Chapter 19: Yuletide
After watching Trelawney sprout the Prophecy, Harry Potter pulled his head out of the pensieve and shook his head. He felt like jumping up and pacing. Or hitting something. Hermione ran her hand over his back in circles, and leaned into his side. It helped, a bit, and he took a deep breath.
"So that's how she sounds when she makes a prophecy." Hermione mused.
Dumbledore nodded at Harry's girlfriend. "Yes. I gather she is quite different when she teaches divination."
"She told us that divination gave vague results, hunches and hints, not predictions of the future." Hermione looked at the Headmaster, not quite stating her question outright. She had abandoned the course, Harry knew, the less than precise nature of the discipline not agreeing with her nature, but she remembered the lessons well, as one could expect her to.
"She made a prophecy, which is while somewhat similar, not part of divination. A prophecy is always true, although it may be somewhat ambiguous." Dumbledore explained.
"Somewhat. All it states is that Harry has the power to kill Voldemort." Hermione sounded calm, but Harry knew she was tense, agitated even, under that facade.
"And that he and Voldemort are destined to fight."
"Which was a given after Harry defeated him as a baby. No Dark Lord can let such a defeat stand." Hermione's arm around Harry's waist tightened, possessively. It felt good.
"Indeed, Miss Granger. As soon as Voldemort decided to attack the Potters, the prophecy had become true, in a certain way. If James and Lily had defeated Voldemort, they would have qualified as the power the Dark Lord knew not. If Harry had died it would have been impossible to prove or disprove that he could have defeated Voldemort. And now, with both alive, and Harry being famous as Voldemort's vanquisher, a new confrontation, direct or not, is all but inevitable." Dumbledore led them back to his office, past the still slightly disconcerting view of his magical quarters with a seemingly endless display of floating books and knick-knacks - or artifacts. "One might say he already started it, with his attacks during the tournament."
Harry had felt Hermione twitch and pull him even closer to her when Dumbledore had mentioned his possible death at the hands of Voldemort, just as he knew he had tensed when his parents' deaths had come up. He pulled the young witch into his lap when he sat down in front of the Headmaster's desk again. He still didn't know how he felt, how he should react to this revelation. To be fated to face the Dark Lord…
"Why would the prophecy still matter, if Voldemort will attack Harry anyway to avenge his first defeat?"
"He doesn't know the full prophecy. As long as he remains ignorant of the second part, he will wonder and worry about it." Dumbledore summoned a lemon drop from the bowl on his desk, then frowned at Fawkes, who seemed to act particularly innocent.
"So, it's merely bait, and a tool in psychological and information warfare then?" Hermione asked, in a way that told Harry she really wanted Dumbledore to say yes. He wanted the same - he could deal with Voldemort wanting to kill him. But to be the subject of a prophecy, a puppet of fate? That was something truly disturbing.
"I wish I could say yes, Miss Granger, but prophecies are more than that. Often not much more - but the Department of Mysteries collects them all, in the aptly named 'Hall of Prophecies', where they are waiting to be revealed to those they concern and address."
Harry closed his eyes. He was his own man, not a tool of whatever power was responsible for this prophecy. It was just a vague self-fulfilling proclamation anyway. He would decide his fate himself.
He opened his eyes. Hermione and Dumbledore hadn't said anything else, waiting for him to finally say something, react in any way, he realized. Neither seemed about to ask how he felt though, not here in any case. Hermione would of course, once it was just the two of them. "If he should not hear about the prophecy, wouldn't it be best to destroy the recordings of it?"
"I wish it was possible, Harry. The extracted memory of it is easily vanished - and retrieved from my mind, should we need it. But the recording in the Hall of Prophecies is protected. The hall was built with the goal to prevent people from suppressing a prophecy in an attempt to manipulate events." Dumbledore spread his hands. "Of course, by controlling who has access to the hall, one controls who knows of a prophecy. A fact certainly taken into due consideration when the Hall was built."
"Would it really be impossible to destroy the recording there?" Harry asked, his scepticism obvious to everyone.
"Not impossible, but the effort needed would be daunting. It would be more advisable to set a trap for anyone going after the recording there. Only those mentioned in the prophecy can access it, so Voldemort would have to visit the department in person."
Hermione opened her mouth, but Dumbledore held up one hand to stop her. "The Department of Mysteries is well protected against the means he can use to disguise himself. Even better than Gringotts, Miss Granger."
Harry's retainer wasn't about to concede the point so easily though. "He found ways around the security of the tournament too."
"Indeed, he did. But we've learned our lessons as well, and I will take more strident measures to improve the security of the Hall of Prophecies."
"Will you be working with the Unspeakables?" Hermione couldn't keep the fascination from her question. Harry knew she had been intrigued by the rumors of what exactly that Department did, and what its halls contained. It was no surprise, given her great love of knowledge.
"Of course." From the small smile playing over the Headmaster's face, he too knew of Hermione's desires.
The young witch merely nodded, not asking further. Harry could feel her squirming though, and tense up - the thought of so much knowledge hidden away in an attempt to control it, if one trusted the rumors, made her mad.
"Thank you for trusting us with this, Headmaster. I will need some time to come to terms with what you have revealed." Harry stated, gently pushing Hermione off his lap. The witch slid off at once, no doubt as eager as he was to discuss the topic in private.
"Of course, Harry. I am sorry to heap this burden on you, but I felt you deserved to know."
"You are right, Headmaster." Harry bowed slightly, then left the office with Hermione in tow.
