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"Imagine that from the minute you could understand English, you were told you were... special. That even amongst other wizards, with their own abilities, you were prized even above them. That the name Malfoy meant something to people. That it meant power, money, and strength. That you should be proud of your name because you were the product of a thousand wizards and witches before you, hailing all the way from the first recorded use of magic.

You are told that the word 'pureblood' is a significant one. That it means one who is descended from magic itself. And soon, after you learn the word 'pureblood,' you learn a few new ones: Outsiders. Thieves. Muggleborns. Mudbloods. Blood Traitors.

They explain it to you in such a way that it makes perfect sense: Muggleborns steal magic. That's why squibs exist. The pureblood population and ideals are steadily falling to the wayside as the Muggleborns begin to outnumber them, forcing their ideas on us when our lives were just fine before. Those who support them are traitors to their blood. Blood traitors.

And one day, they tell you of a savior. They said he was kind, powerful, wise beyond his years. That he had a plan to put us back on top. That he was horribly misunderstood; that he was our only chance of having peace. That the roles were reversed: he was the Light, and Albus Dumbledore was the Dark. Dumbledore was taking away our rituals, our way of life, the proper way to use magic. So, I was taught to anticipate the Dark Lord's arrival. To be ready for his return. To be ready for the honor of joining him. I repeated every word my parents told me these last four years, hoping to meet this great man, this great… savior.

And, this summer, I got to meet that kind, wise, patient, and loving man. And I very quickly learned that he was neither kind nor patient, and that he did not seem to understand the concept of love at all."
Chapter 1
Pronouns
He/Him/His
He should have expected it, really.


It was customary at this point. They'd get on the train, and at some point, Malfoy would come around with Crabbe and Goyle in tow, they would trade insults, maybe a wand or two would be drawn, and then the prat would be on his way.


Easy. Simple. Predictable.


He sort of wished it had stayed that way.


It was after Hermione had accidentally insulted Luna's dad, the editor of the Quibbler when Malfoy finally came around. In a way, Harry was very thankful for that, because the atmosphere had become extremely awkward after that.


"What?" he spat, as soon as the boy opened the door.


Malfoy's face twisted in displeasure, and Harry could just see the retort waiting to fly from the blond's mouth.


And he saw it…die before it could even start.


"I…I need to talk to you," he said in a low tone.


It was just then that Harry noticed that Malfoy, uncharacteristically, was alone. No Crabbe and Goyle following him, like they had for the past four years.


Oddly enough, it made the boy look smaller without his perpetual bodyguards.


"Well, we don't want to talk to you, Malfoy, so you can just sod off," Ron said.


"I'm not here for you, Weasley," the boy spat. There was the Malfoy they all knew and hated. "I came here to speak to Potter. Alone."


"There's no chance we're letting you sneak off with Harry," Hermione said coldly.


"Yeah! Anything you want to say to him, you can say it to all of us!" Ginny added.


Neville said nothing, whilst Luna was once again engrossed in the Quibbler.


Harry was sure this was where Malfoy would resort back to his normal self, spit a few insults, and stalk off.


The last thing he expected was for the blond to swallow, and then nod.


"All right then."


He stepped in and closed the door behind him.


What in the sodding hell...?


Harry watched as Malfoy squeezed himself onto the seat next to Neville, Ginny, and Luna, sitting across from him directly, and making it a tight fit on their end.


"This is so weird," Ron muttered to Harry, loud enough for everyone to hear.


It was only with the other boy sitting right before him that Harry noticed a few more things about him.


Like how Malfoy's usually perfectly slicked-back hair was long and messy.


Or how he was even paler than usual, with the prominent eye bags on his face only accentuating it.


And, curiously enough, the faint scar that ran across the right side of his face, bisecting his right eyebrow, crawling across his eyelid, and ending just as it touched his top lip. It was so faint that if you didn't know it was there, you could ignore it, but sitting in front of him, it was plain as day.


Malfoy's family was rich. If he got hurt, he didn't doubt that Lucius and Narcissa Malfoy would spend every last galleon they had to make sure their baby boy was healed and unmarred.


So what could have caused the mark on his face?


For a few minutes, Malfoy seemed to be struggling to speak, opening his mouth and closing it every few moments.


Unsurprisingly, Ron was the first to lose his patience. With how much bad blood was between the two of them, it was a wonder that Ron hadn't tried to curse him.


"Look, Malfoy, if you're just here, to waste our time and take up valuable space, you can, as I said earlier, sod off-"


"Imagine," Malfoy interrupted. "That from the minute you could understand English, that you were told you were…special. That even amongst other wizards, with their own abilities, you were prized even above them. That the name Malfoy meant something to people. That it meant power, money, and strength. That you should be proud of your name because you were the product of a thousand wizards and witches before you, hailing all the way from the first recorded use of magic."


Hermione exchanged a look with him, and he shrugged his shoulders.


I'm not sure where he's going with this either.


"You are told that the word pureblood is a significant one. That it means one who is descended from magic itself. And soon, after you learn the word pureblood, you learn a few new ones.


"Outsiders. Thieves. Muggleborns. Mudbloods. Blood Traitors."


Ron and Ginny's faces twisted, and Harry could see that Hermione had a scowl on her face.


But Neville looked on, oddly invested, and Harry found himself just as engrossed.


"They explain it to you in such a way that it makes perfect sense: Muggleborns steal magic. That's why squibs exist. The pureblood population and ideals are steadily falling to the wayside as the Muggle-borns begin to outnumber them, forcing their ideas on them when their lives were just fine before. Those who support them are traitors to their blood. Blood traitors.


"And one day, they tell you of a savior."


"A savior?" Harry exclaimed, unable to help himself. "They told you Voldemort is a savior?"


"They said he was kind, powerful, wise beyond his years. That he had a plan to put us back on top. That he was horribly misunderstood; that he was our only chance of having peace. That the roles were reversed; he was the Light, and Albus Dumbledore was the Dark. Dumbledore was taking away our rituals, our way of life, and the proper way to use magic. So, I was taught to anticipate the Dark Lord's arrival. To be ready for his return. To be ready for the honor of joining him. I repeated every word my parents told me, these last four years, hoping to meet this great man, this great…savior."


…when Harry was a child, one of the few things that Aunt Petunia had let him watch was a documentary on a cult. He didn't remember the details, but he remembered the victims. How they'd had this almost fanatical gleam in the eye as they talked about the leader, how they were sure he was going to lead them into heaven, and how he was the only thing standing between them and the everlasting fires of hell. Now that he had joined the wizarding world, he wondered if it was her not-so-subtle way of trying to make him see the wizarding world as a cult. But that documentary was helping him put this in context.


And when Harry thought back on everything that Draco had said, especially last year… a lot of things about the boy suddenly made sense.


Malfoy wasn't an arse by choice; he'd been bred into it. Raised by Death Eaters, surrounded by them since he was born.


Was it any wonder their first meeting had gone so badly when Draco had met someone who had been raised in a (relatively) normal environment?


Was it any wonder that Draco had no friends outside of Slyhterin?


"And, this summer, I got to meet, that kind, wise, patient, and loving man," Draco continued, a haunted look in his eyes. "And I very quickly learned that he was neither kind nor patient and that he did not seem to understand the concept of love at all. He was a madman. He forced my father to grovel at his feet for days, for the slight of not believing he was alive when the only evidence of him was a destroyed house, his tattered cloak, and his wand. He struck my mother for having the gall to protest at her husband's punishment."


Draco, who had been looking down at the floor this entire time, finally met Harry's eyes.


"And he cursed me, for trying to defend my mother."


And that scar on his face, the one that marred his otherwise perfect visage, suddenly had an origin.


"...what in the actual hell did you come here for Malfoy?" Ron asked finally. "To unload all of this shite on us? What makes you think we care? Why didn't you go crying to your pals Crabbe and Goyle?"


Malfoy shook his head. "They don't understand. None of them understand. They met him for a few moments when he caressed their faces and told them that they were the future of the wizarding world. They weren't there when he spat venom at their parents. They weren't there when he went into his mad fits, talking to that beast of a snake. They weren't his plaything when he got bored and decided to just curse you for fun."


Draco took in a deep shuddering breath.


"They do not know that that man-no, that thing? Is a monster. He does not belong. He is drenched in Dark Magic. He reeks of it. The world protests his existence. Magic curdles when he uses it. He is not a savior, he is a demon."


"...what do you intend to do?"


Surprisingly enough, this question came from Neville.


"Malfoy…you can't run," the boy said softly. "Your family has intertwined themselves with him. I know the stories you heard. Some of my family members told them to me before my Gran barred them from the house. There's nothing you can do at this point; once he has you…it's over. You're his. Now and forever. You know as well as I do, once someone in your family pledges their life to him, that entire family belongs to him. We can try to offer you shelter, but I don't think that matters to someone like him. Wards never stopped him before. Even the Fidelius, the only enchantment that seemed tailor-made to stop him failed. I…I don't know what to tell you, but I'm sorry."


"He can go to Dumbledore," Hermione volunteered. " Professor Dumbledore can protect him."


Malofy let out an ugly laugh.


"Albus Dumbledore? Protect me? The poster child of the Dark side? I grew up listening to horror stories about that man, and I'm supposed to go to him for help? Throw myself at the feet of another powerful man and hope he'll give me a crumb of power, as my father did before me?"


"What other choice do you have at this point?" Ginny asked.


"He can always leave an offering for the Heliopaths and see if they'll do something about You-Know-Who," Luna offered.


For a good minute, no one knew what to say to that.


Draco shook his head and got up. "I didn't come here to ask for your pity, so you could ask Dumbledore to take the smallest of mercies upon me. I still have some pride."


"Then why did you come here?" Harry asked. That was the part that confused him the most. Draco and him were the closest thing to enemies without involving a blood feud. But apparently, he had been the first person the boy had sought out. Hell if Malfoy had gotten his way, only the two of them would have heard this conversation.


Draco's face softened.


"After I found out about my family being wrong about him, I wondered what else they were wrong about," Draco said in a small voice. "So…I decided to find things out for myself."


He looked to Hermione.


"I went to the Muggle world. What your people have…what they've built…it's beautiful. It's like a magic all on its own. I've never seen anything like that before Your history, your science, your technology. Phones and cars and planes and electricity…I understand you better now. I have a better grasp on…people, I think."


Then he turned to Harry.


"I'm sorry."


Mentally, he recoiled. An apology? From Draco Malfoy? That wasn't forced?


"I'm sorry for everything. All the curses and horrible words. I know a few words don't make up for four years of adversity, but…at this point? This is all I have to give you."


With a final wave, Draco Malfoy, his longtime enemy, walked away, closing the door behind him.


*********************************************************


"Whatever problem that git's facing, it's not on us," Ron said stubbornly. "Let him rot, for all I care."


"That's hardly fair, Ron," Hermione argued. "You heard him. He's been indoctrinated, and he managed to deprogram himself. He's a kid, just like us."


"You didn't care about him being indoctrinated when you punched the shite out of him last year."


They were in the carriages now, and of course, Hermione and Ron were arguing about what Malfoy had told them. Harry was just watching them, whilst Neville seemed to be in his own mind.


"This is different. He apologized-"


"Four years, Hermione! Four years of trying to get us into trouble, calling you that horrid name, bullying everyone who isn't in his house-and we're just supposed to forget that because he finally realized what he was signing up for?"


"I expect anyone would change how they think if they had to stay with Voldemort for the summer," Harry mused aloud.


An entire summer with the man who had killed hundreds… and he had thought that the Dursleys were horrid.


After the customary shivering at His name, Ron continued with his spiel.


"Look, even if we wanted to help, which we don't, the bloody bastard doesn't even want it. Dumbledore's the only person who can help him right now, and he refuses to go to him. Telling us some shite about Dumbledore being the bad guy."


"...well, it's not that farfetched, if you think about it," Neville said nervously. When all occupants of the carriage seemed to focus in on him, he shrunk in on himself, but managed to continue. "Well, like I said, think about it. The war was more than just spells being thrown about; it was also information. Rumors. Stories. If you want kids to hate someone, you make them the boogeyman. You-Know-Who was ours. Dumbledore was his. Especially if you frame Dumbledore to be this gut who just wants to destroy everything your family has worked towards for decades."


"Oh, bullocks! The only thing that Malfoys and the other purebloods have tried to uphold is their stupid pureblood status and other shite that lets them get away with all the messed up things that they do! Like pretending to be Imperiused during the War!"


"Well yeah…but do the Slytherins actually know that?" Harry asked.


"What kind of -Harry, of course, they know that! They've been bullying us since day one!" Ron argued.


"But how many Slytherin's actually know that it's wrong?" Harry persisted. "The first thing I ever heard about Slytherin was that only Dark Wizards come from that house, that the man who killed my parents was from that House. That certainly colored my view of them. You telling me that it didn't color yours?"


"Mate, it's hardly coloring our views if every Dark Wizard in Britain from the last one hundred years has consistently come from the same House, over and over! I'll tell you this right now, I've never heard of a Hufflepuff, Ravenclaw of Gryffindor Dark Lord."


"Yeah, but we know from experience that not every Gryffindor is a shining bastion of bravery and goodness," Hermione said darkly.


Pettigrew.


Ron winced at the realization. "Okay…that's a pretty good argument, I'm not gonna fight you there. But the fact still remains that the Slytherins are a bunch of evil bastards, and one having a heel face turn, just isn't possible."


"...I'm not saying that we should blindly trust him," Harry said finally. "But let's look for actions, instead of words. If he's really changed, if this is more than just lip service, then we'll see it. If he's still the arrogant arse we all know and hate, then good riddance to bad rubbish."


"That seems fair," Hermione said eagerly, glad to be done arguing.


"...I don't think I'll ever be friends with Malfoy," Neville said carefully. "But having a Slytherin on our side can't be a bad thing, can it? One less wand for You-Know-Who."


"This is gonna blow up in all our faces," Ron warned. "And when I'm right, I'll finally get to say I told you so. Bet you he goes right back to being an arse by pudding."


"Mate, if you're right, you can have all my treacle tart for the rest of the semester," Harry offered with a grin.


Ron matched it.


"Add in your bacon in the mornings, and you've got a deal."


******************************************************


After a night full of revelations(demon horses that only appeared if you saw death pulled the carriages, Hagrid was missing, the Ministry was trying to take over Hogwarts via Umbridge, and Seamus and his daft Mum thought he was a psycho), Harry had pretty much forgotten about Draco and his new attitude. Oh, of course, he noticed that the boy had sort of…calmed down? If that was the proper word? No more insults, no more heckling, no more bullying. Draco pretty much kept to himself and was overall sort of fading into the background because of it. Crabbe and Goyle still followed him, of course, but even when he was with them, he still seemed…alone.


But still, since Draco wasn't making a nuisance of himself, Harry didn't think about him more than necessary. He had his own problems to deal with, especially since damn near everyone in the castle thought he was a liar, and Umbdrige seemed to have made it her life's mission to piss him off.


However, he was reminded of his enemy's (former enemy? Rival?) change in behavior during their first Care of Magical Creatures lesson of the term.


He had asked Professor Grubbly-Plank about Hagrid during the beginning of the lesson and had been rebuffed soundly. Cursing inwardly, and worrying about his first friend, he had barely paid any attention to who else was around them to hear his question.


So it was a surprise when Malfoy stood next to him, grabbed the largest bowtruckle from the table, and spoke to him.


"Do you really not know where Hagrid is?" Malfoy asked curiously.


Harry glared at him. Was this some kind of lead-up to an insulting joke about him or Hagrid?


"Well if I knew, I'd hardly ask her, would I?" Harry said, jerking his head toward Grubbly-Plank.


"Well, he's-"


Draco took a quick look around, and after making sure that no one was really close to them, lowered his voice.


"He's in the mountains, looking for other members of his kind."


Harry nearly dropped his bowtruckle.


"His kind? You- you mean the giants?"


Draco nodded. "I imagine Dumbledore wants an alliance with them. Or at least a nonaggression pact. Since he's half-giant, he makes the most sense to send as an emissary."


Harry nodded slowly in agreement. Having the giants on their side, or at least out of the war, would be a good idea. He'd seen Hagrid easily manhandle and play with creatures that could kill the average man with ease. If the average giant was even just twice as strong as Hagrid, the Light Side would be in big trouble.


However, suspicion soon ran across Harry's mind.


"How exactly do you know this?"


Draco gave him a dry look. "Oh, I don't know Potter. I wonder if it has anything to do with the literal leader of the bad guys staying at my house. Think that might have something to do with how I know? Kinda hard to maintain operational security in the sitting room, you know?"


"Oh. Right. Him."


"Yeah, him. You know, even when I was a bastard, I tried to help you on a few occasions. I'm pretty sure you know that, considering your little escapade into Slytherin House in second year."


Harry blinked. "You knew it was us?"


"The two of you were literally shrinking as you walked out the door. Weasley's head looked like it was slowly catching on fire when you left. I was rude, not stupid."


Oh. Right, well, that really should have been obvious.


"...why are you telling me this?" he asked hesitantly.


Malfoy gave him a curious look. "He's your friend, right? It's understandable that you wanted to make sure he was safe. I'd do the same for my family."


