Chapter 9: The List
Mould-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, Britain, July 11th, 2005
"From your reaction, I assume that you knew both my and Gellert's counterparts in your world. And not under the best of circumstances." Dumbledore's smile had faded almost completely.
Granger shook her head. "I never met Grindelwald."
"But you'd heard of him." Dumbledore leaned forward.
Ron matched him - and shifted his weight a little. Just in case. Whatever trap the man must have prepared might be avoided if Ron managed to tackle him. Dumbledore didn't strike him as the suicidal type, and even so-called knockout gas wasn't exactly safe to use, as the Moscow theatre hostage crisis had proved.
"I had, yes. I dismissed what I heard, though." Granger spoke very precisely, almost biting the words out.
Ron reached over, touching her thigh with the back of his hand. She stiffened, then slowly breathed out.
"What exactly did you hear? It seems obvious that there are significant differences between this world and your own."
Granger snorted at that. "You might say so, yes."
Dumbledore inclined his head, but she still hesitated to elaborate, Ron saw. He cleared his throat. "Explaining the differences would also reveal important secrets."
Granger frowned at him for a moment, then turned her attention back on Dumbledore. "Could you tell us more about Mr Grindelwald and how you met him?"
Dumbledore hesitated a moment before that slightly condescending smile of his appeared again. "Of course." He leaned back. "I met him on a mission in occupied Europe in 1943. Paris, to be exact - the City of Love had seen better days, but even under the Germans, there was a certain
je ne sais quoi… but I digress. It was one of my first missions - I had completed my training a year previously and volunteered for the Special Operations Executive - I was a Baker Street Irregular. Since I spoke perfect French, I was sent on a mission to France."
They certainly wouldn't have sent the man to Norway, Ron thought.
Dumbledore sighed. "Gellert was a member of the Abwehr. A very junior member, of course. He had pulled a few strings to get posted to Paris - his mother knew Admiral Canaris, a relationship that got Gellert into trouble after the failed assassination of Hitler in July 1944. Fortunately, he managed to deflect the suspicion of the Gestapo, or he might have been executed as well."
Dumbledore hadn't said if Grindelwald had actually been involved in that plot. Ron took that to mean that that hadn't been the case. He glanced at Harry, who was frowning. So, he had noticed that as well. Granger, though, seemed to be listening with rapt attention.
"Anyway, I met Gellert in Paris - we frequented the same bars. I quickly realised that he was a member of the Abwehr, and he claims he was suspicious of me as well, but since he never tried to take me in, I think that's mostly his bruised ego speaking." He chuckled. "In any case, I should have avoided him, faded away and focused on my mission, but I was young and foolish. The prospect of working on my mission while socialising with my direct opposite was irresistible."
"You fell in love," Granger said.
Dumbledore's eyes widened for a fraction of a second. "Perhaps the differences between our worlds aren't as great as I assumed. Yes, indeed, we had an
amour fou, as the French would say. We were enemies, in the middle of the war, and even in peacetime, both our countries would have considered our relationship a crime - it was exactly the sort of foolishness young men were wont to engage in."
For the first time, Dumbledore's smile seemed, in Ron's opinion, to be completely devoid of condescension and deceit.
"Of course, it couldn't last. We both knew it. The Invasion happened in June 1944, and in August, the battle for Paris began." The old man shook his head. "The police rose against the Germans, and battles broke out all over the city while Leclerc advanced towards Versailles. Gellert rushed to the hotel in which I was staying, braving the general madness, to get me out of the city - he knew what would happen to
collaborateurs. Unfortunately, he managed to catch me when I was meeting with members of the Resistance, and things took a rather violent turn. No one died, fortunately, and he managed to escape and evade pursuit, rejoining the German lines as they retreated. I didn't see him again until the war had ended."
"And you rekindled your relationship," Granger said rather than asked.
"It wasn't as easy as that makes it sound," Dumbledore told her, "but, essentially, yes." He shrugged. "The most devastating war in the history of the human race had just ended, and millions had to adjust to the sudden changes. Gellert proved to be as adaptable as he was intelligent, and we, well, came to an arrangement."
"You protected him," Harry said.
