Chapter 17: Shockwaves
London, Ministry of Magic, September 22nd, 1999, 20.25 hours
"The Minister's been murdered!"
"The Minister's been killed!"
"The Minister's been assassinated!"
Wand-Leader Hermione had heard those words, in all possible variations, dozens of times just passing from the atrium of the Ministry to the offices of the Investigative Branch. She had expected that - the Wands had just lost their father figure. The closest person they had to family, outside the Corps. And she knew that if she hadn't found out how muggleborns were 'rescued', she'd be feeling the same shock and loss. Though the Wands were still acting as they had been trained. The Ministry was sealed off, and she'd had to go through a Thief's Downfall to enter.
Dean wasn't in the office, but Colin was. "What's the situation?" Hermione asked.
"Ah…" he began, startled, before he was interrupted by an amplified voice.
"Someone's setting fire to Diagon Alley!"
Colin jumped up. She held her hand up to stop him. "The Ready Squad in the Alley will get it. Where's Dean?"
"He went to… you know, the office..." Colin swallowed, and she saw that he was close to tears. Fortunately, he took her rage at how the Minister had fooled everyone as rage against the assassin.
"Let's go then! Benjamin will be there as well, he can reassign us elsewhere if we're not needed."
They were halfway there when another shout went through the Ministry.
"The Half-naga was sighted near Hogsmeade!"
Once again Colin jerked, but Hermione kept walking, and he rushed after her. They were investigators, and there hadn't been a general alert. Yet.
The two reached the floor of the Minister's office. Two Wands - a few years above her, she thought - were standing guard at the lift. Two more were in the anteroom, next to Greengrass. The pureblood witch had her face covered by her hands and her shoulders were shaking from crying. At least the pureblood witch had a good reason to cry - the Minister hadn't betrayed her, Hermione thought.
Benjamin was inside the office, casting detection spells. The rest of his team was there as well. Even Cleo, who flashed a smile at her. And Dean. The body of the Minister was still in his seat. From the looks of it, he had died in pain. Good.
"Benjamin. I came as fast as I could. What happened?" she said while entering. Colin started to take pictures behind her. She'd ask him for some copies of Malfoy's corpse later.
"We've just started the investigation, but as far as we know, he was poisoned by Severus Snape, his personal potioneer and Advisor in Defense Matters," Benjamin said.
Snape had to be working for Dumbledore then. No wonder the professor had been so certain he could have Lucius killed - Snape had been among those most trusted in the Minister's circle of friends.
"Merlin's arse," she said, then looked more closely at the corpse. "How did he get the poison past all the detection spells?"
"That we don't know yet, but he is a master of his art. He could have created a new poison that the spells don't detect."
Or rather, a new poison the two leading alchemists in the world had created, Hermione thought. A binary poison, with both components detecting as harmless. She nodded to Dean. "Good to see you."
He nodded back. She could see that he suspected that she had been involved in this, but he didn't know how. And she couldn't tell him. Yet.
She took out her own wand and started to investigate the scene. She was glad everyone was so worked up about this death that she didn't have to hide her own anxiety. Right now, Ron, Luna and their families were attacking the home of the Malfoys. A home protected by her fellow Wands.
And so she jerked when she heard another alert.
"The Minister's home is under attack! Floo's blocked!"
For a moment, everyone froze. Benjamin addressed the entire room. "Keep working, but be ready to move out at once."
"We're going to get the assassin," Cleo whispered when their paths crossed.
Hermione nodded, feeling guilty at deceiving her friend. If only she could tell everyone the truth. Prove it too. The professor had said he had a plan, but he hadn't conferred with her yet - and she knew her fellow Wands best, didn't she?
Finally, the call she had been waiting for came.
"Fanatics killed the Minister's wife and son!"
Hermione closed her eyes, taking a deep breath.
"Merlin!" Cleo exclaimed.
"The entire family!" Colin whispered.
They didn't announce that anyone had been captured or killed. But that didn't mean it hadn't happened. Hermione turned to Benjamin. "Should I take my team to the Malfoys' home?"
He hesitated just a second, then he nodded. "Yes." She had known he'd send them - the killing of the Minister was more important, and she had the senior team.
"Colin, Dean, let's go!"
They headed down to the Apparition point. Colin was still coming to grips with the death of the Malfoy family, but Hermione wasn't really listening to his mutterings, and judging by the lack of a reaction, neither was Dean.
Shortly afterwards, they were in front of the Minister's home.
"Blimey, they blew the whole roof away!" Colin said, gaping, then taking pictures.
"They blew it away from the inside," a Wand standing guard outside - Kelly - explained.
"Did we get any of the attackers?" Hermione asked. The way the other Wand winced, she had been a bit too forceful. But she was worried.
"No. They blew the roof up, and flew out."
Hermione hid her relief while Dean asked: "Where were our flyers?"
"Blown away," Kelly said. "Those who were there at least."
"What about our losses?" Hermione didn't have to fake her anxiety. Dumbledore hadn't come out and said so, but she was certain that he'd rather have killed the guards than fail the mission.
"Everyone inside was cursed. Dark curses - our Healers couldn't do anything, and they were taken to St. Mungo's." Kelly grimaced. "They're not certain if they can help them…"
They should have the counter-curse, or so Hermione had been told. If that had been a lie… She shook her head. "Let's go inside. We have our duty."
*****
The house looked worse inside. Torn walls, broken windows, even the stairs had been torn up and the ceilings blasted. The three Wands made their way to the upper floors with the help of transfigured stairs, past another grim-looking guard.