"Draco?" Pansy Parkinson called. "What are you doing?"


"And you'll be lucky if you ever see that overgrown oaf in this castle again, Potter!" Draco declared loudly. However, the wink he gave Harry as he walked away told him it was more for appearances than malice.


********************************************************


"That treacle tart is mine," Ron declared as he reached for the dessert in question.


Harry smacked his hand with a fork.


"Ow! What the hell!"


"Ron, stop cussing," Hermione said in a tired tone. "Harry, don't jab Ron with a fork."


"That's not fair; he lost the bet!" Ron declared, nursing his hand.


"First off, the bet was for the day we came back, so you technically lost already," Harry said dryly. "And secondly, Malfoy wasn't being a prick. Well, at least not on purpose."


He told them what Malfoy said, about Hagrid being late because Dumbledore had sent him with the giants. The new information about their friend seemed to perk up even Hermione, who seemed exhausted.


"That makes so much sense!" she gushed in a hushed whisper. "Giants have been enemies of wizards for decades! Not only did they used to encroach upon wizarding and muggle settlements, but their skin is tougher than a troll's, making most spells ineffective on them. Wizards nearly drove them to extinction, but hundreds of wizards have perished to them; Hagrid is the perfect bridge to bring the two species together."


"No offense to you, Hermione, but last I heard, Giants aren't big on talking. They're more the smash-people-now, destroy-cities-later type of guys. I don't know how Hagrid expects to talk to them; it'd be like Mom talking to her accountant cousin; just weird," Ron rebutted.


"Well, I have faith in Hagrid. I think he can do it."


"Better yet, how do we know this is true?" the redhead asked, reaching for the pudding now. "For all we know, Malfoy's lying."


"What reason would he have to lie about where Hagrid is?" Hermione asked, confused.


"To get into our good graces, or-or trick us or something!"


"Alright mate, now you're stretching a bit," Harry said, rolling his eyes. "It's a pretty weak lie if it is one at all. This is something we can verify with Hagrid when he gets back, or ask someone in the Order, like Snuffles, or even Dumbledore."


If he'll even deign to look at me, that is. Or he might just keep me in the dark, to keep me safe.


"You two are getting way too comfortable with Malfoy for my liking," Ron accused, pointing his pudding spoon at the both of them. "Just because he has a decent sob story doesn't mean we should forget what a wanker he is."


"Nobody's getting comfortable with Malfoy," Hermione scoffed. "Harry's the only one who's even had a conversation with him."


"You were defending him!"


"No, I want to give him a chance. Everyone deserves a second chance. If he messes it up, then yes, by all means, rub it in our face, but until then, you should keep an open mind. Not to mention, you're neglecting the utility of having Malfoy in our corner!"


"Like what? What could that prat possibly offer us?"


"Information," Hermione hissed. "Do you know how long it probably would have taken us to find out about Hagrid if Malfoy hadn't told us? Not to mention, we have someone who was in direct contact with You-Know-Who for the whole summer! We have an in for all the Death Eater plans, what kind of creatures are joining their army, and what the weapon is!"


Harry's mouth fell open. Of course: they could finally figure out what the damn thing was, and how to stop Voldemort!


"That's why I'm advocating for giving him a second chance; Draco Malfoy is in the perfect position to be a spy for the Light Side."
 
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Chapter 2
Draco was no longer on the Slytherin Quidditch team.

Harry wasn't sure how to feel about that.

Draco had always been on the Slytherin team, ever since their second year. It felt like another major change in their usual relationship, and he felt uncertain if he liked this one as much as the others.

Because it was obvious that Draco was doing something.

The bags under his eyes were becoming more prominent. His hair was getting messier. His eyes, once sharp and cool, almost seemed fevered and manic.

Even Snape had noticed. He practically coddled Malfoy, shooting the boy undecipherable glances as he did his best not to draw attention to his ill-looking student.

Hermione thought the stress of the summer was weighing on him.

Ron that someone had cursed him, and had chuckled at the thought.

And Harry…well, he wasn't sure what to think. But he knew this much; if Malfoy had been treated half as nastily as Voldemort had treated him in the graveyard, at his rebirth…then Draco Malfoy would find no reprieve from his nightmares anytime soon.

But the thing was, even if he wanted to help Malfoy(and he wasn't quite sure how to even approach such a thing.), there just wasn't time to do so. Too many things were happening way too fast.

Umbridge had become the Hogwarts High Inquisitor, which basically meant she was second only to Dumbledore and maybe McGonagall. This was O.W.L's year, so there was tons more homework given to them at the end of every class than ever before. He had another week of detention with the damn toad, which meant another week of cutting open his own hand. So much shit was happening all at once, and he could barely handle it.

All he could do was keep an eye on Malfoy. And he could certainly see signs that the boy was trying to be better. He was fairer, punishing even members of his own house when they acted out in his duties as a Prefect. He was kinder, more polite to people from other houses, never acting like he was above them. And when Umbridge had come around asking for dirt on Hagrid during their next Care of Magical Creatures class, Malfoy did the unthinkable;

He took responsibility for his past actions.

"Now, I hear there have been injuries in this class?"

Goyle gave a stupid grin and looked at Malfoy, poking him roughly in the arm.

"That was me," Malfoy softly said. "I was slashed by a hippogriff."

"A hippogriff?" said Professor Umbridge, now scribbling frantically.

Harry opened his mouth to defend his Hagrid, but Malfoy beat him to the punch.

"Yes, but it was my fault."

He, Ron, and Hermione looked at each other, stunned.

"Did he just-?" Ron started.

"Admit to him messing up?" Hermione finished. "Yes, I think so."

When they turned back to Malfoy, he and Umbrige were in a very quiet and polite argument.

"Yes, but if Professor Hagrid had introduced a less dangerous beast, then you would not have been injured!" Umbridge hissed

"Regardless, he gave very clear instructions, instructions that I disobeyed," Malfoy said, a tired look in his eyes, feeding his bowtruckle woodlice by hand. "I did not really think that hippogriffs could understand English besides instructions from Hagrid. Rather daft, now that I think on it; they wouldn't be magical creatures if there wasn't something special about them. In the end, Madame Pomfrey fixed me that same afternoon, and I didn't even have a scar afterward."

Harry gave Hermione a harsh, but playful poke in the ribs.

"I told you the git was faking!" he whispered with glee.

Hermione poked him back even harder.

"I never said I didn't believe you, you prat!"

In the end, Umbridge left with a sniff, and Harry gave Malfoy a nod of thankfulness. The blond boy gave a faint smile in his direction but turned his attention back to the bowtruckle in his arms.


And yet, those acts of kindness were being punished.

Draco was being isolated by Slytherin house. When he sat to eat in the Great Hall, he sat at the end of the table, by himself, whilst members of his house gave him confused and disgusted looks. In Potions Class, he was more likely than not to be paired with someone from another house, as the Slytherin students refused to work with him. Even Crabbe and Goyle seemed to have abandoned their longtime friend.

Harry felt for Draco: the boy was trying to do the right thing, going against everything he had ever been told, and he was being shunned by the people he'd grown up with since he was eleven.

And the worst part was, he could imagine it; First Year, when Gryffindor House had turned on him after he lost those points because of Norbert. Second Year, when damn near every house, even a few of his own dormmates had thought he was the Heir of Slytherin. Fourth Year, when Ravenclaw, Hufflepuff, and Slytherin had constantly been on his arse, and Ron had betrayed him. And even now, he could tell that people in the school were divided, some of them thinking Voldemort was back, whilst others thought that he had murdered Cedric to get a fucking trophy.

So yeah, he understood that isolation, that loneliness. At least, during all these events, he'd had Ron and Hermione. And even when Ron had turned his back on him last year, Hermione had stuck by him.

Draco didn't have that. Crabbe and Goyle had abandoned him. He was completely and utterly alone.

So, when Ron and Hermione brought up the ridiculous idea of him teaching them Defense Against the Dark Arts(as if he was some kind of fucking expert), even when he initially rejected the idea, in his mind, he wondered.

If he lent out a hand to Draco…if he offered him a lifeline…

Would he take it?

And could he be trusted with it?

**********************************************************

The Hog's Head bar was a small, dimly lit establishment, tucked away in a grimy corner of Hogsmeade. The air inside was thick and musty, carrying an unsettling, pungent odor that resembled a mixture of damp straw, wet animal fur, and something vaguely reminiscent of goats. The room itself was cramped and claustrophobic, with low ceilings that seemed to press down on anyone who entered, adding to the oppressive atmosphere.

The bay windows, barely distinguishable from the surrounding walls, were caked with layers of grime so thick that it was hard to tell if daylight ever touched the inside of the bar. What little light did manage to seep through was filtered into a sickly, muted glow, lending the space an eerie, perpetual twilight. Instead of natural light, the bar was illuminated by the flickering stubs of half-melted candles, which sat haphazardly on the rough, uneven wooden tables. The candles sputtered and smoked, casting long, dancing shadows that seemed to twist and slither across the walls, making the room feel even more alive with hidden figures and unsettling presences.

The floor, at first glance, appeared to be made of packed earth, uneven and almost muddy in places. But as Harry stepped onto it, his feet crunched on something solid beneath the muck. Beneath the thick layers of grime and refuse that had accumulated over what must have been centuries, there were stones—large, jagged, and uneven. They jutted up in odd angles, worn smooth in some places from years of traffic but still covered in the filth that had never been properly cleaned.

The bar itself was an ancient, heavy slab of wood, worn down by years of neglect and darkened by age and use. Its surface was stained with spilled drinks, scorch marks, and what looked like claw scratches. Behind the bar, grimy shelves were lined with bottles of strange, murky liquids, their labels faded and peeling, some with odd, unidentifiable objects floating inside.

At the bar, hunched over a stool, sat a man whose entire head was wrapped in dirty, fraying gray bandages. His face was completely concealed, save for a narrow slit near where his mouth should be. Through this small gap, he was managing to gulp down glass after glass of a smoking, fiery substance that seemed to burn and hiss as it went down his throat. His movements were slow and deliberate, as though each sip was a careful act of survival, yet there was an unsettling air about him that suggested he was used to this grim routine.

In the far corner, two figures sat at a table near one of the filthy windows, their faces shrouded beneath deep hoods. From a distance, they might have been mistaken for dementors, the way their cloaks hung heavily over their forms, pooling in the shadows around them. However, as Harry drew closer, he heard them speaking in loud, rough Yorkshire accents, their voices gruff and coarse, entirely too human to be the dark creatures they resembled at first glance. Their conversation, though muffled, was laced with laughter, rough like the scraping of rocks, as they discussed something in low, conspiratorial tones.

Near the fireplace, which emitted only the faintest of warmth, sat a witch cloaked in deep shadows. Her thick black veil cascaded from the top of her head down to her toes, obscuring her entire figure in an impenetrable curtain of dark fabric. Only the faint outline of her nose could be seen, as it pressed against the veil slightly, making a small protrusion in the fabric. She sat perfectly still, her presence ghostly, as though she were a mere specter haunting the dark corner. The crackling of the weak fire nearby barely touched her form, casting only the faintest of glows on the hem of her long, black robe. For a very brief moment, Harry thought it might have been Umbridge, but honestly, the woman was too tall. Not to mention, subterfuge didn't seem to be something her repertoire.

The patrons of the Hog's Head spoke in hushed whispers, their voices barely rising above the sound of the fire's crackling and the occasional clink of glasses. Dust hung in the air like a veil, stirred only when someone shifted or moved, and there was a sense that time itself had grown stagnant within these walls, trapped in a perpetual state of decay. The Hog's Head was not a place of comfort—it was a den for secrets, where the weight of history, and of dark dealings, pressed in on all sides.



In other words, this place was fucking disgusting, and Aunt Petunia would collapse if she ever stepped foot in there.

That made the corner of his lips twitch upward into a smile.

"I bet we could order anything in here," Ron said, sipping his dusty butterbeer bottle. "Hey Harry, wanna try firewhisky? Dad let me have a sip when I was twelve; felt like my head was about to pop."

"Ron. You. Are. A. Prefect!" Hermione hissed, his eyes becoming colder with each word.

"I was just joking!" his friend said, holding his hands up in surrender. However, when Hermione turned as the door opened to see who it was, Ron leaned in and whispered in Harry's ear.

"If I can sneak a few shots, you wanna try?"

Harry rolled his eyes and let out a huff of amusement as he watched the veritable crowd of kids walk through the door of the Hog's Head.

Neville, Dean, Lavender, Padma and Parvati Patil, Cho, some girl he didn't recognize, Luna Lovegood, Katie Bell, Alicia Spinnet, Angelina Johnson, the Creevy Brothers-

"Oi, mate, correct me if I'm wrong," Ron said in a stage whisper, one eyebrow raised. "But has the definition of the word 'couple' changed recently? Could've sworn it still meant two."

Hermione deliberately avoided his gaze.

Harry said nothing, his fist clenching as he did his best to keep his anger under control.

This was…fine. Expected, actually. Rumors and gossip spread like wildfire in Hogwarts; hearing that the controversial figure that was Harry Potter was holding some kind of meeting in the Hog's Head of all places, well, he could see why there were more than the couple that was promised.

Still, that didn't mean he liked the whispers and stares as everyone grabbed seats near them.

In any case, there was only one person that he was expecting to see here today.

"I think that's everyone," Hermione said, still avoiding Harry's gaze. "We should get this started-"

"Not quite yet," Harry interrupted. "We're waiting on one more."

Hermione's brow scrunched up in confusion. "You invited someone?"

"Not quite. I told them we'd be meeting in Hogsmeade today, but you were the only one who actually knew where we were meeting. But, if he's half as smart as he's pretended to be all these years, it won't take him too long to figure it out."

A look of suspicion entered the bushy-haired bibliophile's eyes. "He?"

Harry opened his mouth to speak, but right then, the door to the Hogs Head creaked open, and in walked Draco Malfoy, looking very out of place.

Ron got up instantly.

"What the bloody hell-!"

"Draco," Harry said loudly, "Good to see you found your way here."

Cautiously, Draco gave him a nod. "Potter. Some directions would have been nice."

Harry shrugged. 'Yeah, I'm quite sure they would have."

A ghost of a smile appeared on the blond's face, and Harry found a small one appearing on his as well.

How messed up was it that the only way that the two of them could connect was to act like they were still enemies? Had the House rivalries just screwed with their brains that badly, that the only way he and Draco could speak to each other was through taunts?

"Harry," Hermione started.

"See Hermione? Notice that when I said one person, one person came. Not a Quidditch League," He said quickly. Then he turned to Ron. "And not a word out of you."

He was deflecting, and the three of them knew it.

Draco took a seat, but one that separated him from the rest of the crowd, which had switched from whispering about Harry to now glaring daggers at Draco.

Huh. Now that he thought about it, probably ninety percent of the people here had been bullied by the boy in question.

Well, sucks to be him.

He could feel bad for Draco, considering he was trying to turn over a new leaf, but that didn't erase the sins of his past. If he wanted to be accepted, then he'd have to earn it.

"Er," said Hermione, her voice slightly higher than usual out of nerves. "Well — er — hello, everyone. Nice to meet you all here, today."

The group focused its attention on her instead, though eyes continued to dart back regularly to Harry and Draco, alternating glares and stares.

"Well ... erm ... well, you know why you're here. Erm ... well, Harry here had the idea-"

Harry threw her such a sharp look that she backpedaled immediately.

" I had the idea — that it might be good if people who wanted to study Defense Against the Dark Arts — and I mean, really study it, you know, not the rubbish that Umbridge is doing with us" — (Hermione's voice became suddenly much stronger and more confident) — "because nobody could call that Defense Against the Dark Arts"

"Hear, hear! " said Anthony Goldstein, and Hermione looked heartened.

"Well, I thought it would be good if we, well, took matters into our own hands." She paused, looked sideways at Harry, and went on, "And by that I mean learning how to defend ourselves properly, not just theory but the real spells —"

"You lot want to pass your Defense Against the Dark Arts O.W.L. too though, I bet?" said Michael Corner.

"Of course I do," said Hermione at once. "But I want more than that, I want to be properly trained in Defense because...because ..."

She took a deep breath, bracing herself.

"Because Lord Voldemort's back."

The reaction was as predictable as it was hilarious. Cho's friend shrieked and slopped butterbeer down herself, Terry Boot gave a kind of involuntary twitch, Padma Patil shuddered, and Neville gave an odd yelp that he managed to turn into a cough.

Draco just raised an eyebrow, sharing an indecipherable look with Harry.

"Well . . . that's the plan anyway," said Hermione. "If you want to join us, we need to decide how we're going to —"

"Where's the proof You-Know-Who's back?" said the blond Hufflepuff player in a rather aggressive voice.

"Well, Dumbledore believes it —" Hermione began.

"You mean, Dumbledore believes him," said the blond boy, nodding at Harry with a sneer.

"Who are you?" said Ron rather rudely.

"Zacharias Smith," said the boy, "and I think we've got the right to know exactly what makes him say You-Know-Who's back."

"Look," said Hermione, intervening swiftly, "that's really not what this meeting was supposed to be about —"

"It's okay, Hermione," said Harry. After all, he had expected this.

