Chapter 11: Endings and Beginnings
Fire engulfed Hermione. Flames licked at her clothes and at her hair, but the heat was not touching her. Or she was not feeling it yet, due to shock. The young witch didn't know what was the case, didn't care. All she cared about was pushing Harry through the door, out of the labyrinth, to the waiting healers. To safety. Behind her, the genie laughed, cackled.
She tackled Harry forward, tried to shield him from the flames with her own body. He hit the door, gasping - in pain - when she drove him into the stone, forcing it open. The two fell out of the arena, onto the stone floor of the platform. Hermione could see the waiting wizards already starting towards them, wands out. Before she could tell them to heal Harry though her protective spells started to fail, and she felt the flames surrounding her, felt herself burn. She screamed.
Her hair was burning, the acrid stench reaching her nose. Her neck felt as if something was tearing the skin off, slowly. Her robe was burning as if it had been dipped into oil and set aflame. She realized that was true - she had been splattered with a burning substance. Screaming, she tried to tear the blazing robe off her, the same toughness that had saved her so far now working against her. A small part of her was making a note: she needed a quick-strip charm or such. But that thought was drowned out by her panic, her struggle to open her robe and slide out of it before she was burned to a cinder.
Water hit her and for a second she felt relief, felt the heat abate. Then the flames roared up and the heat increased. Steam surrounded her, and her lungs hurt with each breath she took. "Stop! Stop it! No Water!" she screamed, frantically shaking her left arm to get it out of the smoldering sleeve clinging to it. With the burning remains of her robe hanging on her right arm, her wand arm, she started to cast a spell she had learned a week ago, to see if it would help Harry in the task. "Terrenum Mantellum!" Earth, clay, some stones appeared around and on her, covering her, and started to smother the flames.
The earth mixed with the water the fools were still shooting at her, turning into mud. She did not care. It covered her, her head first, then her body, then her limbs, until she was engulfed in mud, earth, and clay. She lay there, blind, held by densely packed earth. Hermione didn't know if she was still burning, the pain from her wounds was already too strong to tell. Her lungs hurt from the steam and the lack of air. The material surrounding her was supposed to be brittle, but the heat and water had changed that. Not enough to bake the clay, fortunately. Using her left hand she dug at the sticky cover over her mouth, tearing at it until she could breathe again.
She gulped down the air, screaming with the pain it caused her, and stammered again "No water… no water."¨She kept stammering, pleading, encased in her shell, in pain. She faintly heard someone else screaming: "No water! She said no Water!" Harry. Then she didn't hear anyone, anything anymore.
*****
Harry's battered body gained more bruises when Hermione slammed him into the door, forcing it open as if he was a battering ram. He fell down on the stone floor, hard, hurting his wrist in an attempt to catch his fall. Groaning, the young champion started to get up, spotting several wizards and witches in healer robes running towards him. Behind him the door had already closed again. Then he heard her scream. Hermione!
He spun around, heedless of his injuries, and saw his best friend on fire, burning, screaming. It felt as if someone had torn his heart apart.
"Aguamenti!" Streams of water hit her, turning into steam as they suppressed the flames, but to his horror the flames did not flicker out, but increased in size.
"Stop! Stop it! No water!" When he heard her words, he didn't think, he simply lashed out. A banishing spell bowled over half the wizards surrounding his friend and interrupted their spells. Someone tried to grab him, and he stunned whoever it was without looking. Hermione needed him!
The witch had struggled out of her burning robe and had started to cover herself with earth. Earth Shell! Trusting his best friend he followed her example. "Terrenum Mantellum!" Earth covered the burning witch, surrounding her, replacing the flames. Water was still hitting her, hampering both his and her spells.
"No water! She said no water!" He screamed at the wizards and witches standing there, brandishing his wand. If they did not stop hurting Hermione…
Fortunately, they did. He barely noticed another, older wizard kneeling, casting at a burning spot on the stone floor. He was too focused on his friend, encased in mud and stone, lying on the floor - dying? He staggered towards her, shrugging off hands trying to stop him, and knelt down, staring at her.
The voices around him started to grow dimmer and he slumped forward.
"It's Byzantine Alchemical Oil. Keep water away from her. Get her to the infirmary and tell them we need a fire-suppressing potion, at once!"
"Levitate her. And get him to the Infirmary as well."
"Merlin! His sleeve is burning!"
"Carefully now!"
He closed his eyes, his cheek pressed into the warm mud covering Hermione's body.
*****
Ron was screaming at the auror standing between him and his friends. "They are my best friends! I need to know how they are doing!" If not for Padma and Neville holding him back, he'd have attacked the stupid wizard, even without his wand, which Ginny had nicked.
The auror remained impassive. "This is a restricted area. No one is allowed inside. You'll be informed in due time about your friends."
Ron relaxed a bit, then tried to rush forward, but Neville knew him too well and didn't let go of his arm. Closing his eyes, Ron finally stopped struggling. What a horrible end to the tournament!
It had started so well, with Harry using his head start and a spell Hermione had found in an obscure book - the announcer had to ask an expert to identify it - to rapidly make progress towards the exit. Fleur had been held up by a giant-sized Brazilian Venomous Tentacula right after entering. Neville had been all excited about the fire-proof strangling plant. Everyone else had been more excited about Fleur getting part of her robes torn off in a most intriguing manner. The veela had defeated the obstacle by draining the plant of any water in it, but it had cost her time. Viktor had blown up a pack of giant moles, and then had run straight into a trap that had sent him down into the deepest bowels of the arena, leaving him in magical darkness that extinguished even magical light. Thanks to a projection the audience had been able to clearly see the walls slowly closing in while Viktor had been stumbling around. He had escaped that by conjuring metal poles to stop the walls, then opened a door with a series of reductos. That too had cost him much time though.
Harry had had his share of close encounters as well during that. It had been exciting to see him go through the enemies, and Ron had cheered louder than anyone else when Harry had banished the spider down the trapdoor it had jumped out of before. He had also screamed louder than anyone else in their group when the spider had appeared, but no one had mentioned that. Yet.