*****
As soon as the two had reached 'their room', Hermione sealed the door and cast a series of privacy spells while Harry summoned two cans of cola. The young witch was more shaken by the revelation of the Prophecy than she had let on, or hoped she had let on. To think that there might be something like fate, destiny, or even worse, a timeline that could not be changed… the implications were horrifying. She grabbed her can as it floated over, and sat down next to Harry.
"How do you feel about this?" Harry asked right before she could ask him and opened his own can.
"I don't know," she answered, truthfully. "I can't really imagine that you can predict the future like this. Or rather, I do not want to imagine that."
Harry didn't look surprised by her words. "I know. It's one thing to fight the fucker, it's another to be fated to."
"Yes. If there is such a thing as destiny, or a timeline set in stone, what is with free will?" Why bother to struggle, to learn, if you're just following the rails laid down by time? Hermione didn't want to, but couldn't help ask herself that.
"What would the Doctor say?" Harry asked. He looked calm, but after four years with him, hermione could spot the signs betraying his emotions.
"The pattern can be changed." It was just a tv series, although a good one.
"That's not what the Greeks thought about prophecies." It figured that he remembered that part.
"Most of their prophecies were very vague. Like ours." She looked at him, daring him to claim this was not their, but his burden to bear. He didn't.
"I'd say 'neither can live while the other survives' is not that vague." Harry finished his can and crumpled it, then threw it up in the air. He had drawn his wand and vanished it before it reached the ground.
"It's rather vague, open to many interpretations. What does 'living' and 'surviving' mean in this context?" Hermione shrugged. "As the Headmaster said, it could already have been fulfilled. And he said that prophecies are often not much more than words given context by others."
"He didn't say that."
"It's what he meant." Hermione finished her own drink. She would pay for it later, with troubles falling asleep, but then - after today's events, she'd have trouble sleeping anyway. At least they'd have a patrol, which would tire her out a bit.
"I think he hinted at it being a bit more than just a self-fulfilling prophecy." Harry wasn't giving up. Just like herself, Hermione knew, he couldn't let go of a problem and accept the comforting semi-truth, or straight lie.
"Maybe a prophecy is just a form of divination, the result of some insight into the subjects of the prophecy. Trelawney subconsciously realized that Voldemort would attack any such threat, and therefore it would be coming true." She was reaching, Hermione knew, but she wanted an explanation that would not tear at her worldview of humans being self-determined.
"That means someone is able to see into our minds, no matter our occlumency."
"Someone, or something." Magic, Hermione thought, but didn't say it.
"I could live with Magic being able to read minds and souls, and forming prophecies from such insight." Harry reached out to her, and Hermione slid into his lap, leaning against him. His idea didn't feel right, or not completely correct, but maybe this time, she and Harry would settle for the comforting half-truth or hypothesis.
After a while spent simply being there for each other, Harry's watch started ringing softly. "It's time for the patrol," he stated with a wry smile.
Hermione sighed, but got up. While her robe straightened itself, she ran a cleaning spell over the room, watching as dust was gathered in a small ball, which she then vanished.
"Parvati asked in the latest prefect meeting if 'non-prefects' are allowed to come along on patrols." Harry said a bit too casually.
Hermione grinned. If the stupid witch thought she could spend hours alone with Harry, trying her charms-enhanced wiles on him, just because she was a prefect, then she had to think again. "I checked the rules. It's all covered."
"That's what I said, and what the head boy and girl agreed with." Harry started towards the door.
"I bet she sulked for the entire meeting." Hermione looked around a last time, to make sure her spell had not missed anything, then joined him.
"You know her. Better than I do." Harry let her open the door as her Patron.
"Yes." And Hermione's presence, walking a step behind the two, behind Parvati, on those patrols would make sure that would not change. Just like she liked it.
*****
Voldemort withdrew his mental probes and let the wizard he had been holding up with a levitation spell drop to the ground. A silencing spell cut off the man's whimpering. The Dark Lord had wrecked his captive's mind, as he had done with the minds of the others who had tried to ambush him, but he had gained the information he had sought. The man behind this attack was not Dumbledore, but Darrin Stanson, a low-life delusional enough to think he was the ruler of Knockturn Alley.
Voldemort looked at the drooling, trembling remains of his captives, all laid out on the floor in the cellar of his safehouse. If those were the best Stanson could muster, then he was not even an annoyance, but a mere nuisance. And yet such a slight had to be answered. No one could attack the Dark Lord and get away with it!
He drew his wand and ended the lives of his captives with five quick killing curses, then vanished the corpses before returning to his study. Dealing with Stanson would be another fine test for his hopefuls, and would cement the DMLE's impression that this was just a struggle between criminals. With a bit of planning it would appear that at least a few of Stanson's men escaped, which would make it possible to keep the gang war cover up a bit longer. And it would serve to weed out the kind of weak fools like the ones he had just disposed of from his own forces. Or at least identify them, so he'd not trust them with anything important.
If only he had more of the experienced mercenaries at his disposal. Like Lucrecia Browtuckle. But witches and wizards like her were cunning, and wouldn't join at the rates Greenbrand could offer, at least not the rates he could offer without tipping people off that he was more than a criminal with some ambitions. But once the war was about to begin in earnest… he'd have to look Browtuckle, and others like her, up. If they would not hire on with him, then he'd have to make sure they'd not join his enemies.
But that was a matter for another day. He had a more pressing, more important task to achieve. Macnair would have met Renquirt. The executioner had been tasked with finding found out all of the protections of the home of the Ministry expert on dementors.
