Chapter 27: Spies
"And that's all for today. Good work, everyone. We'll continue next week."
Hermione Granger had to force herself to keep a polite smile on her face as Harry Potter concluded the first lesson of the Hogwarts Self-defense Club. Too many accursed pureblood witches were making eyes at her boyfriend. None of them had changed hair colors, or shown any other signs of her curse, at least. Though knowing that the girls trying to poach Harry didn't want to harm him was a small consolation for the muggleborn witch in love with her Patron. At least Susan Bones had stopped trying to be overly friendly, but that could be just the result of the much closer scrutiny she was now under, with her aunt being one of the Ministry's most exposed leaders in the war against Voldemort. It was a miracle the Hufflepuff witch didn't have permanent auror guards assigned to her, and according to rumors, Dumbledore had to personally vouch for the girl's safety to avoid that.
"Oh, Mister Potter! That was very interesting! You're a great teacher!" Daphne Greengrass beamed at Harry, a wide smile on her too pretty face. Hadn't the airhead understood that the training session was over, and that she should move out (and on)?
"Indeed. You have improved even more since your already very impressive performance in the Triwizard Tournament." Davis chimed in. Shouldn't the brunette steer the blonde into the right direction, namely away, instead of joining her?
Harry smiled politely at the Slytherin witches. "Thank you, Miss Greengrass, Miss Davis. But I am merely giving you all a few hints; I am far from a qualified instructor."
Hermione busied herself with cleaning up the room, vanishing debris and repairing some of the destroyed furniture and flooring, while she kept an eye and ear on the conversation. She noticed Parkinson was lingering at the door and glaring at the back of the two other Slytherins. For a moment, Hermione was taken aback. Sharing the opinion of the girl who had been too dumb to dump Malfoy for years on anything wasn't a comfortable position to be in. Then again, Parkinson liked muggle movies too, and there was nothing wrong with that. Ron was at the door, not letting that witch out of his sight. The rest of their friends were discussing the session at the back, near the rest of the snacks.
"I am sure you could teach me anything, anywhere!" Greengrass breathed. If her clothes were as bad as her lines, then her robe would split right then, from the strain of trying to keep the chest covered that the girl was all but pushing into Harry. If she wanted to make her intentions even more obvious, she'd have to conjure a bed and strip down.
"That's very flattering, but I fear my talents do not quite match your expectations," Harry answered. Hermione noted that his smile wasn't yet frozen, and still lacked the slightly feral touch it usually had when he was talking to Malfoy, but his eyes were cold. It would be very satisfying to see him send the blonde hussy away with a few choice sentences that revealed her foolishness for everyone to see, like he had done to Malfoy so often in the past. Satisfying, but ultimately counter-productive.
"I think that may be too modest of you, Mister Potter." Davis added, and her smile didn't change. Hermione would have loved to cut in, and ask if Davis meant that Greengrass was 'easy'.
"Modesty is a virtue." Harry answered. He looked over at Hermione.
The muggleborn witch at once stopped vanishing and repairing piecemeal, and finished the room with two spells while heading over to her boyfriend. "My Patron." She bowed slightly.
"My Wand." Harry turned a bit away from the two Slytherins, and nodded to her.
Hermione stepped closer to him. "The room's been restored to the state it was when we arrived."
"I think it's time to return to our dorms then." Harry turned back to the two other witches, and his warm smile became merely polite again. "If you will excuse me, Miss Greengrass, Miss Davis. The tutoring has left me a bit tired, and I'd rather not risk disappointing your expectations due to exhaustion."
The two girls smiled, but took the hint and left, with Parkinson just a few steps ahead of them. Hermione followed Harry, silently glaring at his head. Did he have to encourage them by flirting at the end?
*****
Ron Weasley watched the last three Slytherin witches file out. He didn't know what Parkinson had been planning, but he knew she hadn't been able to slip anything by him - he had hadn't left her out of his view. Once the door closed behind them, he allowed himself to relax a bit and headed to Padma and the others, in the back. Hopefully there were some cauldron cakes left.
"I thought they'd never leave!" he exclaimed.
"Really?" Padma asked, with a frown.
"Yes. Parkinson was hanging around the door, probably trying to put a curse on it on the sly. I didn't let her out of my sight though, until she finally gave up." Ron smiled at his girlfriend. "What's wrong, Padma?"
"Nothing." The Ravenclaw answered, and levitated a cauldron cake towards him. Of course, this meant something was wrong.
"Thanks!" He beamed at her. She knew him well. But perhaps not too well. He took a bite out of the cake, then left it floating next to him while he slipped his arm around her. "I'd rather have been watching you, but you're not about to hex me as soon as I let you out of my sight."
Padma smiled, then pouted. "Maybe I should be." She used her wand to restore her hairstyle to the more complicated and less practical version she had worn before the training, Ron noted.
Ron chuckled. "That's not what I meant. But Parkinson will give up whatever she's planning soon enough. As soon as she realizes that we're on to her."
"That might take a long time given her track record," Hermione smiled, showing her teeth. "It took her years to dump Malfoy, after all."
"She might have gotten a bit smarter in that time," Harry added, following Ron's example and wrapping an arm around the waist of his girlfriend.
Ron took another bite from the floating cake. "So, what did we learn? Other than that witches have the hots for Harry and Parkinson is planning something?" When he saw Hermione pressing her lips together he wished he hadn't been quite so flippant. He knew his best female friend was not taking the whole "Harry hunting", as Padma had told him her sister called it, well.