And then Harry had suddenly screamed, and blood had gushed out of his scar. No one had know what that had been - another trap? Luna had stated that elementals had no such powers, but by then, everyone had been hanging on the edge of their seats, following Harry's struggle with the elemental.
When he had reached Hermione, when the barrier had gone down and the victory fanfare had sounded, the cheers had been almost deafening. The Champion of Hogwarts, the Boy-Who-Lived, had won! The cheers had turned into screams of horror when that earth genie had thrown a fireball at Ron's best friends. Seeing them burning, hurting, hearing them scream, that had been pure torture for Ron and the rest of their friends. Padma had cried into his shoulder, Neville had held Ginny, Luna and Aicha had been frozen, even Aicha's genie had been muttering what probably were curses in a voice too high pitched to be heard.
Ron shook his head to banish those horrible memories. They were walking towards the Champion's Lounge now. The families of Viktor and Fleur were there, or had been there, and might know more. Maybe Viktor and Fleur would be there too.
"How was that possible? Didn't the organizers made sure that all creatures in the maze were safe?" Ginny sounded angry, gesturing wildly at Luna and Aicha. Aicha's tiny genie was hiding inside the hair of the witch, Ron noticed, probably afraid of getting hexed in place of the other genie, who had disappeared from the labyrinth as soon as Hermione and Harry had left. Ginny could be a handful, he knew, and had a temper, but he didn't think she'd hurt the tiny little sprite. Better safe than sorry though.
"They would have made a deal with the genie, and I cannot believe they would not have stipulated a "no killing" clause. Either someone made a really stupid mistake, which is very unlikely given the genies' well-deserved reputation for making dangerous deals, or whatever it did was not lethal, or…" Aicha trailed off, suddenly looking grim.
"Or?" Ginny demanded, impatient.
"Or the deal with the organizers ended when the tournament ended. Usually, the genie would return to its home at once, but if there was another deal already in place…"
"The saboteur." Neville stated in a flat voice.
"The saboteur. But to arrange such a deal, knowing which genie would be chosen, in advance… that would have required a lot of information, and experience."
"But who could that be? There cannot be too many wizards that could do such a thing, and right under Dumbledore's nose." Neville said with conviction.
"And Moody's nose. Or what's left of it." Luna added, which made Ron snort despite the seriousness of the situation. He could think of one likely candidate for this. Another reason why he needed to talk to his two best friends. If they were still… no! They couldn't be dead! Not from a stupid fire!
*****
The first thing Hermione saw when she opened her eyes was a white ceiling. She knew at once she was in the Hogwarts infirmary - the young witch had been in there often enough following Harry's quidditch matches. It was a comforting thought - if she was here, then her wounds had not been too grave. Otherwise she'd be in St. Mungos. Turning her head, she looked around. Next to her bed was another, occupied by a sleeping … Harry! She'd knew that mop of hair anywhere. But why was he still here? Had he been hurt that badly?
"Harry!" Her voice sounded raspy, hoarse, and she had to cough to clear her throat before she could continue. "Harry!" She was about to try to get out of her bed, check on him, when he woke up.
"Hermione?" his head turned towards her and a quick flick had his glasses appear on his head. "Hermione! You're awake!" Her friend jumped out of his bed, to her side, before she could answer. Belatedly she noticed that he was wearing his school robes, not a hospital gown.
"Have you been sleeping here?" She tried to sound incredulous, disapproving even, but to see him care so much about her made her almost as happy as seeing him unhurt and whole.
"Of course!" He gripped her hand, her left hand, she realized, and squeezed gently.
Hermione giggled briefly in response, then grew more serious. She lifted her right arm, covered in bandages, then touched her face. No bandages there. But her hair… she ran her fingers over her scalp, and found only stubble where a thick mass of curls should be. No scars though that she could feel. "H… How bad is it?" Her eyes sought his, demanding the truth, not some gentle lie.
"You'll be needing a hair growth potion." He smiled at her.
"And?" She waved her bandaged arm.
"They had to grew back the skin on your arm, neck, part of your shoulder, and legs. The arm was the worst." Harry winced while recounting her injuries.
"No cursed fire then?" Cursed wounds that could not be magically healed were the nightmare of every witch or wizard. Even if one survived them one was scarred for life. Like Mad-Eye Moody. Hermione suspected that muggle plastic surgery could help, but she was not too keen on finding out in person if she was right.
"No. Byzantine Alchemical Oil."
"Ah. That explains the reaction with the water." Which had almost killed her.
"Yes. If not for your quick reaction…"
"...I'd be dead." Hermione finished with a flat voice, and immediately regretted it when Harry shuddered and took a deep breath, fighting off tears. "I am not, though. I am alright," she added quickly, patting the hand holding hers with her bandaged one.
"Merlin!" Harry gathered her in a hug so tight it hurt. "I feared I'd lost you!"
"So did I," she whispered. The two remained like that for some time. Hermione couldn't tell how long, she simply enjoyed hugging Harry, feeling his warmth, smelling him, alive, healthy, sensing his hands roam over her back, which her gown had left bare… She blinked. That was a bit… "Ah, shouldn't you call Madam Pomfrey?" The Matron usually told Hermione to inform her as soon as Harry woke up, in such a situation. It was quite the reverse from the usual, she realized, with Harry waiting at her bedside.
"Ah… yes, she said something like that. She wanted to check you." Harry suddenly pulled back, and she saw a guilty expression before he turned around and sent off a glowing stag with his wand. "Merlin, I didn't think, I was just so happy you have woken up."
"It's OK. If I were in danger or needed immediate attention she'd have left a monitoring spell in place." Hermione smiled at him. "So… how long was I, ah, out?"
"Three days. They fed you dreamless sleep, so you'd not feel pain while they … fixed your wounds." Harry winced again. Hermione understood - that was longer than she had expected. She wasn't an expert though. "Fleur and Viktor send their regards." He pointed at cards sitting on the small table next to her bed. "The delegations from the other schools left Hogwarts yesterday. Though apart from that you've not missed anything else. The exams won't start until next week, anyway."