Smiling cruelly, the Dark Lord settled down to wait for Macnair to contact him. He'd not tolerate failure.
*****
"My friend identified the wizard who has been hiring wands as Finnegan Greenbrand. He apparently tries to downplay his skills, but he was observed sealing a tavern off while casting silently. He's a powerful wizard."
Meeting Aberforth in Albus's own office was less aggravating than in the Hog's Head, the Headmaster thought. Less costly too. It was not less painful though. With some people, Albus would have loved if they stuck to the topic of a meeting. With his brother, the complete absence of any small talk hurt. "Thank you. Do you know who tried to kill him?"
"Those fools were hired by Darrin Stanson, the owner of the 'Dancing Mermaid'. A brothel."
Albus summoned a lemon drop for himself. There were fewer left than there should be. He knew Aberforth would not take anything from him, so Fawkes must had gotten around the spells on his bowl again. Sometimes the phoenix's ability to travel through all sorts of wards and spells was not as much of a boon as it seemed to. "Was Greenbrand moving against Stanson?"
Aberforth shook his head. "Not to my friends' knowledge. But he'll be paying him back for the attack. He's that kind of wizard."
"Like…"
"Yes."
He could test that, Albus knew. If it was not Tom, he'd be easy to handle. And if it was, he might still get surprised. On the other hand, the Dark Lord would be expecting another attack, and if Dumbledore was involved, Tom would know he was compromised. And if Dumbledore was not involved, it would just lead to a lot of good wizards and witches dying.
Aberforth interrupted his thoughts. "Will you set Stanson and Greenbrand up so they decimate each other's forces?" His casual tone hid the accusation Albus knew was levelled against him well.
The Headmaster didn't meet his brother's eyes. "I would suggest your friends should not get involved in that particular conflict." With a bit of help, the conflict could bleed both Voldemort's forces and the kind of thugs that made Knockturn Alley such a desolate place to live in.
His brother scoffed. "You never change, do you?"
"Stubbornness runs in the family." Albus responded with a mild voice.
The old wizard flinched. Barely, but he did. "Anything else my friends should not get involved with?"
"Dolores Umbridge."
"No chance of that. My friends do not rub shoulders with that kind of scum. They have standards."
Albus didn't know if Aberforth meant the Ministry, or the kind of bigots Umbridge was now seeking out. He didn't ask, just nodded as his brother stood up. "Thank you."
"I didn't do it for you. I did it for those who will suffer if another of your schemes goes wrong."
With that parting shot, the old innkeeper threw the floo powder into the fire, mumbled "Hog's Head", and left.
Albus stared at the fire until it returned to its natural color. He felt more alone than ever, despite Fawkes rubbing his head against the Headmaster's cheek and trilling softly in his ear.
*****
Nymphadora Black-Tonks, wearing the face and body of a courtesan who was currently enjoying a very spontaneous vacation in the Mediterranean with one of her gentlemen, passed through the lounge of 'The Nightingale'. The club near Diagon Alley catered to the rich and prided itself on its discretion. Even a pariah like Dolores Umbridge would not be refused entry there - and according to rumors, she had been seen there. Rumors, of course, that came from a source very unwilling to risk their membership in said club to confirm them, so it had fallen to the young metamorphmagus to investigate.
Nymphadora had expected those kind of assignments when she applied as an auror. The DMLE was not in the habit to waste someone with her talents on assignments anyone with a wand could do. But the political aspects of her task - she had been made to understand that she was to find a reason to arrest the witch so the magical beings her proposal had riled up could be placated - didn't sit well with her. Even though Umbridge really deserved it, for what she had caused.
Not that Nymphadora thought Umbridge would actually be found in the club. The former Ministry employee was a shrewd and connected witch, and despite some rumors, wouldn't have been reduced to join the courtesans working in the club. Nor would she, as Nymphadora's superior had speculated, be trying to use that as a cover to approach others she had leverage over. There were better ways to conduct blackmail. Nymphadora had said so to her superior, but she had been told that the minister had taken a personal interest in 'the case', and so any lead had to be looked into, no matter how implausible. At least no one would blame her when it didn't pan out.
Nymphadora smiled at an older wizard who invited her at his table, stated that she was waiting for a gentleman, and took a seat at the bar. In a few hours an apology from the client would arrive, with the appropriate compensation. The setup meant she would be able to spend the evening in the lounge without getting bothered too much or coming under suspicion. It might even be interesting.
The metamorphmagus was quite surprised when she did spot Umbridge enter the lounge a few hours later and head to the bar. Even more so when the disgraced but at least physically attractive witch took care to greet Trevor Fickleton on the way. The esteemed member of the Wizengamot returned her greeting, and Nymphadora wondered if he was just being polite, or under some form of pressure - according to rumors, Umbridge knew a lot of secrets others did not want to be revealed. Of course, she could just be getting back at a former ally, and trying to taint his reputation by her presence.
Privacy charms prevented her from listening in to the brief conversation. Not even her enchanted earring could penetrate them. But at least she had gotten another lead.
*****
Voldemort almost felt nostalgic, standing in the bookstore in the poorer part of Diagon Alley. He had found a number of truly rare tomes here, back when he had just graduated Hogwarts and had started his rise to power. The store lacked the selection of illegal works the stores in Knockturn Alley offered under the table, but a discerning wizard could still find exotic tomes here that the Ministry would ban in a heartbeat, were it aware of them. Like this translation of an Ottoman book on the Nizari Ismailis, the mysterious magical assassins, which he was skimming through through while waiting for Renquirt to arrive. Just another customer browsing around.