"What makes me say You-Know-Who's back?" he asked, looking Zacharias straight in the face. "I saw him. But Dumbledore told the whole school what happened last year, and if you didn't believe him, you don't believe me, and I'm not wasting an afternoon trying to convince anyone."

"Easy to say that when Cedric Diggory's in a hole, while you're out here walking as if nothing's wrong," Zacharias spat. "Seems so convenient, doesn't it? Every year, you get into something shady, but we just hear that it was the Dark Lord, over and over, despite the fact that you're the only one who's ever seen him in the past fifteen years. Mighty lucky for you, isn't it? No witnesses, no one to contradict you. Just the word of the Boy-Who-Lived."

For a solid minute, there was a ringing in Harry's ears as he just stared at Smith. Did this guy…did this cunt, really just insinuate that he killed Cedric? For a fucking trophy? And that every time Harry had risked his life for his friends or the damned school, that he was just-what? Fucking around? Messing with Dark Magic?

Hurting people?

That anger that had been building since he'd seen Cedric fall down, his eyes empty, till now was dangerously close to erupting. He wasn't sure what he was about to do, but he was very sure that he was going to prove Umbridge right in less than a second-

Draco laughed.

It was a soft, dark little thing that made the hairs on Harry's neck stand up, and more importantly, it gained the attention of everyone who had been ready for him to blow up.

"I'm sorry, but you believe that Saint Gryffindor, Patron of Mudbloods and Blood Traitors alike-what? Killed Cedric Diggory? And brought his corpse back to school? In front of damn near a million witnesses? Well, my mother always said Hufflepuff's were duffers, but you take the cake."

Smith stood up, his face red and angry. "You don't get to-!"

"Oh?"

Draco was on his feet instantly, and unlike Smith, he moved forward.

"Perhaps it's too hard for the little badger to understand," Draco said in a silky voice. "But we are at a precipice right now. The worst Dark Wizard in the last one hundred years of Britain's history is alive…but he is not well. Whatever he did to come back to life, has messed him up mentally and physically. Don't get me wrong, he'll still wipe the floor with ninety percent of the population, but back in his heyday, it used to be ninety-eight. If you're just here to make baseless accusations, you can rightly fuck off and let the people who are ready to fight to get down to business."

"Why should we trust him?" Zacharias demanded. "If he's buddy-buddy with you, then that tells me the type of person he is already."

"We're not friends, you daft twit," Draco snapped. "I know to feeble minds, the thought of being cunning might as well be a foreign concept, but if you can think for just five seconds, you'll know why I'm here."

Smith looked like he was ready to blow his top, but Draco continued, circling the Hufflepuff like a shark.

"For some undecipherable reason, the Dark Lord is unable to kill him," the Slytherin said, pointing to Harry. "He tried first when he was one. Managed to kill a fully grown witch and wizard, but when it came to Scarhead over there, he got so utterly destroyed that there wasn't even a body left to scrounge up. Fast forward eleven years, rumors say that Professor Quirrel was in league with the Dark Lord, or, strangely enough, playing host to him. We don't know what happened, but in the end, we knew Quirrel was dead, Potter was in the hospital wing, the goddamn Sorcerer's Stone was destroyed and no one ever spoke about it again. Suspicious, yes, but I have a feeling that if Dumbledore thought Potter killed a teacher out of spite, he wouldn't be here today.

"Second year, the Heir of Slytherin business. I was oh-so-pleased that people thought my lineage went far back enough to be part of Salazar's line, but the truth is we're French in origin; by other Noble and Ancient Family standards, we've only just graduated from tourists to neighbors. Potter was caught speaking Parseltongue, which was weird, but apparently, everyone forgot that Parseltongue didn't even originate from Britain, it comes from Greece, which I figured you knew, Granger," Draco said, suddenly pointing to Hermione

Hermione jumped, a bit shocked, but she answered regardless. "Well, yes. It's not common in Greece, but it is revered there rather than shamed. Many rich and powerful wizards throughout Grecian history have been notable Parseltongues. It's far more likely that Harry just has a Grecian ancestor, rather than being a descendant of Salazar Slytherin himself."

Huh. Grecian ancestry. He had never even thought that his gift of Parseltongue could have come from anyone but Voldemort. True, it was because Dumbledore had told him that he thought it was because of the man, but in truth, Dumbledore wasn't infallible. The man could have made a mistake, looking for an extraordinary reason, rather than a simple one.

"Thank you, Granger. Now, the whole petrifying people thing was undoubtedly very scary for delicate badgers such as yourself," Draco taunted. "But nobody died. Even the ominous writing on the wall, about the littlest Weasley being dragged down to be killed there turned out to be wrong. Again, we don't know what happened, but Potter came back with her, a mind fucked Lockhart, and presumably, the sword of Gryffindor. The attacks stopped after that, and it was never spoken of again. Weird, isn't it, though, the attacks happened after Potter presumably dealt with it.

"Third year, and that whole business with Sirius Black. Again, we do not know what happened, but at some point, Potter was in the hospital wing, and Sirius Black was in custody, and the two events seemed to be interconnected. I might not be an Auror, but I'm sure even you are starting to pick up some sort of clues. Of course, Black escaped, but he was regarded as one of the Dark Lord's greatest students, so no surprise there, really."

Harry nearly opened his mouth to defend his godfather, but a swift pinch from Hermione and an elbow to the ribs from Ron had him shutting up and watching the show.

"And finally, we come to fourth year. Now, let's not even pretend for a second that Potter was even a willing participant. He looked like he shat himself the moment his name came out the Goblet."

"He still played!" Smith said. "If he didn't want to be in it so bad, then why didn't he just get out of it, let Cedric have his turn in the spotlight."

"Because, you daft child, the Goblet of Fire makes a binding magical contract with the Champions selected. He had no choice but to play. It was either that or figuring out what the punishment was for breaking a centuries-old enchantment created by some of the most talented wizards and witches that Europe had seen since the Founders," Draco replied in a bored tone. "Really, Badger Boy, you're making this much too easy for me. Now, fast forward to the final task. Here's what we know; there was a Portkey on the Cup. Potter and Diggory disappeared for the better part of an hour. Dumbledore said that they were no longer on Hogwarts ground, and the teachers said that they weren't in Hogsmead either. Potter came back, bloody and beaten, carrying Diggory's lifeless body.

"Now, you may say that this is, of course, because Diggory died at Potters' hands and fought him to the death, but I, unlike a majority of everyone in this room, am rich and connected, and I know what the Aururs wrote about their investigation before Fudge shut it down."

Harry froze. There had been an investigation?

And Fudge had stopped it?

"Number one. The Portkey charm on the Cup wasn't created by Diggory or Potter. The magic traces led back to our DADA teacher, Barty Crouch Junior, one of the Dark Lord's more well-known servants, who had stuffed Mad Eye Moody into a magical trunk for most of the year."

Draco let out a chuckle.

"You have to admit though, that is kind of funny. Big, bad Mad-Eye, the famous Dark Wizard catcher, was caught with his pants down. Ironic, considering that was how he conducted most of his raids."

Hermione cleared her throat loudly, and Draco got back on track.

"Right. Anyway, Number two; The Portkeys' coordinates led to a graveyard, where one grave had been defiled, its bones removed and turned into residue for a potion. Number three; A cauldron that practically reeked of death magic, was right there, smack dab in the middle of the graveyard. Not sure what Potter would have done with that, but obviously you have some idea, don't you Smith?"

The boy said nothing, though his face was red and his fists were shaking.

"Number four; the amount of spell residue in the graveyard showed that a battle of some kind had taken place, with multiple combatants casting spells. Way more than just two, and the power of the spells suggested the spellcasters were fully grown wizards. Number five; Potter's wand and Diggory's wand were both examined by Aurors, and neither cast an Unforgivable. So unless Potter had a second wand stuffed up his arse, he couldn't have been the one to kill Diggory."

"When did this investigation even happen?" Harry whispered furiously to Ron and Hermione. "No one ever told me any of this!"

"Well, they probably didn't mention it because it was shut down," Ron said in a low voice. There was a faint frown on his face as he spoke. "Amelia Bones…Dad calls her a firecracker. She probably launched the investigation the minute you came back with Cedric. It wouldn't have taken that long to gather that evidence, not if they worked fast. If the Death Eaters didn't have time to clean up, then the DMLE must have arrived there the same night. You said that the graveyard was near a muggle village, right?"

"As far as I could tell."

"With no registered magicals in the area, it would have set off whatever the Ministry uses to observe wizards and witches. They always know when we use spells near Muggles, and an Obliviation team is usually sent out minutes afterward. Bones would have jumped on it immediately. Fudge would have shut it down as soon as he heard of it. With how hard he rejected the idea of Voldemort coming back, it doesn't surprise me that he stopped it and sealed the records."

So.

Fudge knew. There was proof that he hadn't killed Cedric. That he had been attacked. That Dark Magic had been used in the graveyard.

And that he was innocent. And that burned. If Harry thought he had been pissed at Fudge before, that was nothing compared to the fire that churning in his belly now. After all that bullshit that Fudge had been putting in the Daily Prophet, insinuating that Harry was mad, knowing damn well that Harry had been attacked.

It took a considerable amount of restraint to just continue sitting there and listening to Draco, rather than cursing something.

"And finally, Madame Pomfrey and Professor Snape noted in a report that Potter appeared to have been cut with a sacrificial dagger, and his blood had been forcibly taken, presumably as a proponent to a potion or ritual that required the blood of a virgin, the blood of a foe or the blood of an innocent. Not a lot of good rituals or potions that require any of those three." finished Draco. "So, I can't tell you that the Dark Lord has returned, because my word is probably worth less than mud to everyone here. But I do hope that everyone here has the brains to put the puzzle pieces together."

"And how do we know you're not lying about that report?" Fred asked, crossing his arms. "You're a Slytherin; it's what you lot do. And, better yet, why are you defending Harry? Shouldn't you be happy that your dad's boss is back? Pureblood liberation, and all the crap you've been spouting throughout the years?"

Draco muttered something that Harry thought was very rude under his breath as he rubbed his forehead in frustration before he spoke again.
"If you think I am lying about the Auror's report, you're welcome to ask Bones," the blonde said.

Susan Bones jumped in her seat as she recognized her name.

"M-me?"

"Yes, little badgerette. Your Aunt may not be able to tell you what the investigation was about, but as far as I can tell, nothing stops her from telling you that there was an investigation in the first place and that none of the evidence pointed to Potter being a murderer."

Then Malfoy turned to Fred.

"And as for why I'm on Potter's side, I just told you: The Dark Lord and his servants have routinely lost to a child, on multiple occasions. His greatest enemy is an old man who's half-senile and spends most of his days sucking on Muggle confectionary. At the ripe old age of one, Harry Potter crippled the Dark Lord so thoroughly that it took him eleven years before he was seen again, and by all accounts, he was half dead. I'm Slytherin, so I'm cunning; following a man who has zero wins against a baby and a senior citizen is quite possibly the daftest thing that I have ever heard of. If I'm going to kneel at someone's feet, then that person should be acknowledged as the strongest there is, not a man who's tied with an underage wizard and a fossil two steps away from shuffling off this mortal coil."

As offended as Harry was…he had to admit Draco had a point. Harry had technically never lost to Voldemort. Sure, the man had outclassed him in magic at every term, but on each engagement, Harry had escaped or achieved his objective. The Stone had been destroyed. Ginny had been saved and the Basilisk had been skilled. Yeah, Wormtail had gone free, but Sirius had escaped with Buckbeak. And even with Cedric's death…that was still a win. He was alive. People knew that Voldemort was alive, and that ones that were ready for him were prepping right now.

It was sobering, to realize that he had done more against Voldemort than most adult wizards.

Saddening, too.

Hermione stood up, once again gaining everyone's attention. In fact, Harry noticed that even the other residents of the bar were now watching them from the corner of their eyes, all previous conversations halted as they eavesdropped.

"We're getting off track," the bushy-haired girl said gently. "The main reason we're here isn't to debate whether or not V-Voldemort is back. We're here to learn defense because whether or not it's true, we still need to learn how to protect ourselves and our families. The Dark Arts have never stopped growing; Dementors have grown in numbers and strength. More and more wild magical creatures are appearing. And Dark Wizards and Witches have always been there, and will always be there. Just because they don't have a Lord in front of their name doesn't mean they're any less dangerous.

"Umbridge tells us that we should call the Ministry and its Aurors for help. But I can tell you this; sometimes, you don't have a choice. When evil is standing right in front of you, ready to cut you down, the only thing capable of stopping it is you. Not an Auror, not a Hitwizard; you. Wouldn't you at least like to know how to cast a Shield Charm? Or a Patronus? Or even a simple Stunner. Those are the kinds of things we'll be going over. Nothing crazy, nothing outside of what we're already learning. We'll just be going over them with a finer brush, getting everything we can out of those spells. That's what this group is for. That's what we're all here for."

"And what if we don't want to be in a group that has Draco Malfoy as a member?"

It took Harry a moment to remember the name of the girl who had spoken up and was currently glaring daggers at Draco.

Hannah Abbott, a Hufflepuff girl.

It did not take him as long to remember that Hannah Abbot had believed that he was the heir of Slytherin, and had been one of the people to wear those ' Potter Stinks ' badges, so he didn't really like her in the first place.

Hermione hesitated. "...Draco…has recently had a change of heart. I understand that you might have your grievances against him, but right now, we're giving him the same courtesy that we're giving everyone else here-"

"He cursed me."

The silence was deafening.

"I don't even remember what curse it was, I just remember it felt like my eyes were boiling out of my skull. I couldn't see for an hour. I nearly fell off the Grand Staircase three times as I tried to get to Madame Pomfrey, and she had to keep me overnight for observation. She told me if I had come to her a few hours later, the damage could have been permanent. Do you even remember why you did it?"

Draco's face was like a stone as he answered.

"No."

"I bumped into you on the Staircase. That was it. I didn't even get the chance to apologize; you just whipped out your wand and cursed me. Do you remember what you said to me? I do, even though it's been two years since then;

" Half-breeds should know their place. That's what you told me. That was my great and terrible crime against you; being me. I was in third year; I was a kid. And you used a curse that could have ruined my eyes permanently, for the sin of not being pure enough," Hannah hissed. "I don't care if you've changed your spots or turned over a new leaf. It'll be a cold day in hell before I join any group you're in."

The tension in the room was so thick, you could have cut it with a knife. Harry could see that Hermione was struggling to find something to say, but she was reaching a blank, and honestly, so was he.

How do you even respond to something like that? Harry had always known that Malfoy was no good, but hearing this…it made him almost want to reconsider listening to the boy.

And of course, that was when another spoke.

"He broke my camera."

Collin Creevey.

"Not as bad as getting hexed and being left on the Grand Staircase, mind you. But my parents bought that for me. It was expensive. It was the camera that I learned to make magic photos with. And he broke it. For fun."

"He had his goons, the big ones, punch me in the stomach back in first year after he cast the Body Bind Curse on me," added Dean Thomas. There was a cold look in his eye as he regarded Malfoy. "Said he wanted to see if the spell turned me into a statue-like being, or if my muscles were just frozen. He wanted to see if I could feel pain."

More and more people spoke up; not all of them, but a lot. Not all of them were physical abuse. A lot of it was just verbal. Slurs and the like. The usual name-calling. Insults about friends and family, and swift punishment if they dared to say something back. Draco was talented with a wand, perhaps even more so than Harry, but he used those talents for his own enjoyment.

And Draco could be very cruel when he was having fun.

In the end, there was consensus.

Nobody really wanted Draco Malfoy in the group.

Hermione tried, of course.

"Everyone, I do understand your grievances with Draco, and I empathize with them greatly. Trust me, I've been on the other end of Draco's wand and his big mouth more times than I can count over the years. But we should try and give everyone a second chance-"

"No."

Draco looked very tired, with a strange mix of emotions on his face that Harry couldn't decipher. Was that anger? Frustration?

Guilt?

"It's quite obvious that me being here is a major sign of contention. If I joined the group regardless of what the others said, it would brew resentment and anger. Righteous anger, at that. No point in alienating the few allies you have left just so I can join your little club."

Draco suddenly cracked a small, bitter smile.

"After all, it's not as if I need protection from the Dark Arts."

Draco walked towards the entrance.

Throughout all of this, Harry hadn't spoken. Mostly because he didn't know what to say. He knew that Draco was trying to be better; he had seen it. But that didn't change his history. Malfoy had spent four years talking about how Mudbloods would get their own, cursing people left and right, gleefully extolling the privileges he abused as a pureblood, cementing himself in everyone's minds as 'Dark.' No one knew about the summer spent with Voldemort. None of them knew that he had been scarred trying to help his mother.

Aside from Harry and the others who had been in the train compartment that day, no one knew that Draco Malfoy had a very good reason for wanting Voldemort dead and gone.

As far as they could tell, Draco Malfoy hadn't stopped being evil. He had just been a little quieter this year, a little easier to ignore. So unless Draco did something crazy, like denouncing Voldemort in the middle of the Great Hall during breakfast, well…they really couldn't force anyone to accept him.

So all Harry could do was watch Draco walk out that door, a look of such palpable loneliness on his face that you would think he was the last man on Earth.