"I know that." Hermione glared at him, without any anger though, and he grinned in response. School. Exams. Good-natured teasing. For a moment it was almost as if they were not in the infirmary. As if she was not recovering from an attack that had just failed to kill her. And Harry. If not for the protections on her robe. Her robe! "I guess I'll have to get a new robe." Not really a problem, she had planned to replace some of her spells on her robe anyway, over the summer.
"Sirius already bought half a dozen for you." Harry smiled with an apologetic expression.
"Great. How many of them are not meant for 6th years?"
"There's one standard school robe. I made sure he'd not prank that one."
Hermione rubbed her forehead. She'd feel naked without her protective spells, but it would do. Belatedly she realized she had forgotten something else. "What happened to the broom and necklace?"
"The broom was burned to cinders. The necklace was unscathed."
"Of course! A veela heirloom would be fireproof. You won, right?" Hermione had heard the victory fanfare, but she would not put it past some people - Karkaroff - to try to get Harry disqualified for the loss of the broom, or her own actions in protecting him.
"Yes. Karkaroff tried to argue that I had received illegal assistance from you, both for the Minotaur's Bane and when you pushed me out of the arena, and should be disqualified, but the other judges shot him down. Or so I was told - I didn't really care to follow that, not with you… like this."
"You were hurt as well." If he told her he had been fine, she'd hex him, as soon as she got her wand back.
"I was fine." He held up his hands in a placating gesture. "Honestly, I was no worse than after a rough quidditch match!" Which was not fine at all, in her opinion.
"You mean beaten to a pulp and ragged past the point of exhaustion?" Hermione was not quite growling, but close to it. Things were rapidly returning to what passed for normal when it came to the infirmary and the two of them.
"Err… I won the tournament. I ransomed the necklace back to Fleur, but seeing as Viktor's broom was destroyed, and since that had happened after I had won, so technically it was mine right then, we called it even."
"So you got the prize for the winner and half the ransom. Not bad." Viktor would get a new one from his sponsor, Hermione was sure. The publicity from the tournament, and the dramatic circumstances of its destruction, would ensure that. A good deal - a new broom, and no ransom to be paid. It vexed her a bit, seeing them lose out on the ransom money, but… she didn't care that much about the loss, not after what she and Harry had just gone through. The tournament was finished, she was no longer a stake in it. Even if there had been no real danger of her ending up as Viktor's or Fleur's retainer, it was a relief. She leaned back, sighing.
"Hermione…."
"Yes?" Hermione looked at Harry. He seemed to be hesitating, timid even. That was very unusual.
Her friend took a deep breath. "I've been thinking a lot, while you were… while I was waiting for you to wake up."
Hermione's first impulse was to make a joke, but Harry sounded too serious for that. So she just nodded, prodding him to continue while wondering what he had been thinking about.
"The thought of losing you, to death… it scared me so much, it hurt me so much…" Harry closed his eyes, took another deep breath, then looked at her again.
Hermione licked her lips, suddenly nervous.
"Hermione, it made me realize that you're not just my best friend. You're more. I don't just care for you, I…"
Hermione held her hand up, stopping him. Suddenly, things were clear. Things she had not wanted to see, or hope for. She wanted him to say it, wanted it to hear it, wanted to say it herself, but… "Harry, I… I know." She saw him starting to smile, and it pained her to continue, to wipe that shy smile off his face, but she had to. "But… are you sure it's not just… " she trailed off, and touched her throat, where she would usually be wearing her torc.
Harry understood what she meant, of course. They knew each other, sometimes better than they knew themselves. "Sirius said the Oath doesn't create love. No magic can create love."
"Sirius says a lot when it helps him get girls into bed." Hermione regretted her outburst at once when Harry jerked back, hurt. "I am sorry, Harry. I shouldn't have said that. It's just… he doesn't seem to be taking this seriously." Not as seriously as she felt it deserved to be taken. She didn't mention that Sirius was still suffering from his time in Azkaban, and not getting the help he needed, in her opinion. Harry already knew her thoughts on that matter.
Her friend weakly smiled at the familiar pun. "I know. But… have you ever found anything about the Oath, or the life debt, creating love? You've researched the topic extensively. If there was anything, you'd have found it."
Hermione nodded, even though she knew she had not researched the Patron Oath as much as she should have. She had been 12 at the time, and afraid. And afterwards… she hadn't wanted to know. She had been afraid of knowing, she realized.
"I know, but… there is magic that is said to create love, or something like it. Potions."
"The Oath is not a potion. And we've not been potioned either. Pomfrey would have noticed even if we would have missed it." Harry was sounding almost as if he was pleading.
Hermione's heart went out to him, and more than anything she wanted to hold him, and tell him what he wanted to hear, what she wanted to say. Instead she said what she needed to say. "But what if … I don't want to wake up one day, and find the Oath gone, and with it our…" That was her greatest fear: To find out her feelings were just a lie caused by magic. To find out that Harry only loved her because of magic. To be so happy, and then realize it was fake… she could not bear that.
Harry drew a hissing breath, and grit his teeth. "It's not the Oath. It can't be. Some things, magic can't do!" He didn't sound that sure though, to Hermione at least. He sounded almost desperate. She wanted to tell him it was alright, wanted to make him feel better, but… was that the Oath, urging her to help her Patron? To agree with him, to obey him?
"I'll find out. I'll find out, and we'll know." The young witch patted his hand again, blinking when tears appeared in her eyes. She started to brush them away, but he stopped her.
"Please."
Hermione nodded, unable to say anything right then without breaking down and crying.
The sound of the door to the Infirmary opening made both of them straighten up. Hermione wiped the tears off her face then, and Harry rubbed his own eyes. The were not in private anymore. Appearances had to be upheld. Hermione squeezed his hand again while Madam Pomfrey walked over to them.