Sadly, Macnair had reported that the protections Renquirt had at his home were just a bit too good. Not good enough to stop Voldemort, of course. But good enough to make it very plausible that such an intrusion would be discovered. Fortunately, as the Dark Lord had found out, Renquirt was a connoisseur of rare books and knew this gem of a store. And he knew that walking in with an auror security detail would not be conductive to be allowed back inside, much less get informed of newly arrived books of interest - the owner was very opinionated about censorship. Not opinionated enough to move to Knockturn Alley though.
That wouldn't mean the Ministry expert would be without guards. Just that they would not follow too closely, or too openly. Which wouldn't prevent what Voldemort had planned.
The door chimed, and there was Renquirt. The older wizard went straight to the sales clerk. Voldemort was close enough to listen in without any magical help.
"Hello. I was informed that you have acquired an original edition of Des Moines' 'Of Spirits and Demons'". Renquirt was displaying the lack of social graces so common to the more inverted Ravenclaws. Voldemort almost shook his head. Some things seemed to never change.
The clerk winced - with good cause. The Dark Lord had purchased that book earlier. Re-purchased, actually. After all, he had arranged for its sale to the shop through a straw man in the first place. It wasn't as if Lucius had ever read the book. A minor charm had then made sure that contrary to his instructions, the clerk would not hold the book for Renquirt.
"I am sorry, sir, but the tome was already sold." The clerk cringed even. Weak. Probably a mudblood. Easy to manipulate - it had not taken much to find out about Renquirt's arrangement with the shop either.
"What?" Renquirt gaped at the wizard. "I had ordered to hold that tome for me!"
"Oh." Voldemort cut in. "I'm terribly sorry. I've purchased it, but I wasn't told it was reserved." He smiled, as if he was embarrassed about the whole mix-up. Renquirt turned towards him and Voldemort bowed before the expert could say anything. "Martin Steinmaur, at your service."
"Ebenezer Renquirt. I had ordered that book, but this imbecile forget to put it aside!" The older wizard glared at the mudblood. "Would you part with it? I have been looking for that book for years."
Voldemort smiled - he hadn't known that, just that the book was on the long list the wizard had deposited at the shop. That would facilitate his plan. "Well, I would, but I am working on a treatise on such demons - we lack them on the continent, you know - and I believe this book might help me gain a perspective on them that is not yet covered by the standard literature available here." It wouldn't - he had perused it quite diligently, and had not found anything that he hadn't known before. With a bit of fake hesitation, he went on. "But I could loan it to you, if you only need to read it once."
The way Renquirt's eyes lit up, he understood that this was an offer to let him break the spells on the tome that prevented its duplication. It was quite illegal, of course - if everyone did that, no publisher could stay in business and there would be no more new books released. Or so the publishers claimed, and they had convinced the Wizengamot of that. And yet, at least in Voldemort's time, House Ravenclaw had held regular lessons in how to break such charms - and restore them afterwards, to cover up. The clerk understood the offer as well, but he was hardly in a place to protest, not after his apparent blunder.
"What a coincidence. I am the foremost experts of dementors. If you would like, I could check your work." Renquirt smiled, although rather patronizingly.
Voldemort eagerly nodded. He was showing his real, new face, which was a bit of a risk, but he didn't plan on doing anything illegal, and a potion had provided him with a long beard. Together with a haircolor charm and thick glasses, it should provide enough of a disguise. No one would expect the Dark Lord to be a wizard in his 20s anyway. His voice sounded eager and overjoyed as he answered. "You are? I mean, that is a very generous offer!"
A few minutes later Voldemort left the shop with an invitation to visit Renquirt. The name he had used belonged to a graduate of Durmstrang, who had turned mercenary recently enough so it wouldn't be in his records, and so would pass the check the security detail of his future host would run. And the slightly illegal offer he had made would ensure that no auror would witness their discussion. Afterwards he would easily disappear, to hide any trace.
The Dark Lord smiled, wandering through the streets as if he truly was a visitor from the continent taking in the sights. Like so many other academics Voldemort had known, Renquirt had looked quite eager to show off his superior knowledge to a fellow scholar. Who knew - maybe he wouldn't even have to imperius the man to find out what he needed to free his followers.
*****
Sirius Black wished that this Umbridge was visiting his house, just so he could strangle her with her own entrails and claim self-defense. That stupid, thrice-cursed witch and her damned bigotry had almost driven his lovely guests back to France. He shivered, remembering the morning - or rather, noon - of the day the Daily Prophet had broken the story behind her proposed reclassification law.
Valérie, who had become less shy with each day as his guest, had stolen the newspaper before he had had the chance to read it, and had been browsing the society pages when she suddenly had started to curse in French, in a voice that went from melodious to furious to screeching. Then she had sprouted feathers and transformed. Sirius had been so captivated by the magnificent sight of a veela in her avian form - a truly magical moment - he had not realized the danger he was in, until the veela had dropped the newspaper and fireballs had appeared in her hands - talons. He had understood, in that moment, why James had so often been staring, enthralled, instead of running when a prank of theirs had enraged Lily and she had come for them. Valérie's eyes had been literally blazing.
It had only been when Chantal, Eugénie and Laure had read the article as well, and had started to grow angry, that Sirius had realized just how dangerous four transformed, enraged veela could be. The newspaper had turned to ashes in Chantal's hands in seconds. Then the chair Laure had been gripping had started to burn, and smoke had started to rise from where Eugénie's new talons had dug into the table. For a moment, Sirius had thought of casting a flame-freezing charm, or a dozen, but then he had realized that discretion was the better part of valor in this situation, and had conducted a hasty retreat, just ahead of Kreacher.
