Prisoner of Azkaban does a good impression of being one of the best-constructed books of the series, as long as you are willing to smile and nod at time-travel shenanigans (which you pretty much have to in any book where time travel appears). But these gaping chasms keep opening up every time I poke at it. For example, Sirius and the mail
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Mistrusting both Dumbledore and Remus seems like a slightly stronger possibility. Dumbledore did leave him to rot. And he might worry that Peter and Remus were working together all along. Except he instantly trusts Remus when they actually meet. And it's hard to imagine that the downside if they don't believe him would be that bad, or that tipping them off would cause them to change their plans if they were evil since they already knew he was in the area and possibly after them, so why not give it a shot?
Unless he's afraid Dumbledore has developed a magical way to track a letter back to its sender somehow even if the sender has moved to a different cave outside of town? Or curse the sender?
Maybe "don't ask for help, it's weak and un-Gryffindor" really is it, sadly. Or he really does want vengeance no matter the cost.
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It doesn't, however, explain Sirius's failure to clue anyone else in about Peter, much less how Feline Amazon works. I guess both Sirius and Remus will go to any length to avoid revealing their youthful crimes as part of the Marauders, no matter who suffers from their silence.
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As it happens, Dumbledore would rather cover it up and force Remus into spying on the werewolves, but they probably couldn't count on that. Not after seeing how he didn't even try to investigate Sirius, let alone defend him.
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Because it's implied that the crimes continued through 7th year, when they were adults.
Moreover, Sirius's crime of being an unregistered Animagus continues to the present day....
(I did read a fanfic in which Sirius survived and got his trial, post-war. He was sentenced to time served plus an additional decade in Azkaban.)
Something else that may be relevant: at the time James and Sirius were committing crimes in Hogsmeade, they may well have expected that if they were caught, they'd be let off. (So long as they stopped short of murder, which they were fully confident they could do.)
The Potter heir and a Black, even if disinherited, after all!
(And assumed their families could/would protect the other two as well.)
Sirius might well have gone so quietly with the Aurors because he assumed he'd be kept overnight and released, no matter what they thought he'd done. It might have been a serious shock to him when Walburga either wouldn't or couldn't get him sprung.
So he might, once out of Azkaban and pursuing Peter, have realized that if his name didn't save him THEN, it wouldn't save him if his true crimes were now uncovered.
In which case his ONLY chance of safety is to kill Peter, return him to human form, and fudge the tale of how Peter managed to diddle those Muggle witnesses into believing he'd been killed.
Any story that includes Peter's Animagus ability is going to be trouble for him.
Which, huh. Also explains why he never holds it against Dumbles in books 4 & 5 that Dumbles doesn't ever clear his name. He knows his name is unclearable, except so far as betraying James is concerned.
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If he and Crookshanks had managed to kill Peter without witnesses, he might even have gotten away with a fudge that included Peter's ability without mentioning his own, if shrugging and saying Peter must have Apparated away really quickly at just the right second wouldn't fly. "I'm sure I saw a rat scurrying around at a meeting Peter wasn't at, and next thing we knew Voldemort had suddenly figured out how to undermine the Bones family's security..."
But then he and Remus couldn't bear to have Harry think badly of them and spilled--well, not the whole story, but more of it than they might have planned.
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We don't have any information on how Juveniles are treated differently. Harry is able to agree to the contract in GoF.
His "Guardians" the Dursleys were not there when Harry was brought before the Wizengamot. (They would have hurt Harry rather than help, so he wouldn't want them.) Was that unusual? Do only Wizard parent/guardians count?
Is there any kind of Juvenile Hall?
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The Triwizard Tournament contract might be a special case. Limiting entrants to legal adults seems to be a modern innovation. Harry might be able to make that contract (or have it made on his behalf, as it happens), but maybe he can't, say, buy a house or incorporate a business, because those just regular legal things rather than ancient magical contracts.
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Sirius is in much better shape while on the run, than goes downhill in OoP.
Which I think does make sense. When he is on the run he is active. Being in danger is an adrenaline rush.
But being stuck at home is horrible for him. Alone with bad memories. His mother's portrait yelling at him. Kretcher muttering insults him under his breath. Listening in on meeting, but being unable to help.
Sirius doesn't strike me as a guy who is contact to sit at home curled up with a book.
He seems like the kind of person who the lockdown would be very hard. He reminds me of someone I know who the lockdowns was extremely difficult. Not seeing people and being able to do things was not good for his mental health.
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Which means he does need a reason other than "Azkaban-induced impairment of executive functioning" not to have tried sending Remus or Dumbledore a note about Peter during this year, and I can't think of one which doesn't mean something bad about at least one character, sadly.
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