"I am sorry for the delay. I was held up by the Headmaster. I trust you know how he can be. Now, Miss Granger, let's see how you're doing. You gave us quite a scare there." The Matron didn't even try to shoo Harry out before she started to cast diagnostic spells. She had learned her lesson with Hermione years ago. One did not try to separate the two under such circumstances.
*****
"Did sleeping beauty wake up yet?" Alastor lowered himself into the seat with more care than usual. He wasn't getting any younger either, Albus knew.
"Miss Granger woke up an hour ago. Poppy found she is well on her way to a full recovery and should leave the infirmary in another day or two." Albus smiled stating this. He loved giving good news - especially in times like these.
"So, Potter's ready to be debriefed then."
"Do you think he saw something that will give us a clue about the saboteur's identity?" Albus asked softly.
Alastor scoffed. "No. But his scar was gushing blood, that's something to worry about. I want to know what caused this."
He wasn't the only one. Albus kept his expression bland, but something must have given him away since his old friend narrowed his good eye.
"You know or suspect something." It wasn't a question.
"I do. But if I am right, it needs to be kept secret at all costs."
"Why haven't you already dragged the boy in here then?"
"He was too distracted by his worry about Miss Granger. He would not have been able to deliver a clear memory of the event."
Alastor raised one of his eyebrows. "I see." No need to elaborate further - there was only one thing Albus was using his priceless pensieve for, after all, and both knew it. "If that's true…"
"If it is, we'll know soon enough." It was too late for immediate action now, and rushing anything would cause more problems rather than less. "What did you find out about the sabotage?"
"Precious little. The thing has returned to its home, and we can't track it down from here." Alastor scowled and rapped his staff on the stone floor.
"Not even with the genie's name?"
"We do not have that. The deal was brokered in Greece by a wizard from the Ottoman Empire, who has since disappeared, or so it seems. Our representative never heard the thing's name. And the Ottomans are damned uncooperative. They're not even talking to us, they're flat-out ignoring our requests." Alastor still considered himself part of the auror corps. He probably would until his death.
"A pity. Cornelius might have been a bit too harsh in his latest missive to the Sultan. But then, he had good cause." Albus grabbed a lemon drop. He did not offer Alastor any, his friend did not appreciate good sweets.
"Aye. We can't have the Ottomans kidnap British tourists in the Mediterranean and let the Sultan claim ignorance of what 'rogue elements' might have done." Alastor bared his teeth. "Might be time for another intervention."
"Impossible in the current climate." None of Britain's allies would risk war over a few kidnapped witches and wizards. Not unless their own enclaves were getting raided. But that hadn't happened since the last intervention.
"Aye, pity." Alastor snorted before returning to the topic. "Our saboteur has done his homework. He knew we had no alchemists among the healers on standby who might have recognized the oil and prevented the rest from making it worse with water spells. He knew the deal with the genie ended when the task ended, and knew that that would happen before the champions had left the labyrinth. And he managed to get Byzantine Alchemical Oil - quite rare and expensive." Alastor sounded impressed.
"He could have learned that from the unfortunate clerk caught acting under an imperius."
"No. That one didn't know all that, I checked. Our saboteur had multiple sources. Either imperiused and obliviated, or bribed."
"He will be hard to track either way."
"He is, even though that shouldn't be the case. Wizards that skilled are not a dime a dozen. There are not many who could pull this off in Britain, and even less who have the motive for it. Lucius and his old comrades come to mind, but even among them not many had that skill." Alastor glared at Albus, as he usually did when talking about the Death Eaters who had escaped Azkaban after the last war.
"It could be a foreigner as well. A mercenary."
"Aye. I still think it's one of ours though. My gut tells me so." The grizzled ex-auror patted his stomach. "Multiple layers, multiple traps and fail-safes. That's not something you can do without intimate knowledge of how we operate. And how Hogwarts and the Ministry work."
"I agree. But even with the current uproar, there's no chance to get a permission to interrogate some suspects. Not without at least something that points their way." Albus spread his hands. When his friend opened his mouth, he raised one hand to stall him. "Before you say anything: Given how intelligent this saboteur has proven to be, any auror acting on less than solid evidence might find out they just played into our unknown wizard's hand. Even my reputation would suffer significantly should I accuse people without being able to deliver proof." Or by forging proof. Especially after the winner of the Triwizard Tournament almost got killed under his nose.
"Which could be what our man is planning for."
Albus nodded. "I'll ask young Harry for a memory once Miss Granger has left the Infirmary."
His old friend laughed. "You don't want her to badger you to see the pensive, should she hear of it after the fact."
Albus smiled ruefully. Miss Granger's passion for arcane knowledge, especially when her Patron was involved, was a force to be underestimated at one's own peril. After the events in his first year as a teacher, young Remus still checked his words before mentioning obscure spells. And given Harry's protectiveness of his retainer - and maybe more, unless Albus was wrong about how their relationship was developing - trying to exclude her would alienate the young man. Something he, and Britain, could not afford right now, if his suspicions were correct.
*****
"Hermione!" The witch in question had just enough time to put her book away before Luna Lovegood rushed to her side and grabbed her hands. "Merlin! Your hair!"
Hermione touched her still mostly bare scalp self-consciously. She wished she could have taken the hair-growth potion already, but Madam Pomfrey had forbidden that until her skin had finished growing back. Otherwise there was a chance that the potion would react with the treatment, and she'd end up with hair growing from the new skin as well as from her head. She winced at the image that conjured, then patted Luna's hands, which had started to wander and poke various parts of her. "It's OK. A potion will fix that before I leave the infirmary." She looked up and greeted the rest of her friends who had come to visit her. Behind them stood Harry. Their eyes met, and his smile, tinged with hope and sadness, once again made her want to rush towards him and hug him and...
"Evanesco!"
Hermione's train of thoughts was interrupted by Luna trying to vanish her hospital gown. "Luna!"
"I need to check if all your skin has grown back correctly!" the blonde all but yelled while Aicha was pulling her back.