Dumbledore slowly nodded. "I did expedite him getting cleared, but as a very young member of the Abwehr with relatives implicated in the failed plot against Hitler, he wouldn't have been treated as a true believer in the Nazi ideology anyway."
"But
was he a Nazi?" Granger asked, staring at Dumbledore.
"If he had ever been one, he wasn't, not any more."
"Ah."
Granger's smile was hard to read.
After a moment, Ron spoke up: "Dad's message claimed that we were in danger."
If Dumbledore was annoyed at the change of topic, he didn't show it. "You aren't as safe as you might think you are. The foiled terrorist attacks, the two high-profile assassinations and Britain's most famous kidnapping victim possibly being kidnapped again - the public is demanding results and retribution, and the government will do its utmost to deliver, lest the minister in charge lose even more face and be replaced by one of their rivals in the party."
Ron snorted, but had to agree - justice wasn't as effective at pushing the government into action as the threat of losing power.
Dumbledore nodded at him and folded his hands again. "As a consequence, the authorities will not shy away from any means to find you - and Dr Granger. They already have your family under observation, Mr Weasley. And after Arthur's visit to Mr Lovegood, they will place him and his daughter under surveillance as well. Then once the Grangers resurface, they will also be put under surveillance. Technically, they already are, of course."
Ron didn't react. He was certain of that. But the old man was correct - if Dad had been spotted visiting Xenophon, then it wouldn't take a genius to order Luna to be put under surveillance as well. And while Luna had gone to great lengths to hide her place, no cover was perfect. Put against the efforts of the government, and assuming that they would look the other way while certain police officers bent a few laws, they would be able to find Luna's home - eventually.
"That you were once in a relationship with Miss Lovegood is known. As is the fact that you broke up amicably," Dumbledore went on.
"Xeno's a very careful man," Ron replied. "Even if they break into his home, they won't find anything on his computers." And he knew how to delete data properly so it couldn't be reconstructed. And how to encode messages so they couldn't be deciphered any time this century.
"I don't doubt that. But I also know my former department. And trust me - people who cut their teeth foiling the KGB's best plans will not be daunted by the efforts of an amateur, however gifted they might be."
Ron wanted to frown - both at the implied insult to the Lovegoods' skill and at the threat being laid out so plainly. He didn't, though. Dumbledore wanted him to show a reaction so he could confirm his guess. "We aren't easy to find," he replied instead.
"You need help hiding," Dumbledore retorted.
"No, we don't," Harry stated. "We can hide as long as it takes the police to sort this out without any outside help."
Dumbledore slowly nodded, apparently acknowledging the point. "But do you want to? And that still doesn't help Dr Granger in achieving her goals. As I've already explained, Dr Granger, you won't be able to continue your subterfuge, I'm afraid. Her Majesty's Government is not as quick to grasp the full ramifications of every situation as it should be, but in this case, they can hardly miss the implications."
"And you claim to be a more trustworthy source of help than our government?" Granger asked. "A former spymaster turned arms manufacturer who is collaborating with a former Nazi spy?"
"Technically, Gellert wasn't a spy - he was counter-intelligence," Dumbledore replied. With a smile, he added: "But you are correct: I do claim that I'm more trustworthy than our government. Of course, I am slightly biased." He chuckled. "However, I don't think I've given you cause to distrust me any more than our government - none of my employees, after all, are currently hunting you or tried to frame your friends for murder."
"So you say." Harry was still standing with his arms crossed, staring at the old man.
"If I were behind the attacks on you, wouldn't I have made my move long ago? I could have taken Mr Weasley's family hostage, for example. And ambushed you as soon as you entered my home." Dumbledore slowly shook his head. "If I meant you and yours harm, I would have handled this quite differently, I assure you."
Of course, the man could be merely trying to gain their trust - Granger's trust - by playing nice. But such plans were convoluted and prone to failure. On the other hand, Dumbledore was the partner of a former Nazi - a real Nazi. "And what do you get out of this?" Ron asked, narrowing his eyes at the old man. "You wouldn't be offering a fortune's worth of resources - and risking a possible charge of treason - simply to satisfy your curiosity."