And maybe, from his perspective, he was.

****************************************************************

The rest of the meeting had gone well. Hermione had made everyone sign their name on a piece of parchment, and they had agreed to meet once a week, making sure that the meeting did not coincide with Quidditch Practices. All they needed to do now was find a place to practice in. It should have been Harry's first priority.

But he couldn't stop thinking about Malfoy.

And he could tell by the conflicted looks on their faces, that Ron and Hermione did too.

It was after midnight when the rest of the House had gone to bed, and it was left with just the three of them in the Common Room, that they addressed it.

"So…the meeting could have gone better," Hermione said suddenly, putting down her knitting needles. She had recently started making hats and scarves for the House-elves, planning to hide them underneath trash so that they could pick them up and be 'set free.'

Harry didn't have the heart to tell her that House elves were perfectly capable of cleaning the entire tower just by snapping their fingers and that since they weren't the Elves' masters, the clothes thing really meant nothing.

"I wished you had run that by me before you invited him, Harry. I could have planned something if I'd known he would have been there."

"It was a spur-of-the-moment thing. We were in Care of Magical Creatures again, he and I were chatting a bit, I suddenly brought it up, and he said he'd be there," Harry said. "I didn't know that many people hated him. Or that they had such good reasons to hate him."

"It's not like it's a surprise, though," Ron said. "We always knew he liked to spew filth, and that he wasn't one to shy away from cursing someone in the back. Mind you, I didn't really think there'd be other people besides us, but apparently, that was thinking too highly of him."

"...do you guys think this is a good idea?" Harry said quietly. "Helping Malfoy? After all he's done?"

"...Harry, I know that that I said that I wanted Malfoy on our side because I want an in with the Death Eaters plans," Hermione said slowly. "But that isn't the only reason."

"What's the other?"

"Harry, tell me this honestly. If you were on a battlefield, where you had to kill someone, and you saw Draco Malfoy on the other side, knowing that he had asked for your help, wanting to change…could you strike him down? Could either of you?"

Harry wanted to say yes, yes he would strike down Malfoy if he actually joined the Death Eaters-

But the words wouldn't leave his mouth.

Draco had been a part of his life since he was eleven. He had grown up with him. They had gone to the same classes, played Quidditch against each other, and ate the same meals together every night.

Those kinds of things form a bond, whether you like it or not.

As much as Harry disliked Malfoy…he did not want him dead.

And Ron hadn't answered either.

"I do not like Malfoy at all," Hermione continued. "He was the representation of everything wrong in this wonderful world of magic. He made fun of my teeth and my hair, my enthusiasm for learning and magic, my blood, and my heritage. He used his wand on me. He's talked about me dying a lot more than I would like. He's insulted Ron's family. He's made fun of the sacrifices your parents made to protect you.

"But he's a kid. He's fifteen. He grew up thinking that people like me were dirt, and it only took him one summer to realize that everything he knew was a lie. And he didn't try and pretend everything was just fine and peachy. He didn't continue to act like the arse he was for four years straight. As soon as we got on the train, he came to us and told us why he was changing sides. He even apologized. Can you really compare the Malfoy of today to the Malfoy of six months ago?"

"It was a shitty apology," Ron muttered. "And I didn't see him apologizing to those blokes today."

"Would it have mattered to them?" Hermione countered. "Or would it have sounded hollow and meaningless everything that they said?"

"Why do you want Malfoy to have changed so bad?" Ron demanded, a bit of heat entering his voice now. "For all we know, he's the same prick he's always been. Why are you so determined to make a pass for him? You fancy him now or something?"

A dark look passed over Hermione's face.

"Ron," she said, her tone icy. "We've been friends since first year, yes?"

Ron seemed to shrink in the face of her anger, realizing that maybe he had gone too far.

"Er, yes?"

"What's science?"

Ron blinked in confusion. "What?"

"What. Is. Science?"

"Er, I don't know."

"What's technology?"

"That's not a real word."

It sometimes amazed Harry that Ron didn't know certain things, and he had to remind himself that his friend had grown up in a very different environment than he did. Still, he could have made more of an effort…

"What's electricity?"

"Oh, I know that one!" Ron said excitedly. "It's what Muggles use!"

"For what?"

Ron froze at that. "Er…well…it's for…you know…Muggle things."

Hermione looked at him, unimpressed. "Muggle things?"

"Yeah, Muggle things, like…fellytones and cars and…things."

Hermione turned to Harry. "Four years of friendship, and he's barely taken the time to learn a thing about the world we were born in. His dad is the Head of the Misuse of Muggle Artefacts Office, and his two best friends are Muggle-born. And yet, this is all he knows about the world we came from."

Harry was slowly beginning to understand the point Hermione was making.

"Hey, me not knowing stuff doesn't mean I'm not your friend!" Ron protested. "Don't be like that Hermione!"

"That's not what I'm-"

Hermione took a deep breath as she calmed herself.

"Ron, your family is Light Side, yes? You all believe that Muggles are your equals, that we don't need to be subjugated, and that we deserve to be treated fairly, right? You're above all that Pureblood crap, right?"

"Yeah, of course!"

"Then why does Draco Malfoy, the boy you claim wouldn't piss on me if I was on fire, knows more about my world than my friend of four years?"

Ron looked stunned. "What?"

"That's what he said before he left our compartment on the first day back. That he had gone to my world. That he had found it beautiful. My history, my science, my technology. He knew what those words meant Ron. He didn't just go out there for a lark to see what was different. He studied Muggle culture. He went out there, and he lived it. He knows what a phone is, what a car is, what a plane is. The kid who looked down on me for years went to learn about where I come from. He called it a magic of its own. That's why I believe him. That's why I want to give him a second chance. Because rather than remain ignorant about those he was told to hate, he decided to learn from them.

"So why is it that you, the one that's so much better than him, know less about the Muggle World than him? And mind you, he didn't use four years to figure it out either. It took him one summer to learn these things."

"Hermione…I…it's not…"

Ron kept trying to speak, to find the words he wanted to say, but in the end, he just turned away, ashamed.

Hermione sighed.

"Look, I'm not happy about this either. Half the time I look at him, I want to punch his face in again like I did in third year. He's hurt me, Ron. If I had died in second year, he wouldn't have batted an eye. I can't forget something like that. Even if he suddenly became some kind of faultless saint, I don't think I could ever forget that. But I can acknowledge that he's changed. I can forgive him for what he's done."

Her face turned fragile at the end.

"I don't want him to die, knowing I could have changed it."

"...I understand him," Harry said quietly. "Being alone. Nobody believing in you. Thinking it was you against the world. I just don't…I don't know if I trust him. I can't just…put my life in his hands like that. Because that's basically what this is; this group is teaching people to survive against Voldemort and his Death Eaters. This is too important to risk on a variable like Malfoy. With the Ministry on our necks, Voldemort planning in the background, more and more Dark creatures gathering under his banner…those kids in that tavern might become the only people strong enough to fight against him."

Harry had seen the average wizard cast and fight, and he had never truly been impressed by them. Mad Eye Moody, supposedly one of the best magic users in Britain, had been captured and held for over a year, even with all of his experience and an eye that could see through solid objects. Moody was no Albus Dumbledore, that was true, but he had been taken out by a man who had fallen in one strike from Voldemort and Snape. A man who had dedicated his life to fighting the Dark Arts, and he had been beaten by a man who'd only been an active Death Eater for a handful of years.

Yeah, one could say that Barty Crouch Junior was an exceptional wizard in his own right, but that just made Harry's point more valid. The more he learned about the Dark Side, it seemed they generally had people who were tougher, more skilled, and more vicious than those on the Light Side. If he looked at his classmates as what he considered the average witch or wizard with no extra training was capable of…

Well, it was a wonder that Voldemort hadn't taken over the first time if he thought about it.

"I won't give up on him," Harry said resolutely. "If there's a chance he's legit…I'll risk it. But I'll do it personally. It isn't fair to others, especially not to people he used to abuse, to ask them to risk their lives for him. I'll take a chance on him, but I'll make it so that the only blowback will be on me."

"Count me in," Hermione said.

"...I…I just," Ron stuttered. Harry could understand his turmoil; sometimes it seemed that Ron and Draco hated each other more than he and Harry.

But then a look of determination entered his eyes, and Ron straightened up.

"I don't trust him, but I trust you two," the redhead said seriously. "You two want to take a chance? Then I'm in. I think it's a bad idea, yeah, but…I'm not leaving you two alone to deal with something this big.

"Not ever again."

*********************************************************

Harry didn't bother with small talk at the next Care of Magical Creatures class. He just grabbed his bowtruckle (apparently, this was their last lesson with them), grabbed Malfoy, and pulled him to a space away from the rest of the class. He could tell that the others were whispering as they watched, but right then, he didn't care.

"You know, you could have bothered to say hello, before dragging me off like a petulant child," Draco said, cradling his own bowtruckle. The thing made gurgling noises as Draco slowly fed it woodlice. Apparently, this nicer version of Draco liked to spoil the creatures he took care of, rather than abuse them.

"None of that right now. Give me a reason to trust you."

Anger sparked in the Slytherin's eyes. "Are you serious? After everything I said, you still-"

" Yes, I do. Because despite me knowing that you have changed, despite me seeing that you have changed, you have done your absolute best to present yourself as a complete and utter arse to the world these past few years. You cannot pretend that a significant amount of people at this school don't hate your guts. So you need to give me a reason, a reason that I can align with your past behavior, on why you want to join, because then, I can believe you without reservation."

"Me not wanting to serve a man who's been on a losing streak for damn near five years against a kid doesn't count?"

"I need more than that. Malfoy…you piss me off. So fucking much. I don't think you understand just how much I hate you, and how much of that hate I'm putting aside to hear you out. I just can not reconcile the you of today with the you of six months ago. It's impossible. So, I need you to give me a reason that I can believe that Draco Malfoy, the biggest wart I've ever met in my life, would want to switch sides despite worshipping every horrid deed that Voldemort has done for the last four years."

For a few good minutes, Malofy said nothing, not even looking at him, just feeding his bowtruckle more woodlice as they stood there in silence. Harry was wondering if he had pushed too far when Malfoy replied.

"You want an asshole reason on why I won't join him? Fine, here's one: I want power. Power like Dumbledore. I want people to trust every word that I say like it is the gospel. I want people to acknowledge me as their best chance of staying alive. I want people to rely on me so badly that just hearing my name sends a rush of relief through their body."

Draco's cold grey eyes stared at him as he continued.

"I can not get that kind of power from a madman who loses every year to my schoolmate. Albus Dumbledore managed to be the Dark Lord's equal without touching a drop of Dark magic in his life. And you were his downfall, and the Darkest ability you have is one that was passed down to you. That means there's something about your side worth pursuing. I'm in this for the win, Potter. That's all I'm here for."

Slowly, Harry nodded, a smile growing on his face as he did so.

"I can work with that."
 
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Chapter 3
Hermione did not hate Sirius Black.


She just didn't trust him.


Oh, she knew he loved Harry. You only needed to look at how the man's eyes seemed to shine with excitement whenever the boy's name was mentioned to see how much love Sirius had for his godchild.


What Hermione wasn't sure about was whether Sirius loved Harry for being 'Harry,'...or if it was because he looked a lot like James Potter.


It was the little things she had observed, really. The way Sirius talked to Harry, the way he acted around him, even the advice he gave…it sounded more like the advice you would give a friend or a sibling, rather than a child you were supposed to look after.


Mrs. Weasley said it best. It seemed like Sirius thought that he had his best friend back, and he was acting in ways that made him…erratic. Risking being seen in the Gryffindor fireplace, he encouraged the Defence club(yes, she knew it was her idea, but still), and he seemed so proud of Harry breaking the rules. But what made her so sure that Sirius hadn't grown up since his Hogwarts days was his advice about Draco Malfoy.


"Nope, don't even bother," Sirius had said, shaking his disembodied head.


Harry had just explained the whole Draco Malfoy situation in detail, but even before he had finished, Sirius had a look of doubt on his face.


"I don't know Sirius. It looks like he's sincere-" started Harry, but Sirius cut him off.


"Harry, I say this as someone who grew up in a family of Slytherin's; don't bother. I can't tell you how many times I tried to talk to Reggie or Bella or Cissy, only for them to brush me off or curse me. Snakes don't change their scales; whatever Malfoy's plot is, he's focused on you being the bait. Don't take it."


"Professor Snape is in Slytherin, and he's part of the Order," Hermione countered.


Sirius' laugh was so doglike that she thought he was about to turn into his Animagus form.


"Trust me, Snivellus is
not the example that you think he is. The prick hasn't changed since we were kids. If it was up to me, he'd be in a ditch somewhere no one could find him, but I'm never that lucky."


Hermione wanted to say something in retaliation, but she bit her tongue; Sirius and Professor Snape had serious bad blood between them, like Harry and Draco, but turned up to eleven. Professor Snape even tried to get Sirius Kissed at the end of Third Year. It made sense that his relationship with the man was clouding his judgment.


But that didn't make it fair.


"I've been telling them that from the start, but it's like my word means fuck-all when it comes to Malfoy," Ron grumbled. "Getting involved with that bloke will only hurt us in the end."


"...I don't know Sirius," Harry said. "He's trying to change. I don't like him, but I can't deny he's trying to become a better person. I don't think rejecting him will help us at all, besides being petty. Besides, it's one less wand for Voldemort."


"Or, he'll be like Snape, and he'll be a wand for him half the time," Sirius said wryly. "Look, I know I can't really tell you to do- I don't really have the right to if I'm being honest- but if you want my opinion? Steer clear of him. Worry about yourselves. He knew what side he picked. He's just getting cold feet. When it's time to fight, you'll know exactly who he's casting for."



She did not like Draco Malfoy. In fact, if you asked her last year, she would have said she hated Draco Malfoy; he seemed to cause half of the problems that she and her friends had gone through everywhere, and he had always called her horrid names. He was an arrogant berk who only cared about blood purity and felt that anyone who wasn't on his level shouldn't even be afforded the basic rights every human deserved.


But he was trying to change. Scratch that, he was changing, and for the better. Yes, Malfoy might have important information about Voldemort, but the main reason she wanted to give him a chance was because she liked to see the good in everyone. Ron, Harry, the Weasley twins, and even people like Snape and Malfoy. She believed that everybody had redeeming qualities and that everyone deserved a second chance. No one was perfect; everybody had a dark side.


Even her.


She had read so many stories of powerful witches seeking knowledge until it consumed them, destroying them. Hermione read and learned, the two things she did best. She curbed down on her curiosity, on how far she could push things. She tried her best to follow the rules unless it endangered her friends or herself. She gave herself clear limits. Harry was the brave and powerful spellcaster, Ron was the plucky friend who knew so much about the world around them, and she was the researcher, the one who found the answers by going through dusty tome after tome, finding even the most obscure rituals and spells.


Nothing more, nothing less.


"Granger?"


She blinked at the sound of her name, coming back to herself.


Draco Malfoy was standing right in front of her.


Her left hand, which had been lax, now tightened around her wand, a flurry of spells rushing to the forefront of her mind. Draco...even if he had changed, she didn't like being alone with him like this, where there were no other witnesses. Back in first year, a scenario like this would have been a nightmare for her…


Mafoy, seeing her tenseness, immediately raised his hands in surrender.


"Easy Granger. I'm unarmed."


That doesn't mean much for a wizard.


Still, she made sure to point her wand at the ground.


"What are you doing here Malfoy?" she asked, confused.


"Same as you; I'm on patrol."


Right. Sometimes, it was hard to remember that Draco was a prefect as well. Though, she was surprised to see him patrolling this far away from the dungeons. They were near the fourth floor, near that weird picture of a wizard trying to teach trolls how to do ballet.


So normal dumb wizarding ideas, like writing with quills and playing a game where people-seeking cannon balls were unleashed against eleven-year-olds.


"Where's Pansy?"


Draco shrugged "She's not really talking to me right now, so we can't coordinate patrols anymore. She's either asleep, or she's in the dungeons. Where's Weasley?"


"He has homework," she grumbled. If Ron had just followed the schedule she had made for him, he wouldn't have been drowning in schoolwork, but what did she know? It's not like she was at the top of their class for four years straight.


"So, that means the two of us are patrolling alone. Wanna team up?"


Her first instinct was to deny his offer vehemently. Walking in the dark castle with Draco Malfoy, alone, after hours seemed like a recipe for disaster.


But she forced it down and gave him a polite smile.


"Sure."


Patrolling wasn't as serious as it sounded. It was mostly just going around the castle, making sure people weren't out of beds, and generally just ensuring everything was quiet. Patrolling with Ron was…an experience. He constantly made jokes and even tried to scare her the first couple of times. He could be stupidly annoying…but he was hilarious, and he made her laugh, something she needed with their O.W.Ls this year.


Patrolling with Malfoy was tense. Half the time she was on the lookout for something in the shadows, and the other half, she was on the lookout for him.


She knew she had spoken a big game about accepting him and making sure he wasn't isolated, but now that she was in the position she had to trust that Draco Malfoy really had changed, and neither Ron nor Harry was here, it-


"Can we talk?" Draco said suddenly. "I know this is supposed to be serious and stuff, but I think I'll go spare if we just walk here in silence for the next couple of hours."