Hermione looked down and noted with some relief that while most of her right sleeve was gone, she was still decent. She looked up to glare at the culprit, but her rebuke died on her lips when she noticed that Luna was crying. "It has healed perfectly fine, Luna. Trust me. See?" she raised her right arm. "My arm was the worst, and it's perfectly fine."
The blonde witch muttered something about treacherous genies between sobs. Hermione exchanged a glance with Aicha, and the Ravenclaw released Luna, who immediately rushed to hug her, still crying. Hermione returned the hug, consoling her friend, but couldn't help but feel guilty - Harry had to have been feeling even worse about her close brush with death. She glanced at him, briefly, while Aicha and Ginny were consoling Luna and Ron and Neville were trying to ignore the scene. He nodded at her, approving, and she felt better, but still far from well.
*****
Voldemort stood atop of a seaside cliff, looking out at the sea. He felt a touch of nostalgia. Back when he was still living at the orphanage he used this place to teach those who made the mistake of angering him the error of their ways. Back when he was just discovering his power. Back when he was just entering the Magical World. It was only fitting that this was where his return would be completed. He pulled out a small stone from his pocket and cast muggle-repelling wards. Then he canceled the spell on the rock.
The stone changed into the body of Barty Crouch Jr., his most faithful follower. Smart, driven, and utterly loyal, Barty had given everything for his Lord: His wand, his mind, his life, his soul. He had known he was very unlikely to survive the strain from the ritual, yet had still done it. As Voldemort had known he would. And now even Barty's body would vanish, forgotten by everyone but Voldemort himself.
He had considered leaving Barty's body at the ritual for aurors to find. To have the body of a man who died in Azkaban years ago suddenly appear would have caused the Ministry, especially Barty's father, quite the trouble. It would have been a fitting revenge for Barty. But it would have been too dangerous. Voldemort was not yet ready to challenge the Ministry, much less Dumbledore. Finding Barty's body would have pointed at him, and not even the tampering he had done to the ritual site would have fooled Dumbledore for long. No, it was better for Barty to vanish, to leave no trace that could lead to him, until he had gathered enough followers, and gained enough power to secure his position.
Without further ceremony Voldemort pointed his wand at the corpse and set it ablaze. Fueled by his power the corpse burned to ashes in minutes. A flick of his wand, and the ashes were scattered into the sea. Below him was the well-hidden entrance to the sea cave he had discovered so long ago. Now it served another purpose. He thought about checking up on it, but shook his head. No need. It was after all just a trap for his enemies, no matter how unlikely they were to find it after the death of Regulus Black.
The dark wizard took out another, smaller rock, throwing it up and catching it again with effortless grace. His new body was perfect. Handsome, unravaged by the effects of dark rituals and more fights he wanted to remember, and utterly unlike his old looks. His Death Eaters would know him thanks to their mark, but others who knew Tom Riddle, or Voldemort, could pass him on the street and would never recognize him.
He turned away as the sun set. He had another, much smaller body to dump into a hag's cooking pot in Knockturn Alley.
*****
Kenneth Fenbrick rolled his eyes, staring at the devastation in front of him. Next to him his partner, Bertha Limmington, was already studying the remains, wand waving. She was a skilled witch, pretty too, but a bit too eager to work and not eager enough to play. With him, for example. "Guess the Faithful overdid it this time. I haven't seen that much destruction since the day their former High Priest, old Ignatius, tried to resanctify the pitch of the Chudley Cannons."
Bertha looked up at him, frowning. "This site was devastated by a ritual, not a fight between quidditch fans and religious extremists."
He sighed. She was really no fun. But she was the best to have at one's back, so he had to take the good with the bad. "I know. I was joking."
"Ah."
"But whatever ritual it was, it didn't leave anything standing. Even the altar is cracked and scorched, and whatever they had placed on it has been melted." He poked with his wand at a piece of black, polished rock, which crumbled to dust at the touch.
"It turned most of the trees in the vicinity into kindling, too. Judging from the position of the remains, the wood was smashed against a barrier." Bertha stood up and pointed at a broken branch near her.
"One hell of a barrier, to withstand that."
"Muggles assume it was a tornado."
"That the work of the forgetful squad?" Kenneth didn't really like the obliviators. One simply couldn't trust wizards who spent their days altering memories, even if they were the memories of muggles. Too many rumors of one or the other obliviator using their skills on wizards or witches who caught their fancy.
"No, they came up with it themselves. Apparently, someone saw the storm."
"Only the storm?"
"Yes. The muggle took shelter and only came out again once the storm had ended."
"The only way to get this much power into a ritual, even on a site like this, is a sacrifice." Kenneth was no expert, but no auror was ignorant of the Dark Arts.
"A powerful sacrifice." Bertha looked grim. She knew as well as him that there were very few sacrifices that were powerful enough for such effects. Either a magical animal like a Unicorn, or a wizard or witch.
"I am not about to accuse the Faithful of delving into the Dark Arts and sacrificing people. Let's kick this upstairs." Kenneth knew what happened to aurors who made the wrong kind of enemies and couldn't back up such accusations. Azkaban always needed guards to relieve those who burned out. He had stepped on a few toes already, and couldn't afford any serious mistakes.
"Or downstairs. The Unspeakables might want to take a look at this."
"Unless they were here when it took place." Kenneth had heard all kind of rumors about what the Unspeakables did. And what they were. Such a ritual would fit right in.
"No trace of blood or bone. No body. No danger for muggles. Let's report back." The two aurors apparated away, leaving the ruined site alone again.
*****
Harry watched as Hermione stared at the potion in her hand. She was already wearing her new robe - 'the unpranked one', Sirius had called when he handed it over. Harry didn't think he wanted to know what Sirius had done to the other robes. He didn't think he wanted Hermione to know either. "Something wrong with the potion?" Hermione's head was still a mess of stubble and very short hair. The potion was supposed to fix that.
"Hm? Oh, just lost in thought." His friend pulled the cork off and downed the potion. She shuddered and made a face at the taste, then started panting when hair suddenly started to grow rapidly on her head. The brown locks did not stop growing until they reached her hips and completely obscured her face.