The sight of Valérie's thin robe, aflame, right before the house elf had slammed the door close, had stayed with him though, and signed eyebrows and robes had been a small price to pay for such an experience. At least in his opinion. Remus, ever the too-serious, had called him crazy.
Well, that was Remus, the worrywart. As far as Sirius as concerned, the whole event had turned out well enough. The four girls had been apologetic about the loss of control, the house had gotten a new kitchen, the fire prevention charms had gotten an upgrade, and Kreacher would not even dream anymore of being rude to his guests. It still had taken quite an effort to keep his guests from returning to France at once. It had been understandable, after such an insult to their race.
Sirius sighed. They would eventually return to France, to their family, their lives. He was sure they'd remember their visit fondly, as he'd remember them. But they'd not stay. Not even Valérie.
Valérie. The shy one, or so he had thought. Until that morning. Noon. Whatever. All that passion, all that magnificent fire floating around her, consuming her robe, outlining her curves… a dangerous, beautiful, passionate woman. And yet he'd miss the talks with her the most, once she'd return to France.
He was tempted to follow her, them, when they went back, but he was needed here. Harry needed him, more than ever, with the prophecy hanging over his head. Sirius had failed his godson once, he'd not fail him again.
Sighing, he tried to focus on the latest report from Gringotts, if only to withstand the temptation to turn into Padfoot for the day.
*****
"Wards have been reinforced. Someone's moving around inside, too - even though it's late."
"The target's home then." Keith Yennington nodded to Blasius Meister. "You and Hannah start on the wards on the house. The rest of us will be ready for reinforcements. Brendan and Hortensius will cover the backyard, me and Wulfred will be covering Blasius and Hannah as well as the front side's most likely apparition point. If anyone tries to flee, stun them, Kill them before they can escape however. If anyone apparates, hit them before they know you're there."
"The mudbloods won't know what hit them." Blasius stated, grinning widely. The rest of the group chuckled.
"Don't underestimate them. They'll have support from their patron too." Keith cautioned his group. He didn't want to lose another wand to overconfidence and arrogance.
"Their patron should have taught them not to put on airs." Wulfred muttered.
Keith silently agreed with the thug. The house they were assaulting was a spacious one, far nicer than the house Keith had grown up in - and Keith was a pureblood. He didn't share the rest of the group's hatred of mudbloods, but they should know their place, and not try to lord it over purebloods. "Go now!"
His group split up, as ordered. No backtalk - a few muttered grumblings didn't count. They still had a way to go, but they were closer to what Keith would consider acceptable wands for hire. He'd not face Ottoman raiders with them at his side, or French border patrols, but mudblood rabble and their negligent masters they could handle.
"Apparition and floo are blocked. Disillusion as well. Working on the wards now." Hannah reported after several minutes.
Keith could spot an owl leaving the house. He didn't care. By the time it reached the recipient of the message, things would be over. He ran a hand over his enspelled pouch, where he carried the stolen loot he was to place in the house once they were done. It was possible that their employer could have decided it was easier to frame competitors, but Keith had stopped believing this was about thieves a while ago. He didn't care - the gold was good, and that was all that counted for him.
A few minutes later the wards were down. "Smash the windows and set fire to the house. We'll smoke them out." That set his group complaining again - there would be less loot - but he shut them up with a glare. They had learned not to cross him.
Soon the living room he could see from his spot was burning brightly. Keith would have sealed the house if the goal was just to kill the targets, but their employer wanted prisoners. And Keith wanted to get his group some more practise in actual combat. Merlin knew they still needed it.
So he crouched down and had his wand ready. If the targets were smart, they'd fake a sally to the front, then flee to out the back. If they were ruthless or desperate, one or more would be sacrificed to let the others escape.
The front door was pushed open, and a figure appeared, casting wildly while running towards the wardline - and towards them. A sacrifice it was then. In the flickering light of the burning house, Keith saw it was a witch. It didn't matter. "Keep the back covered!" he shouted, then sent a bludgeoning curse at the witch. Her shield protected her, but she staggered. Wulfred hit her with a piercer, which her shield stopped as well. She was good - for a mudblood. Maybe even a hired guard. Keith turned the floor around her into a swamp - transfiguration had been his best subject - and saw her slip and fall.
Slowed down and almost stuck in the mud, she couldn't dodge and her shield didn't last too long against the barrage of curses from Keith and Wulfred. Neither did her robe's protections. Wulfred disarmed her, cackling loudly. Before he could reach her though Keith had stunned her and transfigured her into a small figurine.
"Hey!" The other wizard turned towards him, snarling. He didn't raise his wand though. He knew better than that. Everyone knew after Keith had dealt with Warrington.
Keith glared at the wizard. "This is not the time or place for that. Spend some of the gold for this in the brothels." He didn't know why his employer wanted the witch - and others - kidnapped, but he wasn't about to let some rapist jeopardize the mission.
For a second Wulfred held his gaze and Keith got ready to curse the thug, then the other looked away. "Alright boss."
Keith nodded, but didn't turn his back on the man while he stepped up to the burning house. He pulled the loot out, still in a bag, and threw it inside. The aurors would think the witch had tried to flee with it, then had been forced to drop the bag in her attempt to escape.
A small explosion shook the house slightly and the heat increased. The mudblood must have had a potions lab set up somewhere inside. Keith fell back. "We're done here! Meet up at the rally spot!" he shouted, with the aid of a Sonorous.