Narcissa Malfoy had died in her bedroom. And she hadn't died well.
"Merlin!" Dean exclaimed. Colin shivered. Hermione knelt down next to the remains of the witch and waved her wand in a familiar pattern.
"Entrail-Expelling Curse and a Fire Flaying Curse," she said. Looking up, she added. "That one's one of the Black family curses. Bellatrix Lestrange used it often according to our reports." She hadn't expected those kind of curses being used by Dumbledore's group. But maybe she should have. You couldn't really frame a dark witch without dark curses, after all, and Sirius Black was the cousin of Bellatrix and Narcissa. And apparently hiding a rather nasty streak under his charming attitude.
After checking the room for traces and clues without success, they went to Draco's room. His corpse looked almost peaceful, compared to those of his parents. "Poison," Dean announced. "Not the same as the one used on the Minister though. Different symptoms."
Hermione nodded. "Was his security detail poisoned as well?" They hadn't been, or their corpses would be next to him. But loyal Wand-Leader Hermione wouldn't know what traitor Hermione knew.
"No. Just cursed."
"Just," Hermione said, frowning. "Selective poisoning usually means treason, but I don't know how Snape managed to get both the Minister and his son. Accomplices then."
"The Fanatics. Snape must be working for them."
Hermione nodded. Colin shook his head. "Merlin's arse! How deep goes this rot?"
Far deeper than you'd imagine, Hermione thought.
*****
London, Ministry of Magic, September 22nd, 1999, 23.25 hours
"I'm going to the Leaky Cauldron," Wand-Leader Hermione announced. "Luna's with her father on an expedition to hunt moon rabbits in Wales, and I don't feel like being alone."
Colin nodded, fooled by her excuse. Dean met her eyes, then stood up. "I'll get a drink myself before bed. After today, I need it."
Hermione nodded. Colin looked like he was considering joining them, but then he sighed. "I'll wait until this last batch develops, then I'll go to bed."
Hermione didn't let her relief show. Dean nodded curtly, and the two left their office. Neither spoke until they had reached the Leaky Cauldron. The pub was full, but the mood was not jovial, but tense. The news that the Minister for Magic had been killed, with his entire family, had spread like Fiendfyre, and everyone was now anxious, wondering and worrying about who would succeed him. The Chief Warlock, Elias Cornfoot, was acting Minister, but no one expected him to actually take the reins of the country.
Usually, Wands entering a pub mostly frequented by purebloods would be ignored. Not this evening though. A wizard who looked like he had drunk a bit too much stood up and yelled: "Hey! You Wands!"
When they turned towards the man who was wearing a slightly frayed robe, he took a step back, and almost fell down onto his chair.
"Yes?" Hermione asked, less friendly and polite than she'd usually be when addressing a pureblood.
He swallowed, but then rallied his - partially liquid - courage: "What happened? How could anyone kill the Minister and his entire family? What were you doing? First the Department of Mysteries, now this!"
"We're still investigating the exact events." She couldn't say more. Her pride made her want to comment further. To tell the wizard that it hadn't been the Wands' fault.
"Tell us what happened!" A witch yelled, from another table. Others took up this cry.
"It's classified information." Hermione raised her voice. "Are you a spy trying to find out what we know?"
"What?" The witch was staring at her.
"If we tell you what we know, the culprits will hear, and will be able to hide. Is that what you want?"
Hermione and Dean had drawn their wands. They were facing about two dozen wizards and witches, but the drunk wizard who had started this confrontation flinched and took a few steps back. The crowd, lacking a leader, backed down. For now, at least - there was some muttering and whispering.
The crowd had gone from hostile to scared. Pushovers. Hermione nodded, and turned to head upstairs, trusting Dean to cover her back, should anyone suffer from some renewed courage and decide to do something foolish. She knocked on the door to Ron's room and loudly announced: "It's me and Dean."
"Come in!" Ron answered. She felt relieved - he wasn't in a hospital then, like his brother or Tonks!
She heard the door unlock and checked inside. There he was, standing with his wand in hand, a smile on his face. He didn't look hurt. She closed her eyes for a moment, then rushed to him. They hugged and kissed.
After a while, Dean cleared his throat. "Before you end up in bed… I want to know what happened today! Someone killed the Minister, and I'm certain you were involved. But you couldn't have done it alone. And you didn't ask me for help. And those were Fanatics attacking the Minister's home… What happened?"
He wasn't quite pointing his wand at them, but he had it out. And she could see that he was tense, tenser than she had seen him before, outside of a battle. Before she could answer him, someone else spoke up.
"I believe I can explain the whole situation to your satisfaction, Mister Dean."
In the corner, Dumbledore faded into view.
*****
London, Diagon Alley, September 22nd, 1999, 23.42 hours
Albus Dumbledore smiled gently at the startled young Wand, his wand hidden in the folds of his sleeves. It wouldn't do to make the young man think he was about to be attacked. And even so, Mister Dean's wand was almost raised before the young wizard realized that Albus was not attacking. He relaxed, but just for a moment. When the man's eyes widened, Albus knew that he had recognised him. The wand started to point at him again, then was pointed at the floor. The young wizard wouldn't attack then. Albus kept his own wand ready anyway.
"You're Albus Dumbledore! The leader of the exiled blood traitors!"
"Traitor is a matter of perspective," Albus said. "What do you call a man who has your family killed so he can raise you as a loyal slave?"
Mister Dean stiffened and pressed his lips together. As if on cue, Miss Hermione spoke up: "The Minister betrayed us. Every one of the Corps."