"Oh, at my age? Trust me, I would." Dumbledore laughed. "Neither myself nor Gellert have any family we can stand, so our considerable fortunes will, after our eventual but inevitable deaths, be left to Germany and the United Kingdom, respectively. And while I would never consider myself a traitor, my loyalty to my country isn't so strong as to keep me from spending a small fortune on indulging my whims." He leaned forward. "Moreover, spending a small fortune to, let us say, prolong our lives a little longer? That would be an immensely shrewd investment at any age, wouldn't it?"
Ron frowned. What did the old man mean? He glanced at his friend; Harry was frowning as well. But Granger… the woman was nodding.
Ah. "You're counting on gaining access to the technology of Dr Granger's world to prolong your life," Ron said.
"Precisely," Dumbledore told him. "I don't think I'm wrong in assuming that Dr Granger's world is quite a bit more advanced than ours if, at her age, and with only access to our technology and knowledge, she can construct a means to travel between worlds. And humans being humans, I trust them to have invested considerable resources in warding off death."
Granger chuckled at that. "Some of them, at least. Others considered death but the next great adventure."
"I have to admit, Dr Granger, that I'm not particularly religious. And, according to your file, neither are you."
She sighed. "You are correct. Both in my view of religion and in your assumption that my world's population tends to live considerably longer than yours. Your counterpart, for example, was a hundred and fifteen years old when he was killed."
Dumbledore positively beamed at her.
Granger's answering smile looked both tired and cynical. "However, as the circumstances of my arrival might have indicated, I don't know how my home's faring - when I, involuntarily, left, we were fighting a civil war against a mad tyrant."
Dumbledore looked, briefly, surprised - and was that a sliver of annoyance? At having missed or dismissed that information? So the old man wasn't infallible, either. "That tyrant… he wouldn't have been German, would he?" Dumbledore asked.
"No. The Dark Lord, as he called himself, was born a British subject," Granger replied.
"He called himself 'the Dark Lord'?" Dumbledore sounded both appalled and amused.
"He earned the name." Granger sneered, then shook her head. "His followers were so brutal during the first civil war, people were afraid to say his name ten years after the war had ended with his defeat."
"And he returned to start another war?"
"Yes. More successfully, this time. He took control of the country in 1997 in a coup. We fought back, of course, but things were looking grim."
"I see. The situation must have been dire indeed if you were fighting. Unless you're older than your counterpart was."
"I'm twenty-five years old." Granger snorted, though she sounded bitter, not amused. "So, once I open the portal back, I might be returning to a war - or a country ruled by a monster."
Ron tensed again. If Dumbledore decided that this was too much of a danger instead of an opportunity...
"But that would just be in Britain. Other countries wouldn't be touched by the war, would they?"
"That depends on whether the Dark Lord won the civil war and decided to imitate Grindelwald and invade the rest of Europe." Granger showed her teeth.
"I see." Dumbledore chuckled softly. "Gellert will be interested in hearing about his counterpart's exploits, I think. He was quite a bit more important in your world, then."
"Yes. As was your counterpart," Granger said. "He personally defeated Grindelwald in a duel."
"Oh." Dumbledore blinked. "I'm unsure whether I should be proud or sad about that."
"Proud," Granger replied.
"You mentioned that my counterpart was killed. At the hands of this tyrant?" Dumbledore sounded far too casual about the fate of his counterpart, in Ron's opinion.
"Indirectly. As a result of a trap, he was slowly dying and decided to use his own death to let his best spy gain the tyrant's trust," Granger told him.
"Now that is a sound move," Dumbledore said. "Noble, in a way, but certainly effective." He rubbed his beard. "However, to let a young woman like yourself know about it seems a little careless."
He was fishing for more information. Ron shook his head and spoke up before Granger's pride drove her to reveal more secrets. "You don't know the situation."
"Unlike you."
Ron shrugged. "Not in detail."
"I was a member of your counterpart's organisation," Granger just had to explain. "He personally trained our cell for a special mission."
"Despite your age?" Dumbledore tilted his head. "While only a fool would doubt your intelligence, you didn't strike me as an agent."
"Those are the best agents, aren't they?" Ron interjected.
"Touché," Dumbledore admitted. "However, I have a good eye for field agents, if I do say so myself."
"And I don't fit your mould, do I?" Granger retorted with a frown.
"Not exactly, no. And I generally preferred to recruit agents who had been extensively trained - not agents who had barely reached adulthood, no matter their talents."