"We now have a decent picture of the ability of our fellow students to defend themselves." Harry stated.
"And it's not a great picture." Ron commented. "Most of them don't have the stamina to handle prolonged combat. Even the duelists are not in the shape they should be."
"We might have a bit too stringent standards though," Neville added. Ginny, next to him, nodded.
Ron realized his sister lately was found very often next to his friend. He almost sighed. Ginny wasn't raised by muggles, unlike his best friends, but she might not take Neville starting his 6th year well. Not if Neville stuck to tradition. He'd have to ponder that another day. Right now he had to focus on the session, and their real problems.
"The problem is that the Defense Course is more focused on learning and casting spells and knowing the weaknesses of various enemies and spells, instead of the actual application of that knowledge," Hermione had slipped into her docent voice. "And dueling is a sport, with rules and limits. The duelists do better than the rest, but I am certain that none of them will fare well if we switched to group tactics."
"The focus of the club is on evading and escaping," Harry reminded her. "We're not exactly producing hit-wizards here." He rubbed Hermione's back when she sighed.
"Our plans to create an army of battle-wizards to defeat the Dark Lord have been foiled!" Luna exclaimed dramatically. "What will we do now?"
"Well, if we wanted to recruit students, there are a few promising candidates." Hermione didn't say what or who they'd be recruiting for.
"How many of them would stick with us after one lessons with our resident torturers?" Padma frowned. Ron pulled her a bit closer - the witch didn't really like the training with Sirius and Remus.
"More than you'd expect, I think," Hermione stated. "With the Daily Prophet reporting so many incidents, people are scared. And fear is a great motivator."
Padma tensed up. Ron knew Hermione hadn't meant to attack his girlfriend - the muggleborn witch was far more direct in such cases - but he also knew Padma was quite jealous of Hermione's ability to excel academically, and still fare much better in combat training than her. You could only chat about your best friends so often before you noticed how the mood was affected by certain topics. He spoke up to move the discussion on. "Did anyone notice anything suspicious?" That had been one of their greatest concerns, after all.
"Parkinson didn't stare at Harry, but she was impressed by your last two repair and vanishing spells, Hermione," Luna finished her soft drink. "I think thats quite suspicious."
"Why?" Aicha spoke up, with the wary but curious tone any of the quirky Ravenclaw's friends was very familiar with.
"If she's not after Harry, but pays attention to Hermione, then that leads us to the conclusion that she is interested in her, not him. You've got a romantic rival, Harry!" the blonde nodded sagely at the Boy-Who-Lived, who seemed amused. Hermione though was staring at Luna with an appalled expression. "But fear not! I shall protect your body with my own, if needed!"
"Thanks, Luna." Hermione's tone was dryer than a salt desert.
"It'll be my pleasure!" Luna beamed at her.
"That's what I thought," the muggleborn witch weakly smiled.
"That aside, Parkinson has to have a motive to attend, and I doubt that she's only wishing to learn how to dodge spells," Ron tried to get the discussion back on track. "She could learn that from another tutor. Her family probably has some on call anyway, given their reputation."
"Well, you'll have to find out, Ron," Harry nodded at him. "You seem to have the best shot, given how nice she was acting towards you during the session."
Padma tensed up again, and Ron felt like testing Harry's reflexes with a few hexes. He knew the other wizard was correct, though. And Ron'd do it too, of course. But not eagerly. "Can't we just kidnap her, dose her with veritaserum and obliviate her?"
"In the current climate, people are more cautious." Hermione shook her head. "We could probably pull that off, and probably avoid too much trouble, if we have a good plan and use all our means, but I do not think it's worth it. This is Parkinson, after all. The girl who thought Malfoy was a good boyfriend for years. Not exactly the brightest and most dangerous witch in school."
"She was pretty good today," Ron added. "Better than average, but I see your point." A glance told him that Padma certainly thought dosing Parkinson was worth the risk.
"Other than Parkinson, did anyone else act suspiciously?" Hermione asked. Ron and the others shook their head. "As long as Ron handles the love-struck witches, we're good then."
Ron glanced at Padma, and winced at her expression. He really wished Hermione would understand that not everyone was as used to playing a role in public as the muggleborn witch and her Patron. And that not everyone trusted their love as much as those two did.
*****
"Lucrecia Browtuckle was killed four days ago. Did you know?"
Albus Dumbledore, sitting behind his desk, winced at the tone of his brother, who had just flooed in. Aberforth usually was cold, even hostile, whenever they met, but he was rarely angry. Today he held himself straight as a broomhandle, and as stiff. And his eyes… the last time he had seen that expression had been after the Intervention. "I didn't know." He had suspected, after hearing of a remarkable fight in a tavern so skillfully sealed, a team of aurors hadn't managed to break in in time to stop it. There were very few wizards or witches capable of such a feat, and not that many more able to last as long against such a foe. He had suspected, but hoped he was wrong. Lucrecia hadn't been a friend, but at his age, anyone passing who he had known that long was a heavy blow.
"Killed by the Dark Lord, while trying to spy on the scum in Knockturn Alley." Aberforth didn't take a seat. Fawkes trilled, consolingly, but the old wizard didn't even spare the phoenix a glance. "What a bloody waste!"
Albus took a deep breath, but didn't say anything. Aberforth was just waiting for an excuse, any excuse, to vent.