The young man took a deep breath. Albus could almost see how he struggled with himself. He gave the young man a few moments, before he said: "I am not trying to tell you that the enemy of your enemy is your friend. But I am telling you that we - the wizards and witches who went into exile in France, rather than bend the knee to the Dark Lord - are not your enemies. After all, we were called blood traitors because we supported muggleborns such as yourself, and Miss Hermione."
The Wand slowly nodded.
Albus continued: "We haven't forgotten our home though. We have simply bided our time until the moment was ripe for our return."
"So, that's your plan: Kill the Minister, and take over Britain?"
Albus would be lying if he denied that this summed up part of his plans at least. So he didn't answer. Instead he said: "We have returned because the Dark Lord has returned."
"What?"
"The Dark Lord Lucius claimed to have killed has returned from death. Due to the dark magic used to return a body to him, he has taken the appearance of what The Quibbler dubbed a 'half-naga'. Given his affinity with snakes, it is not an entirely wrong classification."
The young man didn't look convinced yet. Albus nodded at him. "Who else but the Dark Lord could stand up to the Corps? Who else would the Lestranges follow? Who else would the Minister have feared so much?"
Mister Dean hissed and stared at him. Albus twitched his wand, and entered the man's mind, brushing past his rudimentary shields with ease. The young man wanted to deny this revelation, but his mind, trained to investigate, would not let him. As expected. He was also not in love with his friend, which was a very good thing - jealousy and scorned love could drive people to do terrible, tragic things. Like betraying their best friends.
"We have come back to Britain to deal with the Dark Lord, once and for all. We know how he has cheated death, and we have the means to destroy him for good, this time. We do not want to fight you, or the Ministry," he said.
"But you would, if we don't want you to return."
Dean was thinking about warning the Corps now. The knowledge that this would condemn his best friend to death weighed heavily on him though.
"Why would we want to fight them?" Miss Hermione cut in. "Or rather, why would we want to fight for the same kind of people who think we're beneath them, who have us kidnapped, our families murdered, and who raised us as slaves to fight and die for them?"
Albus saw how the young man wavered. Felt how rage at Lucius, and the memories of years of slights rose, above the lingering loyalty he had been conditioned to feel towards the Ministry.
"We're not your enemies, Mister Dean. As you should recall, we killed no Wand today, nor any innocent."
"You cursed them though! With Dark Curses!" Dean's sudden anger at him almost made him lose the connection to the man's mind.
"We did," he said. "But with curses for which the counter-curse is known at St. Mungo's." He smiled apologetically. "It is needed that this attack is thought to be the work of the Dark Lord, so the Wands do not attack us in a misguided attempt to avenge the very man who had their families murdered and deceived them for all their lives."
Once again Dean struggled, before he accepted it. "You want us to fight the Dark Lord instead."
"I want you to protect Britain. Your help in fighting the Dark Lord would be welcome, but you have suffered and bled for Lucius Malfoy already, I would say you have done far more than you had to."
"We'll not shirk our duty to Britain!" Dean spat out, though Albus could see the doubts in his mind.
"You'll need the Corps. The Dark Lord has many followers," Miss Hermione said.
"Working together might reduce the casualties for our side," Albus said. He was counting on such an alliance, not just to fight Tom, but to lay the foundation for the time after the Dark Lord's defeat. If the Wands could be won over, Britain would follow. Apart from the Dark Lord himself, they were the last significant power left in the country. Lucius had left no significant opposition in his desire to secure his family's power.
"That's a matter to be decided by the next Minister," the young man said.
"I suppose that this would currently be Elias Cornfoot, as the acting Minister?"
"For a certain definition of acting," Miss Hermione said. Her fellow Wand snorted, then looked surprised at his own levity.
Albus smiled. "I will contact him then. I dare say that in the current circumstances, he will be quite amenable to meeting with me." He knew that the young man was still not fully convinced, but it shouldn't take that much more - after all, the Wand had already been aware of Lucius's treachery. And he knew that should he betray them, his friend would be killed. Something Albus knew the Wand would not let happen.
"More than you think, Professor," Mister Weasley suddenly said. He had, perhaps wisely, stayed silent during their talk so far. He stashed a communication mirror in his pocket. "My brothers just called. The Dark Mark's floating above Diagon Alley."
*****
London, Diagon Alley, September 23rd, 1999, 00.35 hours
Ron Weasley had known that Dumbledore planned to frame the Dark Lord for the killing of the Malfoys, but he hadn't understood what that would do to the people. Now he knew. All around him, people were panicking. Not the Wands, of course. But the Leaky Cauldron had all but emptied, three fourths of the crowd were gone; the rest seemed intent on drinking themselves into a stupor.
In the alley proper, things didn't look any better. A lot of people were on the street, staring at the Dark Mark. Some were crying, most were whispering. Afraid. Scared. One spell away from fleeing in panic. He had often asked himself, after hearing his parents tell stories of the last war, how Britain could have fallen so quickly to a Dark Lord whose survival had been faked, but now he understood how that had been possible. Fear, overwhelming fear had taken hold of the population, and made them give up. The few brave wizards and witches who had continued to resist had not been enough to turn the tide.
He hoped that the Wands would be enough.
"This is pathetic," Dean muttered, staring at a trembling old wizard fumbling with his wand for a minute before managing to disapparate.
"It's to be expected," Hermione, at Ron's side, said. "The Minister has been killed, and the Dark Lord has returned, all on the same day… people are shaken. That's likely to be the reason he hadn't announced his return until today. He wanted to shock the country into surrendering."
