Chapter 3: Past Sins
London, No 12 Grimmauld Place, August 21st, 1993
Sirius Black was pacing back and forth in the entrance hall. He would meet his godson Harry for the first time in almost twelve years. And Harry had spent all that time thinking Sirius had killed James and Lily. He would hate him. And rightly so - Sirius had failed his parents. Harry's parents, that is. He had let the traitor escape. He had...
"Sirius!"
He whirled around and faced his old friend - whom he had failed as well - and barked. Barked? He blinked, then realised that he had changed into Padfoot without noticing. Again. Sirius quickly changed back. "Sorry."
Remus shook his head. "You don't want to greet Harry as a dog."
He flinched. Things were easier as a dog. Clearer. Simpler. That had kept him alive, and sane - more or less - in Azkaban. As Padfoot, he didn't worry much. He didn't brood much over his past. He didn't feel much guilt. He simply was what he was. "It's just… he will hate me!"
"Why would he? You were unjustly imprisoned. You broke out to save him when you realised how close the traitor was to Harry. You brought the traitor to justice." Remus shook his head. "He has no reason to hate you." In a lower voice, he added: "I'm the one who has no excuse for never visiting him."
Sirius didn't have a good answer to that. He tried anyway. "You were not really yourself after the war. Not with all of us…" he trailed off, wincing. "And there's your furry little problem." Remus could use that as an excuse, couldn't he? Get something good from his curse, for once. "You couldn't get enough of the Wolfsbane Potion." That would change, of course. What use was the Black fortune - all his now, as he was the last Black heir - if he couldn't use it to help his friends? Or his godson's friends. Hadn't Dumbledore mentioned that a witch had gotten into trouble helping Harry, or something? Ah, Harry was his godfather's son, already charming the ladies and getting them into trouble!
"I'm only dangerous for three days a month," Remus muttered, looking even gloomier now.
Sirius grinned. "Ah! Finally you admit it! I've been telling you that for years, and you never accepted it!" He rubbed his chin in an exaggerated fashion and forced himself to smile widely. "Something else that you have in common with witches, now that I think about it - they also usually never believe me, and they are rabid beasts a few days per month as well…"
"Sirius!" Remus half-yelled, half-groaned in that achingly familiar way of his.
Sirius smiled for real now, remembering the good times, at Hogwarts, when… he blinked. He didn't remember! Nothing detailed. Just some hazy images… and fragments of laughter and… he shook his head. His smile gone, he cursed under his breath. "He'll understand, Moony." But he wasn't convinced himself. Remus should have visited.
And Sirius shouldn't have been in Azkaban.
He noticed that he had changed into Padfoot again when he realised that the world hadn't just figuratively lost all colour, and that the background noise wasn't the moaning and ranting of the other prisoners in Azkaban, but the screams from his mother's portrait, dampened by the enchanted wall Dumbledore had put up five minutes after Sirius had brought him to the Blacks' ancestral home.
Which, he thought, after changing back into a wizard, wasn't their actual ancestral home, being far too young for their family tree - but the Blacks didn't talk about what had happened to their real ancestral manor in 1756. Not even after they had taken revenge for it.
He sighed. "Maybe we should do something useful, instead of simply waiting." And brooding. And turning into dogs. "Most of the rooms here still haven't been cleared of curses and traps." Dumbledore had said he'd send a Curse-Breaker over, but the man hadn't been available yet, and the Headmaster hadn't had time to do more than Sirius's bedroom - which had been filled with more traps than Sirius had expected, and all of them focused on his bed - and the kitchen.
Remus stared at him. "Have you forgotten what happened the last time we tried?" Sirius blinked at him, and Remus hissed. "Sorry, I didn't…"
Sirius shook his head. "No, no, I remember." He shrugged. "We got a bit singed. No harm done. No real lasting harm done," he corrected himself when Remus pointedly glanced at the sleeve of his brand-new robes. "We've been through worse at school." At least he thought they had been… Weren't Dementors supposed to only take the good memories?
"Yes." Remus's face showed a mixture of nostalgia and regret, so Sirius had guessed correctly. "But it also took us an hour to recover. Meeting Harry while you're on fire is hardly better than meeting him as a dog."
His friend was right, but Sirius wasn't about to concede so easily. 'Never admit anything, least of all your guilt or defeat', hadn't that been their maxim, back at Hogwarts? He couldn't remember. Dumbledore had said his memories would return, over time… but had been cagey when Sirius had asked how long it'd take. "Bah." He was about to launch into a tirade about being Gryffindors when the fireplace in the hall lit up. Harry!
He bounded over - bounded? He changed back again and spread his arms… and almost hugged Dumbledore. Sirius managed to turn his gesture in a credible bow, though. "Welcome to my humble and curse-infested home."
"Thank you, Sirius. Remus." The Headmaster smiled - he probably hadn't been fooled - and stepped to the side. A second later, a body shot out of the fireplace and into the hall.
Sirius eyes widened. "Harry?"
Harry - Dumbledore wouldn't have brought a stranger, would he? - sat up, rubbing the back of his head and mumbled what Sirius was certain were curses Sirius's mother would be appalled to hear. His godson really took after him! "Yes? Sorry about that; magical travel doesn't agree with me. Apart from brooms." He stood up. "Mr Black…?" he trailed off as he offered his hand.
Sirius grabbed and shook it, enthusiastically. "Call me Sirius! Or Padfoot. You look like James…"
"... except I've got my mother's eyes, I know," Harry interrupted him, then winced. "Sorry, I just hear that all the time."
Sirius chuckled. "Well, it's true." He hadn't lost those most precious memories. His godson was cheeky too! "I'm sorry for not meeting with you sooner… I was in prison. Unjustly, you know."
"Yes. The Headmaster explained it to me."
"Did he?" Sirius glanced at Dumbledore, who nodded. One weight off his chest, he guessed - his memories were a bit spotty, after all. With that out of the way, it was time to talk about the main topic. He forced himself to smile widely again. "Good. Now… as soon as I'm officially exonerated, I'll take custody of you and fulfill my duties as your godfather!" Harry looked surprised, and Sirius felt his stomach drop. "If you want me to, I mean…" he added in a smaller voice. Harry hated him!