"A few days before that, Mathilda Miller was almost killed by Death Eaters." Aberforth put down both hands on Albus's desk, staring at his eyes. The Headmaster nodded at his brother.
"One of my friends dead, another escaped thanks to luck. The Dark Lord casually wipes out an entire tavern while the aurors watch from outside. The Longbottoms lose a whole family of their retainers. Lockhart has to flee to Hogwarts. What the hell are you doing, Albus?!" Aberforth's chest was heaving and he was grinding his teeth. "Where are the dead Death Eaters? Where are you when people are dying?"
Albus's years of experience in politics allowed him to keep his expression neutral. "The Dark Lord has lost quite a number of his men and women in those incidents."
"Don't give me that line, Albus! He lost a few idiots! Curse Fodder! None of them were marked! Where are the dead real Death Eaters?" Aberforth shouted at Albus, and the Headmaster could smell the firewhiskey on his brother's breath.
"They are using expendable wands for most of the raids. My friends are ready, and doing what they can, but with the risk of the Dark Lord taking part in a raid, they have to be careful, lest they run into an ambush themselves," he calmly explained.
"Rubbish! If the Dark Lord is around, they simply have to call you to counter him." Aberforth shoved the bowl of lemon drops on Albus's desk away with enough force to make it hit the wall before it tumbled to the ground, spilling the sweets. The Headmaster managed to summon them back before they hit the floor, but not before Fawkes had swallowed a couple, trilling in triumph.
"That is likely exactly what he wants me to do: To commit to one place, so he can devastate another." Albus didn't let his own anger and frustration show.
"So don't play his game! Don't wait for him, hit his followers!"
"I would - would I know where they are. They are not exactly announcing their presence when they are not wearing their masks." Albus didn't add that finding the Death Eaters and their allies was what Aberforth's 'friends' were supposed to be doing. He didn't have to, his brother knew that very well.
Aberforth glared at him, then, finally, sat down. "Mathilda is working on finding a high-ranked follower. But even with the two bungling aurors she managed to recruit, that's very dangerous. My friends can't provide the kind of backup she and they need. Not with them being scattered around Britain, and even on foreign shores, doing your work."
Albus raised an eyebrow. His brother might not be as young as he had been during the Grindelwald war, or the Intervention, but he was one of the few wizards Albus wasn't certain he could beat in a fair fight. If he was asking for more help, did that mean he didn't think his own presence would be enough?
Aberforth scoffed. "I'm not getting any younger, Albus. And I don't have your advantage."
Albus stiffened, but didn't glance at his wand holster. He suspected Aberforth knew about the Elder Wand, but neither of them had ever spoken of it.
Aberforth waved his hand. "I can still handle anyone but the Dark Lord. But if there are more of them… I might take too long to provide the help a friend might need."
Albus knew what it cost his brother to ask him for help. He'd never have done it, if not for the death of Lucrecia.
"Not Fletcher. And none of your pet aurors either. I don't want any friction with your most respectable friends." Aberforth added in a mocking tone.
Albus almost frowned. Beggars shouldn't be choosers. Then again, he needed Aberforth's help. Well, there was one possibility. No auror, no Fletcher, and Albus didn't want to send his less experienced friends out. He smiled. "I know just the wizard to call then."
Sirius had been getting restless anyway. Even with Harry's training and four veela to occupy his mind.
*****
Gilderoy Lockhart hadn't thought that he could be utterly terrified simply by listening to two friends chat at Hogwarts, but Jenny and Hagrid had just proven him wrong.
"If we cross those two spiders, and then mate the result with dwarf acromantulas…" Jenny was floating two of those australian monsters, enlarged even, around to illustrate her plans.
"It's not t' sure that th' spidermantulas would be smart enough t' follow instructions." Hagrid peered at one of the beasts, unimpressed by the spider's apparent attempt to savage his finger. "And they'd breed. If they're t' small, they can breed without anyone th' wiser. Bit dangerous for the' other creatures. Probably for muggles too."
"Can you even cross non-magical spiders?" Gilderoy didn't recall any such feat done, but then, no one might have cared about it.
"Ne'er tried. Hadn't found any interesting muggle critter so far." Hagrid shrugged. "Didn't ever visit Australia, 'f course."
"I could get some magical spiders from Australia, if muggle spiders don't work. Outback Doublelegs, probably." Jenny turned the redback spider around. "Would go nicely with that body type."
"Aren't those the spiders that can split their shadow off, and then travel through it?"
"Yes, very fascinating critters, Gil!" Jenny beamed at him. "They hunt in packs, and can bring down Giant Kangas easily. Imagine a pack of them hunting Death Eaters!"
"And how would they recognize Death Eaters?" Gilderoy's current smile wouldn't even have made the top 100 of Witch Weekly.
"We'd banish them at the Death Eaters. Or fill a trap box with them. They would work as area denial too." Jenny explained enthusiastically.
"And how do you keep them from attacking other people after they have run out of Death Eaters?" The author winced at the idea.
"Good point. We need a smarter monster then." Jenny frowned.
"Trainable, yes!" Hagrid smiled. "But then…. war's not a good place for animals anyway. T' dangerous."
Gilderoy would have mentioned that that was kind of the point, but he didn't want to make Hagrid reconsider weaponizing such monsters. At least they were seeing reason.
"I guess we'll have to settle for conjured spiders. Those cannot breed, and they vanish when the spell ends." Jenny pouted. "We'll just have to learn the best spiders to conjure."