"Oh. Um, okay. What do you want to talk about?"


Ron and Harry were right, this is weird.


"What do you want to do after Hogwarts?"


"I'd like to work in the Ministry," she said immediately. "There are so many places where I could learn valuable things; the Department of Magical Transportation, the Department of Mysteries, maybe even the Department for Regulation and Control of Magical Creatures!"


The last one was a more recent desire, borne from wanting to see her Society for the Promotion of Elfish Welfare blossom into something more substantial. Plus, it might help her learn about why House Elves were the way they were, so needy and dependent on wizards despite having powerful magic of their own.


"Really? I thought you'd want to be a Professor," Malfoy said in surprise.


Hermione let out a very unladylike snort. "Look, I understand that I've cultivated the image of a bookworm and a know-it-all all, but I have zero desire to teach children. I barely have the patience to help Ron and Harry pass their classes. I like discovering things and learning more about magic and its rules. I want to learn more about the secrets of magic that no one knows about."


"Like where magic comes from?" Draco asked.


"Well naturally! It's only one of the biggest mysteries in the magical world!"


Nobody knew where magic came from, or precisely what it was; there was speculation that the difference between wizards and humans was a gene that allowed them to harness magic and warp reality, but no one really knew what it was. You couldn't measure magic or manipulate it in its raw state, and the rules they knew about magic barely seemed adequate for the overpowering force of nature that it was.


"You know, I have a theory about that," Draco said causally as they walked up the staircase.


Hermione couldn't help but tilt her head slightly to the side as she raised an eyebrow.


"Really? You have a theory about the source of magic?"


"Hey, you don't have to sound so skeptical. I'm not that far behind you in the yearly rankings, you know?"


As much as she hated to admit it, Malfoy was right. Whilst she was usually in the top three students of the year, often taking the number one spot, Draco was always in the top ten, sometimes even breaching the top five. Ron and Harry barely ever made it past the top thirty. Back then, it used to grind at her, that someone who believed in such pig-headed values was smart, and she'd have to console herself with the fact at least he wasn't smarter than her.


"This theory doesn't have anything to do with purity of blood or anything like that, does it?" she asked shrewdly.


Draco rolled his eyes. "Yes, I promise it has nothing to do with whose ballsack you came from."


The sheer absurdity of the statement, especially coming from someone like Draco Malfoy, was enough for her to let out a small peal of shrieking laughter before she regained her senses and covered her mouth, her face turning red.


Draco did nothing more than let out a huff of amusement before continuing to move forward and speak.


"My theory is this; Magic comes from the earth's core. It is an invisible, intangible energy that was created during the Big Bang, and suffused itself with the planet as it was being created. Magical energy emanates from beneath the mantle and upwards through the crust, permeating grass, trees, rocks, and even the very air. I think that wizards are a subspecies of humans that came across an unrefined, but physical source of pure magic; think of something like the Fountain of Youth, but back in the Stone Age.


"I'm thinking whatever they gathered around, whether it was a forest or a lake, was so permeated with magic that they built a society around that source. Drinking, feeding, or even living next to a source of near undiluted magic would probably show some kind of enhancement to the body, whether it be physical or mental. As generations of people lived there, magic would have entered their DNA, changing them on a base level allowing them to perform miracles with their minds. These would have been the first uses of wandless magic.


"Now, we know that magic and humanity originated from Africa, but I suspect the Akkadian Empire, the first Empire in the world, was where our group of first-generation wizards came from. The legends and myths that come from the Akkadian Emire mention a fair amount of gods, and we know from Grecian History that gods like Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades were wizards that used specialized weapons made from enchanted metals as the foci for their abilities, the predecessors to staffs and wands.


"My theory isn't perfect, but it explains why things like why certain woods are able to contain the power of creatures like phoenixes and dragons, why a majority of magical creatures seem so similar to some of their mundane counterparts, like the relations between dragons and reptiles, and why wizards can use magic in the first place, but people such as Squibs and Muggleborns exist."


So involved in his theory, that it took Draco a solid minute to realize that Hermione was behind him several paces, staring at him in shock.


"Everything all right there Granger?" he asked, a tone of concern in his voice.


"Uh y-yeah," she stammered, catching up to him. "It just…your theory surprised me."


"Why? The Akkadian Empire angle too extreme?"


"No-well yeah, but I'll come back to that later. It's just…you used a lot of muggle terminology and science, like the Big Bang, the Earth's Crust, DNA… just a lot of things I didn't expect you to know about."


Draco shrugged, looking faintly uncomfortable. "Like I said, I went out to see what else about the world my parents were lying to me about."


"Yes, but Draco, you missed several years of primary and secondary school, the place where you would learn about these things in the first place. When you said you knew about the muggle world, I thought it was just a more thorough surface look, that you knew enough not to stand out, not enough that you could pass off as a secondary school student. How'd you learn several years of schooling in one summer?"


An awkward grin was her answer. "I had a lot of time on my hands. So, what do you think of my theory?"


"It's…okay," she admitted. "Though, I question the validity of your Akkadian Empire argument. Yes, they were the first Empire, but you're automatically assuming that the first thing a bunch of magic users would do is start an Empire. It's more likely that there were tribes of magic users that stuck together, figuring out their abilities and refining them. Not to mention, the first recorded uses of wandless magic originate from Africa, where the largest concentration of wandless magic users reside today."


"Yeah, but it's possible the Akkadian Empire solely relied on oral notation rather than physical manuscripts. And you forget, even before Apparaition and Portkey's and Floos and brooms and flying carpets, wizards had a mode of teleportation. Yes, it was slow, clumsy, relied on runes that couldn't be messed up, and had a large number of problems with the initial designs, but teleportation was noted to have been used in the Bronze Age…"


That was how the next two hours went; them discussing Draco's theory. Hermione poking holes in it playfully, while Draco tried to defend it with a smile. It was…


Nice.


A lot nicer than she expected. She wouldn't say that she and Draco were the best of friends now but he had tentatively moved from ally to companion.


"You know, I'm kind of mad at you now," she said as they finished searching the Astronomy Tower.


"For what reason?"


"If you hadn't been such a prat all these years, we could have had conversations like this all the time."


Merlin, it had been a while since she got to exercise her brain with another classmate. Other Gryffindors weren't really interested in what she studied, and she still had a know-it-all reputation. She wasn't friends with anyone in Ravenclaw; they seemed to see her more as competition than a peer. It was obvious why she didn't converse with any Slytherin and Hufflepuffs weren't interested in her either. It didn't help that people seemed to treat their little group as…well, as dangerous, and as such, did their best to avoid her, not wanting to get caught up in whatever the current year's scheme was.


Draco let out a little sigh at that. "Not really. Even if I wasn't a racist, I was still a pampered brat who thought too highly of his father. You would have still hated me on principle."


"A shame, then. Though, if everything goes well, we can make up for lost time."


Draco had a full smile on his face at that, and while it twisted his scar a bit, it made him look…kinder, in a way.


"Thank you," he said softly.


For a few minutes, they just walked together, the silence between them no longer uncomfortable.


"I was hoping you could pass on a message to Potter for me," Draco said as they neared Gryffindor Tower.


"A message that can't wait until the next Care of Magical Creatures lesson?"


"More like a message I don't want other Slytherin's to overhear," Draco replied. "I understand that I'm not invited to the Defence Club, but if Potter is willing to spare a couple of hours a week, there are a few things I can teach him."


Hermione couldn't help but cross her arms in disbelief. "No offense, Malfoy, but what can you teach Harry?"


Draco's answer was to extend a hand.


Hermione narrowed her eyes with skepticism.


And with a flash of light and heat, blazing red fire filled his hand.


Hermione's eyes widened with shock.


"Wandless magic," she said breathlessly. "You-only powerful wizards can do that!"


Draco's smirk was so wide it nearly reminded her of his more unpleasant days.


"Not necessarily. But it's a good skill to have and just one of the many I can show Potter."


Hermione shook her head. "You can't just teach someone wandless magic; it's a skill, almost like being an Animagus. Only certain people can do it, like Professor Dumbledore."


And Voldemort went unsaid.


"You're already forgetting our conversation, Granger? Students from the Uagadou School of Magic do wandless magic all the time. Wands are a tool; us European wizards have been using them as a crutch."


"...Harry won't learn anything dark," Hermione said after a few minutes, biting her bottom lip. Normally, she would have been more cautious, agreeing to something like this, but wandless magic was too much of a game-changer. Harry might have been the best dueller in their year, but she was well aware he had no extraordinary skills to back him up, besides his stupendous luck. Wandless magic would be able to help him survive against Voldemort, there was no question about that.


Draco snuffed out the flames in his hand by closing his fist, and there was an imperious look in his eyes as he spoke.


"From the age of eight till the summer before last, my parents spent hundreds of Galleons having some of the best duellists, the greatest potioneers, the craftiest enchanters, and the most skilled spell crafters personally tutor me for months on end. I don't show it often, but I'm more skilled than damn near every student in this castle. If I used Dark Magic, it was because I wanted to, not because I needed to. I'm a Malfoy; a long time ago, that name was synonymous with cunning and skill. I'm going to be the one to make people remember that.


"And if Potter decides he's tired of getting pushed around by old men with their own agendas, then send him my way, and I'll show him how to reach the strength they have now."


"..you really think you have the skills to become the next Albus Dumbledore?" she asked quietly.


Harry had told her of Draco's ambition; to have people see him as the next Leader of the Light, or at the very least, comparable in power. Before tonight, she had been skeptical. But after seeing him summon flames without a wand…


Draco smiled again, but this time, the shadows of the corridor made his face look darker, like a beast wearing the skin of a human.


"I'm halfway there."


***********************************************************


"It's a trick," Ron said around a mouthful of bacon. "Had his wand up his sleeve or something. Fred and George say Muggles have something like that; sleigh of hands-"


"Sleight of hand," Hermione corrected immediately.


"Close enough. You expect me to believe a bloke like Malfoy can do wandless magic? Come off it. Only the strongest wizards in history could do that; Godric Gryffindor, Dumbledore, even bloody You-Know-Who."


"But wizards in Uagadou don't use wands," Hermione said slowly, sipping pumpkin juice. "It's how some of them get away with breaking the Statute; they can say that they were just making random gestures and didn't mean to make someone's chin fall off."


"Yeah, but Uagadou keeps their secrets to themselves. Dad met a Ghanaian wizard when he was starting out in the Ministry. He said the bloke barely even spoke about his home. They like keeping it hush-hush. They wouldn't tell outsiders about how to do wandless magic."


"Not even for gold?"


Harry had been musing over what Hermione had told them all morning, and it seemed that he was ready to speak now.


She worried about that. Harry was quieter nowadays, and he hid things from them. She didn't think he was splitting from them or something like that, but she knew that he was keeping more to his chest nowadays, and with all the pressure on his shoulders, that couldn't be good for his mental health.


"It's not like secrets can't be sold for gold," Harry continued. "I mean, just look at what Malfoy's dad has been able to do with a bag of gold at the right time; Mr. Weasley told me. Malfoy Sr. gets laws he doesn't like delayed, bills that might disturb his business shut down, a place on the school board of Governors, and the ear of the Minister. Some gold in exchange for a few magical secrets doesn't seem impossible."


Then he turned to her.


"How useful do you think this is, realistically? Is it just a party trick to impress people, or is it something I can use in a duel?"


She licked her lips nervously as she thought of how to answer.


"It…depends? Wandless magic in Britain has been well documented, because of how rare it is. Oftentimes, people can't do much with it; levitate objects, banish them, fix things with a touch, that sort of thing. But if he can do what people from Uagadou can do…Harry, people don't really…Africa has a bad reputation, in the magical community. Everything there is too…powerful. It's the place where creatures like Nundu and the Sphinx came from, and they need groups of powerful wizards to deal with them. Uagadouan wizards are on another level from European wizards. One Uagadouan sorcerer can do things that take up to ten wizards here."


She was rambling, and she knew it, but she wasn't too sure about this offer of Draco's. Yes, she understood that Harry needed power and skills, but Uagadou was considered only a few steps away from a place like Durmstrang. They kept their secrets viciously, they treated outsiders coldly, and they weren't like Hogwarts.


You could technically graduate from Uagadou at any level, or 'year' in Hogwarts speak. Most people who attended the secretive school left at what counted as their fourth year. But every year, around ten wizards graduated from what equated to their seventh year, and those were the top crop for wizardry. They could summon storms with simple gestures, heal wounds deemed incurable, and take on armies of wizards on their own.


There was a reason why despite all the wars and battles that had happened in the last thousand years, no one had dared involve Uagadou in their conflicts. Even Grindlewald, someone who had traveled the world looking for strong recruits and challenges, had never stepped foot in Uganda, or the continent of Africa if they were being specific.


"It's an edge," she said finally. "If taken to its extreme, I don't doubt that you could match up to someone like You-Know-Who."


"Yeah, but Uagadouan wizards are practically nutters. You can't even look in their direction without them giving you the evil eye. I mean, did you hear what those Nigerian wizards did to some of the Death Eaters that came at the World Cup? They're in the Janus Thickney Ward, and they still can't speak English!" Ron argued, concern on his face. "I mean, what if Malfoy uses this as an excuse to curse Harry with something horrid?"


"We agreed to give Malfoy a chance," Harry said. "And if this is something that helps me survive the year, then I won't turn my nose up at it just because a berk is the one handing it to me."


"...we should go with you," Hermione said suddenly.


As much as she wanted to say that it was a desire borne from wanting Harry safe, she couldn't lie, at least, not to herself.


She wanted that power.


It was a greedy thing, the lust for knowledge in her head. Like a hole with no bottom, her curiosity forced her to dig deeper, devour more, and learn everything. Even after attending Hogwarts for four years, magic still enchanted her, taking her by surprise. It amazed her-galled her, really-that wizards could do such fantastical things and just dismiss it, not wanting to see how far it could go.


Ron nodded along with her idea. "Yeah, that's a great idea. With me and Hermione there-"


"Hermione and I," she corrected automatically.


"Yeah, whatever. With the two of us there, any tricks that Malfoy tries will be sniffed out. He can't get something past all three of us."


Harry nodded, grabbing a crumpet with one hand, and the butter dish with the other.


"Did he mention a meeting place? A classroom or something like that?"


Hermione shrugged. "I think you'll have to ask him that Harry. Besides, whatever it is, it can't really compare to the Room of Requirement, can it? More chance of getting caught, but he'll know that which means there's less chance of us getting hexed."


As Harry and Ron really started to get into the particulars of what wandless magic really entailed("It's basically accidental magic that you're doing on purpose," Ron explained. "Like when you're a baby, and you want your bottle, so you summon it yourself. Except as an adult, you do that with a wand, a sword, anything really. Dad says that Dumbledore can do Lumos without a wand; just summons a ball of light in the palm of his hand) Hermione found herself biting her lip wondering just how Draco had mastered it in the first place.


The theory of Draco just buying the secrets of off someone made sense…until you realized that nearly all purebloods, whilst not in the same tax bracket, could probably offer similar amounts of gold. If it was as simple as just throwing gold at someone until you taught them, then why didn't every Slytherin and Pureblood child have the ability to use wandless magic?


What made Draco so special?


*********************************************************


A little-known fact about Hogwarts Professors, or, more specifically, Heads of Houses.


They can search as students belonging without their knowledge. You don't have to inform the student or their parents, you can just nip down to the dormitories and look through everyone's belongings, without them any the wiser. It was a measure implemented roughly five hundred years ago when some fool child had brought a Cursed Object into the Hufflepuff dorms and nearly killed every student there.


Heads of Houses tended not to do this, though; it sowed resentment and distrust in students, making them believe that the Professors didn't respect them enough to give them the privacy they deserved.


In Slytherin House, however, a Head of House doing that would basically be a slap in the face not just to the student, but to the family as well. Slytherin's prided themselves on their ingenuity, their cunning, and their ability to move around unseen. If it ever got to the point where a student had to be searched, it meant that they had failed every core tenement of their House. The political implications were dangerous, and it could end very badly for all parties involved.


But in this case, Severus Snape had no choice.


A day before the School year, Luciius had come to him, worried to death about Draco. He had talked about how Draco had been laid up for almost two weeks after the Dark Lord had punished him, and when he had come to, his son had barely even recognized him. He lamented about how Draco wouldn't even meet his and Narciss'as eyes anymore, preferring to eat in his room, only conversing with the House Elfs and tending the peacocks. He fretted about how his son was spending more and more time in their private Library, sneaking in during the dead of night, researching books about death, rebirth, and reincarnation.


And he had come to him with a specific worry in mind.


About a month ago, another two weeks after Draco had recovered, he had taken one of the Elf's with him and gone to Gringott's, where almost a sizeable amount of golden was missing. Not even a quarter of a quarter of their wealth, but still substantial enough that Lucius knew it wasn't for anything Draco usually bought.


Draco had sent this money off with a letter, and it had taken their owl a week to come back, with the poor thing exhausted, ragged piece of paper in his beak.