Harry couldn't help but chuckle at the sight. Hermione raised her wand, pointed it at her head, and muttered an incantation he didn't catch. Her hair shortened to its usual length, straightened some and, most importantly, styled itself so her face was visible. She conjured a mirror to check her appearance, despite having done the spell hundreds of times before.
"You look great."
"You're not exactly objective." She smiled at him, but with less mirth than he'd have expected, if not for the memory of what she was alluding to.
Neither of them had brought up that particular topic since. And yet, things had changed. Harry held out his hand to help her stand up from the bed she was sitting on. It was a polite gesture ingrained into him since years, but today, he almost hesitated, and when she took hold of his hand, he felt suddenly self-conscious.
Hermione didn't grin at him, as she would have done a week ago, nor did she display the snobby, exaggerated attitude she sometimes used in private to make fun of the old-fashioned manners they had learned and practiced so thoroughly. She just smiled, almost shyly, and let her hand linger in his far longer than politeness required. Though when they approached the door leading out of the infirmary and she fell into her customary place half a step behind and to the side of him, he heard her mutter that she felt like Melinda Brockthistle, the heroine of one of the wizard novels from the last century she had read when studying manners. Harry grinned widely. That was his Hermione. Then they stepped out into the hallway and were Patron and retainer again.
*****
"Good evening, Mister Potter. Please have a seat." Dumbledore's office never seemed to change, Hermione thought while she followed Harry inside. Still as cluttered as the first time she had seen it, with those tempting books she was certain were not available in the library of the school, or even the Black Family Library. She managed not to let her gaze linger too long on them, though, and sat down next to Harry. The Headmaster was sitting behind his desk. Parchment and knick-knacks covered most of the polished wood. Alastor Moody was sitting at the wall and growled something one could consider a greeting, if one were generous. He was tapping his staff on the floor and staring at them with his natural eye while his artificial one rolled around. Hermione had gotten used to it, after he had filled in for so many lessons during the full moon.
"I am glad Miss Granger has recovered fully. That was quite a dramatic moment, at the end of the tournament." Dumbledore smiled gently at the two of them, even as he was nominally addressing Harry as her Patron.
"Thank you Sir." Harry bowed his head slightly, which Hermione copied as a matter of course.
"You gave us quite a scare. I have to apologize again for the lapse in security that allowed that horrible moment to happen. A tragic mistake that would have had the most grave consequences, if not for Miss Granger's and your own quick thinking." The Headmaster took a lemon drop from the bowl on his desk. Hermione briefly closed her eyes as she remembered the flames surrounding her, burning her, the horrible stench of her hair, her skin, smoldering… she clenched her hands, dug her nails into her thighs until it hurt to stop her thoughts. The nightmares were bad enough already.
From the way Dumbledore stiffened, he had noticed her reaction. He did not comment on it though. "I have asked you to meet me, Mister Potter, since there was a peculiar moment during the task, when suddenly, you started to bleed heavily from your forehead. From your famous scar, to be precise."
Hermione saw Harry straighten up. She hadn't heard about that scene. That didn't sound reassuring, and his reactions told her he was about to claim he was fine, as usual.
Dumbledore didn't give him the opportunity though. "I would like you to copy your memory of that moment, so we can study it and find out what caused it."
"Donate my memory, Sir?" Harry sounded as surprised as Hermione felt. That was the first time she heard about such a thing.
"I have a special item, quite delicate and very, very rare, that allows me to store and study copies of memories. It's called a pensieve, a gift from my friend Nicolas."
Hermione had to close her mouth. To think what one could use such a thing, such an artifact for… if those memories could be stored, one could preserve the memories of the greatest minds of the Magical World, see lessons from the most famous teachers, or watch obscure spells be cast as often as needed until one could learn them…
"How do I do that, Sir? And how do I limit the memory to the exact scene you are talking about?" Harry's question interrupted her fantasy, and made her realize what else such a thing could be used for. It was worse than legilimency, in a way. If memories could be taken against one's will… she resolved to study occlumency with Harry over the summer, as a priority.
Dumbledore explained how to draw out a copy of the memory using one's wand. Hermione took note that one could also remove the memory entirely, judging from his words - a useful trick to keep it secret, she thought, even from legilimency… maybe even from oneself? She longed to study this pensieve. If she could copy it…
The silver strand that Harry drew out of his temple looked ethereal, flimsy even, as if a single gust of wind would disperse it. Dumbledore held out a vial, and Harry guided the memory into it.
"Thank you, Mister Potter. Please keep this secret, it might turn out to be very important." The Headmaster slipped the vial into one of the pockets hidden in the yellow stars decorating his blue robes. Moody had remained silent so far, but stood up now. This seemed to be quite a bit more important than Hermione had thought - and Harry suddenly bleeding was very important to begin with, in her opinion!
"Might we see the pensieve, Headmaster? As much as this might require secrecy, it's my memory, so I already know whatever you hope to find out." Harry stood up, and Hermione hastily followed his example. She wanted to hug Harry for that - the opportunity to see such a marvelous artifact… she could barely conceal her glee when the Headmaster nodded.
"I think that would only be fair. Follow me." Dumbledore turned and stepped towards the door behind his desk, which presumably led into his quarters. Quarters they were about to enter!
The private living quarters of the greatest wizard of Britain looked the part. Where others might have had shelves, sometimes formed from the walls themselves on demand, Dumbledore's quarters were cluttered with knick-knacks, clothes, books and exotic items, all floating around each other as if they were caught in a whirlwind, which had been slowed down to a gentle breeze. Hermione didn't recognize even a quarter of things she saw. But she realized that there were far too many objects to fit inside the room.
As they followed Dumbledore the floating items gave way, only to reform their dance after them, looking like curious hovering birds. Dumbledore must have noticed her staring, since he smiled and explained: "In my life I have acquired far too many things even for a bottomless trunk armoire, so I needed a bottomless apartment." Hermione drew a sharp breath - she had never ever heard or thought of such an application of that spell. To live in such quarters...