Hopefully everyone would remember where that was, this time.
*****
"What a mess." Kenneth Fenbrick sighed, looking the still smoldering remains of the house over.
"Four different signatures on the fire hexes. Three on the collateral damage in the garden - one of them the signature of the missing owner of the house." Bertha Limmington stated.
"They're getting more organized then. No ganging up on the obvious target." Kenneth didn't like it when criminals grew smart. It made his job more difficult - and more dangerous. "What about the rest of the family?"
"According to her Patron, the children had been living in his mansion for the last week. Her husband is in St. Mungo's - spell mishap." Bertha said while examining the floor of the house.
"Lucky guy." Kenneth ignored the glare Bertha sent to him and looked at the hole in the floor. "Lab explosion?"
"Yes." His partner was looking at a heap of molten and burned things on the ground.
"Do you think they were brewing illegal potions?" Kenneth knew better than to head into the remains of a lab. No one knew what kind of poison might have been left - or created - there.
"Impossible to say without a more thorough investigation." Bertha picked up a golden cup that looked undamaged.
"What did you find?"
"A golden cup. Old and well-crafted." Bertha levitated it in front of her to check it from all angles.
"Family heirloom?" Kenneth joked - it was far too old for a muggleborn family. It was more likely a gift from the family's patron.
"The family coat on it doesn't match the victim's patron." Bertha answered, using her wand to brush more soot away from the cup.
"Stolen loot?"
"I am rather sure it was stolen."
"The question is, by whom?" Kenneth smiled at the glare his partner shot him. Both of them knew that this was not the work of thieves settling accounts with competitors. If there truly had been a hitherto unknown underground network of muggleborn thieves leading law-abiding lives as a cover, as the press and some Wizengamot members claimed, then the aurors would have heard of it. If not before the murders started, then soon afterwards, when the surviving members would have come to them for protection. No, those muggleborns getting murdered were not thieves - but why would anyone want them to appear as thieves?
Kenneth didn't like the possible answers he could think of.
*****
Remus Lupin wasn't in a good mood, despite the upcoming Yuletide. Or maybe because of it. Krum was visiting again thanks to the lack of Quidditch matches during the holidays. Shouldn't professional players train even during a break?
Remus stared at the essay he was supposed to be grading and dropped it on his desk. To be jealous of a kid was embarrassing. Even if said kid was an international Quidditch star and had been the Champion of Durmstrang for the latest Triwizard Tournament. And was not suffering from a curse that made a sizeable part of Britain consider them a beast. If he ever got his hands on Umbridge, he'd show her just how dangerous a werewolf could be…
The teacher stood up and began pacing in his office. The full moon was approaching. A few more days, and he'd feel his bones ache, his appetite change, and his mood grow more aggressive. And then would come the night of the full moon. The time when he would become a beast. Remus shuddered, then clenched his teeth together. He wouldn't be a mindless beast. Not as he had been before the Wolfsbane potion had been invented. But his mind would still change. Far more emotional, far more prone to act impulsively, instinctively. Too much like a beast.
He had never talked with anyone about it. He had come close to with Sirius, one night, with both of them deep into their cups. But he had controlled himself. It was too private. Sirius was an animagus and an impulsive wizard. He wouldn't understand how terrible it was for Remus to lose control, to change so much, each moon.
When he changed, things got too simple, too easy. He had no friends anymore, just family or acquaintances. People he wanted to defend, like Nymphadora, and people he didn't care about. And people he wanted to rip to shreds. No matter how wrong such an action would be. Like Umbridge. Or Krum.
It was quite fortunate indeed that the full moon didn't fall into Yuletide this year. Remus had no illusions about his chances with Nymphadora. He was old enough to be her father - well, almost old enough; he had not been as much of an 'early bloomer' as Sirius had been -, he suffered from the worst curse possible and his salary was not a tenth of what Krum was earning. Remus knew all that. He could even accept it, given time. But if he came to blows with the Bulgarian interloper, and it would be blows, not hexes…
He wasn't sure what he'd fear more: Nymphadora despising him as a beast, or pitying him as a delusional old fool.
And of course there was the fact that being more emotional, more prone to act instinctively, was not a good state to be in when in the company of veela who seemed bent on enjoying their own version of the Year of Discovery while they were in Britain. Nymphadora thinking he was a dirty old man, chasing girls half his age, and only pursuing her so he could sleep with a metamorphmagus, was another thing he didn't want to happen.
He summoned his bottle of fire whiskey, a gift from Sirius for the term. It was almost empty now, just as his friend had predicted. Maybe he'd manage to straighten himself out if Krum married Nymphadora. Thinking about that made him draw himself a double shot.
Although if Krum was really planning to marry into the family, then it was high time that he was introduced to the family tradition of pranking. Remus would have to drag Sirius away from his veela girlfriends for a bit, to properly prepare a fitting prank, of course. It was certainly better than the mutt again trying to set him up with his old girlfriends. Remus hadn't much, but he had his pride.
*****
Harry watched the snow-covered Scottish countryside through the window of the Hogwarts Express. Yuletide! Harry had been looking forward to the occasion for quite some time now. It would be his third Yuletide at No 12, Grimmauld Place, and with a larger crowd than the two times before. Sirius, Hermione, Remus, the Black-Tonks family, Viktor and the four veela who seemed to have moved in permanently with Sirius. Harry wasn't sure what to think of that, actually. He had met the girls in France, but he didn't know them. Or remember them well. There had been too many pretty blonde witches around then. And now they had spent more time in his home than Harry himself. Sometimes he wished Hogwarts was not a boarding school. He'd be able to spend more time with Sirius then.