"Ah… I think I do, yes." Harry nodded. "Though we might get to know each other first?"
Sirius refrained from turning that into a double-entendre and nodded. "Have I mentioned I'm rich?" Kids liked gold, didn't they? "If you need anything, you just have to ask; the Black fortune is at your disposal!" That should help his godson see that he was the best choice as his guardian.
Harry looked surprised again. "Err… how rich?"
Sirius grinned - honestly, this time. "Well… I've heard you know Malfoy, right?" Judging by the scowl on his godson's face, he did know the tosser. Wait, that would be the tosser's son. But, like father, like son… unless it was Sirius; he was an exception. He shook his head. "Anyway, we're far richer than them!" Unless his family had managed to squander the entire fortune before they had all died off. But that was unlikely - as this cesspit of a house proved, they had lived more than frugally in his absence. Probably.
"Well, it wouldn't be for me… and it would be very expensive, but I have this friend, my best friend - my best female friend - and…"
"Say no more!" Sirius clapped him on the shoulder. "Spending gold to impress your girlfriend is always a worthy expense!" Harry was his godfather's godson!
"Err... she's not my girlfriend," Harry said.
Dumbledore cleared his throat, and Sirius could see that Remus had his face covered by his hands.
"What?"
*****
London, No 12 Grimmauld Place, August 21st, 1993
Harry Potter stared at Sirius Black - his godfather, the Headmaster had said - as the man looked first confused, then concerned and almost afraid. His clothes looked new, but Black looked haggard, his face pale and hollow-cheeked - a weird contrast with his well-kept beard.
"What?" Black repeated himself, looking from Dumbledore to the other wizard - whose name Harry hadn't yet been told - and back. He wasn't looking at Harry, though.
"Harry's twelve," the other man said.
"Thirteen," Harry corrected him. He wasn't twelve any more.
The other man was showing his teeth, too. "Thirteen. That's not an age to... spend gold on a girl." That made the offer to help Hermione sound… dirty.
Dumbledore cleared his throat. "Harry's friend's situation is a little more complicated than it may appear."
"She helped save me from one of Malfoy's plots, and, in revenge, Malfoy's father had her framed for theft, and ruined her family," Harry explained. "Her family was sentenced to pay a huge fine."
Black nodded, apparently taking this at face value. "That sounds like the Wizengamot I know. Or rather, the Wizengamot I never knew, since I didn't get a trial."
For a moment, silence filled the room - a rather dark and dusty entrance hall, complete with a big stairway leading up to the first floor. Though the wall at the back looked new. Harry looked at the third man again. "So… who're you?"
The man took a deep breath, but it was Black who spoke up: "That's Remus. Remus Lupin. He was one of your parents' best friends. We were inseparable in our Hogwarts years. If not for me, he'd have been your godfather." Black was talking almost as fast as Hermione in a rush, Harry thought. And he was smiling widely again. "You may be wondering why we didn't visit you, after the war." Harry hadn't but he hadn't known about Lupin until now.
"Sirius!" Lupin hissed.
Black was undeterred, wrapping his arm around his friend's shoulder. "Well, I was in prison, as you know. Innocent, though. And Remus is a werewolf."
"Sirius!" Lupin literally growled.
"He's only dangerous for about three days a month - like witches - but since werewolves are considered dark creatures, and he couldn't afford the Wolfsbane Potion, he felt too bad to visit you." Black nodded. "That has changed, though, since he now has a job. He'll be your new Defence teacher!"
"Ah." Harry didn't know what else to say. He had no idea about werewolves, other than muggle movies and comics.
"Oh…" Sirius blinked. "Please don't tell anyone about his furry little problem, will you? That could get him fired. People are afraid of werewolves."
"An unfounded, but unfortunately common, prejudice," Dumbledore said. "Werewolves are wizards like you or me. Only under the full moon, three nights per month, do they transform. And only in their cursed form can they spread the curse. Even without the Wolfsbane Potion, which grants them control over their cursed forms, they can take precautions to avoid endangering others during that time."
"Ah." That made sense to Harry. At least for the moment.
"I'm very sorry I didn't visit you," Lupin said, shaking off Black's arm. "I was in a bad place, after the war. I had lost all my friends, or so I thought, and…" He shrugged and didn't meet Harry's eyes.
"It's alright," Harry said. He wasn't certain if he meant it, but Lupin looked rather pitiful.
"So… that's settled. Let me show you the house! At least the safe parts. Which aren't that many, but we're working on it!" Black exclaimed after a moment.
"The safe parts?"
"Oh, yeah. Most of the house is littered with traps and curses. My parents went a little crazy before their death."
Harry silently wondered if that ran in the family as he followed the two strange men to the kitchen.
*****
"What are your impressions of your godfather and your future teacher?" Dumbledore asked Harry after they arrived in the small park near Privet Drive.
Harry shook his head before answering - Side-Along-Apparition didn't agree with him either. "They seem…" He searched for a diplomatic way to say 'mental'. "...to have gone through a lot?"
The Headmaster sighed. "Indeed. Both of them suffered a lot after the war, and little blame can be applied to them for it."
Harry made a noncommittal sound.
"You may be sceptical, understandably so, but I can assure you that they are both good men - although fallen on hard times. Sirius has spent more than a decade under the cruel attention of the Dementors, and Remus has been struggling with his curse since he was a child, always afraid of being hated and feared by everyone should his secret be revealed." He looked sternly at Harry.
"I won't tell anyone!" Harry quickly said.
With a smile, Dumbledore continued: "Few knew about his secret and did not fear him. Your parents were among them, and they and most of his other friends were lost in the war. In addition to that, Remus has spent all these years hating his best remaining friend, thinking he was the traitor responsible for all of this. That burdens him more than anything, I presume."
"I guess so." Harry could understand that, but he still felt some resentment. If he had known about his parents, about magic earlier…
For a few minutes, they walked towards his relatives' home in silence. "Will I be living with my godfather once he is cleared?"
"Only if you want to," the Headmaster said. With a wry smile, he added: "And not before the house has been thoroughly cleared of curses and traps - and dust and dirt."
"So… shortly before I graduate?"
Dumbledore laughed. "You may be underestimating what magic can achieve, my boy. I estimate that you could, if you want to, spend Christmas with Sirius in comfort and safety."