"We had proved our worth several times by the point we were recruited," Granger shot back.
"We shouldn't go into too much detail," Ron reminded her. Judging by how flushed she became, she understood.
"I won't pry," Dumbledore remarked. "However, trust generates trust."
"And some decisions shouldn't be taken lightly or in haste," Granger declared.
She meant well, and Ron agreed - but now Dumbledore knew that she was keeping an important secret. Well, perhaps he would think his counterpart had not been so sloppy in his training and suspect that it was disinformation.
"Of course. I assume you will want to discuss things with your backup as well. Please, take your time."
Ron really hated the man's smile.
*****
"A former government spymaster turned arms conglomerate corporate tycoon?" Luna asked wide-eyed.
Ron winced, bracing himself. He knew what was coming.
"He must be evil! Twice over!" Luna blurted out. "A key member of the shadow government conspiracy!"
Yes, Ron was quite glad they had taken the time to check themselves for listening devices.
"His lover is Gellert Grindelwald, a former counter-intelligence operative of the Third Reich. Grindelwald's counterpart was one of the worst dark wizards ever known and almost conquered Magical Europe before Dumbledore's counterpart stopped him," Granger said. "Although I think they were a couple before that war."
"Oh! That's… That's even worse!" Luna shook her head wildly. She started to pace in the small clearing in which they were gathered.
"I don't trust him. He's far too smooth," Harry said.
"Far too condescending, too," Ron added.
"Your father trusts him, doesn't he?" Granger asked.
"Dad owes him," Ron replied. "He's not exactly unbiased."
"And he's offering you his help because he plans to use dark magic to live forever!" Luna declared.
"As a muggle, his options for gaining immortality are rather slim," Granger said. "But magic could be used to keep him fit and healthy for a number of years - not forever, of course. But ten, twenty, more years would be possible, I think."
"What could a man with his power and influence do with two more decades?" Luna shuddered.
"But he is correct in that even after our names are cleared, I won't be able to continue my work in peace. The government wouldn't allow it," Granger pointed out. "And I'll be the target of other countries as well. As will the Grangers."
"Do you trust him?" Harry asked. "He's not the man you knew."
"I know," Granger said, frowning. "But it's not about trusting him - it's about trusting his motivation to be aligned with ours, I mean, mine. Sorry." She shook her head. "I don't think he'll risk losing this chance at living longer."
"Or at discovering more worlds ripe for the picking," Ron added. "Once you finish your work, all bets will be off."
"I know," Granger replied through clenched teeth. "But he's my best chance of going home."
Ron pressed his lips together. She was probably correct. But he really didn't like it.
"And he's our best opportunity to finally reveal all the crimes and conspiracies the government covered up!" Luna stood straight, hands on her hips. "This is our chance to infiltrate his organisation! And help Hermione at the same time!"
Ron glanced at Harry. They couldn't let the two women do this alone. And they couldn't just knock them out and drag them away - they'd be back at the first opportunity.
He sighed.
*****
Dumbledore's decades of experience as a spy and spymaster meant he wasn't radiating satisfaction when they returned to his manor. Ron thought so, at least - the man's polite manner had to be masking his glee. "Welcome back," he said. "And welcome, Miss Lovegood."
Ron nodded together with Harry and Granger as Luna frowned at the old man. "That remains to be seen, Mr Dumbledore."
"I can assure you that I mean neither you nor your friends any harm," Dumbledore replied. "Our interests align, after all."
"Really?" Luna narrowed her eyes and stared at him. "Then it's true that MI6 was also active in Britain!"
Dumbledore blinked at her. "Pardon?"
"How else would you know what my interests are, if not by spying on me?" Luna explained.
"My dear, I retired from MI6 long before you finished school," Dumbledore replied.
"But not from spying!" she retorted.
"That depends on your definition of spying, I believe." The old man smiled.
"I think 'violating people's privacy' covers spying perfectly," Luna declared.
Dumbledore nodded. "Such actions are often needed, though, lest people lose something even more important."
"That depends on your definition of 'often'," Luna shot back.
Dumbledore laughed at that. "Touché, Miss Lovegood."
Luna smiled in return, but Ron could tell that it wasn't an honest smile. He hoped that Dumbledore didn't manage to read her as easily. Well, at least she hadn't called him a merchant of death, oligarch or traitor to the country.