"Maybe we can cross those muggle spiders, and then learn to conjure th' result?" Hagrid had a big grin on his face. "Th' critters would be safe, but we could still use'em in th' war."
Gilderoy shivered at what mental image those words conjured.
*****
Keith Yennington shuddered, rubbing his arms. It didn't help. He hadn't expected it to help, not when the warming charm on his robes didn't do anything against the unnatural cold. He couldn't simply do nothing while he froze though. His ragged breath was fogging, and the dead grass around him was covered with frost.
But the worst wasn't the cold. It was the memories. Remembering his worst failures, his worst regrets… he struggled with the anger, pain and shame filling him. And the closer he got to the abandoned mansion that the Dark Lord's most terrible allies, the dementors, were gathered in, the worse it got.
He didn't want to go in. He wanted to turn around, flee, escape. But there was no choice. This was his punishment for failing the Dark Lord. Trembling, he reached the door, which opened at his touch. Behind it, the dementors were already waiting, eagerly, he assumed. They knew what happened when someone came to visit. He was sobbing now, the tears freezing on his face, as he entered this den of horrors.
The demons surrounded him at once, their inhuman figures and faces hidden by tattered robes and hoods. They floated around him, reaching out to him, then recoiled when they saw the amulet he was wearing. Keith was close to collapsing from the effect of their aura. His body felt as if it was freezing solid, and his mind was caught in a whirlwind of trauma and shame.
And yet he didn't give up. Didn't get overwhelmed, like anyone else would have been. Didn't break. Instead he snarled at them, his hatred warming him enough to pull out half a dozen sticks and throwing them into the midst of the horde. Hissing, he drew his wand and undid the transfiguration of the muggles he had captured. The dementors immediately went for the six muggles, almost entering a feeding frenzy.
As he had been ordered by his master, Keith stayed until the last muggle's soul had been sucked out. Once more the dementors swarmed around him, almost but not quite touching him, and he heard the hint of whispers before they left. His limbs were so cold, he had lost almost all feeling in them. White spots covered the exposed skin. He knew he'd need a healer after this, to treat frostbite, maybe worse.
Hissing, he aimed his wand at the soulless husks left on the floor.
"Avada Kedavra!"
As he killed and vanished the muggles one by one, he swore that those aurors whose escape had caused this punishment would pay for it. Pay with their very souls!
*****
"This sounds backwards. Why would we infiltrate the "Silver Siren" if we want to know what's going on in the "Pleasing Pixie"? Kenneth Fenbrick didn't even try to hide his suspicions when he addressed his new and self-appointed 'partner', Mathilda. If that even was her real name. His old and real partner, Bertha Limmington, was supposed to support him, but she remained silent. The glares the witch sent at the courtesan spoke volumes though.
"Darling, I explained that already. The 'Pixie' is a gambling and pleasure den, run by Finnegan Greenbrand. One of the Dark Lord's men. He'll be expecting us, and know your faces. The 'Siren' belongs to Esmeralda Burke, who has been very careful to stay neutral in this war. Hence it's considered neutral ground." Mathilda sighed, and Kenneth had the distinct impression she was annoyed at him.
"She's a fool then. The Dark Lord will take over her business as well," Bertha stated.
"Ultimately, yes. But at the current point, trying to take over Burke's business would galvanize the remaining 'old crowd' of Knockturn Alley into opposing him with all they have left. They'd lose, but they'd hurt him," Mathilda explained. "Neither will break the truce, informal as it is."
Kenneth blinked. "Merlin, do you plan to make them break the truce? Set the old scum against the Dark Lord?"
The other witch shook her head. "No, I want to gather information from some of the regulars of both venues. Though I'd not mind if what you proposed would happen, as long as I am not in the line of curses when it does."
"The other gangs might just cut and run if that happens. Darrin Stanson's fate was a clear demonstration of the Dark Lord's power." Bertha countered.
"Those who are afraid have already fled. The rest are entrenched. They've been in the Alley for generations, they won't leave as long as they see a chance." Mathilda stated while examining her appearance once more. Not that she had to, in Kenneth's opinion - the French-trained courtesan looked as attractive or alluring as her reputation indicated. She must have noticed his glances, since she smirked at him and let her robe show a bit more cleavage. And since the skimpy thing already showed her navel, that was no mean feat.
A stinging hex to his buttocks interrupted his current trail of thoughts. He sent a grateful smile to his partner - she had just broken the siren's spell on him. "So, what's the plan? We wait outside, ready to spring you if you call?" Kenneth sounded as casually professional as he could, after his gaffe.
"Merlin, no! Burke's no fool, the second a fight breaks out inside, the 'Siren' is locked down. You'd have to fight through the guards outside, and break through the wards, to reach me. No, I'll need you inside, with me. That way you can also do something more useful than staying around and attracting the wrong kind of attention."
Kenneth nodded. It sounded convincing. And he would rather wait inside than outside. Sometimes people in the seedy alley got desperate, and would even take on two armed and ready mercenaries. "I guess two more wands for hire won't look out of place there." He grinned - he'd have to play his role well, of course.
"The Dark Lord's minions will be looking for a new pair of wands for hire, so that won't work well. Three courtesans though…" Mathilda grinned, and with a flick of her wand, two robes floated towards Kenneth and his partner. Skimpy, frilly robes. He exchanged a glance with Bertha, who was staring at the robe coming towards her as if it was a basilisk, and turned back to vehemently oppose this idea on her behalf when the spy continued: "Aberforth agrees with the plan, and he and a few of his brother's friends will be our backup."