"Thinking about your four godmothers?" Hermione asked, with a slightly teasing smile.
On the other hand, he'd be spending far less time with Hermione if Hogwarts was a day school. He shook his head. "No." When he noticed her doubting expression, he added: "Well, partially. It's just… they have spent more time with Sirius than I, than we have."
"And what a time it must have been!" Ron cut in, grinning. Harry glared at him - while he wished Sirius all the happiness his godfather deserved, he didn't need to think of how exactly that was currently being achieved.
Hermione huffed at their friend. "If Padma were here, you'd pay for that remark."
"But she isn't. And what she doesn't know won't hurt me." Ron answered, unrepentant. "Four veela, Fleur's cousins!" he shook his head in apparent admiration.
"Speaking of, how is Fleur?" Harry asked. Last he had heard, the proud veela had been incensed - literally - about the proposed reclassification law that would have made her a beast in Britain. even though it was quickly buried in the Wizengamot.
Ron frowned. "She's still in France, with Bill. They'll visit over Yuletide, but mum's not happy about it at all. We'll have some turbulent holidays." He shivered, and Harry, knowing the temper of Molly Weasley, and of Fleur, nodded in understanding.
"It is only reasonable for a couple to live in a country where neither partner is considered a second-class citizen." Hermione stated primly, daring Ron to disagree. He didn't. Harry's friend knew it was a very touchy topic for the witch - there was no magical country where she wasn't considered a third- or second-class citizen.
The next minutes passed in silence. Ron was reading a Quidditch magazine, Hermione was studying a book about spellcrafting and Harry was staring out of the window again, thinking about his family. He couldn't stop thinking about it though.
"Do you really think he'll marry one of them?" Harry knew that if Sirius was to marry, things would change in his home. He wasn't sure how.
"He cannot marry all of them, not in Britain." Ron answered. "But wouldn't marrying one of them make the other three jealous?"
"If he's actually in a relationship with all four. That could be just a rumor." Hermione added. Harry held her hand, running his thumb over her skin. She hated how everyone expected her to be the other witch, and that situation was a bit too close to her own. Ron was in rare form today, pushing Hermione's buttons without trying.
"You'll find out soon enough!" Ron smiled widely, and winked at them.
Harry was about to change the topic when Hermione shifted around, hooking a leg over his. "Say, Ron, did you find out why Parkinson has been watching you so intently?" She sounded a bit too smug in Harry's opinion.
"She's watching me so Malfoy can focus on you two. I am on to her though." Ron answered confidently.
"Are you sure? I've heard rumors that she's interested in you, if you know what I mean." Hermione's own grin widened.
"What? You're joking, right?" Ron stared at her as if she had told him he had to return to Hogwarts because the rest of the Weasley family was visiting Fleur in France.
"It's probably just a rumor. You'll find out in Sixth Year, I guess." Hermione smirked.
"Gah!" Ron shuddered at the thought, and both Harry and Hermione laughed until Padma returned. None of them wanted to explain what they were laughing about to Ron's girlfriend. It was just a rumor, after all, and a baseless one too.
*****
The rumors had been true. Hermione was convinced of that soon after her arrival at Grimmauld Place. Chantal, Eugénie, Laure and especially Valérie were just too comfortable with Sirius for this relationship not to be quite … she really didn't want to call it 'serious', but it fit so well. Though the way the four veela, wearing outfits completely inappropriate for the season, were draped around and over the wizard in the salon while he was talking to Harry about the last term at Hogwarts, that had to be staged. Sirius was obviously trying to embarrass Harry and herself.
It was working too. Hermione prided herself on being open-minded and tolerant, but this blatant display… she had to remind herself that wizards didn't share the same morals as her muggle family. That there was no gender discrimination in Britain or France. And there was nothing wrong with consenting adults doing whatever they wanted in private. Really. Harry and herself would just ignore the display, and ruin Sirius's prank.
They would, if Harry was cooperating. He wasn't though. Her boyfriend was distracted, staring - and not just at his godfather. Hermione felt like scowling, but kept smiling. She was better than this. She knew he loved her. And yet… the young witch slid closer to Harry, then slid into his lap and started to distract him herself. She was not a veela, but she was his girlfriend.
The talk about school soon broke down completely, replaced by giggling and French whispers, and babbling from Harry. And Sirius laughing loudly. No one got hexed though. Or burned.
*****
"Now, you two will be alone for the evening. Don't do anything I wouldn't do!" Sirius winked at Harry and Hermione while he was standing next to the floo in the house, clad in resplendent dress robes in black and gold. He and his guests would be attending the Longbottom's Yule Ball. Viktor had already gone through the floo, to get his date at the Black-Tonks' home. The four veela were still getting ready upstairs. According to Hermione, who had been shopping with them, their robes were just shy of scandalous - even for witches. Harry wasn't sure if he should regret the fact that he and Hermione wouldn't attend the ball, or be glad. His girlfriend would have likely tried to match the French witches' robes if her attitude so far was any indication, and he was not entirely sure how he felt about that. He liked her being more daring, more sure of herself, but to dress so provocatively… Not that she'd admit she was doing anything of the sort, of course.
But on the whole, he was looking forward to the evening, just the two of them. Remus was off at Hogwarts for something, the older wizard hadn't been too clear about it. Just the two of them then, without distractions. Or interruptions. Unless of course Kreacher tried again to provide detailed suggestions to "discipline Master's Godson's Slave". That elf really had it out for Hermione.