Ron nodded. That was probably the main reason, though Dumbledore's spy might have influenced the Dark Lord as well, delaying this until the professor was ready for it. Not that he could mention that here on the street.
"We're not surrendering," Dean said through clenched teeth.
"Well, they're not rioting. And we can't exactly stay out here all night in case there's an attack," Ron said. That would leave them too tired to work well tomorrow - and Ron knew that there would be a lot of important tasks for everyone. The fate of Britain hung in the balance.
"The guards in the alley should be able to handle the situation," Hermione said. "And if there is an attack, the entire Corps will react. We wouldn't be able to do much, out there by ourselves."
"I guess I'll head home then," Dean said. Reluctantly, Ron thought.
Hermione nodded at her fellow Wand. "Are you alright with…" she trailed off, though both wizards knew what she was talking about.
Dean winced. "I'm not, but… what alternative is there?" He gestured at the scared mass of people. "This is worse than I thought."
He disapparated without another word. Ron looked at Hermione. They should have taken Dean back to the Leaky Cauldron with them. To be certain that he was on board with their plans. Hermione ground her teeth - she had to know this as well. "He'll come around. As he said, there's no alternative."
Ron nodded, though he had some doubts.
They headed back to the Leaky Cauldron. The number of wizards and witches drinking heavily had increased. The mood had grown even more desperate.
Dumbledore had been waiting in Ron's room for them to return. As soon as they had closed the door, he ended his Disillusionment Charm. "Did Mister Dean return to the Ministry?"
"Yes," Hermione nodded. She looked at the professor. "He'll not betray us," she said, but there was a sliver of doubt in her voice, in Ron's opinion.
Dumbledore inclined his head. "No, I do not think he will betray us. But I am not certain that he will help us either. In any case, he would do well to avoid a wizard's eyes."
Hermione pressed her lips together. Ron knew she was frustrated. At herself, for letting Dean go, and at Dean, for going. And at Dumbledore, for causing this situation. There wasn't much he could do about this right now though. "The people out there are scared out of their wits. If the Dark Lord actually shows up, they're not going to resist," he said.
"I concur," the professor said. "It is a quite familiar situation. Tomorrow, I will contact the Ministry as soon as it is possible to do so without arousing suspicion. The Wands should be able to keep the Dark Lord at bay until then, should he try something."
"That was your plan," Hermione said, staring at the old wizard. "You knew this would happen, and you planned for this."
"I did. I remember the time after the Dark Lord's first defeat well." Dumbledore sighed. "So much fear and panic. The Ministry collapsed within days. Many of those who had kept fighting while others fled or surrendered were killed. Lucius took control with ease, and as easily kept it. He smiled at the witch. "There were no Wands of Britain then. There were people as brave as you and your comrades, but they were weary and tired from years of the war, and their number dwindled with each battle." He sighed again. "I don't like causing the entire country to tremble in fear, but I am convinced that this is the best way to secure the Ministry without causing more bloodshed, and without turning the Corps into our enemy."
Hermione frowned, but she didn't contradict the wizard. "I should have deduced that Snape was your spy long before this. You were so certain that you could have the Minister killed, you had to have someone very close to him. And you had to have someone close to the Dark Lord to frame him convincingly, and whom the Dark Lord would believe could kill the Minister as well." She scoffed. "How could I have missed this?"
"You are well-trained, but you are still young," Dumbledore said. "The idea that the man Lucius has trusted with his health, his personal potioneer, his friend even, for close to two decades, could be a spy, might not be too outrageous. But to assume that he not only has gained the confidence of Lucius, but of the Dark Lord as well, and is betraying both? Few would not dismiss this notion as too implausible."
Hermione nodded while clenching teeth. She didn't like making mistakes, Ron knew.
"But, knowing all this, can you find a fault in my plan? Or offer a better alternative? We are trying to avoid a bloody conflict with your comrades."
Hermione shook her head. "No, I can't."
The professor didn't gloat. He simply nodded. "I have to return to France now, and prepare for tomorrow. Have a good night, Miss Hermione. Mister Weasley." Dumbledore nodded at them and vanished through the cabinet.
Hermione sighed and sat down on the bed. "Snape's a dead man," she said. "The entire Corps wants to kill him. With the exception of Dean and me. And I don't think the Dark Lord will overlook that Narcissa and Draco were killed right after Lucius."
Ron said. "Snape will know this, and if he has gone back to the Dark Lord, he only did it because he thinks he can frame someone else as a traitor. Or did so." He didn't think Dumbledore would knowingly sacrifice the man. Or rather, he hoped that would not be the case.
"I suppose so." Hermione closed her eyes. "Did he plan all of this? When he sent you to Britain?"
Ron didn't have to ask who she was talking about. "I don't think he planned or even expected everything that happened." Especially not the two of them falling in love. "But killing Lucius and then stepping in to protect Britain against the Dark Lord?" He nodded. "I think that was his plan all along, or one of his plans."
"Do you ever question him?"
Ron took a deep breath. "I don't follow him blindly. But my family has trusted him since before I was born. And he hasn't let me down yet."
"I once thought the same of Malfoy."
Ron suppressed the slight spark of anger he felt at hearing this comparison.
"He too was very charming, and he too had long term plans, and hidden plots," Hermione said.
She was looking at him, biting her lower lip. She looked very vulnerable. Like when she had told him all about her investigation into her own past, and when he had told her his real name.
"And you're worried about Dumbledore turning out to be like him?"