The auror closed his mouth at once. He didn't want to oppose Dumbledore - any Dumbledore.
"Now get dressed, so we can start your training." Mathilda clapped her hands together.
"Training?" Kenneth and Bertha asked in unison.
"Well, of course. You can't pass for apprentice-courtesans without some training." The spy shook her head at the two aurors. "Merlin, did you honestly expect we'd jump into this this evening? Amateurs! If you're quick studies, we'll be ready in a week!"
Kenneth blinked. Then he realized - courtesan training. With the very attractive spy, and his partner...
"Get your mind out of the gutter, darling! I'll be teaching you how to move, act and speak so people will think you're a courtesan in training. We're not going to train in bed."
The spy was shaking her head at him, and Bertha was glaring at him. What had he done to deserve this?
*****
"Are you certain you wish to take part in this?"
Remus Lupin watched while Sirius addressed his four lovely … lovers. Chantal, Eugénie, Laure and Valérie were sitting in the salon in Grimmauld Place 12, sprawled over the couch there, with a spot left free in the middle of the four.
Chantal nodded. "Yes, we are." The other three veela nodded their agreement.
"Alright then," Sirius smiled and went to sit down on the couch. "Now, Dumbledore said that our first mission..."
"What?" Remus stared at him. Did his friend really just … he shook his head in disbelief and stood up. "Sirius has failed to explain this properly. This is very dangerous. The Dark Lord has many followers, and the death toll is rising each day. Among the Death Eaters are some of the most brutal, lethal wands in Britain, maybe the world. Facing them means risking your life. Are you really sure you want to do this? You are guests here, your family is in France." He glared at Sirius again. Didn't his friend see that he was responsible for those girls coming to Britain? How could he let them risk their lives so causally? Yes, they were honor-bound to defend their host, but that meant defending the house, not going out and attacking Death Eaters.
The four were all staring at him as if Remus was the lunatic in the room. And Sirius was doing it too!
Valérie, who had slid into Sirius lap as soon as the wizard had sat down, shifted a bit and met Remus's eyes. "You're wrong," the young veela declared. "Our family is 'ere."
Chantal added: "Our parents and our heads are aware of this."
Eugénie nodded. "They didn't call Fleur back, even though she's the youngest d'Aigle in Britain, and 'ell-bent on 'elping 'er Beel".
"But…" Remus shook his head. They were so young, they had all their lives still ahead of them.
"Did you 'esitate, or even consider not fighting, back when you'd just graduated?" Laure, sitting on the armrest, asked.
Remus hadn't an answer for that, and sat down. He looked at Sirius, who smiled lopsidedly at him.
"They got you there, Moony. We've been in their place, and we did the same thing." Sirius's hand held Valérie's.
Remus then finally realized that his family had truly grown. He must have missed it since he had been at Hogwarts, though that was no excuse. He just hoped these four wouldn't suffer as the Marauders had suffered.
*****
Sirius Black smiled, a bit sadly, at Remus as the werewolf sank into his seat. He was Sirius' best friend, but he spent most of his time at Hogwarts. As a result, he didn't know his girls that well. Remus probably didn't know him that well either, Sirius suspected. They had been separated for more than a decade, after all, and both had changed a lot. And Sirius trying to relive his youth hadn't helped, or so he thought.
Well, Remus would get over it. Sirius pulled Valérie closer to him, resting his chin on her shoulder and inhaling her scent. He knew she was smiling, and would be closing her eyes for just a second. If he could, he'd stay like this forever - surrounded by his family. Safe. Happy.
Sighing, he spoke up. "Now, before I was so rudely interrupted," he grinned at Remus, who glared at him, "I was about to tell you what I heard from Dumbledore." That made Remus straighten in his seat, and Sirius both saw and felt the veela shift on the couch. "The old man told me that he needs a group of wands who can react and strike rapidly. Since we don't have jobs or other responsibilities other than enjoying life, we're a good choice for that, unlike Moony over there, who has been working on suppressing the spirits of students for a few years now."
Remus rolled his eyes at that, as expected. Sirius's grin widened. He pulled out a few discs from his enchanted robe's pocket. "Our first mission is to provide backup for some spies, if needed. Those will alert us if that's the case. If they are vibrating, we'll meet up here, then head out. Just wear them as a ring, or as another piece of jewelry. No kinky business though - they are from the Headmaster, and you never know what he can do with them!" His girlfriends giggled, and even Remus had to smile at that.
"We'll not be the only ones, of course. Remus will be joining us as well, if he doesn't have detentions to oversee, or tests to grade. Nymphadora will help out, if her job and boyfriend leave her time enough." Sirius kept his tone light, but watched if Remus showed any reaction. His friend said he had gotten over the metamorphmagus, but Moony always had been the most serious among the Marauders, not one to love and leave like the others. Not counting James' obsession with Lily, of course, or the traitor's lack of luck with witches. Sirius's friend didn't twitch or brood, so he took that as a good sign. "Bill and Fleur are also joining us, so I am thinking of calling us the Double-V-Force. Veela Victory!"
Remus groaned at that, but his girlfriends giggled.
The teacher shook his head. "Please be careful. You'll be facing trained killers."