Two days before the students had come back to Hogwarts, a bird that he hadn't recognized had dropped something off for Draco, and the boy had hidden it immediately. Lucius knew that it wasn't Dark, thanks to the various charms around the house, but the man was well aware that with money involved, anything could be dangerous.


And when Severus had asked Lucius why he had not confronted his teenage son, as the man of his house?


Lucius snarled, a look of anger and disgust on his face.


"How can I ask him anything, after what he saw?" the man hissed. "He saw his father following after another man on his knees like a dog, constantly kissing the hem of his robes and begging for forgiveness. He saw his mother struck like a common Muggle when she begged for my release. And Draco did not beg. He pulled out his wand immediately and was struck down for trying to defend my wife, his mother.


"At that moment, Draco was more of a man than I was. He listens to me, of course, but he no longer hangs onto my words as if they were gospel. He no longer comes to me, asking for advice. He no longer spends time with me in my study, when the two of us would just come together and…
be together, just father and son, basking in the other's presence."


Lucius looked at him, his eyes red and teary. "I don't know if I can try and command him, and find out that my son has lost any respect he ever had for me. I think such a thing may actually be my end."



Severus had watched Draco and had noticed the boy's tiredness, his lack of energy, and his more secretive demeanor.


He had also noticed how he went against Slytherin House, gaining enemies and losing allies every day, acting as if he was a slovenly Gryffindor rather than a proud Slytherin.


He noticed how despite all of this, things just seemed to be falling in place for Draco.


And he could hardly ignore it when a few nights ago, Pansy Parkinson came to him in tears, telling him in between sobs about how she caught Draco retching in a corridor, green and gold bile falling to the floor.


Recklessness, signs of toxic poisoning, overconfidence, and enough gold missing that it could cover three Firebolts…


After that, well, it was easy enough to realize what he was looking for. Despite his fame in the British Isles, he was not the only Potion Master in the world, and he wasn't even the best in Europe if they were being honest. One of the best, to be sure, but not the best. It would be easy for Draco to find one of those reputable names and put in a rush order. The potion needed six months to stew, but certain potioneers always kept some in stock, whether it be for themselves, or to sell for the highest bidder.


The potion was banned for Sporting events, which explained why Draco had quit the Quidditch Team. It was toxic in high doses, but for this potion, high doses basically meant anything more than a few tablespoons a month. The average wizard would use maybe a few drops a week.


Draco must've been using a few drops a day. He was dosing himself very carefully, but the effects were slowly building, and if he didn't take care, the boy would end up dead.


And despite his feelings for children in general…Draco was an exception to that rule.


He'd always been, ever since the first day they'd met, in that overly expensive hospital ward, Narcissa exhausted but smiling, and Lucius trusting him with something so precious he could barely understand why.


So that was why he had to intervene now before it could get worse.


A knock on his dungeon door brought him out of his thoughts, and he calmed what few nerves he had with a small sigh.


It was time.


"Enter."


Draco Malfoy walked into the dungeon, looking thoroughly uncomfortable.


"Sir? Vincent Crabbe said you called for me-!"


When Draco caught sight of the flask in his hand, his already pale and sickly face turned a rather frightening shade of white.


And for good reason.


"Come and sit Draco, " he said with a drawl. "Perhaps you can enlighten me as to why you've been slowly poisoning yourself with Felix Felicis for several months now."


He gave the water bottle-sized flask in his hand a little shake, and the golden liquid inside splashed merrily, its owner looking at him with wide eyes.
 
Chapter 4
It said something about Draco's stress that his first instinct was to twitch for his wand, rather than try to explain himself.

Severus shut that down fairly quickly though.

"Do not do anything stupid, Draco," he hissed, his voice like venom. "Sit down. If you do not, I will stun you, inform the Headmaster of your activities, and have your parents come and collect you tomorrow. Is that what you want?"

Draco's only answer was a scowl and clenched fists.

"Sit, boy. This is the last time I'll tell you."

Slowly, reluctantly, the boy walked forward, trepidation in each footstep, until he plopped himself down in the chair before his desk, a glare on his face the entire time.

"Good. Now, we will sit and talk about this like grown wizards, not temperamental little witches, is that understood?"

A terse nod.

"Speak, Draco. You've been so eager to do that these days, what's stopping you now?"

"...yes, sir."

Snape let out a soft sigh, unheard by the boy before him. He was glad that Draco still had his wits about him. If Draco thought he even had a sliver of a chance against someone like him, his collapse from overuse of the potion must be right around the corner.

Then again, Draco is no slouch when it comes to dueling. And the potion probably evened the odds. After that, it would have come down to…well, luck.

"Good. Now, let's clear up some… misconceptions. You are not in trouble. This conversation will stay between us. I just want to know what is so important you are risking death for."

"...it's nothing important. Just a lark," the blonde boy muttered.

"...you're not a fool, Draco, and I hope you don't think me one. You are wise, wiser than you believe, and I know that you wouldn't waste such a powerful tool on a lark, as you say. Draco…you can trust me."

It took a solid minute before the boy spoke again.

"Why didn't you tell us about him?"

Severus frowned. "Him?"

The glare returned. "Voldemort."

It felt like a flash of fire flittered across his Mark, as it always did when someone mentioned his Master's name. Like a constant reminder that he was always there, always listening.

"Do not say his name-"

"You see?! That's exactly what I mean!" Draco yelled suddenly, slamming his fists on the table. 'What kind of leader forces you to fear his name? What kind of visionary tortures children? What kind of savior makes you feel like your only choices are death or following his fucked up plans to kill everyone in his path?"

Severus leaned back, surprised. He'd known that Draco had been injured by the Dark Lord over the summer, but he didn't think that it had been severe enough to make Draco question his allegiance.

He had thought that the boy was cozying up to Potter for some unknown plot of his to bring the boy closer to the Dark Lord. If Draco was genuinely changing sides…

"He was not always like that Draco," he explained. "His resurrection…it left him…impaired. Soon, he will stabilize, and he will more resemble the man we told you about."

"Liar," the blond hissed with such certainty that it made Severus blink, taken aback. "You've always feared him. You always acted like this when you were discussing him. Maybe back then, he knew how to hide it, but everyone in the Inner Circle, they knew, didn't they?"

You knew, went unsaid.

"The Dark Lord is kind to those who earn his favor," Severus replied. Not quite a defense and they both understood that. "To be accepted by him, to be treated as an equal by him…it is an honor that not many are worthy of-"

"Fucking. Bull. Shit."

Severus' blood froze.

"You and Mom and Dad and even the fucking House Elves told me that I would never have to bow to anyone. That as a Malfoy, I belonged at the top. As a pureblood, I was worthy of a life of luxury. That as a wizard, I was graced with magic."

Draco was standing now, and his fury was almost palpable.

"But all of a sudden, some loser from the dead who can't manage a straight fucking win against a dope in glasses who didn't even know magic existed five years ago shows up, and all of that goes out the window?"

Severus was suddenly distinctly glad that the Dark Mark actually couldn't be used as a listening device because if the Dark Lord ever heard Draco's true thoughts, the entire Mlaofy lineage would be dead before dawn.

"And you think siding with someone like Potter and his merry band of Gryffindors will change things?" he asked with a sneer. "Do you truly think that begging Dumbeldore for mercy will be any different than begging the Dark Lord? The only difference is Dumbledore will smile kindly as he sends you to your doom."

That damnable old man…he had repented for his sins. He had made up for his sake. Potter's spawn was still alive. Lily's eyes still looked upon the world with wonder. He had saved twice as many as he had killed and healed thrice as many as he had tortured. And despite it all, here he was yet again, caught between two masters, chains on his neck threatening to split him in two.

He did not want Draco to suffer that fate. Dumbledore would not shy away from making the boy Severus' successor should he one day fail to please the Dark Lord.

He was very good at sacrificing the lives of those he deemed acceptable. The original Order of the Phoenix was proof enough of that.

The sneer that Draco threw back in his face was worthy of his father. "Oh please. Just because you're comfortable kneeling at the whims of old men whose glory days are long past doesn't mean that I'm the same."

The sting of the insult almost made him want to curse his fool of a godson…until he registered what he truly said.

"What?"

Draco's fists clenched, his knuckles turning white. "This…this shit can't continue," he said, his voice low. "The ostracization of Slytherins. Continuous service to Dark Lords. Resented by the British Wizarding World as a whole. Unable to make a home for ourselves anywhere but the nests of snakes…this can't go on."

Severus let out a sigh. He couldn't deny it; he'd had the same thoughts many times. But…

"No one can change how the world looks at us. Not even you, as skilled as you are."

Draco bit his lip, mulling something over in his mind for a solid minute until he finally spoke.

"But power can."

Severus stared at him warily. "What do you mean by that?"

He had just implied that he wasn't going to follow Dumbledore or the Dark Lord. So where was he going to get this so-called power from?

"A proficiency in wandless magic. A collection of diverse spells that others are not aware of. Mastery of wordless magic. An innate understanding of runes and spell crafting."

Draco's eyes were defiant as he spoke.

"Those are the hallmarks of a powerful wizard, are they not?"

"...they are some," Severus admitted cautiously. Where was Draco going with this? "But not all. Skill in dueling, charisma, and a good amount of raw talent are needed to be considered one of the greatest."

"...and what if you cheat?" Draco asked, his voice nearly a whisper. "What if you used every resource available you could to grab that edge? If you found shortcuts to replicate powers that you were told were impossible? If you borrowed principles from a culture you were told was worthless? If you could cheat your way to the top, or, at the very least, make yourself look like you belonged there…then couldn't you be considered one of the greats?"

Draco extended his hand, and the flask of Felix Felicis flew from Severus' hand to Draco's.

It was only natural for his eyes to widen.

"H-how did-"

"I figured it out!" Draco said, joy and triumph in his voice. "It was never as hard as they said it was! The key was the gestures! Most people who use wandless magic still have to make some kind of gesture, to make a movement of some kind that they believe will release the magic held inside them. We had dozens of foci before wands, and they all required one thing.

"Us.

"We count as foci. Our blood, our bones, our skin, every single bit of us is as magical as any magic creature! Yes, the spell will be weaker, and it will be diminished in power because foci are multipliers as much as they are tools, but they'll still be cast! I had to reverse-engineer it through the use of subtraction. You have to master the spell in its entirety before you can cast it wandlessly. I can only do four right now, but the potion has been guiding me, helping me remember the lessons my mother and father paid for all those summers ago. I understand what those people were trying to teach me now!"

Severus could only stare at Draco with wonder as he listened to his godson ramble on in excitement, a fervor in his voice, red splotches of excitement on his cheeks as he spoke.

Severus had heard this style of speaking before. The excitement of figuring out an essential part of magic on the path to power.

Once, in a wicked tone, as a demon in human skin figured out how to use the blood of Muggleborn wizards and witches to increase his own magical power using a dark ritual no one had managed to figure out in decades.

And once again, with a gentle man with blue eyes of burning determination, creating a curious device that could steal light sources of any kind.

Draco sounded like the Dark Lord and Dumbledore when they had figured out a puzzle that had eluded them for so long.

"-and not to mention, I've been modifying spells for my own use as well with this new method-"

"You've been what?" he asked sharply. "Draco, messing with spells is dangerous!"

"Yeah, I know that," the boy said, rolling his eyes. "I'm just subtracting parts of the spell; the need for the incantation and the gestures, so all I have to do is think and point."

Wait, this part sounded a bit familiar.

"And how would you accomplish such a thing?" He asked, an eyebrow raised.

Draco gave him a bright smile. "In our first potions class this year, I found an old book."

Oh.

"The owner had terrible handwriting, but he was a genius. He created a spell called Levicorpus, which had a nonverbal incantation and a very simple hand movement that he was planning to erase."

Oh, no.

"Called himself the Half-Blood Prince. Bit of a poncy name, but hey, with his spell crafting skills, I guess he didn't need to be humble," Draco said with a shrug. And yet, there was a little smirk of amusement on his face.

Brat, he thought with fondness.

"...all of that aside, you need to stop taking the Felicis."

Draco shook his head. "Can't. I need it, even if it's only for a few hours of the day. What I'm working on is too big for me to stop now. It'll all crumble if I stop taking it this early."

Severus rubbed the bridge of his nose in frustration. This damnable boy; technically, Felix was not a restricted item in the school, mostly because it was such a rare and highly sought-after substance that no one would imagine that they would waste it on such a thing as school.

But Draco was working on something bigger than just schoolwork. He was aiming to stand next to Dumbledore and Voldemort, and change the reputations of Slytherin's…somehow.

He needed all the luck he could get.

But he didn't want his godson to die in a pool of golden vomit either.

"Fine. A compromise, then. I will give you an enchanted dropper that will only allow you to take enough for two hours' worth of luck each day. In return, every Saturday and Sunday, you will come here and take a detoxing potion, and will not touch the Felicis again until the weekend is over. I will trust that you will only use the dropper, and not continue to dose yourself. In return, none of this conversation will leave this dungeon. Is that clear?"

He expected a thank you, maybe even a handshake.

The hug he was brought into seemed to surprise the both of them.

"Thanks, Sev," Draco muttered, and for just a few moments, Severus was reminded of the little boy with silver hair who used to watch him make potions with awe, wanting to see more of 'Uncle Sev's Magic.'

He awkwardly patted the boy on the back, and pretended that the block in his throat was due to the residual fumes of potions in the rooms.

"Hey, can I borrow one of the unused potions classrooms during the week?"

Severus frowned. "Why?"

The boy crossed his arms, a mock glare on his face. "I just need it. Can you trust me on that, Sev?"

"It's Professor Snape to you," he retorted. "And…yes. You may."

If Draco was going to do something dumb, then at least he could keep an eye on the boy. He seemed to overestimate the power of the potion. Felix did it's best to make the best of any situation, but if you did something extremely dangerous, the only thing you could say afterward was that 'you're lucky only half your face got permanently scarred.'

It was only a few minutes after Draco left that Severus realized that the boy had never looked him directly in the eyes during that entire time.

How lucky for him.

"Cocky brat."
*************************************************************************************************************
For a very long time, Pansy Parkinson had been afraid of Draco Malfoy.

She hid it well, though. She laughed at his jokes. She clung to his arm. She preened at his attention, and she acted like Draco's words meant the world to her. It was very easy for her to do.

After all, her mother had been doing it for years.

Her father had a horrible temper and was a mean and rough man, but her mother knew just the right way to cook his dinner, the right way to pamper him, and the right way to get what she needed without fists and wands getting involved.

"When you fear a man," her mother had once whispered to her, "you get closer to him. You make him think that he is a gift to the earth. You make him happy, and you learn how to stop what makes him sad. That way, when you've gotten over your fear, you can decide whether to keep him… or dispose of him."

So she had done the same thing with Draco. She had given him all her attention, all her praise, and all her time. She wanted Draco to think of her as a sycophant, a follower who would obey him at all costs.

Because the truth was, she didn't really have a choice.

House Malfoy, for some reason, had taken an avid interest in House Parkinson. When her father faced Azkaban, Lucius Malfoy was there to save the day, burning gold and favors alike. He had done the same for the Crabbe and Goyle families and made it clear to all of them that with the Dark Lord gone, that meant their allegiance was now to him.

And so, before little Pansy had understood exactly what freedom was, it was swiftly taken away from her.

Crabbe and Goyle had been delegated to muscle, to make sure that the Malfoy Heir was never harmed.

And she? She had been relegated to… well, whatever Malfoy needed, as her father had cruelly put it.

"I don't care if the kid uses you as a meat shield, a wife, or just a roll in the hay," her father had told her, acrid smoke from his mouth stinging her eyes. "Just make him happy. Last thing we need is Lucius Malfoy deciding that our debt to him needs to increase. You're a girl, aren't you? Your mother is supposed to teach you this stuff. A witch's proper place in our world. Easier for you than if you'd been a boy, though. Better to warm a bed than to… well, you don't need to worry now, do you?"

He had chuckled after that, seemingly unconcerned at how casually he had thrown away his only child.

She could handle Malfoy. His disdain of Muggles and Muggleborns, his fervent worship of the Dark Lord, his crass humor, and raging tantrums. In a way, she grew to like it. Draco was like a child, really. He was so much simpler than her father, who wanted to make everything a test of loyalty to him. Draco took the world at face value, and a few honeyed words here and there were enough to calm him.

After hearing that he would host the Dark Lord for the summer, she expected his arrogance to increase tenfold. A bit of a challenge, but one she figured she was ready for.

Until she had greeted Draco on the train and instantly noticed the giant scar marring his perfect face.

Until she noticed the almost frantic look in his eyes, watching everything and nothing all at once, like he was being hunted by a predator only he could see.

Until she had noticed how quiet and withdrawn he had seemed, looking like he wanted to fade into the background.

And every day, she watched him change more and more. He was friendlier now, if that was the word. Fairer too. He studied at odd hours, abusing his prefect privileges to sneak into the library after hours. He looked after the first years. Distanced himself from the rest of them. Started consorting with Potter and his crew.

It terrified her.

It threw everything she knew about Draco out the window. She didn't know how to handle him now. She didn't know what pleased him, what made him happy, how to make him consider her as… important to him. Every attempt to bridge the gap only furthered it.