That would mean he could see Hermione more often, Harry thought. Sirius lived in London, after all - much closer to her new home. And… "Sir. Do you think my godfather will help Hermione?"
"I have no doubt. Sirius is a very generous person, and keenly aware that your friend was framed as a result of her helping you. As well as that, Sirius has suffered a grave injustice at the hands of the Ministry himself, just like Miss Granger. Such a shared experience will make him rather sympathetic, I think. He cannot currently access most of his family's fortune, but once he has been exonerated, that will change."
"But it's a huge sum." Harry had thought he was rich, after seeing his vault, but he couldn't have covered the Grangers' debts even if he spent all his gold.
"Your godfather was not lying when he boasted about his wealth. He can afford it - though it will certainly not be a trifle, not even for the famous Black family fortune."
That sounded good. "How long will that take?"
"Not too long. Pettigrew's trial will be held this week, and Sirius's should follow soon afterwards."
Harry felt relieved. That meant he could tell Hermione the good news before he went to Hogwarts. If everything went well.
*****
Devon, Ottery St Catchpole, August 23rd, 1993
"The boys are in the garden, weeding, my dear. We didn't expect you this early."
"Thank you, Mrs Weasley. I'll go find them, then."
Previously, meeting the Weasleys hadn't made Hermione Granger feel so conflicted. On the one hand, she hated the pity Mrs Weasley was showing her. She didn't need the witch's pity - especially not since the Weasleys weren't really better off than her own parents. On the other hand, Ron's mum had accepted her without reservations, convinced of her innocence. And shared her ire at the Malfoys. And the Weasleys knew what it meant to be poor. Although they had had a longer time to get used to it. A much longer time.
She stepped out on the porch of the house and looked at the nearby pond, then closed her eyes and faced the sun for a moment. Autumn was fast approaching, and you should use an opportunity when it presented itself, as Mr Fletcher was fond of saying. Provided it was safe to do so, of course.
But she hadn't come here to sunbathe - and how she missed her summers in France! She had come to see her best friends. Shaking her head, she walked out to the garden. Harry and Ron stood there, looking at something in Ron's hand. A gnome, she realised when she reached them.
"Harry! Ron!"
"Hermione!" the two chorused. She hugged Harry while Ron disposed of the gnome in his hand by throwing it over the fence before hugging her as well. He seemed to have grown and put on some muscle during his time in Egypt. And he had gotten a tan - or at least what people with his skin tone had after a long time in the sun.
She buried the jealousy thoughts of Egypt caused her to feel, then frowned. "Shouldn't you turn them around a few times, to prevent them from coming back to the garden?"
"Well, yes. But one gnome more or less won't matter. Can't get rid of them for good anyway." Ron shrugged.
Harry laughed. "Yes. I was tempted to get some for my aunt's garden, but Ron persuaded me not to."
"Really, mate - you don't want to degnome your garden every day next summer!"
"Well… if all goes well, I won't be living there next summer," Harry said.
"Oh?" What had happened? Hermione hadn't heard anything about this.
"Yes. My godfather, Sirius Black, has offered to take custody of me."
"What?" She stared at him as his serious expression gave way to a smirk.
"Didn't I mention that?" He was even laughing now. At her.
"No, you didn't." She pursed her lips. "And why would you want to live with an escaped mass murderer who wants to kill you?" Unless that wasn't true. Hermione knew very well how wizarding justice worked.
"Well, he's innocent, for one thing," Harry said.
"Yes," Ron cut in. "The real murderer was Scabbers!"
"What?" His rat?
"Yes!" Her friend was nodding emphatically. "He was an animagus. A wizard named Peter Pettigrew."
One of Black's supposed victims, she remembered. "Like Professor McGonagall?"
"Yes. He's been hiding as Percy's and my pet for years!" Ron shuddered and looked like he wanted to retch. "Black recognised him from that picture in the Prophet, broke out and told Dumbledore. And when we got back from Egypt, Dumbledore was waiting for us. Scabbers tried to run, but the Headmaster had him stunned, petrified and bound in an instant. Too bad he didn't kill the rat!" he added with a scowl.
"If he had died, then Sirius would have trouble proving his innocence." Harry was frowning at Ron.
"He slept in my bed!" Ron retorted.
Hermione wasn't about to get into that argument. She could understand wanting revenge. All too well. "So, you'll be moving to Black's home then?"
"I'm not certain yet." Harry sighed. "I'd like to leave the Dursleys, of course, and they would be happy to see me go, but… Sirius is not exactly… well, he's been locked up for over ten years in Azkaban, and it shows."
Hermione winced. That probably meant Harry's godfather was dangerously unstable.
"I've heard people go crazy in Azkaban after a year!" Ron had the grace to blush when Hermione and Harry both glared at him. "Sorry."
"Dumbledore says he'll get better, but…" Harry shrugged. "I guess I have to see how he is come Christmas." He smiled at her. "But there's good news for you!"
"Yes?"
"Sirius is rich - really rich. He can pay your debts! And he said he'll do it," Harry added.
Her friend sounded excited, but Hermione was sceptical. Or cautious. "It's a huge sum."
"He's much richer than the Malfoys."
"Oh." He could afford it, then. And without ruining himself, unlike Harry. "But would he want to spend so much gold on a stranger? Once he is feeling better."
Harry blinked. "Well, I think so. If he wants me to live with him, he better do it!"
"Harry!" She frowned at him. "You can't decide whether or not you'll live with him over whether or not he pays my debts!"
"Sure I can! If he doesn't want to help you after you got into trouble for saving me, then he obviously doesn't care about me that much!" Harry grinned at her.
"He's got you there, Hermione." Ron grinned as well.
She huffed, but there wasn't much she could say refute that. And, if she was honest with herself, she didn't really want to say anything to refute it either.
If Harry's godfather paid her debts, then she didn't have to feel that guilty any more for wrecking her parents' lives.
"So… how about a quick game of Quidditch?" Ron asked. "The weather's perfect for it, and Mum won't have lunch ready for an hour or so - Dad's going to be late, seeing as he has to talk to the DMLE about Scabbers."
"Well…" Harry glanced at her, then at Ron.