"Moony, we've not spent our days in bed. We've been training too, for a while. Trust me, the girls have what it takes. They're better than we were when we started." Much better, counting their ability to throw fireballs and transform.
Remus sighed. "This has been coming for some time then?"
Sirius wasn't sure if his friend was talking about the training, or his relationship. Eithe way, he nodded. "Yes, Moony."
"Guess you've finally grown up. Who'd have thought?"
"Hey!" Sirius frowned when his friend laughed and his girlfriends giggled again. He was happy too though. Maybe Moony knew him better than he thought.
*****
"No, no, no! You are far too forward, darling." Mathilda Miller shook her head at the male auror. "You need to be confident, assured of yourself, but not pushy or arrogant."
"Some witches like that."
"Some witches pretend to like that, more likely. But you forgot again: As a courtesan, you're not hitting on witches to seduce them, you are trying to entice them to hire you. Pushing yourself on them just makes you appear cheap or desperate. And that's no way to do business in this business," Mathilda lectored the auror. She noticed his partner smirking, behind his back, and almost smiled. The witch had been acting rather hostile so far, so it was good to see her loosen up some.
"I've never had problems. Lots of witches could tell you that." Kenneth grumbled.
"That was as an auror. Big, bad, impressive. You can't act like that as a courtesan." Mathilda didn't mention that once you got a reputation, once people competed for your attention, you could act like that. She had been in that position, once. And had lost it all. Or given it up. But if she mentioned that, then the fool would let his ego drive him to act like that, and cause their mission to fail.
"Why aren't you telling her what she's doing wrong?" The auror pointed at his partner.
"She's not doing anything wrong. She's cool, classy, and smart. She'll draw her share of attention in the 'Siren'." Perhaps a bit too cold, even if some wizards liked that kind of fake challenge. But it was just a cover, after all. They wouldn't be doing real business. Not unless it was needed.
She noticed that Kenneth was staring at his partner, blinking, then grinning. "Did you just tell her she's acting like a courtesan when she's just being herself?"
Mathilda rubbed her forehead while Bertha made her displeasure of that remark known with some very creative language that made the other auror cringe. Well, she had planned to take a week to train the pair enough to pass muster. It looked like she'd need every single evening.
*****
"Really? You faced half a dozen of Macedonian Marauders?"
"Oh, yes. Just me, and my wand. But they were spread out, and I had their number. First, I took out their leader…"
Kenneth Fenbrick tuned the witch's tale out for a moment. He felt exposed. Vulnerable. He knew his robes only looked flimsy. That the spells on them were actually stronger than the ones on his "civilian robes". He knew he was not unprotected. But the looks he was getting, in the 'Silver Siren'... he really missed his auror robes. The witches and wizards would look differently at him. Granted, they'd curse him too. But he wasn't certain if that wouldn't be preferable.
Bertha Limmington didn't seem to be affected, even though her robes were as skimpy as his, just cut differently. If he focused on her head, he could imagine her watching a crime scene easily. Well, focusing on her head was a bit of a challenge, right now. And on a crime scene, she'd be crouching, bending over, and doing all sorts of things that her current attire was not meant to do. Or was meant to do, given their cover.
He shook his head, and again listened to the wand for hire trying to impress him with obviously fictional tales of daring victories against Balkan mercenaries. She wasn't ugly, she was actually rather pretty, but she was grabby, and her attitude grated on his nerves. And he couldn't help but adding charges in his head during her tales - from breaking and entering to murder.
On the other hand, as long as he was flirting with her, no one else should be bothering him, and she seemed content to tell her tales, buy him drinks, and cop a feel. Rather easy to handle. He was here to protect the spy, after all.
And he was faring better than Bertha, who had to deal with two pushy scumbags trying to outdo each other in their attempts to impress her. Kenneth had wanted to curse both of them a few times already just to shut them up, but his partner had a much bigger tolerance for such idiots. Probably a childhood trauma.
Their spy was sitting with a bulky wizard. Gerard Bulstrode, if Kenneth had overheard his boasting introduction correctly. The wizard had been slightly slurring his words already. But, as far as they knew, he was a regular in the "Pleasing Pixie" as well, and probably well-connected too in the sort of circles that wouldn't mind the Dark Lord taking over.
So, the mission, such as it was, was going well. That would be worth some more embarrassment, or gropes. Probably. At least he would be getting paid overtime for this, and didn't have to work as a babysitter during Hogsmeade weekends. He'd like it even more if he could list the training sessions with Mathilda as overtime as well, but that would mean he'd have to explain why he'd needed special training, and what kind. And that information was something that wouldn't ever reach the auror office.
The grabby witch pulled him closer again, not noticing how fake his smile and laughter at her flat and crude jokes was. Kenneth hoped their spy would hurry up so they could leave.
*****
"We'll never speak about this evening again."
Mathilda Miller carefully didn't smile when she and the two undercover aurors gathered again in her safe house after they had left the 'Siren'. She felt like it though - Kenneth's declaration was funny. But the two were already glaring daggers at her.
"We were successful though. Dear Gerard was quite talkative. Apparently, the 'Pixie' is full of 'the right sort of people in this war', and Keith Yennington is a regular there - and influential. It looks like that's one base for the Dark Lord. Gerard also mentioned that the brothel has lately been offering a 'novelty service', as he called it: Muggles. Foreign muggles even, he didn't know the country." Mathilda said.