"We've decided to accept your offer - provided the details fit our needs," Granger said.
The old man smiled. "Of course."
"Such as where you'd set up my new lab," she went on. "And the Grangers' safety."
"I can arrange permanent protection for your family. Privately or through the government. As to the location of your laboratory, that depends entirely on you," Dumbledore told her. "Our facilities in Germany would be safest, but we have a subsidiary in Britain as well."
"Would that be in Scotland?"
"Why, yes. An isolated research facility in the highlands."
"Of course it would be there." Granger shook her head with a dry smile.
"However, you wouldn't be able to move as freely as you could in Germany - your notoriety is quite a bit higher in Britain, so you'd have to go to greater lengths to maintain operational security." Dumbledore spread his hands. "The decision is, of course, yours."
But if they had to leave in a hurry, they would be closer to their own resources. And they would speak the language. Well, a form of it, Ron thought.
"But we'd stick out more in Germany," Luna pointed out.
"You plan to keep Dr Granger company?" Dumbledore didn't sound surprised.
"We always see things through on an assignment," Harry said. His smile was more a challenge than a friendly gesture, Ron noted.
"That might not be well received by whoever ends up being the new leader of CI5," Dumbledore pointed out.
"It doesn't matter," Ron said. "We'll stick this out."
Granger looked surprised for a moment, he noticed, before a brief smile appeared on her face. Truth be told - or not, in this case - Ron had surprised himself a little.
"If Dawlish takes over we'll be screwed anyway," Harry added.
"That man is such a bore." Granger nodded.
Luna was beaming at them. Ron just knew she saw this as them finally 'throwing off the shackles of the government', as she had urged him to do in the past.
*****
Ron looked around, both out of habit and training, as he walked down the hallway connecting the guest rooms Dumbledore had offered them. He couldn't spot any cameras, but he was certain there was at least one. Well, they had known there would be when they decided to accept the old man's offer. That was also the reason he hadn't gone into any details when he had called Dad - the 'safe phone' Dumbledore had provided would be bugged as well.
Granger opened the door a few seconds after he knocked. "Ah." She didn't seem to be surprised to see him. And she was already wearing her sleepwear, he noticed.
He nodded. "I trust everything's alright with your room?" It was a pretext, and she knew it.
She pulled the door fully open. "Yes."
He could see that her and Luna's room was bigger than his and Harry's. Two beds, two desks, a big armoire and a dresser. He could easily spot Luna's bed - her clothes were spread out over it. Dumbledore had offered them all single rooms, but they had declined. Ron and Harry because even though Dumbledore was unlikely to move against them - there were easier ways to deal with the two of them - they felt safer rooming together. Granger and Luna because Luna had insisted, and Granger hadn't objected.
She stepped to the side. It was as good an invitation as any, and he entered.
"Luna's in the bathroom," she told him.
He nodded - he could hear the running water.
"By the way: thank you," she said after closing the door.
He shrugged. "We see things through."
"At the cost of your career?"
He shrugged again. "We can find other employment."
"The job market for police officers who went rogue might be a little…" She trailed off, wincing.
He smiled. "Things will work out. If all else fails, we can become private investigators." They had planned that, as kids, after all.
"Would that offer a stable income?" She frowned as she sat down on her bed.
"Things will work out," he said. This was more important. He knew it.
She smiled at him. "Thank you."
She looked younger when she smiled, he noticed. Not as… hard, perhaps? Or driven. Almost… He shrugged once more and looked at the window - or, rather, the curtains covering it. "I didn't become a police officer so I could leave people in need to fend for themselves."
"Ah."
"I didn't mean that you were helpless," he explained, looking at her. She wasn't smiling any more. "Just, well… I don't trust Dumbledore."
Granger nodded slowly. "Understandable." She wasn't frowning, but her smile looked polite, not genuine, now - Ron could tell.
"So, I figure it's best we stick together until this is over," he said.
She nodded, then pursed her lips. "I don't want you to feel obligated. Especially not if it means your life and career will be affected." She was looking at the armoire, he noticed.