She nodded. "All those plots… I feel used. And the curses he used on the Wands… I know I should have taken Dean back to him, but I didn't really try."
He sighed. He understood why she was worried. In her place, he would be worried as well. He chose his words carefully. "He has planned this, yes. But he did a lot to avoid killing any Wand, even though it would have been… easier and safer to do so." He put his hand on her shoulder. "So far he has not betrayed my trust. And I don't think he has betrayed your trust either, has he?"
She shook her head. "No, he hasn't. But he was careful with his words. Very careful." She closed her eyes for a moment. "I'm not used to feeling the need to watch my allies as much as my enemies."
He nodded. "He warned me of this, you know. Said that becoming a spy would change how I looked at the world, and at others. Said I wouldn't be able to trust people easily anymore. I chose to become a spy anyway." And he was certain that Dumbledore had known he would. "I don't regret it. If I hadn't, I'd not have met you." And wouldn't have fallen in love.
"I guess that's one thing to be grateful for." She smiled, weakly though.
"But an important thing, I hope?" he said, pulling her in his arms. If her feelings towards Dumbledore extended to Ron as well...
She nodded.
They kissed, and then fell asleep in each other's arms.
*****
London, Ministry of Magic, September 23rd, 1999, 15.30 hours
Wand-Leader Hermione walked through the atrium, ignoring the few nervous Ministry employees milling around. Apart from the Wands, the Ministry might as well be gone for the day. Half the employees hadn't even shown up for work, and the rest seemed to expect an attack by the Dark Lord any minute.
"Pathetic," Dean muttered next to her. He had said that a lot today. They hadn't talked about Dumbledore yet. Hermione knew she should, but… she wasn't certain she could make as convincing a case for the man's aims as was needed right now.
"The Minister was killed, and the Dark Lord returned, all within a day," Hermione said. "They're not trained to handle this." She didn't mention that most of the Corps was guilt-ridden having failed to save the Minister. The Wands didn't talk about that.
"That's what we're for!" Colin piped up as they entered the headquarters of the Corps. "We protect Britain!"
Benjamin was in his office with Cleo. The female Wand flashed a smile at Hermione, slightly twisted by the scar running from her forehead to her jaw. Benjamin just looked at her. "Any success?"
She shook her head. "No. We didn't find any trace of whoever spread the rumours about the Dark Lord's return. Nor of those who spread the rumours of Dumbledore coming to Britain." She knew, of course, who had started those rumours, but they had been in disguise.
The Wand-Leader sighed. "I didn't expect you to, but it was worth a shot."
Hermione wasn't certain she agreed, but she had to admit that having more Wands out on the streets, being seen, was probably worth more right now than working on her cases. Not that she wanted to actually solve every case. For some of them, she had been responsible after all.
Cleo nodded. "The whole Ministry's in a tizzy, and things have become even worse ever since Dumbledore contacted the Chief Warlock."
"Acting Minister Cornfoot," Hermione corrected her automatically.
"We can consider ourselves lucky if he manages to be a reacting Minister," Cleo said. "He was the Minister's mouthpiece, and with him gone…"
Benjamin didn't bother to call her on the remark, Hermione noted. The Chief Warlock wasn't exactly respected in the Corps.
"What's happening on that front?" she asked.
"Professor Dumbledore is expected to arrive today, to talk to Cornfoot," Benjamin said. "We're part of the security for the meeting."
"That's a remarkably fast development," she said.
Her fellow Wand-leader snorted. "If Cornfoot had refused to see Dumbledore, the public outrage would have been too great. With the Minister gone and the Dark Lord revealed, people want their saviour."
"Kind of funny, that they turn to Dumbledore after he has been seen as the major threat to Britain for close to twenty years," Cleo said.
"They fear the Dark Lord more than Dumbledore," Hermione pointed out. "They fear his vengeance for following the Minister after he supposedly killed the Dark Lord."
"But Dumbledore was defeated by the Dark Lord in the last war," Cleo countered.
"Not personally. They never met on the field," Hermione said. "The Ministry's collapse was what ended the war."
"And we're currently reenacting that collapse," Dean said.
Benjamin shook his head. "As long as the Corps stands, the Ministry stands."
"But where does the Corps stand?" Hermione asked. She needed to know that, preferably before Dumbledore arrived.
"Where the Minister wants us to," the wizard answered.
"And if that's with Dumbledore?" Hermione looked at him. That was the real question.
"That's better than with the Dark Lord," Benjamin retorted.
Cleo nodded emphatically, then ran a hand over the scar on her face. "I don't want to surrender to those Death Eaters."
"No one wants that," Dean said. "And I think Cornfoot knows that."
"If he doesn't he'll be made aware," Benjamin said. "We'll not betray the Minister's legacy to his murderer."
Hermione forced herself to nod at that pronouncement. She told herself that it was the right thing to do - the Dark Lord wanted all muggleborns dead. Not that she could tell them that, the Wands still believed that the Dark Lord had survived Halloween 1981, and had not gone mad until later, when the first Wands had already been through Hogwarts. She changed the topic. "Has the investigation of Rookwood's disappearance shown results yet?" she asked.
Benjamin shook his head. "Nothing. If he's still alive, then he hasn't appeared yet."
"I doubt he'll show his face, not with the Dark Lord and Dumbledore back in Britain," Dean said.
Colin nodded.
Cleo snorted. "Let's hope he's dead. The situation is complicated enough."
"Rookwood would at least be a capable leader," Colin said. "And he's British."