"Sure," Hermione said, "let's do it!" She tried to sound as enthusiastic as she could. The surprised - or even shocked - expressions on her friends' faces helped.
"Really?" Ron was gaping at her.
"Yes, really." Hermione smiled. Mr Fletcher had told her to get better at flying - a good thief needed to be a good broom flyer as well. Apparition and Portkeys could be blocked much more easily than a fast broom.
She would simply have to get a better broom than the decrepit ones she had flown at Hogwarts.
*****
London, Enfield, August 23rd, 1993
Hermione Granger doubted that she would ever be any good at Quidditch. Even now, many hours after the game, she felt despondent when thinking about it. She had done embarrassingly badly in every position they had put her. They had finally settled on her being Keeper, since 'she might block a Quaffle by accident, at least', as Ginny had put it, the little traitor. She set her jaw - she would master broom riding. She had to. And no piece of wood would get the better of her. She was a witch!
And she was procrastinating, she added to herself, sighing, when she glanced at her parents. Her mum was sitting at the table, going over bills, and her dad was reading a magazine. Shaking her head, she stood up. She had to do this.
"Mum? Dad?"
They looked at her, and she couldn't help feeling that their tired smiles hid their justified anger at her. It was her fault, after all, that they had been ruined. Financially, at least. "Yes, dear?"
She took a deep breath. She had debated this - it was just hearsay, although Harry wouldn't lie to her - but her parents needed to know. If only to give them some hope. "There is a possibility that my debts will soon be paid."
"What?" Her parents looked more alarmed and suspicious than hopeful, she noticed.
"Harry has recently reconnected with his godfather, who has offered to pay my debts, since this all started when I helped save Harry. He hasn't got control of his family fortune yet, though - some legal entanglements need to be resolved first." That was a good, neutral way to speak about a charge of mass murder, she thought. Her parents didn't need to know every detail, after all. "That shouldn't take too long, though." Her smile faltered a little when her parents still didn't look like they believed her.
"Dear, we're talking about a huge sum - a real fortune. For normal people, at least," her mum said. "People don't pay that much to friends of their godchildren. No matter how rich they are."
"And even if that man did - and you haven't mentioned his name yet, I noticed," her father said, and she winced in response, "you - we - would simply owe him. Even if he said we wouldn't. There's always a catch."
She pressed her lips together. "His name is Sirius Black."
"The wanted murderer?" Her mother gasped.
"He was framed," Hermione said.
"Framed?" He father sounded even more sceptical.
"Yes, framed. But they caught the real culprit, and so he'll be exonerated soon."
Her father's scoff told her enough about his faith in wizarding justice.
"And he was in that wizard prison, with the Dementors?" Her mum's face and tone told her that she knew what that meant for Black's mental health.
"Yes."
Her parents exchanged a glance she knew very well. They didn't believe her. But she would prove them wrong. She would set this right, no matter what it took. And she would make Malfoy and the others pay for their crimes!
*****
London, Ministry of Magic, August 25th, 1993
"This is your first time at the Ministry of Magic, right?"
Harry Potter nodded at Mr Weasley without really looking at him - he was busy taking in the sights in the Atrium. So many wizards were bustling about, coming and going from the half a dozen or more fireplaces lined up along one side - the same fireplaces from which he, Ron, Percy and Ron's dad had just stepped out, or, in Harry's case, stumbled out. And there was a big marble fountain with golden statues in the middle of the hall, between them and their goal - which seemed to be a lift guarded by two wizards in grey robes.
"Those are Hit-Wizards," Percy said - he must have noticed Harry's glance. "They're wizards who specialise in magical combat, unlike Aurors."
"Aurors are the police, right?" Harry asked. He had seen them, in their red robes, when they'd arrested Hermione.
"Yes," Mr Weasley answered. "There aren't as many Hit-Wizards as Auros - they mostly guard the Ministry and Azkaban."
"In times of peace there is not much need of Hit-Wizards. Certainly not enough to justify the expense of paying a large number of them," Percy cut in, in his typical, slightly pompous, manner.
"That might be true, but it means that when you suddenly need more Hit-Wizards, you have to hire and train them first," his dad retorted. "It's better to spend more gold in peace than needed than to spend Auror lives in war." He sounded unusually serious to Harry - but then, they were here on serious business.
"Henry. Bertie." Mr Weasley nodded at the two Hit-Wizards.
"Arthur," the one on the left, Henry, responded. "Here for the trial?"
Mr Weasley nodded. "Yes."
"Nasty business. You know the way."
The doors opened, and the four stepped into the cabin. Once the lift was moving, Mr Weasley sighed. "What's wrong, Dad?" Ron asked.
"It's nothing."
The three boys exchanged glances. Harry was certain it wasn't nothing, but it wasn't as if he could push Mr Weasley. And neither Ron nor Percy seemed willing to pry either.
He shelved the thought when they arrived on the Wizengamot's floor. There were more guards here - both Hit-Wizards and Aurors - and they were quickly ushered to the seats for the audience, which Harry found were in the topmost row of the Wizengamot Chamber.
Most of the seats were already occupied - but a number of people offered him their spot when they recognised him. For once, Harry was glad about his fame, though he could have done without the whispers behind his back. Or, as he realised when he overheard some 'didn't notice him for over ten years…' comments, behind the Weasleys' backs.
He was distracted by Mr Weasley pointing out various members of the Wizengamot as they started to file in.
"There's Augusta Longbottom. She is the proxy for her grandson, until he comes of age."
"Neville will be a member of the Wizengamot?" Harry asked. It was hard to imagine the rather shy boy in this Chamber, mingling with the other impressive wizards.
"Technically, he already is, but he cannot vote until he is seventeen years old," Percy explained. "So his grandmother votes for him until then."
"There's Malfoy, the bloody bastard," Ron spat through clenched teeth.
That was the man who had forced Hermione out of Hogwarts, Harry thought as he stared at the blond wizard. He looked very similar to Draco - just taller, and even more arrogant, in his opinion. Harry wished he could curse the git.
"Must be hard for him, judging a fellow Death Eater," Ron muttered.
"He was under the Imperius," Percy said, not bothering to hide his doubt. "Officially."
"That's enough, boys," Mr Weasley said. "This is not the place for such talk."
Chastised, the three remained silent until the chamber had filed and the trial began.
