Sirius didn’t betray the Potters—Pettigrew did. The proof’s in the details: Sirius never killed anyone. Pettigrew’s ‘death’ was staged, and his rat form hid the truth. Sirius broke out of Azkaban to catch him, not to hurt Harry. The map showed Pettigrew alive. Case closed.
Sirius Black's innocence in 'Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban' is a masterstroke of J.K. Rowling's storytelling. Initially painted as a traitor who betrayed Harry’s parents, the truth unfolds like a dark, twisted puzzle. Sirius wasn’t the Secret-Keeper for the Potters—Peter Pettigrew was. Pettigrew faked his death, framed Sirius, and vanished as a rat. Sirius’s desperate escape from Azkaban wasn’t for vengeance but to protect Harry from Pettigrew, who’d been hiding as Ron’s pet, Scabbers.
The evidence is buried in memories and magic. The Marauder’s Map reveals Pettigrew’s name, and Hermione’s Time-Turner allows Harry to witness the past. Sirius’s ragged appearance and wild behavior mask his loyalty. He’s a man broken by injustice, not guilt. The real villainy lies in the system—Dumbledore’s quiet regret, the Ministry’s haste to condemn. Sirius’s innocence isn’t just a plot twist; it’s a critique of blind trust in authority.
The whole ‘Sirius is innocent’ reveal is classic Rowling misdirection. We think he’s a killer, but he’s actually Harry’s last link to his parents. Pettigrew’s the real rat—literally. Sirius’s animagus form, a big black dog, mirrors his role: a loyal guardian, not a murderer. Even his ‘crazy’ moments make sense once you know he was tracking Pettigrew for months. The kicker? The Shrieking Shack scene. Harry hears the full story from Lupin and Sirius, and Pettigrew’s stunned face says it all. Justice delayed, but not denied.
Sirius Black’s innocence hinges on a single, gut-wrenching detail: he never got a trial. The wizarding world assumed he was guilty because he laughed at Pettigrew’s ‘death’—but that laughter was madness, not malice. Twelve years in Azkaban for a crime he didn’t commit. The truth? Pettigrew cut off his own finger, transformed into a rat, and let Sirius take the fall. The biggest proof is Scabbers. A rat living unnaturally long, missing a toe—Pettigrew’s disgusting disguise. Sirius risked everything to expose him, not to harm Harry but to save him. The Ministry’s incompetence is the real crime here.
2025-06-25 16:01:19
35
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
His Innocent Sera
BlueDreams
9.6
264.6K
I wanted to marry you and make you my queen but you threw it all away when you ran from me. Now, I'll keep you as my mistress- Nathaniel Serrano
Avani is the last earth dragon in the world. Not only that, but he is also the last male dragon. The other three remaining elemental dragons, air, water and fire, are all females. Unless he mates with one of the other three dragons, the race of pure dragons will die out.
Since he snubs the idea of finding a mate, refusing to allow anyone to claim him and therefore control him, he has taken over as protector of the forest. The hunters are always searching for supernaturals to force into their Arenas, a modern-day gladiator fighting ring. And now, they are capturing supernaturals to experiment on, creating a new race of hybrid creatures. Because Avani can shift his emerald-green scales into the black of onyx, those he saves have started to call him The Dark Protector.
Merethyl is an elven princess. She and her brother, Yhendorn, are captured by hunters when her family is attacked, her parents slaughtered in front of her. She and Yhendorn are held captive, experimented on, until one day they find a way to escape. As they flee, Yhendorn is re-captured sacrificing himself to make sure Merethyl gets away.
As she runs, the hunters chase her, trying to run her down. Avani hears her and flies to her rescue, killing the hunters that are after her. When he realizes that she smells better than anyone he’s ever smelled before, he knows he must get away from her. He cannot allow her to have the total control over him that claiming him would give her. But Merethyl has nowhere else to go and she needs Avani’s help to rescue her brother.
Will Avani be able to resist the charms of the elven princess, or will he fall to her, claimed, making her his dragonrider?
For twenty-four years, Alpha Draegon longed for a son, but the Moon Goddess had other plans. When his wife bore a daughter, he defied fate and raised her as a boy, hiding her true identity from the world.
On Valen’s eighteenth birthday, the feared Lycanis warriors descend upon their kingdom, demanding a male from every family—or war will follow. To protect her secret, Draegon prepares to offer himself in her place. But before dawn breaks, Valen is gone. She has surrendered herself to the Lycanis.
Taken to the High Dark Mountain—a cursed land where no man has ever survived—Valen learns the terrifying truth. The Lycanis are on the brink of extinction, and the men taken captive are meant for one thing: to breed. The strongest among them will become warriors, the weakest will become slaves. To her horror, Valen is both strong and dangerously beautiful, making her the most desired among the Lycanis females.
But one man’s attention is deadlier than all their King. A monstrous warrior feared by all, he chooses Valen as his personal guard, unwittingly drawn to the one person who holds his fate in her hands. Valen struggles to conceal the truth because he is bound by duty, tormented by forbidden dreams, and forced to endure his darkest indulgences.