"You're not a bother," he replied, a little more sharply than he had intended. "Also, we can't exactly hunt down Scrimgeour and Bones's killers. Regulations." And too many other agencies were involved now to be able to get around those pesky rules. "But protecting you, and foiling their plans to get you? That'll hit them where it hurts."
"Ah." She inclined her head. "Does Harry think so as well? Ginny might disagree with his priorities."
He had to snort at that. "Well, he hates leaving things unfinished. And Ginny can't complain - she's away too often for her job." His sister would complain, of course - Ginny wasn't the spoiled little princess any more, but part of her still thought she was special. More than she was, of course. Granger's expression told him she didn't believe him. Well, she had probably known Ginny's counterpart. And she didn't seem to have been convinced of his sincerity. He grinned at her. "Anyway, you're stuck with us."
"I'll try to bear it," she replied, with a grin of her own. And if her smile had made her look younger, her grin made her look… well, fun.
"I'll try not to be too much of a burden."
"Oh, hi, Ron!"
He turned his head. Luna was standing in the door to the bathroom, one towel wrapped around her body, the other around her hair. How had he missed that? Moody would have his head if he knew!
Luna walked in, tilting her head left and right with each step - to shake the water out of one ear without letting it flow deeper into the other, as she had once explained to him. "Are you plotting? Can I help?"
"We're not plotting," Granger said quickly. She wasn't smiling or grinning now. "We were just discussing Ron… Mr Weasley's plans for the future."
"Oh! Are you still planning to become an astronaut?"
Ron closed his eyes for a moment. "I abandoned that idea before secondary school, Luna." As she should know.
"You might have reconsidered - after all, you should never stop dreaming." Luna sat down on Granger's bed. "And Hermione here proves that even the most fantastical dreams can be real!"
She was correct, of course. Though Ron had a feeling that he was missing something.
*****
Mould-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, Britain, July 12th, 2005
Granger was scribbling down notes, Ron saw, as Luna, who was, for some reason, glaring at him, let him into their room. "Working?" he asked.
She looked up. "Not on my project." She leaned back with a sigh. "I was finishing the list of my… allies."
"Oh."
"Have finished, I think. I don't think I've missed anyone." She took a deep breath and closed her eyes.
That explained Luna's reaction - Granger must have recalled some very unpleasant memories doing that. She might've had a flashback or two as well. "Sorry," he said.
"What?" Granger looked at him. Then she shook her head. "I decided to do this. It's not your fault."
"We asked you to," he replied.
"Asked. The decision was mine." She pressed her lips together.
He suppressed a sigh. Stubborn to a fault. She wouldn't even accept his apology.
"We shouldn't have asked you to do this!" Luna exclaimed.
Granger smiled at Luna, tilting her head slightly. "It's OK."
"It's not!"
Ignoring the unfair difference in how Granger treated them, Ron walked up to her desk. "That's the list?" he asked, ignoring Luna's frowning pout.
"Yes." Granger reached out and picked it up, then held it up for him to take. "Here."
He skimmed the list. Harry and his counterparts' were the first names, of course. He looked at her, and she smiled, shrugging.
"Best start at the top."
He snorted, then read on. Luna. Ginny. Fred. George, Percy… everyone from his counterpart's family was next, with the exception of Aunt Muriel. Granger had probably never met the old battleaxe. All of them were alive, or had been when Granger had left her world, he noted with relief. Which vanished when he remembered that Granger had left her world in the middle of a battle and wouldn't know what had happened in the years since.
Dumbledore - deceased. Severus Snape - deceased. He'd apparently been… "A teacher?" he asked.
"Ron!" Luna stepped up to him, hands on her hips, and huffed. "Stop!"
Granger, though, chuckled. "Perhaps get Harry so we only have to go over it once?"
Harry was currently resting - they had traded guard shifts - but he wouldn't want to miss this, Ron knew. And Harry preferred directly hearing testimony instead of hearing about it. "I'll get him."
He dropped the list and went to fetch Harry. As expected, Harry wanted to see the list.
"So, Snape?" Ron asked.
"Snape?" Harry blinked.
"He was a childhood friend of my Harry's mother and hated his father and Sirius. He had an acerbic temper and was very smart, but also incredibly petty and cruel - I only ever saw him smile when he was punishing someone."
"Ah. Sirius mentioned him," Harry said - in a tone that closed that subject for further discussion.