Harry didn't pay much attention to the opening - he focused on Pettigrew, chained to the accused's chair, down below, in the centre of the chamber, flanked by two Aurors. The wizard who had betrayed his parents and framed his godfather looked pitiful. A small, cringing man in tattered robes, stringy, unkempt hair falling to his shoulders. And his face… He looked like the rat he had been for so many years, Harry thought.
"...accused of treason, twelve counts of murder and conspiracy to pervert the course of justice. How do you plead?"
"N-not g-guilty!" Pettigrew stammered. "I'm innocent! It was all Black!"
While Pettigrew's plea was noted down and his personal information confirmed, Harry leaned over and asked Mr Weasley: "Treason?"
"Supporting the Dark Lord is considered treason," Ron's dad whispered back.
A stern-looking woman with a monocle was leading the interrogation. "Did you willingly join the Dark Lord?"
"No! No! I didn't join him! It was all Black! He forced me!"
"Did you willingly take his Dark Mark?"
"No! I didn't! I was under the Imperius!"
"Did you betray the location of James, Lily and Harry Potter to the Dark Lord?"
"No, it was Black! He is the traitor."
Harry clenched his teeth. Whatever small amount of pity he had felt for the miserable wizard down there had vanished. "Damn liar!" he muttered as Pettigrew tried to blame his godfather for all his crimes.
"I hope he gets the Kiss!" Ron whispered, glaring at the man.
With Pettigrew denying every charge, the interrogation didn't take long, and Madam Bones, the Head of the DMLE - Mr Weasley had pointed her out to him earlier - stood to address the Wizengamot.
"Honoured members of the Wizengamot! You have heard the denials of the accused. He claims he had been placed under the Imperius Curse by Black and forced to join the Dark Lord, to take his mark and to betray the Potters. He spins a tale about how he barely escaped Black after the murder of the Potters, and how Black just failed to kill him while murdering a dozen muggles! And yet he cannot explain how he was able to escape Black if he were under the Imperius Curse. Or why he didn't come forward after Black's arrest - nor went to St Mungo's to have his finger regrown."
"I was afraid for my life!" Pettigrew yelled. "I knew Black would escape! He..."
A flick of the left Auror's wand cut Pettigrew off. "Silencing Charm," Percy mumbled.
Madam Bones continued unperturbed. "But, most importantly, he cannot explain why he hid as a rat among a wizarding family for twelve years, living as the pet of two of the family's sons, spending years at Hogwarts, in close proximity to Dumbledore himself, but never daring to seek the Chief Warlock's protection. He has not offered to testify under Veritaserum either.
"Honoured members of the Wizengamot! The man bears the Dark Mark. His behaviour cannot be explained by him being under the Imperius Curse, nor by him being afraid of Black - not after the Dark Lord had been killed and Black had been sent to Azkaban. No, the only explanation for the accused's actions is that he was a follower of the Dark Lord. If there is any doubt about this man's guilt, which I do not believe there is, then I ask for an interrogation under Veritaserum. Otherwise I ask for a guilty verdict, and for the accused to be imprisoned in Azkaban for the rest of his natural life."
Harry noticed that many were nodding in agreement with the witch as she sat down. Even Malfoy!
The Minister for Magic, Cornelius Fudge, rose from his seat. "Mr Pettigrew, what do you have to say in reply to that?"
Mr Weasley whistled. "No one is willing to speak for him. That's not surprising, given the charges."
"Don't they have lawyers?" Harry asked. He was no expert, but the accused had a right to a lawyer. At least on the telly.
"Lawyers?" Mr Weasley shook his head. "This is not a muggle court. Only members of the Wizengamot have the right to speak here. Apart from witnesses and the representative of the DMLE."
"Ah." Harry nodded.
Down below, Pettigrew was blathering: "I'm innocent! It was all Black's fault! He imperiused me! I couldn't help it! I was so afraid, even with him in Azkaban! I knew he would escape! He had even fooled Dumbledore! I… I… I'm innocent!" He broke down in tears and sobbed in his chair.
The Minister rose from his seat again. "Honoured members of the Wizengamot! Those among you in favour of clearing the accused of all charges, light your wands."
Very few wands lit up in response. Pettigrew wailed.
"Those among you in favour of conviction, light your wands."
The entire chamber seemed to light up as dozens of lit wands were raised.
"The accused has been found guilty of all charges. Does the Wizengamot wish to alter the requested sentence?" One wand was raised in response. "The chair recognises Mr Malfoy."
Murmurings filled the chamber as Malfoy's father stood up. "Honoured members of the Wizengamot! The crimes this man has committed are without peer. Not only has he betrayed the Potters, whose son saved us all from the Dark Lord, but he also framed the scion of the Black family, a man who should be sitting among us now as the Head of his family, causing him to be imprisoned, despite his innocence, in Azkaban for twelve years! The Chief Warlock himself reminded us just recently of the fate of a prisoner of Azkaban; I do not think I need to add anything to that. For crimes such as these, the Dementor's Kiss is the only appropriate punishment."
The murmurs grew louder. Harry stared, his mouth hanging open. Malfoy had been the last wizard he had expected to ask, no, demand that.
"Blimey!" Ron muttered. "I didn't expect that!"
"It helps to distance him from Pettigrew," Mr Weasley explained. "He only escaped prison himself because he claimed to have been imperiused."
"One rat sacrificing another rat to save himself." Ron scoffed.
When the majority of the Wizengamot followed Malfoy's suggestion and, once again, many wands lit up the chamber, Mr Weasley stood up. "Come on, boys. You don't want to see what comes next." Ron opened his mouth, probably to protest, but his dad glared at him. "No, you really don't want to see that, Ron. Come on."
They were not the only ones in the audience to leave.
*****
London, Greenwich, August 26th, 1993
Sirius Black Innocent! Peter Pettigrew the Real Killer! Sentenced to Dementor's Kiss!
Hermione Granger shook her head as she read the front page of the Daily Prophet. "How quickly justice is done if you're a pureblood and rich," she muttered, more than a bit envious of Black's good fortune.
"That's the way things are in Wizarding Britain," Mr Fletcher responded. "The rich get off. Though I wager that it's the same among muggles."