Yet, secrets have a way of unraveling. And when war erupts, a single spear thrust reveals the one truth that could change everything—Valen is no man.
Now, the King must decide: will he cast her aside as a traitor, or will he claim the only soul that can soothe his madness?
I was the second princess of the Phoenix Court.
And I fell in love with a lowly black serpent.
In my past life, just to be with him, I purposely picked that black serpent during the Sacred Bonding ceremony when we each chose our companion beasts.
After that, we spent every night together.
I didn't care what the whole clan thought. I was determined to marry him.
But on our wedding day, that same serpent I'd given my heart to drove an arrow straight through me, killing me while I was three months pregnant.
As I lay dying, I heard him hiss bitterly in my ear, "If it weren't for you, I'd have been with Seraphine by now. You should've died a long time ago."
That's when I finally got it. All he cared about was power. And he'd been in love with my older sister all along—the sister who was next in line for the Phoenix throne.
When I opened my eyes again, we were back at that same moment—the Sacred Bonding ceremony.
Before everyone, he dropped to his knees and confessed he loved my sister. He begged not to be bound to me.
The whole clan looked at me with pity.
But I only smiled and pointed to a small white serpent resting quietly off to the side.
That black serpent thought clinging to my sister would make him powerful. What he didn't realize was that only the one I chose would become the true heir to the Phoenix Court.
For three hundreds under vampire rule, the Blood Prince has drawn a new bride from his realms every fifty years.
In my previous life, Seraphina was chosen,Lucian’s childhood sweetheart.
The night before our bonding ceremony, she burst into our chamber, tears streaming.
“Lucian, I’ve been chosen as the Blood Prince’s seventh bride!” she sobbed.
“They say he loses control on his wedding night, drains every drop of blood from his bride. None of the first six lived to see dawn.
I don’t want to die—please, claim me as your mate!”
But Lucian had already claimed me.
And by wolf law, an Alpha may bind only one mate at a time.
So I step forward, and refused her.
The next day, at the altar, Seraphina slit her throat with a silver dagger.
Lucian didn’t flinch.
He ordered the blood scrubbed from the stones—and proceeded with our ceremony as nothing had happened.
However,on our honeymoon, he pushed me into starving wolves.
His eyes burned crimson as he snarled, “If you hadn’t tricked me into marking you earlier, Seraphina would be alive.
You killed her.”
Over a dozen of wolves with gleaming eyes swarmed me in,
tore me limb from limb.
Then I woke, back on the day the mate-hunger hex seized Lucian.
This time, I dragged Seraph-the girl Lucian cherished as most precious jewel,from her house myself,
and shoved her into Lucian’s chamber.
“Be his cure, and I’ll take your place as the Blood Prince’s bride instead.
Katherine Dalton was once the pride of the Blackwood Pack. As the Beta’s daughter, she thought she had everything, a happy family and a bright future—to be Alpha Harrison’s Luna. She loved Harrison deeply for five years.
But fate had other plans. Her best friend was claimed by Alpha Harrison as his fated mate, only to die shortly after, and Katherine became the prime suspect. Faced with the Beta rank and her brother’s future, her parents abandoned her. Alpha Harrsion threw her into prison, despite her countless repeated that she never killed Elisa.
In prison, she endured endless torment and lost her connection with her wolf. She never thought she would be freed again by a stranger. But Harrison hasn’t done with her. He forbade any pack from taking her in, unless she became a slave or a whore.
Katherine vowed she would never forgive him. Until the Moon Goddess played a cruel joke, binding them together as second chance mates.
As the secrets behind the murder begin to unravel, Harrison regrets and refuses to let her go again. But is it already too late? And Harrison’s rebellious half-brother turned to be the very man who freed Katherine from the jail.
Now we have a broken woman, two unwilling Alphas, and two mate bonds.
Sirius Black's character in 'Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban' is fascinating and multi-layered, which makes him one of the most compelling figures in the series. Initially framed as a dangerous criminal who escaped from Azkaban, he embodies the theme of mistaken perceptions that runs throughout the book. The revelation that he's actually Harry Potter's godfather and has been wrongfully imprisoned for a crime he didn't commit is a huge twist!
What really struck me is how his loyalty to Harry and his intense desire to protect him unveil his true nature. While he's portrayed as this somewhat wild figure, the deeper aspect of Sirius is that he was a close friend to Harry's parents and bears the weight of their legacy. There's this underlying sadness to him—after all those years in prison, he experiences a harsh reality where the world has changed, leaving him feeling like a relic of the past.
By the end, it becomes clear that Sirius isn’t just running from the law; he's running toward something bigger, trying to reclaim the family he lost. It's that blend of tragic backstory and fierce loyalty that really crafts a unique character who resonates with so many fans. His struggles symbolize this ongoing battle for justice and belonging, which I think is relatable on many levels. It's layers like these that keep fans like me coming back to 'Prisoner of Azkaban' time and time again. There's always something new to discover in his narrative!