Making fun of Mudbloods caused cringes to flash across his face.

Praising the Dark Lord only darkened his mood.

Even the cruel jokes about snuffing Muggles (jokes that he used to make!) just caused a wooden expression to form before he excused himself.

And as much as she feared Draco Malfoy… she missed him too.

He was a constant in her life. Despite his morbid jokes, he made her laugh. Despite his dismissive attitude, he always asked after her. Despite his raging tempers, he knew enough to stop when she flinched, and would even mutter apologies to her when they were alone.

He wasn't perfect, but he was far better than her father, and wasn't that enough? Wasn't that requisite enough to fall in love with someone? To have them treat you better than anyone else in your life?

She knew she wasn't pretty. A lot of girls told her she had the face of a pug as an insult, and sadly enough, she could see where they were coming from. Her eyebrows were a bit too big, her lips a tad too thin, her skin just a touch too sallow, and her body bony and full of sharp angles.

But Draco hadn't seemed to mind. He let her touch him. He even seemed to enjoy it. It was one of the things that let her daydream about a life with him, where she was the new Mrs. Malfoy, and she could finally get some respect in their world.

But those had been her dreams with the old Draco. This new one was persona non grata in Slytherin. Orders from the upper years were to isolate him and leave him be. The Malfoy family could handle their own business. Touching this might set off a political bomb that none of them were ready for.

But Pansy couldn't help herself. She followed him; at a distance, of course. Just to make sure he was okay. Just to know where he was.

To have some kind of control over the situation.

And it was on one of her expeditions, to her horror, that she found him vomiting a veritable ocean of that horrible-smelling green and gold liquid into an abandoned corridor. She had watched him retch for a solid minute before he finally released it all over the corridor floor, and an entire twenty seconds passed uninterrupted as Draco released more fluid from his body than she knew the human body could expel.

Then he just stood up, wiped his mouth, Vanished it all, and then walked away, like he hadn't spent a significant amount of time purging his body of something that did not belong there.

She had laughed hysterically for quite a while after that.

Of course, she had to tell Professor Snape.

Was this why Draco had changed so much over the summer? Had the Dark Lord…cursed him somehow? Was Draco slowly dying?
That thought had scared her more than anything she'd ever realized.

She did not want Draco to die. She didn't want to keep pretending she didn't want to talk to him. Not if he was dying. She didn't want things to end like that, no matter how she felt about him.

So she waited for him to leave Snape's dungeon. She didn't know exactly what to say to him, so she just waited in an alcove, her body shivering in the dungeon's frigid cold. She never did understand why the dungeons couldn't be heated up like the rest of the castle.

Thankfully, she didn't have to wait long. It barely took thirty minutes for the meeting to be over, and Draco came out with a hopeful expression, so she could count on him being in a good mood, at least.

When he was only a few feet away, she stepped out of the alcove, and he stopped dead, surprise on his face.

"Pansy? What are you doing here?" he asked, utterly confused.

She opened her mouth to reply…only for nothing to come out. She…honestly didn't know why she was here. She wanted to see Draco and wanted to talk to him…but she didn't know what to say.

"I thought you were mad at me," the blond boy continued.

That jolted her into speaking. "Why would I be mad at you?"

He shrugged. "Seems everyone is these days. They think I'm a traitor, a sellout."

"...I don't," she said softly. "And neither does Crabbe. He misses you, I think."

He looked at her in shock. "He does? I never thought…huh."

"What are you doing, Draco?"

"You mean like here, specifically, or—"

"The thing you're doing with the Gryffindors. Acting weird. Helping Potter," she clarified. "I thought you hated him."

Draco let out a sigh. "It's complicated."

"No, it's not. They hate us. Everyone hates us. We're better off with each other. I don't understand why you're being nice to them; Weasley looks like he wants to gut you half the time, Potter acts like you're the scum of the earth, and Granger pretends that you're not worthy enough to clean her robes. They've hated us since day one; why are you giving up everything to help them?"

And she truly meant everything. If this ever got back to the Malfoys, or worse yet, the Dark Lord, either Draco would be dead, tortured, or disowned, and she honestly didn't know which was worse.

"This is a lot bigger than you think, Pansy."

"It doesn't have to be. Come back with me," she pleaded. "Let's go back to normal. You don't have to laugh at the jokes anymore. Just…just let the Dark Lord do what he has to do and don't interfere. We can go back to normal!"

Everything can make sense again.

Slowly, Draco moved forward and gently took her hands in his. She stared at him, entranced. Draco had never bothered to be gentle with her before. This was…new.

"Pansy," he said softly. "Things will never get better for us this way. We can't keep serving every Dark Lord that comes our way, praying for one of them to give us what we want. All they've ever done is step on our backs and grind us into the dirt."

"The Dark Lord—"

"Will die," Draco said with such confidence that her eyes nearly bulged out of her head. "He will die at the hands of Potter, broken and alone. He will die like every other Dark Lord before him, and every Dark Lord after him. We can't live like this; cycling through madman after madman, allowing them to drown us in the mud, hoping that one of them will bring the change we want. I know you don't believe any of that shite about Muggles and Muggle-borns. You never did."

"I-I…"

No, she never really had. She didn't think any of them actually thought that Muggles were inferior to them. After all, if wizards were so great, why were they the ones in hiding instead of the Muggles?

"Pansy, I know I haven't been a good friend to you. I've come to the realization that I'm not even that good of a person. But I want you to give me a second chance. A do-over."

He gave her hands a soft squeeze.

"Join me. Not the Dark Lord. Not your parents. Not whoever the Purebloods tell you to follow because their mother fucked their second cousins—"

She couldn't help the unhinged giggle that came out, and Malfoy's smile looked a little wild too.

"But me. The annoying kid you've been following since our first year. I know your family owes mine a debt. I know that's why you supported me at first. But I'm hoping that even with all the bad things I did, you trust me enough to keep you safe, like I have all these years."

"...I'm scared," she admitted, her eyes burning. "He's killed dozens of us, just for not joining him. What if you're wrong?"

The hug he pulled her into was surprising enough to make her freeze in shock.

"Don't worry," he whispered. "If everything goes to shit, we'll just find another ugly little marked child and a frail old wizard, and throw the lot of them at the Dark Lord. He seems to be having performance issues when it comes to those kinds of opponents."

The laugh that bubbled up inside of her made her relax, and tentatively, she returned the hug.

As odd and flipped around as everything was right now…she could get used to this new Draco.

Pansy lingered in the hug, feeling the warmth of Draco's arms around her, something she had never experienced before. She had grown so used to his coldness, his arrogance, and now this… vulnerability was disarming. She honestly didn't know if it was a good or bad thing.

When they finally pulled apart, Draco gave her a small, uncertain smile. It was a far cry from his usual smirks and sneers.

"Thank you, Pansy," he said quietly, his voice sincere in a way that made her heart ache. "For giving me a chance."

She swallowed hard, her mind racing. She wasn't sure what she was stepping into by agreeing to this. Betraying the Dark Lord—even in thought—was unthinkable. But Draco was right about one thing: nothing about their world would ever change if they kept repeating the same mistakes.

"What happens now?" she asked softly, her voice trembling slightly. Could you blame her: they were planning to go against the Dark Lord! He'd killed so many magical families like they were flies beneath his palms, and right now, they were relying on Potter to be the one to end him.

Draco's smile turned grim, the softness in his eyes hardening into determination. "Now, I keep doing what I've been doing. There's a lot to prepare for. Potter has his plans, and while I think they're half-baked, they're better than the alternatives. I'm going to help him."

Pansy stared at him, wide-eyed. "Help him? You're going to openly fight against… against him?"

Draco nodded his head. "Yeah, but not for a while. I've been making sure that people know that I'm different now, supporting him in small ways here and there. There's things need to do, spells I need to get up to snuff, items I need to finish enchanting, that kind of thing."

"And what am I supposed to do?" Pansy asked, crossing her arms defensively.

Draco hesitated for a moment, then reached out to touch her shoulder. "You do what you've always done, Pansy. Survive. Keep your head down, play your part. You're better at that than anyone I know."

The compliment caught her off guard. She wasn't sure whether to feel insulted or flattered.

"But," Draco continued, "if there's ever a chance to act, to do something that matters, I hope you'll trust me enough to take it. We can't do this alone. I can't do this alone. We'll meet in secret for now; it's best to have you where the other Slytherin's are. They'll tell you things that they won't tell me now."

Pansy's heart sank at his words. He was putting so much trust in her, and yet she wasn't sure she could live up to it. But the look in his eyes, that mix of hope and desperation, made it impossible to refuse him.

"I'll try," she said at last, her voice barely above a whisper. "I don't know how much help I'll be, but… I'll try."

Draco smiled again, and for a fleeting moment, she could almost see the boy he used to be.

"That's all I need," he said.

As he turned to leave, Pansy reached out and grabbed his arm. "Draco, wait."

He looked back at her, his expression curious.

"You're not… dying, are you?" she blurted out, the words tumbling out before she could stop them.

Draco blinked, then let out a short laugh. "No, Pansy. I'm not dying. Not yet, anyway. I've just been… experimenting with something. It's nothing to worry about."

She didn't believe him, not entirely, but she decided not to press the issue. For now, she was just relieved that he wasn't about to drop dead in their next class. maybe Porfessor Snape had fixed him?

"Take care of yourself, okay?" she said, her voice softer now.

Draco nodded. "I will. And you do the same."

With that, he disappeared down the corridor, leaving Pansy standing alone in the cold dungeon.

She wrapped her arms around herself, shivering as she leaned back against the stone wall. Everything was changing so fast, and she wasn't sure how much more she could take.

But as terrifying as it all was, there was a strange flicker of hope inside her.

For the first time in a long time, she felt like she wasn't just drifting along, following the currents of other people's decisions.

Maybe, just maybe, she could chart her own course.

And if Draco Malfoy, of all people, could change… then maybe she could too.
 
Chapter 5 New
"If Snape catches us here, we're dead," Hermione commented offhandedly as they walked through the dungeons.


"Does anybody else feel like this is a trap? Because this feels like a trap," Ron said as they stopped to make sure that no one was following them, and that no one was ahead of them. It was hard to see down in the dungeons with the torches about to die, and they couldn't risk using a Lumos, because the minute they did, Snape would appear out of nowhere and descend upon them like a flock of locusts on farmland.


He could practically feel Harry roll his eyes next to him.


"Do we have to go through this again? I thought you said you'd give him a chance."


"I did, against my better judgment. I just want to point out that the last time Malfoy asked to meet us in a place of his choosing, we ended up fighting for our lives against a guardian of Hades."


"Oh please, Fluffy was all bark and no bite…except to Snape," Hermione said to their right. "Also, for someone who's scared of getting caught by Snape, you're being awfully loud, Ronald."


He felt his face heat up in embarrassment; she knew he hated it when she said his full first name like that. It made him sound all pompous and snotty.


Like Malfoy.


"I would be quieter if you were under here with us," he hissed back. "When'd you even learn that spell anyway? Flitwick never showed us that."


The spell he was talking about was the Disillusionment Charm that Hermione was using, giving her an imperfect form of invisibility. You could catch her outline when she moved, but you couldn't see her once she stood still. Ron would admit to being a little jealous; a spell like that was neat.


It also meant she wasn't squashed beneath the cloak like he and Harry were, sweating together like two sardines.


"Harry told me about it a couple of days after returning from the Dursleys, and he said Mad-Eye put it on him. So I pulled Mad Eye aside at our little prefect party and asked him about it. He was very eager to teach me. Said it was a very useful spell for dodging Dark Wizards, and then shooting them in the back when they're looking around for you."


Yeah, of course, the crazy old codger would say something like that. Mad-Eye was cool, but there was no doubt that he was crazy after all his years of Dark Wizard catching. If only he'd been the one to catch Malfoy's dad. He doubted that even Moody would've been able to resist getting rid of You-Know-Who's walking checkbook.


Malfoy…


If you'd told him, even just a year from now, that they'd be in a position where they had to trust Draco Malfoy, he'd have called you an idiot. Malfoy was his opposite in every way; their lifestyles, families, views on life and people…and wealth. Definitely their wealth.


It wouldn't surprise him if it turned out that he hated Malfoy more than Harry and Hermione did. Harry didn't like Malfoy because he was an arrogant git who couldn't keep his mouth shut, but for Ron, it was a bit more personal.


He had been a baby when his Uncles Fabian and Gideon died, but Percy, Bill, and Charlie all had that wistful look on their faces when they spoke about them. Mom still cried on their birthdays, and it was the only day of the year that the twins got special treatment, something that they surprisingly did not abuse.


Dad didn't get weepy, but every year, on the evening of February 10th, he'd drink a shot of Firewhisky from his chipped glass mug, just staring into the fire until it was time for bed. Ron didn't remember who said it, but Lucius Malfoy had been heavily implicated in their deaths, showing up to St. Mungo with spell wounds just hours after the two men had died.


Even if Malfoy hadn't been the one to hold the wand, he'd still praised the man who had (probably) done it. His father had most likely killed his uncles and while it wasn't on Malfoy to apologize, the prat never hesitated to act like his family was better than everyone else's, even though the only notable thing his parents were known for was how many Galleons they had.


And yet, here he was, prowling through the dungeons on Malfoy's say-so, like a good little house-elf.


Honestly, now that he thought about it, why did he and Hermione have to hide? They were Prefects; they were supposed to be out after hours, to make sure that others weren't. It was Harry who needed to be hiding and sweating beneath the cloak that had gotten too small for two teenage boys to hide under without their feet smacking into each other every second step.


Well, too late for that now.


"Hold up. He said the dungeon was marked with a pentagram on the door, right?" Hermione whispered, coming to a stop in front of them.


"Yeah. In silver chalk," Harry replied.


"Then we're here."


Hermione opened the door, and he was right after her, reveling in the cool of the dungeons after being trapped under the steam room of a cloak for damn near thirty minutes-


Only for the three of them to freeze in the doorway as they saw Snape and Malfoy in the room the two of them having a conversation that had stopped as soon as the door opened.


Ron didn't say anything; he didn't have to. He was certain that the two of them could feel the 'I-was-right,' energy just wafting off him in waves as Snape glared at them, looking as if he was trying to decide whether tonight was Christmas or April Fools.


Oh, if only being right didn't come with a hundred points from Gryffindor each…


"This is what you intend to use my dungeon for, Mr. Malfoy?" Snape asked, condescension dripping with every word. "To parley with…dunderheads?"


"I know you don't have to be nice since we're using your dungeons for this, but right now, we are kind of allies," Draco said, a small smile on his face. "I'd be grateful if we tried to keep things somewhat professional."


The bat of a man merely rolled his eyes as he walked towards the door.


"Woe betide the four of you if you are caught. Whilst Umbridge detests coming down here, she's not above using Filch as a spy. If you get caught, I was never here, and I will advocate for Potter to be thrown out immediately. Good night."


And with that, the door closed behind him with a click.


It took them a good few moments before someone finally spoke, and to his surprise, it was Hermione.


"What just happened? Why was he so…nice?"


"Nice?!" Harry said incredulously. "He just said if we get caught, he'll ask Umbridge to throw me out!"


"Well yes, but that's Snape; it's expected by now. The fact that we're not five hundred points short and lacking a detention every night cleaning bedpans for the rest of the year…that's nice. For him, anyway."


Ron gave a dark snort as he nodded at Malfoy.


"I guess with enough Galleons anything is possible."


Malfoy raised an eyebrow. "I don't have to pay Severus to help me. He wants to."


Harry asked the obvious question before Ron could process the fact that Draco called Snape by his first name.


"Why, because you're a Slytherin?"


"No, because he's my godfather," the blond prick said, uncaring that he had just dropped a bomb on the three of them.


First off, who chooses Greasy Snape as the godfather to their child? Did Lucius Malfoy just not have any ready to take on the responsibility? And secondly, that revelation cleared up so many things; no wonder Snape babied Malfoy so much over the years! Was that even fair, having a teacher teach his godkid? Malfoy probably got points for breathing, if that was the case!


"Anyway," Malfoy said, drawing their attention back to him. "We're not here to talk about my family, illustrious as it is. We're here for three main reasons. One, these meetings are the only times we can talk frankly without being interrupted or overheard. We cannot keep whispering in corners between classes. That is exactly how I found out about you lot hiding a dragon in a wooden hut, which never inspired confidence in your intelligence, by the way."


Ron felt his face become warm with embarrassment, and opened his mouth to defend their eleven-year-old selves(though to be fair, they should have gotten on Hagrid a bit harder about the fire-breathing monster in the wooden house thing), but Malfoy didn't even give him a chance to speak before he ran right over him.


"Secondly, these meetings will be an exchange of actual information and tactics. The information in Slytherin House is very scant because a lot of the adults don't actually tell us when they plan to go murdering and pillaging, so a lot of the information I'll be giving you is from the summer, most of which is still relevant now and is extensive enough that we can't go over everything even if we had two hours to spare.


"And finally, I will be teaching Potter how to master magic; we will be going over rituals, wandless magic, specific potions you need to learn, runes and spells that are normally restricted to purebloods, and even physical training; There are a startling amount of wizards who cannot handle a hand to hand confrontation. Get in close before they can cast, and you've won."