She hadn't expected him to overhear her - he had been reading the sports section in his favourite armchair and had seemed to be focused on the Quidditch scores. Another lesson in not trusting appearances. And he wasn't exactly wrong. "Yes, but it's not usually that blatant," she admitted. "Although that might be because there are too many newspapers and other media in the UK to be bought off." She was getting a tad too cynical for her age, she thought. But the things the article had said about the Weasleys, the hints about how they had to be either stupid, or would have known about Pettigrew… Someone wanted Ron's family to suffer for this, and she was certain she knew who.
Mr Fletcher laughed. "Yeah. Though the Prophet is an equal opportunity newspaper - if you have the gold, they'll write what you want." He put his own newspaper down. "But isn't this good news?"
"It is." Hermione was already feeling guilty about her envy. "Mr Black offered to pay my debts."
"Did he, now?" Mr Fletcher tilted his head sideways. "That's shockingly generous of him."
Hermione frowned at the wizard's tone. "Harry asked him to, and Mr Black thinks the world of his godson." And, from what Harry had told her, he felt terribly guilty about the death of Harry's parents.
Mr Fletcher scoffed. "That's a hell of a sum to pay to get into your godson's good graces - even if he's the Boy-Who-Lived. On the other hand, the Black fortune is legendary. More than once I toyed with the notion of breaking into the house. But it was too dangerous." He stared at her. "The Blacks earned their reputation as one of the most dangerous families in Britain. They know more dark curses than any other family, and they know how to use them as well. Black's cousin Bellatrix was the Dark Lord's right hand. Deadliest witch in decades. And Black's got a reputation as well." He snorted. "I bet that also played a role in his exoneration - he wasn't present at his trial, but remained in hiding. So everyone knew that if they voted against him, he would know - and could get at them. Or their families. If you steal from the likes of him, you have to make dead certain that no one knows it was you, or they'll hunt you down and kill you - slowly."
She didn't think planning to rob Harry's godfather was a good idea - especially not after his generous offer. "He seems like a good man. He fought the Dark Lord, until he was unjustly imprisoned without trial."
"I've met him a few times in the past," he answered. Hermione filed that away with the other information her tutor had let slip about his past. "Brave and brash, the stereotypical Gryffindor - though that was before he went to Azkaban. That changes a man."
Hermione knew that as well. "He might change his opinion about me too, once he recovers from that ordeal."
Mr Fletcher laughed again. "You don't 'recover' from bleedin' Azkaban. I 'aven't yet met anyone who did."
She nodded.
"But it affects people differently. Most go mad in there, but some come out broken, and some come out… nastier. Crazier. Knew one cutpurse, got caught once too many times, and spent a year in Azkaban. 'E came back a killer. Didn't cut purses any more - 'e cut people. Ta pieces. Took an Auror down with 'im when they ran 'im down." He was staring at the wall now. "Never thought bleedin' Cuttin' Curses coulda done that."
She shivered. "Well, Dumbledore thinks Mr Black is safe to be around."
Mr Fletcher scoffed. After a moment, he took a deep breath, and continued, his accent gone again. "Even if Black pays your debt, even if he says it's a gift, you'll owe him. You'll owe him big." He grinned. "You want to get even with people - for good or ill."
She couldn't deny that. "I plan to get the gold back from the pureblood bigots anyway. With interest."
He laughed, but not in a patronising way. "And with that said, let's get started on today's lesson. Today, we'll study the Supersensory Charm. It's not third year material, but after seeing how you did in your tests, I don't doubt that you'll cast it easily."
Hermione smiled - she had done well in her mock-exams. Not as well as she would have had she stayed at Hogwarts, of course. But more than well enough. And she was determined to keep that up. She had to if she wanted to get her revenge.
*****
Hogwarts Express, September 1st, 1993
Harry Potter was looking out of the window, watching the landscape pass as the train wound its way up north, towards Scotland. Ron was reading the latest issue of Quidditch Weekly for the third time - today. "You know," the redhead suddenly spoke up, "usually, Mum asks me if I've packed all my things. Today, she asked if I remembered the advanced locking charm Bill taught us in Egypt."
Harry remembered the scene - he had been present, after all. And Mrs Weasley had been adamant that neither her children nor Harry would be framed as thieves. "Hermione wasn't that impressed by the charm, though."
"She's Hermione. The charm will keep Slytherins out, at least."
Harry could have pointed out that Hermione had been the one Malfoy and the other Slytherins had framed, but that wouldn't have served any purpose. He had to trust that the measures the Headmaster had said he had taken would prevent them from repeating their foul plot. "We'll still have to be on our guard."
"Can't trust the slimy snakes," Ron agreed.
Hermione would have told them that snakes weren't slimy, Harry thought. He sighed. At least they could meet her on Hogsmeade Weekends. Probably in the local bookshop, he thought with a grin, then frowned - she might not have the money to buy the books she wanted. Harry did, though. He couldn't pay her debts, but he could at least pay for her books.
His thoughts were interrupted when the door started to rattle - someone was trying to get in. He heard some incantations as he drew his wand, noting that Ron had done the same, and loudly asked: "Who's there?"
"Open up, Potter! Or are you scared?"
Malfoy. Harry snarled. He wanted to hex the git.
"Do it yourself. Or are you too stupid to open a door, Malfoy? Need your father to do it?" Ron yelled back.
"You… just you wait! Granger's gone, and you're next!"
"He doesn't even bother lying about it," Harry muttered as Malfoy tried once more to open the door, before moving away.
"Everyone knows it was him anyway. Everyone who counts, at least." Ron scoffed.
Harry nodded, but he knew that enough students believed that Hermione had really stolen from the Slytherins. Or wanted to believe that.
*****
Hogwarts, September 2nd, 1993
"Have you heard? Malfoy got detention! On the very first day of classes!" Ron yelled with a wide smile as Harry came down the stairs to the Gryffindor common room from their dorm .
"For the rest of the week!" Lavender cut in, nodding several times. "Parvati heard it from Padma, who heard it from Zabini." The witch lowered her voice until half the room was crowding around her. "He threatened that second year muggleborn, Colin Creevey, who went and told McGonagall. And an hour later, Snape's tearing strips off Malfoy's hide."