Which, of course, didn't stop Granger from adding: "He was one of our teachers - and a double-agent working for Dumbledore. He got caught helping us, though, and was murdered."
"McGonagall?"
"Another teacher. And our Head of House at school. Flitwick was a teacher as well," she said, mentioning the next name on the list.
"Sirius died?" Harry exclaimed. "You didn't mention that!"
"No, I didn't," she said. "It was rather brutal."
Ron saw her and Harry stare at each other and cleared his throat. "Remus Lupin was also your teacher?"
"Yes. For a year. He was one of our best."
"He's dead," Harry told her.
"Oh. Illness?" Granger asked.
"Yes," Harry said.
Ron had never met the man, though Harry, and especially Sirius, had often talked about him. Magic had probably cured his counterpart. "So many teachers. Did they recruit your entire school?" he asked.
"More or less. Dumbledore had a lot of friends among the teachers, and we students, well… many of us started training when we realised that there would be a war, and that we couldn't count on the Ministry."
"Oh!" Luna held a hand in front of her mouth. "They recruited children as soldiers?"
"We decided to fight," Granger told her.
"But they let you," Harry retorted.
"They had no choice. The Dark Lord's followers were hunting us - many of us - anyway. And my Harry was… linked to the Dark Lord. As his best friends, we wouldn't let him face that monster alone." Granger once more met Harry's eyes. "We've been fighting against him in one form or another since we started school together."
"Crazy," Harry muttered.
Well, Ron could understand not leaving a friend alone. "Fleur Delacour?"
"Bill's wife."
The other Bill was married? "Is she French?" Ron asked.
"Yes. And the most beautiful woman I've ever seen," Granger added.
Probably some sort of siren, then. Ron nodded. That would do it - his Bill wouldn't marry any time soon, no matter how much Mum tried to prod him.
"Justin Finch-Fletchley. Ernie MacMillan." Both deceased.
"They were in our year."
Neither had been at Ron and Harry's school. He read on. "Colin and his brother died?"
"Yes," she replied in a flat voice.
Ron skimmed the list and winced. No wonder Luna was so mad at him and Harry - there really were a lot of dead people on this list.
*****
Dumbledore was already seated at the head of the table when they entered the dining room - or salon, as he called it - but there was also another man present, standing to the side with a trolley loaded with covered plates. The first member of Dumbledore's staff they had seen so far - though Ron was certain that there were quite a few bodyguards - or assassins - in the manor. You couldn't keep such a building ready for visitors, much less safely guarded, without a lot of people. "This is Johann," the old man told them. "He's handling the cooking and serving."
A sort of butler, Ron guessed. He was certainly dressed to fit the part. And while he wasn't young by any measure, he didn't move like an old man either. Military or similar training would be Ron's guess.
"I hope you had a pleasant morning," Dumbledore went on. "I apologise for not joining you for breakfast, but I was detained by a few minor yet pressing matters."
"No problem," Harry said in a bland tone as he took his seat.
"We managed," Luna told him. "My compliments to you," she added, smiling at Johann. "The scones were delicious. The bread was a little too dark, though."
"That would be my fault," Dumbledore apologised as the other man nodded and started to serve lunch. "Gellert has pretty much banned white bread from our table - he has strong opinions on bread and the documentation to back them up. I stopped challenging him on this point long ago."
"Dark bread is healthier as well," Granger added.
"So people say. I've never quite acquired a taste for it, but please don't tell him that," Dumbledore said with a wink.
Whatever his other skills, Johann was a great cook, Ron found out as the first course - Alsace tarte flambée - was served. Luna shared his opinion and made no secret out of it - at least Dumbledore found her moans amusing rather than rude. Unlike Aunt Muriel.
"A speciality of his," Dumbledore commented. "Alas, Johann's recipe is one of the secrets I've never managed to acquire."
A hint that he was working on Granger's secrets, of course. Well, while he had undoubtedly put them under surveillance, they weren't about to discuss the truth openly anyway. Although… they might attempt a double-bluff: talk about magic and make Dumbledore think they were using 'magic' as code for something. No… Dumbledore knew Granger was from another world; he wouldn't simply dismiss the supernatural. And Moody had always cautioned them against being too clever for their own good - not that Ron had needed much cautioning with Fred and George as negative examples.
