the nausea and the fear, and followed the black thread through the unreal landscape of millions of minds until he found the one he wanted, followed the call, the burning, rode the flow, followed the link between him and his Master.
And concentrated on being not-there, not-real, not-listening, not-spying, whilst being and doing all of those things, because if any one of those powerful mages, let alone the most powerful one he was linked with, felt anything wrong, he was worse than dead.
He lasted about ten minutes, he calculated later, before he fainted from pain and exhaustion. And he remembered almost nothing.
As time went on, he could do it for longer. Get clearer images, make out more words. And the residual muscle spasms and headaches and blurred vision didn't last as long either.
Which, he supposed, was better than the reverse.
Because there was no choice about this spying. About this lonely, desperate, striving in the bowels of the uncaring school, gathering scraps of information that might save a life or change an outcome. That might change the odds just enough.
Of course going in person would have been easier. The Killing Curse is a quick way to die, even Cruciatus would be preferable to this. But it wasn't about being easy. It wasn't about what he would prefer.
He had a duty. He had a debt to pay.
And so he paid it. In the currency of pain and fear, all alone in the cold stone room. Wishing he could be doing what everyone thought he was doing: facing the Dark Lord in the open, on his feet.
But a role like that is for heroes, not for him.
Not for him.
Heroes are young and handsome and good at games. They don't have greasy hair and crooked noses, they don't spend their time in dungeons.
Everyone knows that.
I know that most people lean towards Snape being very close to Voldemort, but I can't see how. Given Rowling's timeline, he would have been about 21 when Voldemort fell, Evil Overlords don't have 21yo geeks as major players in their organisations!
Nor do Evil Overlords nearly topple governments and take over countries with 12 or 13 followers.
So I think Voldermort's organisation was much bigger than the few Death Eaters we saw in Goblet Of Fire, and that Snape was not one of those intimates. He was a recruit being groomed for bigger things, but at the time of his defection he was not one of the inner circle.
Voldemort may not have known it was Snape who foiled him at the Quidditch match, may have thought that Snape didnt know it was the Dark Lord who was after the Stone, but if the speech in Goblet Of Fire about missing Death Eaters does refer to Snape, then he won't be welcomed if he suddenly turns up....
So he can't. He has to spy in other ways.