"Snape? Punishing Malfoy?" Harry shook his head. He couldn't believe that.
"Zabini said that Snape told the Slytherins that if he had to punish them because they went against the Headmaster's rules, then he'd make them suffer even more for the humiliation," Lavender went on.
"Zabini is a snake. He probably wants us to think that," Ron said, scowling.
"Even Snape fears Dumbledore." Neville shook his head, then cringed when he realised he had the room's attention. He continued, though: "And Dumbledore was very clear at the feast that anyone trying to get others in trouble would regret it."
"Malfoy was rather quiet at dinner," Harry pointed out. "And the Slytherins didn't jeer at us either."
"Well, good!" Ron huffed. "They should expel him. And the rest of his snakes."
"Not Zabini, though. He's dreamy!" Lavender said with a smile.
"He's a snake!" Ron yelled.
Harry slipped away while Ron and Lavender started to argue about Zabini. Lupin had asked Harry to meet him after dinner, and Harry didn't want to discuss how fanciable Zabini was, or how stupid it was to trust a Slytherin.
*****
"Ah, there you are, Harry. Come in." Lupin sounded even more tired than he had an hour ago, in their first Defence lesson of the year.
Harry had barely taken a step inside when he found himself gathered in a tight hug. "Harry! How do you like being back at Hogwarts?" Sirius Black was apparently visiting his old friend and in a chipper mood.
"Hi, Sirius," Harry said after he had been put back down on the ground. He glanced around. Lupin's quarters were adjacent to the Defence classroom, and he was familiar with them, having helped Lockhart with his fan mail last year. Lupin didn't seem to have made many changes - other than the massive cage in the corner. There would be a full moon tonight, he remembered. "It's weird to be here without Hermione. And the rumours are running wild about the Slytherins."
"Oh! Just like James, when Lily had been sick for a week!" Sirius said, nodding with a grin before blinking. "Or was that the Easter break?" His eyes lost their focus, and Harry didn't catch what he was mumbling under his breath.
Lupin cleared his throat, drawing Harry's attention. "The Headmaster has made clear that he will not tolerate another incident such as what happened to Miss Granger. Apart from having instructed the house-elves and rearranged the portraits to keep an eye on the dorms and the students between classes, he has also had a quiet word with each Head of House, or so I gather, to ensure they will keep their students under control."
Sirius snorted, apparently no longer lost in his thoughts. "The only teacher with whom he needed to speak was Snape. Bloody... bastard," he finished, and Harry caught Lupin glaring at his godfather.
"I heard Malfoy received detention." Harry tried to look as if he wasn't fishing for information.
"That is correct." Lupin looked grim. "He threatened students with expulsion, hinting that they would be exposed as criminals. The Headmaster wasn't amused."
"Bloody git! As rotten as his father," Sirius snarled. "Did I tell you that Lucius Malfoy is trying to prevent me from taking over my family's affairs? He has 'voiced concerns about my mental state'," he added with a sneer. "Call me crazy, will he? I'll show him crazy!"
"No, you won't," Lupin said firmly, despite his obvious physical discomfort. "That's exactly what he wants you to do. Dumbledore has said that the most Malfoy can do is delay your taking control of the Black fortune - as long as you don't play into his hands."
Sirius looked mulish, but nodded. Harry couldn't help feeling that Malfoy's depiction of Sirius's mental health wasn't completely wrong. "How long will that take?"
"A few months at most," Sirius said.
"Provided Sirius behaves," Lupin added.
"I've just been talking to a few of my soon to be honoured colleagues." Harry's godfather grinned widely and shrugged. "Told them my tale of woe from Azkaban, a few tales from the war… they were very understanding."
"Just be careful." Lupin sighed, as if he didn't think Sirius would manage.
"Anyway, I've not - just - visited dear Moony to see you and bore you with talk about politics," Sirius said, sitting down on the couch. "There's a more serious matter to discuss as well."
More serious than his godfather's gold and Malfoy's plots? Harry looked at him.
"We need to train you, Harry."
"Train me?"
"Yes. Dumbledore told us that Voldemort isn't dead, as most people think."
"I know. I met him last year." Harry pressed his lips together.
He remembered that grotesque figure stumbling out of the dungeons when Harry, Ron and Hermione had been caught out after curfew by Quirrell. It had come straight at them. "Inferi!" Quirrell had yelled and stepped into the thing's path, his wand flashing, but his curses had no effect on the attacker. Not before it had reached him and swatted him aside with inhuman force, smashing him against the stone wall. The sound of the teacher's head cracking open, the sight of the blood and brains on the wall… Harry shuddered at the memory. And that paled in comparison to the sound of two voices screaming themselves raw and the horrid smell as the creature was burned alive by his own touch...
"Harry?"
"Harry!"
He shook his head. "I'm alright. Just remembering."
The two wizards exchanged a glance. "Anyway," Sirius said, "He is out there, a shade, a ghost, or something else, we don't know. But we do know that he wants to kill you. Almost did, too. Of course, we'll do our best to protect you, along with Dumbledore, but this is Voldemort we're talking about - our best may not be enough. And you can't depend on Lily's protection either. So you need training in Defence."
"You won't be able to take on the Dark Lord in a duel, of course," Lupin took over, "but it might be enough, combined with everything else, to escape him."
Harry slowly nodded. He had mixed feelings about this. On one hand it was refreshing to see that they were open and honest with him about his chances. On the other hand, it was also rather depressing.
"Mad-Eye Moody wanted to train you, said you had talent, but you're not yet ready for Moody's insane idea of 'training', Sirius went on. "Might as well face the Dark Lord - that might be less dangerous. So Moony and I will train you, a few evenings a week. Shouldn't cut into your Quidditch training sessions. Can't let the snakes win the cup, now, can we?"
Harry's godfather apparently didn't know the current team captain, Harry thought - Wood was a maniac when it came to training. But this was more important. But… "Can Ron join us? He was there too, when Voldemort attacked me. And he's my best friend." Best mate, in any case.
"Of course!" Sirius said at once with a wide smile. "Just like James and me!"
Harry didn't know if that was a good thing.