The Headmaster looked at an alcove, and a small item floated towards it, set down and grew into a shallow stone basin which reminded Hermione of a bird bath covered in complicated runes and glowing slightly. She suppressed a giggle at the thought of Fawkes bathing there.
Dumbledore used his wand to remove another strand of memory from the basin, storing it in a vial, the poured Harry's memories into the pensieve. After he touched a few runes with the tip of his wand, the glow intensified and a fine mist started to raise from it. "Lean forward and push your head into the mist, and you will find yourself inside the memory. Focus on pulling your head back, and you will leave it again."
Hermione repeated the instructions in her mind several times. It would not do to get lost in Harry's memories. As tempting as that thought might be, sometimes. She stepped next to Harry, whose face was tinted blue from the glowing basin. A short bow later she suddenly was in the labyrinth, facing an elemental - she was seeing through Harry's eyes! His body, with her in it, moved by itself, and she smelled the air. Wet, fresh earth. She saw the elemental come towards her, saw Harry's wand raise, and then suddenly, she was elsewhere.
She was in the middle of a hurricane, wood, trees smashing against a glowing barrier. To her horror she saw a dead baby, cut open, on a stone altar, next to a another screaming baby that suddenly started to turn into a snake, a viper she noted, rapidly growing and … changing, Limbs sprouted, and the head changed, hair appearing… scales faded, replaced with skin… until a handsome man stood there, covered with blood. Another man, trembling and covered with bloody runes, was holding out a wand to him. Then she found herself surrounded, engulfed with earth. Just like…
With a scream she pulled her head back and fell to her knees, panting, then vomiting on the floor until only bile was left. Harry was there, rubbing her shoulders, keeping her hair back, whispering into her ears. "I am so sorry, Hermione. I should have known… it was my memory."
"It's not your fault", she managed to mutter in response.
"I should have expected this. Please forgive my lapse and accept my heartfelt apologies." Dumbledore apologized, but he did sound a bit distracted.
"We all should have expected that." Moody added in his usual gruff voice. "But we saw what you suspected, Albus."
"We did. Mister Potter, it might be best if you return to the Infirmary with Miss Granger. I think she, and you as well, could do with a calming potion, maybe even some dreamless sleep tonight. But please, do not tell anyone about what you saw. It is of the utmost importance that this is kept secret. Lives depend on it."
Hermione vanished the vomit. She felt embarrassed about the whole situation, no matter how apologetic the Headmaster acted. But this… "It's him, isn't it? He's back." She felt Harry stiffen. Both were staring at the Headmaster. Hermione wanted him to deny it, to reassure her that it was not true, but he didn't. He only gave them a sad smile, and the barest of nods.
*****
Once the two teenagers had left his office, Albus sighed and sat down at his desk again. Alastor was already pacing.
"That was Barty Crouch Jr., a dead man." The retired auror stated. "I recognized him clearly. How is this possible?"
"That is a mystery yet. But I think we both know who the revived man is."
"Aye. Only one Barty would go to such lengths for. He is back, then."
"As I suspected."
"What will you do now? Inform Fudge?"
"I doubt this is a good course of action. We only have a memory. And while I think I could persuade Cornelius, should I show him the pensieve, it is by no means a sure prospect. And it certainly would alert our enemy's old and possibly new supporters that we witnessed his return." Albus sighed. He did not like the course of action that he was persuading himself to take.
"You hope Potter will have more such visions, giving you more information. And you want to keep it secret from the Dark Lord so he doesn't take steps to stop this." Alastor knew him well.
"Yes."
"Don't you trust your pet spy anymore?" Alastor sneered, as he usually did when talking about Severus. He was almost as good at holding grudges as Severus was.
"He hasn't been contacted by his former Master yet."
"Or he has not told you about it." Alastor still doubted the man's loyalty. Albus didn't think his friend would ever trust Severus.
"He informed me that the Dark Mark has grown stronger, more pronounced, again. But I think it would only be prudent to use as many ways to gather information on Voldemort as possible.
"You won't tell your pet snake though."
"No." Albus trusted Severus, but only a fool would let a spy operating in the enemy's camp, which Severus would hopefully soon be able to, know much of one's own secrets.
"Good. Should I look into what Barty Sr. knows?"
"That might tip our hand, if he is compromised. But if he is, we need to know, or he'll be able to do a lot of damage in the Ministry." The thought that Barty Crouch Sr. might be a supporter or pawn of Voldemort… it was absurd, and yet… one could never be sure.
"I'll be discreet."
Alastor left through Albus' floo, leaving the Headmaster alone with his thoughts and with the crushing weight of the responsibility today had placed on his shoulders.
*****
"Walden." The soft, almost melodic voice made Walden Macnair whirl around, wand appearing in his hand. Someone had broken into his home, without triggering any of his wards! He didn't see anyone though - disillusioned?
"Quick reflexes. You've kept in shape." Walden turned towards the voice, now coming from his side, when suddenly pain worse than the Cruciatus he had once suffered filled him, drove him to his knees. His wand dropped from nerveless fingers and he screamed, throwing his head back.
"Yes. Your Master has returned." The pain stopped, and a tall, slender man stepped out of the shadows of his living room. It wasn't the Dark Lord. He looked too different, too young. Before Walden could challenge the intruder the mark on his left arm burned, and he suddenly knew with every fiber of his being that he was facing the Dark Lord.
"Master." Already on his knees, he bowed his head. He didn't know how his Lord had returned, where he had been - dead, or hidden from any magic - but he had returned.
"Walden. One of my faithful. You didn't deny me when I disappeared. You were not captured either. You hid." The Dark Lord circled around him with slow, measured steps, tapping his wand - Walden recognised it at once - against the palm of his hand.
"Yes, Master. I hid, so I could serve you upon your return."