"If he's still alive, then he's a suspect in the murder of the Minister," Hermione pointed out. She felt bad when Colin's face fell, but it was better if the Corps didn't consider Rookwood as an alternative to Dumbledore. "Besides, Dumbledore has been British longer than any of us has been alive." It was far easier, she realised, to push Dumbledore's agenda when she was faced with the alternatives.
"He didn't save us from the muggles though!" Colin said, frowning. "How many muggleborns were abused and killed by muggles while he was in power?"
"I don't know. But I know that the Dark Lord's forces killed a lot of muggleborns during the last war. And the surviving muggleborns went into exile with Dumbledore," Hermione said. She would have liked to point out that the Minister had been a follower of the Dark Lord during that war, but that might be pushing things too far, with Malfoy dead for less than a day. The wound was too raw still, everyone but herself and Dean was ready to lash out at the Minister's enemies. If they suspected Dumbledore had a hand in this...
"That just means that they saw Dumbledore as the lesser evil." Colin could be stubborn.
"I wish we could ask them about it," Hermione said. She had to remind Dumbledore of this possibility. Then again, he likely had thought of that already. Planned for it. "Do we know who will be coming with Dumbledore?"
Benjamin shook his head. "No. Sarah wants us all ready, just in case this is a trap, or if the Dark Lord attacks."
"Great. Guard duty again," Dean said.
"We'll be observing the delegation from the Exiles. Gathering information," Benjamin said.
"While acting as guards." Dean snorted.
Benjamin looked at Hermione. She sighed. "Give it a rest, Dean. We'll do our duty, as usual."
"Of course. At least it'll be interesting to see how our acting Minister will be reacting."
While everyone chuckled at that, Hermione made a mental note that Dumbledore's plan had decent chances to succeed. At least the Corps wasn't opposing it, as far as she could tell.
*****
London, Ministry of Magic, September 23rd, 1999, 17.30 hours
Albus Dumbledore stepped out of the Floo connection in the Ministry's atrium and found himself facing a dozen Wands. They were not quite threatening him, but they certainly were not a simple honour guard; their positions and posture showed that clearly. He didn't lose his smile though - he had expected that. Miss Hermione had warned him in advance as well. He spotted her, in the background, with Mister Dean and a younger wizard. Albus would have felt better if he had either obliviated the man, or spoken to him some more. But the risk of the Wand turning on them, condemning his best friend to death, was very small. Acceptable, he had decided. Behind Albus, the Floo flashed again, and Sirius stepped out of it, followed by Arthur.
"Welcome to Britain, Professor Dumbledore," Elias Cornfoot, the acting Minister, standing in the middle of the Wands, next to Crispin Greengrass and Phileas Parkinson, said.
"Good evening, Minister," Albus said. "It is kind of you to welcome me in person." He nodded to Crispin and Phileas. "Mister Greengrass. Mister Parkinson." Then he gestured to his two companions. "May I introduce you to Sirius Black and Arthur Weasley?"
Arthur smiled widely. "We've met before, when I was working at the Ministry."
"Ah, yes." Cornfoot's smile seemed more than a bit forced. Greengrass wasn't quite as obvious, but Albus could see that he looked a bit embarrassed. Parkinson didn't show any emotion.
The Minister cleared his throat. "Shall we proceed to the Conference Room?" He hadn't introduced Wand-Commander Sarah, who stood behind him, Albus noticed.
"And who might you be?" the professor asked, smiling at the young witch.
"Wand-Commander Sarah," came the reply. The woman didn't smile, but nodded at him.
"Pleased to meet you. You command the Corps then?"
"Yes."
Albus nodded, hoping Sirius wouldn't flirt with the witch, or at least not too much, and then followed Cornfoot to the room that had been prepared for their meeting. Six seats were prepared at a massive table made from black, polished oak. Daphne Greengrass was standing at the wall, next to another seat.
"Greetings, Miss…?" Albus trailed off.
"That's my daughter, Daphne," Greengrass said.
"It is my pleasure to meet you, Miss." Albus turned to the three pureblood wizards. As he had expected, his greeting of Sarah and Miss Greengrass had thrown them off a bit. "Shall we begin then?"
"Of course."
Everyone took their seats. Sarah took up a position behind the Minister. Half a dozen other wands formed a line behind her, including Miss Hermione. Miss Greengrass took out a dictaquill.
"Ahem. You are aware of the Dark Lord's return and the Minister's demise. Minister Malfoy, I mean," Cornfoot began.
"That is correct. I've kept a subscription to the Daily Prophet after my departure from Britain," Albus said. It was correct, though his information was a bit more detailed than that, of course. "My condolences on your loss."
"Ah, I see." Cornfoot fidgeted a bit. "We are currently in a bit of a crisis. The death of the Minister has shaken our country, and the return of the Dark Lord has shocked and terrified the people."
"They have a good reason to be shaken," Albus interjected. "He has proven to be rather unstable, and as I understand, he has sworn vengeance on all who have betrayed him. A definition that, I believe, extends to just about every prominent pureblood."
Greengrass nodded gravely. "He already tried to kill me and my entire family. If not for the Minister, we would be dead."
"The Minister, and the Wands, I believe?" Albus asked. "I do not think Lucius fought the Dark Lord by himself."
"Yes, of course."
Albus saw that Sarah squared her shoulders. He wasn't about to overdo the flattery, of course, but he wanted them to know he respected and acknowledged them. He looked at Cornfoot and waited.