The main course - roast with a variant of hollandaise sauce - was served with a small card for Dumbledore. The old man read it, then frowned.
"What's happened?" Harry asked at once.
"It seems Mr Yaxley has disappeared," Dumbledore replied. "I didn't expect this so soon."
"'So soon'?" Ron asked. Had Dumbledore suspected Yaxley? And why hadn't he told anyone?
"It was obvious that this was, at the very least partially, an inside job. Mr Yaxley was among the most obvious suspects, and in light of the attention this has gathered, it was inevitable that the culprit would be discovered. However, I expected it to take a little longer - Mr Yaxley doesn't seem to have covered his tracks well enough."
"He could have been murdered by the kidnappers," Granger pointed out.
"Theoretically possible - but the murderers didn't bother to hide their first victims, did they? So, if he was killed by them, then it's still more likely that he was their inside man and they dealt with a loose end. Ruthless, but efficient. If they are playing the long game, they might even use this to frame others - and sow some more discord amongst our various departments." Dumbledore sounded almost impressed.
"And if he wasn't?" Luna asked.
"Then he wasn't cautious enough despite two dramatic examples of the danger. Although under the circumstances, I don't think he could have been easily killed unless he was deliberately avoiding the police and MI5 operatives and, therefore, bereft of their protection," Dumbledore told her.
"He's running," Harry said.
"That would be my assumption as well - though is he running from his accomplices or superiors, or from the authorities?" Dumbledore spread his hands.
"Those could be one and the same!" Luna interjected.
"They could be, yes - but if our government were behind the attacks on Dr Granger, I dare say they would have gone differently. More competently, for one thing." Dumbledore sounded almost offended at the 'tradecraft' of whoever was hunting them, or so it seemed to Ron.
"The government isn't infallible - quite the contrary!" Luna insisted.
Ron cleared his throat - he had heard that rant before. "If he's running, the police should uncover his involvement soon."
"At which point you will have to decide whether or not you'll return to CI5," Dumbledore pointed out.
"We've discussed that. We'll stick with Dr Granger," Ron told him.
"Splendid! Such loyalty should be rewarded! Allow me to cover your expenses." The old man beamed at them.
Ron had seen more subtle attempts to bribe him. But they could use the money - provided it wasn't dirty. Which, he had to admit, was a distinct possibility. But to refuse would probably cause more trouble - the police would be trying to track their and Sirius's money. "Thank you, sir," he said.
"It's my pleasure. With that settled… Dr Granger, do you have an idea where Mr Yaxley's counterpart might seek refuge?"
"No, I don't. He didn't manage to escape us."
"Ah." Dumbledore sighed. "That would have facilitated matters."
"I don't think you can rely on such details," Granger told him. "For example, your counterpart was the headmaster of a boarding school as well as an internationally famous politician. At the same time," she added.
Once more, Dumbledore looked surprised for a moment. Then he chuckled. "How curious, yet fitting, in a way. But do you know what friends and allies the Yaxley of your world did have?"
Granger drew a hissing breath.
*****
"Justin and Ernie are dead."
"What?" She looked at Ron, blinking. Had he just told her…?
He shook his head and held out the Daily Prophet. "They've got pictures on page two. Not front-page news, I guess," he added with a hollow chuckle.
She took the newspaper and turned the page, then hissed through clenched teeth. The Death Eaters had taken pictures of the two dying. And the Daily Prophet had printed them - claiming Justin had killed Ernie. Another 'rabid mudblood' killing a poor, trusting pureblood while 'trying to steal his magic'. It had to have been the Imperius Curse! This was… this was… She wiped her eyes with the back of her hand.
"We can't let them get away with this," Harry snarled - when had he entered the tent?
"We've got our mission," she replied immediately. They couldn't start attacking Death Eaters - other Order members would be doing that.
"I know!" he spat. "But this… We can't let them get away with it," he repeated himself.
"We won't. But for now we have to focus on our mission."
"But once we're done..." Ron bared his teeth. "According to the Prophet, Runcorn's in charge of these 'investigations of muggleborns'. He's a friend of Yaxley's."
So, Runcorn was responsible for this. She nodded. "Let's make a list. So we won't forget."
*****