"Muggle trafficking?" The wizard used his wand to remove the muggle make-up that had helped with his disguise. "Why would they do that, and why now, in the middle of a war?"
"The muggles change frequently, and the owner of the place does not care if they get 'damaged'," the courtesan continued in a grim tone.
"It makes sense then. While kidnapping British Muggles on that scale would endanger the Statute of Secrecy, there are a number of countries where muggles can go missing in large numbers without anyone growing suspicious." Bertha explained.
"I can't believe they'd smuggle muggles to Britain just for a brothel. That's not exactly profitable, and they could use anyone involved in this for more important tasks." Ken conjured a screen and changed his robes.
"So they are important somehow, for the Dark Lord. Sacrifices for rituals?" Mathilda didn't wince, even though that thought brought up memories she'd rather not think about.
"That, and… he'll need to feed his dementors somehow. There haven't been enough kidnappings to sustain them, and we haven't heard of muggles falling prey to them either," Bertha added.
This time Mathilda did wince. To be fed to a dementor… her soul devoured… a fate worse than death indeed. She resolved again to not let the Death Eaters capture her alive, if it came to it.
Kenneth spoke up almost eagerly though: "That means we can raid it with all the force we need."
Mathilda thought it would be a good idea to stay away from Knockturn Alley for a while.
*****
"I've got news."
Harry Potter looked up from the book he was reading in their private room. Ron had just entered, an excited expression on his face. Nearby, Hermione glanced over, but didn't interrupt her experiment.
Ron summoned a butterbeer from their stash, and sat down next to Harry. "Fred and George just had a meeting with McGonagall. Apparently, she thinks they hexed Marietta Edgecombe, since the girl's hair has changed color and she had a persistent pimple on her forehead, with neither of them reacting to the usual counter-curses or remedies."
"Edgecombe?" Harry wasn't familiar with that name.
"Ravenclaw sixth year. Rather shy and quiet. She is a friend of Cho Chang." Hermione explained.
"Ah!" Harry knew the Ravenclaw seeker from Quidditch, but had never bothered to get to know her friends.
"So, we know she means Harry ill, but we don't know what she's planning. Spying, or something worse?" Ron finished his butterbeer.
"It's always the quiet ones…" Harry quoted, and Hermione sniggered while Ron blinked. He explained to his friend: "It's a muggle saying. It means that the quiet people can be the most dangerous."
"Ah." Ron nodded, not asking further. "So, what do we do now? I guess interrogating her is out of the question?"
"That would only alert those working with her to the fact that we know about her." Hermione shook her head.
"If she's not acting alone." Ron added.
Harry frowned. "The curse didn't trigger in the first meeting, so she would have changed her intentions about me in a week, all by herself. I think it's more likely that someone is behind her, or at least influencing her."
"Influencing her?" Hermione frowned. "I'll have to check if there are spells on her during the next meeting."
"Pomfrey should have found them if Edgecombe has gone to her about the curse's effect." Harry said.
"She might not have been looking for compulsion spells or worse, if it looks just like a prank." Hermione defended her idea. "Besides, it won't hurt us to check her."
"She could have been bribed easily," Ron spoke up. "Gold moves hearts, as Lockhart said once, and the Edgecombes are not particularly rich." From the way his friend talked, Harry deduded that the Edgecombes were in the same financial bracket as the Weasleys.
"It could be Malfoy." Harry knew the Slytherin had the gold and the motive.
"Or Voldemort putting pressure on her family, which in turn puts pressure on her." Hermione added, as often looking for the worst case.
"Let's inform the Headmaster. If it's Voldemort, he'll find out. If it's Malfoy, it won't hurt," Ron declared.
Harry winced a bit. His friend noticed. "I take it that you didn't ask for permission to curse our fellow students?"
The Boy-Who-Lived shook his head, together with his retainer.
Ron chuckled. "Well, knowing him, he'll probably give you a detention, and award Hermione some points for creative spellwork and good thinking."
Hermione smiled. Harry glared at her. "You expected that from the start!"
His girlfriend didn't show any regret. "Of course I did! It's one of the perks of being your retainer - you're responsible for anything I do to protect you."
"That's because I am supposed to discipline you if needed." Harry frowned at his friend.
"Technically you gave me permission to cast the curse. It would be quite hypocritical if you decided to punish me now." Hermione kept her tone light, but Harry knew the topic wasn't something either of them was comfortable with. Some fantasies of his after seeing a few of Sirius's books from his teenage years notwithstanding.
So he sighed theatrically: "Outplayed by my own retainer. Some Patron I am!"
Giggling, Hermione slid into his lap. "The best!"
Well, maybe not the worst, Harry thought. He tried his best, at least,
*****
"And here are your rooms," Sirius Black opened the two doors with a flick of his wand and a flourish of his hand. The two rooms were connected, of course, and he didn't think his two latest house guests would be sleeping in separate beds, but technically, each had their own room. He had been raised to be a proper host, after all.
"Thank you, Sirius," Fleur smiled at him. "Our apartments were lacking wards strong enough to be safe."
Bill Weasley nodded, a bit stiffly. Sirius knew the proud young curse-breaker didn't like moving to Grimmauld Place 12. But the redheaded wizard was aware that he and his girlfriend, maybe soon fiancée, were in danger, and that their flats, like so many others, were not safe enough these days. And the alternative to accepting Sirius's gracious offer was to either move to France, or to the Burrow. And what young couple would want to move in with either of their parents? At their age, Sirius would have died rather than moving back to his parents. Well, given that they had thrown him out before he graduated, he would have died for moving back with them. Maybe. For all his mother's madness, Black blood was usually thicker than water.