Their guests descended the stairs, and Harry had to fight not to stare or he would be looking forward to a slightly less enjoyable evening than expected. It was hard though - the four were wearing matching robes in black and gold, slit multiple times from ankles to hip, and hip to neck, tight enough to draw attention to their curves, loose enough to offer teasing glimpses. If Hermione wore such a robe… he glanced at his girlfriend, his imagination hard at work.
They smiled, waved at him, hugged Sirius and before Harry had realized it the five adults had left through the floo, leaving him alone with Hermione.
"That explains why minors are not invited." Hermione stated after about a minute.
"Too much pressure on them before they have gone through the Year of Discovery?" Harry asked, citing the official reason.
"No, too many scandals with underage witches and wizards wearing such robes. At least that's how this 'tradition' started, in my opinion" She glanced at him, then added. "Could you imagine me wearing that?"
Harry nodded enthusiastically before he caught himself. "Yes! Err..."
"Well, since you can, there's no need for me to actually wear it, is it?" Hermione smirked at him.
"You wouldn't wear it anyway." Harry wasn't pouting, at least he didn't think he was.
"Maybe I would. But not now." Hermione stuck her tongue out at him.
"You don't have such robes."
"I could transfigure my clothes. Easily." Hermione ran her wand down her robes - which seemed to fit her just a bit more snugly after that.
"And duplicate all the charms on them?"
"Yes." His girlfriend stated full of conviction.
"That I'd like to see."
"I know."
"I didn't mean it like that."
"Sure you did!"
They were still going at it when they reached the dining room, where Kreacher had prepared a five course meal. Harry was certain it would be a very enjoyable evening.
*****
Azkaban looked as foreboding and hostile as its reputation indicated. Even more so at night. A dark island in the middle of a black sea. The only thing that stood out against the shadows and darkness were the white tops of the waves breaking against the rocky, steep shores. Voldemort thought he could spot a flickering light on top of the walls, or inside one of the towers, but it could have been a simple trick of the moonlight too. It didn't matter - those he had come to see didn't need or use lights.
He floated closer to the cliff. The wards of the island would have broken the charms on a broom by now, but he was flying with pure magic, and the wards were not built to counter that. They were not built for the greatest Dark Lord Britain had ever seen! As he came closer he could feel his imprisoned followers suffering behind the cold, damp walls. Waiting for him, trusting him, even after more than a decade. To know, to feel such loyalty…
As he rose to the top of the cliffside he felt colder. The warming charms on his robes would be able to deal with any weather, no matter how extreme, but this was an unnatural cold, seeping into his bones no matter what he wore and what spells he cast. The aura of the dementors, the soul-sucking guardians of Azkaban. The fiends had noticed him and were converging on his position. Lesser wizards would have fled now, or broken down. Voldemort was made of much sterner stuff, but even the Dark Lord was not immune to a dementor's power, much less a horde of them. Not without the talisman he had taken from Renquirt, at least. The talisman the scholar hadn't been supposed to have.
When he saw the first shadow move towards him, tattered robes floating slowly through the air, he pulled it out. A soft light spread from it, and the cold disappeared at once. The fiends stopped their advance, circling around him, their inhuman faces hidden by large cowls and hoods. The talisman both attracted them, and held them at bay - that was what it had been made for. They were eerily silent - the only sound he could hear were the wind, and the waves clashing against the rocks below. He was wearing a dark cloak with a hood himself. From afar, he'd look like a dementor.
"I have come to make a deal with the Ravenous Cold." Voldemort stated. According to Renquirt that was what the dementors called themselves. Or what the scholar believed came close to what they thought of themselves. It didn't matter. What mattered was that he had spoken the correct words of parley. The demons surrounding him drew back, all but one. That one floated closer, facing him.
The dementors did not speak, but they understood speech. That was common knowledge. And it was wrong, as Renquirt had explained when prompted under the Imperius. They understood concepts, images, memories, emotions - but not words. Quite a few of the wizards who had first attempted to deal with them had lost their souls because they had not understood that. Hadn't understood the need to think and feel as precisely as one would word a contract. Or hadn't have the mental discipline to achieve what they knew had to be done.
Voldemort understood, and could do it. And more importantly, he knew what the dementors had wanted, when they had made the deal that resulted in them becoming the guards of Azkaban. What they had wanted, but had not been granted by the Ministry.
His offer was simple - he concentrated and imagined one dementor, then two, then three. Breeding. The demon facing him understood, and grew agitated. Voldemort suddenly felt hunger, and he understood. He thought of food. Of eating. Added it to his offer. Breeding and Feeding. He felt more agitation, then felt constrained. Imprisoned. He shook his head. Only a fool would grant them the freedom to move and feed where they wanted. The Ministry had limited them in their deal to only be able to feed on command. Voldemort would do the same. But he would allow them to breed. The Ministry would never surpass that offer. Not before he had taken over, in any case. And afterwards… deals would be renegotiated.
Breeding and Feeding, Voldemort thought, and the demon understood, and accepted. The Dark Lord felt a tingle run through him when the deal was closed and he had gained a small army. He didn't bother speaking, just willed them to feed on everyone outside a cell on the island, and they left to do his bidding.
While the human guards lost their souls when the inhuman guards turned on them, Voldemort floated down to the ground and started walking towards the prison. When he passed the gates, he pulled out a small bag containing small figurines. One for each of his followers imprisoned here, and a vial of polyjuice for each as well. And the figurine that was the transfigured body of Martin Steinmaur. He had come prepared.
Chapter 20: Sacrifices