The acting Minister coughed. "As I was saying, we're faced with a crisis. The faith of the people in the Ministry has been shaken. Our forces haven't been able to provide us with any successes against the Dark Lord's followers to give the people new hope."
"Not surprisingly, given that it has been less than a day," Albus said. "I am familiar with the Dark Lord's tactics. He is very hard to find." Unless you could track his very soul.
"He's also terrifying on the battlefield," Parkinson said. "We've lost dozens of Wands when they met him."
"Back in the last war, he avoided a direct confrontation, and withdrew whenever we met on the field." Albus smiled. "Unlike Grindelwald, he refused to duel me."
"He has grown more powerful in his absence," Parkinson said. "He has taken an inhuman appearance even."
Albus raised his eyebrows. "Things have changed then. When my allies and I left Britain, mixed blood was not seen as a sign of great power by Mister Malfoy and his friends."
The reminder that Lucius had ruled Britain in the name of blood purity caused the three wizards to squirm, just has he had expected.
"Nevertheless, I am quite confident that I can match him spell for spell." He smiled at them.
Cornfoot looked like a drowning man who had just been offered Gillyweed. "That's very reassuring to hear, Professor. Britain needs help, or it will fall into his inhuman hands."
"A Ministry on the brink of collapse, a terrified population, and dark forces on the advance… I am very familiar with this situation. As are my allies. We had to leave Britain under similar circumstances."
Cornfoot winced and glanced at Parkinson and Greengrass.
Albus leaned forward. "But rest assured that I and many others would gladly return to our home to help the Ministry in its time of need. Provided, of course, that there are certain changes in the Ministry, and its policies."
He leaned back in his seat with a smile as the acting Minister exchanged glances with the other two purebloods. He had them.
Lucius's blood purist regime wouldn't survive its founder. Albus would make certain of that.
*****
London, Ministry of Magic, September 23rd, 1999, 21.15 hours
Wand-Leader Hermione was very glad that the negotiations between Dumbledore and the Ministry - at least the first round - had concluded, and not just because the professor had managed to receive the concessions he had wanted, and the likelihood of the exiles fighting against the Corps had diminished greatly. It had taken almost four hours, and she was glad for a break. Not that she'd show that, not in front of Sarah. The Wand-Commander would have her hide if she showed such weakness in front of their guests.
The results were, broken down to essentials, quite clear: The British Ministry of Magic welcomed the return of the British exiles who left Britain in 1981. A general pardon was extended to them. Confiscated property would be returned to the original owners, with compensation for the current owners decided at a later date. The same went for destroyed property. The British exiles would be joining the fight against the Dark Lord under the leadership of Dumbledore. No more discrimination based on blood status.
To acting Minister Cornfoot, those would have looked like easy concessions. Most of the land and houses the exiles wanted back were owned either by purebloods rich enough not to care much about losing them, or purebloods poor enough not to matter much. Most of those who still cared about the actions in the last war the exiles were being pardoned for were enemies of the Ministry anyway. And even the end of discrimination might not look like much to a Minister desperate to get help against the Dark Lord since all muggleborns currently in Britain were Wands, and the half-bloods had had almost 20 years to get used to their place.
The real struggle would come after the Dark Lord was defeated, when the returned exiles would demand changes to Britain. And, Hermione thought when she saw Dumbledore approach Sarah after the meeting had ended, some of the groundwork for that would likely be laid today as well.
"Wand-Commander Sarah, may I have a word about our strategy after the press has been informed?" Dumbledore asked politely.
Sarah looked surprised for a moment, then she nodded. "Of course."
"Splendid!" He smiled widely, then turned to the acting Minister. "Shall we proceed to inform the press now, so the good people of Britain might go to sleep knowing that things have changed for the better thanks to the Ministry?"
"Of course," Cornfoot hastened to say.
Journalists from the Wizarding Wireless, the Daily Prophet, Witch Weekly, Teen Witch Weekly, and The Quibbler were waiting in the atrium. She smiled at Luna, sitting there with her oversized notepad, next to her father. The blonde witch beamed at her, before sticking out part of her tongue from the corner of her mouth as she concentrated on reporting. Behind the journalists stood what looked like half of the Ministry employees. The cowards had returned after rumours of Dumbledore's presence had reached them, Hermione thought.
"Wizards and witches of Britain, I have good news!" Cornfoot said. "In our time of need, Albus Dumbledore has returned to Britain, to fight the Dark Lord."
Even though just about everyone already had to have known that, the whispers and murmurs grew louder, and the acting Minister had to wait almost a minute before he could continue. At least the people sounded hopeful rather than hostile. Not that the two dozen Wands in attendance would let anyone cause trouble.
"With him return our fellow wizards and witches who left Britain for the shores of France when the Dark Lord took over. Despite the tragic loss of our Minister, the Ministry stands strong."
Dumbledore kept smiling while Cornfoot informed the press about their agreement with far more words than were needed. FInally, the press could ask questions. Unsurprisingly, they were aimed at Dumbledore.
"Why are you returning now, and not before?" asked the Daily Prophet's journalist, Rita Skeeter.
"I am returning now because the Dark Lord's presence has been confirmed."
"Would you have returned if the Minister was still alive?" Skeeter asked.
"I do not think Lucius would ever have asked me to come back." Dumbledore nodded at Xenophilius Lovegood.
"Do you foresee any problems dealing with the Dark Lord? He has taken the form of a half-naga, after all," Luna's father asked.
"I do not care what form he takes. I am here to fight him and defeat him, just as I defeated Grindelwald."
"You fled from him twenty years ago, why would you think you'll be faring any better now?" Jones from the Wizarding Wireless asked.