"You hid, and waited, but never searched for me. Did you hope I would never return, never call upon you again to do your duty?" That voice brought back memories. Walden suddenly realized he might be killed here, now, for having offended his Lord.
"No, Master. I waited, to be ready to serve you again."
"I see. You were lazy, weak even, without my guidance." The Dark Lord sounded amused, but Walden could almost sense the danger. More than ten years had passed, and yet it felt like yesterday.
"Yes, Master."
"I have need of a man in good standing in the Ministry, who has never ever been suspected of belonging to me, and who was not ambitious enough to act on his own."
Walden was relieved, but didn't show it. He would live to serve. He had met few, even among the Death Eaters, who could kill as easily as his Master. Many thought the Dark Lord killed on a whim, but Walden knew better. He knew all about killing, it was his daily bread, and the Dark Lord never killed on a whim. Each of his kills served a purpose.
Walden remembered his initiation. He had been young, barely out of Hogwarts, and looking for a purpose himself. He had followed the Dark Lord because his friends in his House had done so, but had not really understood what it meant, what it offered. Until the day he had received his dark mark. He would never forget that. He had met the Dark Lord alone, just the two of them. And the muggle he had brought, but that vermin didn't count. He had expected he would have to kill the muggle, to prove his loyalty and dedication. Had psyched himself up for hours so he could do the deed without showing any hesitation or weakness. And the Dark Lord had gone and killed the muggle himself. A flick of his wand, and it was done. Burning the dark mark into his arm had taken far longer. Walden had bit his lip until it bled so he'd not scream, would not show a weakness, but when it was done Walden had understood what power was. Power over life and death. He had felt sure of his place in life for the first time in his adult life. A month later he had joined the Ministry, as an executioner. Killing suited him, as he had found out thanks to the Dark Lord.
"Rise, Walden. We have work to do."
"Yes, Master."
*****
"I still cannot believe that cursed mudblood survived! To think Matron Pomfrey would waste her efforts on such undeserving filth…" Draco trailed off while biting into a bread roll as if he was trying to kill it.
Pansy glanced over at her nominal boyfriend. Draco had been lamenting Granger's survival ever since the Headmaster had announced that the mudblood had fully recovered and would be leaving the infirmary soon. It had become repetitive hours ago, so she tuned it out whenever she could.
Pansy hadn't expected the mudblood to survive either when she had seen her ablaze, and heard her scream. She didn't think it was just Madam Pomfrey's efforts that saved her though. Granger was tougher than she had thought. She spotted Potter and his retainer enter the Great Hall, and studied them. There was no need to be subtle about it - everyone was staring.
Pansy kept observing the two during the meal, while making agreeing noises whenever Draco stopped his ranting to get another bite. She didn't think the mudblood had escaped unscathed. And it was not just that the mudblood's robes were looking drabber than before - she probably could not afford to replace the robe that had burned. No, something had changed between her and Potter. It was subtle, but it was there. They were not as close as before, a certain awkwardness, a hesitation, was there that had not been there before. Maybe she was hideously scarred from the fire and Potter did not want to touch her anymore, but felt guilty enough for her wounds to still do it? He just was the kind of boy who would act like that, even without the added push from being her Patron. Quite the difference to Draco, who'd drop her in a heartbeat, should something similar happen to her.
"Look at them, sitting there, gloating. To think such a mudblood-lover has actually won the Triwizard Tournament! A stain on every prior champion!" Draco didn't care that Hogwarts' champion had won, and the fact that many others in their house did care didn't faze him in the slightest.
Pansy considered telling him her theory about the mudblood being scarred, but decided against it. Draco would not spread it subtly, but shout it across the hall. Potter would take offense, and things would escalate. Best case, Pansy would have to spend an evening consoling Draco, and with exams starting next week, she really had better things to do. Worst case… she didn't know what the worst outcome was, not anymore. Potter had changed, Draco had changed. Pansy didn't like it, didn't like not knowing, but she'd rather not find out right now just how much they had changed.
*****
"Did you read this article? 'The Faithful deny any involvement with a possible human sacrifice ritual in Western Wales, where an old holy site was destroyed by what seemed to be a tornado.'" Ron put down the Daily Prophet and looked at the others in their compartment. Ginny and Neville didn't look like they had heard him. They were talking about plants. Ron wondered how dense Neville had to be; his little sister was so transparent. As if she cared about plants past her grades in Herbology! Padma at least was interested, she had been reading the article together with him. Luna sniffed, demonstratively holding the latest issue of the Quibbler she was reading a bit higher. The blonde witch had calmed down after her scene in the infirmary, but she still seemed determined to keep an eye on Hermione, and Aicha had naturally followed her best friend. Which was why the compartment currently held eight instead of the regular six people. Not that Ron minded sitting so close to Padma.
"No, I haven't. Can I borrow it for a moment?" Hermione held out her hand. Ron handed the newspaper over without a thought. One did not come between that witch and something she wanted to read. He was about to turn back to Padma, asking about her exams - she was a Ravenclaw and loved to talk about such things as much as Hermione - when he noticed his friend freezing for just a second, and then showing the newspaper to Harry. Ron saw Harry's expression turn grim for a second before his friend relaxed again.
The two had been acting odd since the tournament - odder than usual during the end of year exams, at least - but that had been understandable, given what they had gone through. This though… he met Harry's eyes and raised his eyebrows, then looked at the Prophet. Harry looked at Ginny and Neville, then back at Ron and nodded subtly. Ron understood. He should have known, in hindsight, from what he had heard.
"Well, better they trash an old Druid place than the Cannons pitch!" he stated loudly. "Speaking of the Cannons, did you hear about their last game?" He had to fight to keep his eager expression on his face when he saw Hermione grit her teeth. Well, he could honestly claim it would help keep the others from paying attention to that hint of Voldemort's return. In addition to that, annoying Hermione with Quidditch talk was a bit of normality that all of them needed right now, in his opinion. And he could do with a bit of distraction from thinking about Voldemort's return himself. For the first time ever in his life he was not looking forward to the Summer vacation.
Chapter 12: Summertime