Sirius forced the increasingly morbid thoughts away and grinned lecherously at the two. "Now, the rooms are charmed for privacy, so you don't need to restrain yourself."
Fleur simply nodded, smiling. "I expected that."
Bill coughed, but didn't show any other reaction, to Sirius's disappointment.
"Also, you can call on Kreacher, but I'm not responsible for anything he says if you do so. He's got the foulest attitude of any house elf I've ever seen. Hermione claims it's a result of his harsh treatment by my family, or the residual effect of the dark magic done in the house in the past, and not his fault, but even she looked ready to hex the bugger more than once, even if she won't admit it." Sirius warned them. They didn't look impressed. Well, they'd learn. A few new choice curse words, at least.
Valérie appeared at the end of the hallway, and walked towards them. Sirius's friend and lover was wearing a black silk robe, slit several times from the hem all the way to the plunging neckline, effectively turning it into a bunch of silk strips held together by spells. He smiled widely and appreciatively at the sight, and was about to wrap an arm around her as soon as she was close enough when he noticed her and Fleur staring at each other, as if they were sizing each other up. Not as if - they were doing exactly that.
He didn't notice that he and Bill had taken a step back until after the fact. Seeing the two veela circling each other was too distracting - and exciting. It was a dominance play, he realized, a dim memory of one of Hagrid's lessons briefly going through his mind. Like cats meeting for the first time. He expected them to sprout feathers and wings and laying into each other any second as the staring contest continued, with neither wizard nor veela present saying a single word.
Then Valérie moved to him, pressing herself into his side, wrapping an arm around his shoulders and sliding her thigh up his while he moved his arm around her waist. The two veela still hadn't broken eye contact, and the animagus thought he saw some yellow spots appear in their eyes.
Fleur cocked her head, then slipped her arm into Bill's. Another moment passed, then the younger veela nodded, followed by Valérie, and then Fleur led Bill into her room.
Once the door had closed behind them, Sirius took a deep, shivering breath - Valérie was still all but hanging on him - and looked at his girlfriend. The veela was smiling, apparently satisfied with the outcome of the encounter, then licked her lips before pulling his head towards her for a kiss.
They didn't make it to Sirius's or her room, and he wasn't sure he managed to cast a privacy spell in time, but Sirius didn't care.
*****
The Dark Lord Voldemort studied the stain on the floor that had been a muggle a minute before, then back at the drooling, bleeding wizard clutching a wand to his chest on the other side of the room. "Your wands do need some more work, I think," he commented in a dry voice.
"Indeed," Steinberg, standing next to him while an enchanted quill wrote down notes on a floating piece of parchment agreed. "Though I am getting closer. This model lasted for several days of intense use before the wielder lost control. Carefully managed, it could be used with expendable forces to great effect."
Voldemort was forced to agree - the test subject, as Steinberg had called him, was a rather weak wizard, with no talent for the Dark Arts, and yet, with this wand, he had managed great things before it had turned him into a mindless husk. Maybe soulless, even - he'd have to get that tested by offering the body to the dementors. "It would be bad for morale though, if my forces started to fall victims to their own wands." He could always pass off the test subjects as having been punished for a grave failure - they were chosen from the kind of wizards his followers would easily believe that of - but even his most gullible men would object to be turned into sacrificial weapons.
"Without actual field testing I will be needing more test subjects and test materials," Steinberg finished his note-taking.
"I'll send another volunteer to you, and have more muggles delivered." Voldemort turned to leave.
"I'd prefer two volunteers, to compare their reactions," Steinberg sounded hopeful and eager. The man was maybe a bit too overenthusiastic, but he was certainly talented.
The Dark Lord nodded. "Two then."
When he entered his chamber, Bellatrix was waiting for him, lounging on his bed. "Master!" The dark witch exclaimed, jumping up and falling to her knees.
"Bella." He bade her rise with a gesture. The slender witch complied, her black robes moving around her body, drawing attention to her restored youth and beauty. She didn't move toward him, she knew better than that, but she did her best to entice him to come to her - a game both of them had liked ever since their reunion.
"I've spoken with my sister," she said. No need to ask which sister - as far as Bella was concerned, she had only one sister. The other one simply hadn't been polite enough to accept that she was dead, yet. "Her son has told her that Potter has started to train more students in 'self-defence'. He is apparently trying to find out more."
The Dark Lord scoffed at the thought. Young Malfoy was an idiot. A sometimes useful, eager idiot, but an idiot nonetheless. If not for the gold he would soon control, Voldemort would ignore the remaining Malfoy family. As things were, he put pressure on the mother but hadn't spoken to the son yet. "He might be a useful distraction, nothing more."
Bella nodded, not hiding her scorn for her own nephew. Voldemort had to remind himself not to underestimate anyone. That had led to his downfall once already.
"Arrange for someone who takes part in those meetings to donate a memory, and obliviate them afterwards." That would allow him to see for himself what the one with the power to defeat him was doing.
"At once Master!" Bella turned to leave, but he stopped her with a raised hand.
"There is no rush." He glanced at his bed, then back at her.
The dark witch smiled. With a gesture she caused her robe to fall down to the floor and slowly started to walk over to the bed.
Chapter 28: Raids