"I moved to France because the Ministry at the time had collapsed, and organised resistance to the Dark Lord had vanished. There were no Wands of Britain around at the time, and my allies, brave though they were, were facing too many enemies. This is obviously not the case today. The Corps has fought the Dark Lord several times, and has proven to be both effective and courageous. Together, we will end this threat to Britain."
Hermione couldn't help but smile at that, and she could see many of her fellow Wands were smiling as well. It felt good to be acknowledged. Then she remembered that Dumbledore had been planning all of this, and had no trouble schooling her features again.
Rita Skeeter, of course, couldn't let such a statement stay unchallenged. "Wouldn't you question their competence, since the Minister and his entire family have been killed while guarded by them?"
Dumbledore frowned at the witch. "While I am not familiar with the details of Lucius's death, it is known that he was killed by a wizard he trusted, and met without Wands to guard him. You cannot expect the Corps to guard you when they are ordered away." He nodded at the reporter from Witch Weekly.
Graziella Gibbons smiled. "My question is for Sirius Black."
The wizard, who had until then been smiling at all the pretty witches in the audience, and among the Wands, straightened up and beamed at her. "Cast away, Miss!"
"You haven't married in exile, despite having been among the most eligible bachelors for years. Will you be looking for a wife in Britain?"
Hermione saw the wizard twitch, but he answered with a wink and a smile. "I've been looking for the right witch all my life, but I haven't found her yet. I'm not about to give up though."
That caused more murmurs among the audience. Mostly among the witches, though, Hermione noticed. As if there was nothing more important to ask.
Then the representative from Teen Witch weekly asked about Ginny Weasley's relationship to Harry Potter. Hermione Granger almost wished the Dark Lord would attack the Ministry.
*****
London, Ministry of Magic, September 23rd, 1999, 22.15 hours
When the press conference finally ended, Wand-Leader Hermione was ready to hex the lot of the journalists, just to shut them up, even though she realised Dumbledore had deliberately shifted the topic away from the death of the Malfoy family. It was just too aggravating. And she needed some food.
She was walking back to the Corps Headquarters with Dean, behind Dumbledore's delegation, when Colin caught them and handed them two packages with a sandwich and sweets. She beamed at him. "You're a lifesaver, Colin!"
Dean chuckled. "But whose life did he save? Yours or the reporters'?"
She snorted. "Both - Sarah would have killed me for losing my patience." She hastily ate a few cauldron cakes. That should tide her over until she could eat in peace.
They reached the Corps' HQ and Sarah led the three exiles into her office. Hermione tagged along, and used the opportunity to study Arthur Weasley some more. During the negotiations, he had not said overly much, presenting the picture of a harmless, friendly wizard. Though given Ron's abilities as a spy, and after meeting Fred and George, Hermione didn't believe the act. Dumbledore wouldn't have taken a harmless wizard with him. His open curiosity was likely just a way to spy without acting suspiciously.
Sirius Black, on the other hand, might truly be a flirt - he had complimented every witch he had met, including herself, and not even the coldest stare from Sarah seemed to have impressed him. Hermione didn't know what his game was, or Dumbledore's.
Once inside her office, Sarah turned to her visitors. "You wanted to talk about strategy."
"That is correct, Wand-Commander. I have about two dozen witches and wizards ready to move to Britain at once, and engage in combat. More will follow, though they need a bit more time to get ready." He smiled. "After almost twenty years in exile, they didn't exactly expect to be able to return so quickly."
Sarah nodded. "You need safe quarters then."
"At the start, at least."
Hermione was certain the exiles had more than the one safehouse she knew of, but she understood that telling this to Sarah would do more harm than good.
"We've been fighting a defensive campaign so far, which limited our options. Efforts to track the enemy to their bases have not been successful yet." Sarah seemed to look at Hermione when she said that, and the Wand-Leader frowned. The debacle with Draco hadn't been her fault!
"I believe I can help you out there. I know some rather obscure spells to track people. There's a good chance even the Dark Lord does not know them, and therefore would be hard-pressed to defend against them." Dumbledore nodded. "Though this information should remain confidential, lest he prepare."
"Of course," Sarah said, in a flat tone. She didn't seem to be too impressed by Dumbledore, unlike most of the older wizards and witches Hermione had seen in the atrium.
"You haven't voiced your opinion during the negotiations," the old wizard said.
"It isn't my place to make policy." Sarah's answer was in line with everything Hermione had been taught.
"And yet you could, if you wanted to. You are currently among the most influential people in the Ministry."
"The Wands serve Britain. They do not rule it." Sarah stood straighter.
"An admirable stance. Too many discovered too late that entering politics was a mistake. I can understand if you wish to keep the Corps out of that sort of business. Though at the same time, you might wish to have the same say in your future as every other witch and wizard has." He smiled. "Some of the people coming to help us would have been among your ranks, had they been born but a few years later. I know they are interested in your experiences and would like to talk to you."
Hermione understood what Dumbledore was doing there. Had thought of that herself. Talking with muggleborns who hadn't been kidnapped by the Obliviators might make the Wands question what they had been told about their own lives. Subtle enough to not raise suspicion too. Mostly, at least. With a bit of luck, others would discover the Minister's lies, without Hermione having to push things along.
If things went well, that would solve a lot of problems. Among them the fact that Ron couldn't reveal himself yet without threatening this new alliance. Hermione wasn't planning on marrying 'Antoine Dupont' just to keep Dumbledore's schemes from unraveling.
*****