*****
London, Diagon Alley, September 4th, 1993
"Mr Smith?" Hermione tilted her head to the side, as she had practised. "I think this 'at 'ere looks best." She held her wand with two fingers as she pointed it at a wide-brimmed hat on the rack in Madam Malkin's Robes for All Occasions - apparently, pointing with your bare hand was considered a gaffe, as was holding your wand as if you were ready to cast a spell. She brushed a strand of blonde hair behind her ear and smiled brightly at her tutor.
"Ah." Mr Fletcher looked at her, then turned back to the saleswitch with whom he had been chatting - flirting, Hermione thought, despite the age difference. "Pardon me a moment, dear. It looks like my charge has made her selection."
He walked over to her and bent a bit down to peer at the hat. "A classic, Miss Abel."
"Thank you, Mr Smith." Hermione dipped her head, slightly tilted still, and kept smiling as if she had just been praised for an excellent essay by Professor McGonagall.
"But it might not go too well with your robes." Mr Fletcher rubbed his chin. "Dear, do you have matching robes in stock? Elegant, but not too daring - nothing French, please."
The shop did have such robes in stock, of course, and Hermione found herself being fitted with new robes quickly enough. And they weren't at all daring, in her - admittedly uninformed - opinion.
"How did I do?" she asked half an hour later when they had left the shop and she noticed Mr Fletcher subtly casting a privacy spell.
"Passable. The accent was still a little overdone, but that can be explained by being a recent arrival. You need to add just a hint of French, nothing more," Mr Fletcher said. "Remember: You're a young witch born out of wedlock, and you're trying your best to fit in in your father's country."
She snorted, but kept her vapid smile in place. At least the wig she was wearing didn't itch and the fake glasses were charmed to be near weightless. "It seems as if I just have to act as if I don't care about anything but appearances."
"Appearances are crucial in our business," her tutor chided her. "You need to fit in perfectly, so no one will ever suspect you of having even the slightest nefarious thought."
She had known that, though acting like some of the girls in her dorm - her former dorm - grated. "And do I have to flirt with the saleswitches too?"
He laughed. "No. But you need to know how to treat the staff. Friendly enough so they don't despise you, but also with the right amount of aloofness to fit your role as a pureblood." He snorted. "You can't afford to underestimate the staff. Even house-elves, whose limited magic barely makes them more competent than muggle servants, can spoil a heist. They are too weak to stop you, or even slow you down, but they are sneaky, generally know their master's house better than the owners themselves, and all they need to do is to sound an alarm to ruin your day. They, like human servants, see much more than their masters suspect. And most of them gossip like schoolgirls." He grinned. "You'll find that out yourself, when you're learning how to act as a maid."
"I can't wait." She didn't care to hide her lack of enthusiasm.
He chuckled, presumably at her expression - she had remembered to pout, to stay in her role, instead of scowling. "Oh, it's not that bad. Only fools mistreat their servants, and such fools rarely have anything worth the effort - or if they do, posing as their servant isn't necessary."
She huffed. "Why do wizards even have servants? There's a spell for everything." She had seen Mrs Weasley do the work of half a dozen housewives in an afternoon using magic.
"Status, of course. Whether it's a house-elf, who generally are limited to the oldest families, or human servants, having others serve you is a status symbol. Some purebloods claim it allows them to focus their magic on important things instead of wasting it on trivial chores, but that's hogwash. It's not as if you have a limited amount of magic at your disposal."
"You get tired, though," Hermione retorted. At least she felt winded after a long practice session.
"Yes. But that's mental and physical exhaustion. And the harder you train, the less exhausted you'll be when it counts."
His grin widened a bit, and she knew there was a hard practice session in her near future.
*****
Hogwarts, September 6th, 1993
"Are you OK, mate?" Ron asked as he and Harry Potter made their way from the Gryffindor tower to Lupin's quarters.
"Do I look like I'm OK?" Harry shot back, a little more heated than he'd wanted.
"You look like you've been used as a practice target for a swarm of Bludgers." Ron was as blunt as ever.
"That's exactly what happened," Harry answered. "Wood wanted to 'stress-test' your brothers and released eight Bludgers."
"What? That's stupid! There's never more than two of them in play!"
"That's Wood." Harry sneered as he imitated his team captain's speech: "'If you can defend our Seeker against eight Bludgers, you'll have no problem at all when there are only two of them!' the bloke said. And, as we found out, they can't defend me against eight Bludgers. And I can't dodge that many either." He rubbed his shoulder, which, even after a visit to the infirmary, still hurt. At least the Bludgers had been training balls, not the real deal, or he'd be drinking Skele-Gro for days.
"Merlin's beard!" Ron shook his head. "I'm almost sorry I missed practice. But I needed to finish my Transfiguration homework. Percy insisted."
Harry groaned. He had yet to finish his.
*****
"Hello, Harry. Good evening, Mr Weasley."
"Ah. Hi, Harry. Ron."
Lupin's greeting was as cordial as ever, but Sirius took a deep breath before addressing them, Harry noticed, and didn't seem to be too happy to see him. His godfather hadn't stood to greet him, and he had a glass filled with amber liquid in his hand - drinking before dinner usually meant bad news when Uncle Vernon did it.
"What's wrong?" Harry asked. He didn't think refusing to to go along with Sirius's plan to use detentions as a cover for his training was the reason for the other wizard's mood; Harry couldn't afford to get a reputation as a troublemaker with Malfoy around.
"Wrong?" Sirius scoffed. "Nothing's wrong… but nothing's right either!" He downed his glass and then coughed fire. "You haven't heard then."
"No. We were in the Infirmary," Harry said. "Quidditch training accident!" he hastily added when Sirius's head whipped around and the man drew his wand while rising from his seat.
"Ah." Sirius sat down again. "Someone stole my revenge. Again!"
"I told you: Such talk will make you a suspect!" Lupin glared at Sirius, then sighed when the latter simply glared back. "Barty Crouch was found dead in his home."
Harry had never heard of Barty Crouch, and his face must have shown that, since Lupin elaborated. "He was the Head of the Department of International Magical Cooperation, but before that, he was the Head of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement."
"He was the bastard who threw me into Azkaban without a trial!" Sirius hissed. "And now he's dead, like Wormtail - and I didn't get to kill either of them!"
Harry really hoped that his godfather had a good alibi, because it seemed as if Sirius would be the main suspect.
*****