"Hey, what do you mean rituals?" Ron said, clamping down on that little tidbit immediately. "We're not doing any dark shite, you psycho!"


"For Merlin's sake, Weasel, I know critical thinking isn't your strong suit, but you really need to get out of your comfort zone," Malfoy drawled. "I'm not asking you to bathe in the blood of virgins, I'm talking about cleansing rituals, rituals for strengthing wards, hell, even the Fidelious involves a ritual. The really strong shit involves more than just wand-waving. The Ministry decried it because amateurs get themselves killed, and because yes, a fair amount of them actually are dark. That doesn't mean you can discard them; Potter needs to be at least good enough to survive the Dark Lord by the end of this year. He doesn't have the time to try and learn everything by the book."


Malfoy's gaze zeroed in on Harry, and his voice was cold as he spoke.


"You are going up against a man who is generally acknowledged as one of the greatest modern wizards ever to hold a wand. You have no special talents or abilities that will allow you to escalate to his level. You only have one choice available to you: cheat.


"Now, shall we begin?"


*************************************************************


"What's Voldemort planning? For the war?" Harry asked, his voice low but steady.


"Right now, he's gathering his troops," Draco said. "He's sent emissaries to the vampires, werewolves, Dementors—any sentient Dark creature that can think for itself. In the last war, they naturally aligned with him because he brought death and chaos. But this time, he's offering alliances—real alliances. He's promising them prey for their cooperation. Muggles, to be exact."


Ron felt the blood drain from his face as Hermione visibly paled beside him.


"He's going to allow them to feed on Muggles?" Hermione hissed, horror etched into every syllable. "That's—aside from being a war crime—that'll break the Statute! The entire Wizarding World will be exposed!"


"Yeah, that's the plan," Draco said bluntly.


"...What?" Harry's disbelief hung heavy in the air.


Draco leaned back slightly, arms crossed. "As insane as he is, it's actually a good plan. If we're exposed, the ICW will wash their hands of Britain. They'll be too busy dealing with chaos worldwide to stop the Dark Lord from taking over here. And the Muggles? They're not going to react kindly when they find out we've been obliviating, mind-controlling, and cursing them for centuries. They'll fight back—hard. And suddenly, Light wizards will face a choice: stand with the Muggles and fight their own kind, or flee. Either way, Voldemort wins."


The silence that followed was suffocating. Ron swallowed hard.


"But…even if we do have to fight Muggles and Death Eaters, won't the Death Eaters still be the bigger threat? I mean, we can just…stun the Muggles, right?"


Three pairs of eyes turned to him, disbelieving, but it was Hermione who got at him first, righteous fury in her voice as she lectured


"Ron! I know that you don't know that much about Muggles but you can't seriously believe that a Wizard can cast faster than a Muggle can fire a-"


Hermione's face shifted from shock to realization.


"Oh my God," she whispered. "Ron, you…you don't know what a gun is."


"Not just guns," Harry added, voice hollow. "Grenades. Tanks. Fighter planes. Satellites. They've got weapons that can level cities, Ron. Entire cities."


Ron stared at them blankly, the unfamiliar words echoing in his ears. Reluctantly, he turned to Draco, the only other person in the room who knew what the two of them were going on about, but would actually explain in a way he understood.


"What are they talking about?"


Draco's expression was unusually serious. "Weasley, nearly every spell we've created? The Muggles have machines that can replicate them. Healing, transportation, stealth, transfiguration—that's our edge. But spells like Bombarda, Incendio, Aguamenti, and even the Killing Curse? They've got weapons that can do all of that, and on a massive scale. Fiendfyre? They've got napalm. Protego Diabolica? They've got bunker busters. Wizards have been hiding so long, we've forgotten that Muggles moved on without us. If it came down to open war, I'm not so sure we'd win in a direct confrontation. Add in our ignorance on who the Muggle leaders are, how their military operates, the strength of their technology, and the way they have us outnumbered five to one…well, it becomes a massacre."


Ron felt something cold settle in his chest. "No. That—Muggles, they—they can't. They're harmless. They try to replicate magic, but it's not real. That's what Mum and Dad said—they can't do what we can do."


It was something that his mother and father had told him constantly; that he couldn't play with Muggle children, because he might hurt them on accident. That he couldn't use his magic against Muggles, because they couldn't defend themselves against magic in any way. That the reason why Wizards hid away from Muggles was to make sure they didn't become lazy and start relying on them for every problem.


But…if all of that was true…why hadn't Wizardkind just…started ruling the world? He didn't want to, of course, but the thoughts wouldn't leave his head. If wizards were heads and shoulders above Muggles, why hadn't they just taken over the Muggle World? Back in the old days, long before he was born, he knew that wizards of those times probably took the Malfoy's side of things rather than Dumbledores. So what had stopped them from just taking over and ruling the muggles, cursing them into subjugation as they had with the centaurs, the goblins, the giants, and basically every foe that Wizards had faced?


He didn't like how much his thoughts made him sound like Malfoy…or at least, the old Malfoy.


Draco's voice cut through the silence. "He's not entirely wrong, though. After the first wave of slaughter, wizards would figure out that the metal sticks kill people, and start hiding better, start learning more about the enemy. The real deciding factor in a war like that would be the Muggleborn, if they decided to side with Wizardkind, which has never been all that great to them, or to the Muggles, who will undoubtedly treat them with suspicion from Day One."


He shook his head. "But that plan isn't The Dark Lord's focus yet. That's his endgame. Right now, he's focused on taking over the Ministry. Once he controls that, he can start paving the road for everything else."


Hermione exhaled slowly. "Right. If the Headmaster stops him before then, we'll be okay. That's the plan. That's the hope."


Draco snorted. "You've got a lot of faith in a man who's technically never killed anyone. Don't get me wrong, Death Eaters are terrified of Dumbledore because he will fuck them up magically in ways they didn't know existed. But the Dark Lord? They fear him, because death and torture are the only outcomes with him."


Hermione's lips pressed into a thin line, but she didn't argue.


"What's he looking for in the Ministry?" she asked. "The Order said he's after some kind of weapon. Do you know what it is?"


Draco hesitated. For a fraction of a second, his expression froze—then smoothed over. "No clue. But it's in the Department of Mysteries, and that's bad enough. That place is a graveyard of forbidden spells, rituals, and magical weapons. Whatever he's after, it's either old, powerful, deadly—or all three."


Harry frowned. "Hermione, what could it be? Anything come to mind?"


She rubbed her temples. "The possibilities are endless. There have been swords that were said to cut through time and space, staffs that increased a wizard's power tenfold, rituals that bring back armies of the dead…but as far as I know, the strongest weapon in the Wizarding World has always been the wand. Everything was just used as a supplement to wandwork."


Hermione looked absolutely miserable as she spoke, and Ron could understand why; Hermione's love of books was a curse rather than a blessing here. She could probably make a list of everything that You-Know-Who could probably want to use, but that wouldn't let them find out what it was before he got it.


Think Ron. You're a wizard; you've heard the stories of damn near every sick thing he's done and even helped stop some of them with your friends. What could he want from a dusty old place like the Department of Mysteries? Dad would probably know, but he won't tell us. We have to figure it out ourselves. What is something that Voldemort has been wanting for so long that he'd consider infiltrating the Ministry for it?


Ron chewed on his lip. "What if it's…another way to be immortal?"


Harry shook his head. "Why bother? He already has multiple ways to come back from the dead: Possessing Professor Quirrell, that weird Diary that possessed Ginny, the messed ritual Wormtail did—why go after something else?"


"But he needed help for those. And from what I've heard, and what you've told us, that's the sort of thing that You-Know-Who hates; relying on others," Ron countered. "That's not real immortality, not the way legends talk about it. If he needs someone to bring him back every time he dies, he's not truly immortal. He's just really good at nearly not dying."


Hermione's eyes lit up. "That's…not a bad point. His first attempt at immortality was through the Sorcerer's Stone. There's a pattern here. He's never stopped chasing the idea of perfection—perfect immortality, invulnerability…something that would make him truly untouchable. I'd have to double-check, but Wizards and Witches have constantly claimed to come back in various forms of reincarnations and resurrections throughout the ages. A perfected form of Immortality, or to bypass injury entirely…yeah, I can see that appealing to someone like him."


Oh. He hadn't really expected the two of them to take his side on this thing, especially not with how Harry had initially dismissed him, but the two of them looked like they were warming up to the idea. It made a swell of pride rise in his chest. He liked this, being useful, and being able to help in a tangible way. Yeah, he wasn't Bill with his warding skills, Charlie with his strength, the Twins with their tools, Ginny with her viciousness, or even Percy with his logic and knowledge, but he could still be useful to this. He could still matter to his friends.


But of course, Malfoy had to speak up.


"Let's not fixate on that idea. If we lock onto one theory, we'll be blindsided if he goes after something else. Weapon, immortality, knowledge—it doesn't matter. We have to be ready for anything."


The two of them nodded in agreement, and despite Ron acknowledging it was a good idea, he still couldn't help but feel a brief flare of hate for Malfoy for seemingly rejecting his theory.


"Right," Harry said quietly. "Let's move on."


*****************************************************


"How useful is wandless magic in combat?" Harry asked eagerly. From what Hermione and Ron had told him, wandless magic was supposed to be a game-changer—spells cast on a whim, magic that couldn't be traced by the Ministry, and a style of fighting no wizard was truly prepared to counter unless they had attended that Nigerian magic school.


So he was fairly disappointed by Draco's response.


"It's essentially a souped-up parlor trick," Draco said bluntly. "Don't get me wrong, it's an incredibly useful trick to have in your pocket, but make no mistake—it's better as an ace in the hole rather than a main style of combat."


"But I thought you said only powerful wizards could use it!" Harry said, frustration bubbling up. He'd been putting a lot of stock into wandless magic as a way to fight Voldemort, but once again, the harsh realities of the magical world seemed determined to remind him there was no easy path to power.


Draco shrugged. "Yeah, powerful wizards can use it… but they still use wands because wands are superior. Minor spells are doable wandlessly—Lumos, Summoning, Banishing, and even your precious Expelliarmus. But heavy spells? Protego, the Patronus, Unforgivables, complex Transfiguration, or high-level Charms? You'll be lucky to get a spark for your trouble. Learning a useful wandless spell is like carrying a single Get-Out-Of-Azkaban-Free card. It'll work, and it'll shock the hell out of everyone—but you'll probably only pull it off once."


He smirked faintly. "I've managed four because I'm just that good, but if you're smart, you'll focus on two useful ones and master them. Oh, and stick to Traditional spells—they're easier to manage without a wand than the Modern ones."


Harry frowned. "Traditional spells? What does that mean? I've never heard of that before."


From Ron's bewildered expression, it was clear he was just as lost.


Thank Merlin for Hermione.


The bushy-haired witch straightened slightly, her voice taking on that crisp, lecture-like quality she always had when she was about to share something from a particularly obscure book.


"There are two major categories of spells: Traditional Spells and Modern Spells."


Hermione's tone was confident as she explained. "Traditional Spells are the oldest magic we have. They interact with the environment—conjuring water, producing air, summoning fire, Summoning and Banishing objects, Diffindo, Reparo. Essentially, most Charms and Transfigurations fall into this category. These were the first proper spells our ancestors developed when wands were created, and they were used in ancient magical wars."


She paused briefly before continuing, "Modern Spells, on the other hand, are what you'd think of when you see bright jets of light flying across a battlefield. Stunning Spells, Expelliarmus, Rictusempra, even the Avada Kedavra—all Modern Spells. They're faster, more precise, and easier to cast under pressure, but Traditional Spells are usually more powerful and have broader effects."


Draco inclined his head slightly, almost as if to acknowledge her explanation. "Exactly. Traditional spells are foundation-level magic. They interact with the world around you and have deeper ties to magic itself, which makes them more flexible in wandless casting. You can still use Modern spells, but it'll be harder for you, and take a lot more effort. But don't get your hopes up, Potter. Even with the best training possible, you'll only manage a handful of them without a wand. So pick carefully."


Harry exchanged a glance with Hermione and Ron, his mind already racing. Wandless magic might not be the key to victory he'd hoped for—but it was still a key. And Harry Potter wasn't one to leave any door locked if he could help it.


As for the spells he wanted to learn…Expilliarmus was definitely on that list. The ability to deprive an opponent of their wand was just too strong to pass up. Even if it was harder for him to learn, he'd still put in the time and effort to master it. As for the second…Accio. It was a spell he was intimately familiar with, and one he could do under pressure. Plus, if he ever got disarmed, he could just summon his wand back into his hand, which meant that he would never truly be unarmed.


"When do we start learning that? Wandless Magic?" Harry asked. "I want to get started on it as soon as possible."


"I have some notes with me, detailing every step you need to go through to truly master a spell to the point you can do it wandlessly."


Malfoy reached into his robes, and brought out a wad of parchment that he handed to Hermione, who snatched it from his hands with greedy eyes.


"I've dumbed it down enough that even you and the Weasel should be able to decipher them, but just in case, I'll give them to the only one amongst you who actually has a brain."


The twin middle fingers that Harry and Ron threw up in unison showed that the two of them, despite being behind Hermione, would always be on the same page.


************************************************


Hermione was satisfied.


This was way more information than she'd ever thought they'd get. When Malfoy told them he had intel on the Death Eaters, she'd assumed it would be scraps—just names, vague locations, fragmented details they'd have to stitch together into something useful.


But this was solid, actionable information. They knew Voldemort's plans—his actual plans. Sure, they didn't know what the weapon was, but they knew where it was, and that made all the difference.


And Draco's notes… they were extraordinary. Detailed, methodical, and clear, they provided step-by-step instructions on mastering a spell to the point of wandless casting.


First, you removed the incantation. Silent casting.
Then, you removed the wand movement. No unnecessary flourishes—just focus, point, and cast.
Once you'd mastered the nonverbal and gestureless versions, then you could start attempting the spell wandlessly.


It would take weeks, maybe months, to get to the final stage, but it was brilliantly straightforward. Even more impressive was Draco's observation that once you mastered a spell wandlessly, using it with the incantation and gestures would result in roughly a fifty-seven percent increase in power.


It was brilliant. Hermione couldn't stop herself from wondering: Who taught him this? What book did he get these notes from? Because this was some of the most informative material she'd ever seen from a fellow student.


"Alright, any more questions?" Draco asked, glancing down at his watch. "We haven't got much time before Filch starts prowling down here."


"I've got a question," Ron said, his voice deceptively calm. "When You-Know-Who stops hiding and everything goes to hell… what exactly are you going to do?"


"Ron," Harry said warningly. "He's already done enough—this session alone proves that."


"Sure, sure, but that's easy to say now, when everything's quiet, when we're just gathering our forces and building our strength." Ron's voice was sharper now, his blue eyes locked on Draco. "I want to know what Malfoy plans to do when You-Know-Who comes out in full force. Because this is exactly what Snuffles warned us about—that he'd be a wand for Him half the time, and a wand for us the other half. We're the ones who'll actually be in danger, while he gets to lounge around in his bloody mansion while the world burns. How's he going to keep passing us little tidbits of information when he's surrounded by Death Eaters? And how do we know he's not just playing both sides to worm his way to whoever wins?"


Ron sneered. "It's what your Mommy and Daddy did, after all. Or maybe you'll take after dear Auntie Bella and actually dirty your hands."


Hermione's stomach turned at Ron's words. She understood his wariness, but Draco had proven himself—over and over. This wasn't fair. She opened her mouth to defend him, but Draco beat her to it.


"Excuse me?" Draco's voice was like ice. "Do you know what I'll be losing when this war starts?"


"Nothing," Ron said flatly. "Same as last war."


Draco stepped forward, his pale face twisting with raw anger. "Every time I think I've measured the depths of your idiocy, Weasley, you find a way to impress me."


Harry and Hermione exchanged uneasy glances. Ron was their friend, through thick and thin, but neither of them could really defend this; he'd crossed a line.


Draco continued, his voice low and sharp. "As far as the other Slytherins are concerned, I'm already a blood traitor. My only saving grace is that my parents haven't found out yet. But mark my words, by the end of this year, they will. I'll be disowned. Do you understand what that means? I won't have a home. I won't have a family. The wealth and power I grew up with? Locked away, forever. Everyone I've ever cared about will either be hunting me or turning their backs on me. There'll be a bounty on my head larger than your family's Gringotts account has ever seen in seven generations."


He took another step closer, his voice trembling with fury. "I am the only one here who's going to lose everything. You think this is easy for me? You think I have nothing on the line? You're not the one rejecting everything you've been raised to believe, Weasley. You're not the one risking your life just by having this conversation. You think you're a hero because your family will always love you, always stand by you. You don't know what it's like to stand alone."


Ron's face twisted—anger, guilt, and something like shame flickered across his features.


Draco leaned in closer, his voice now quiet but venomous. "You're not noble, Weasley. You're comfortable. And that's not the same thing as brave."


"Alright you two, that's enough," Harry said, trying to defuse the situation. "Don't do something that you'll regret."


Ron's wand hand twitched, his voice low and tight. "Back up, Malfoy. Now."


Draco sneered, his lip curling. "Why? Can't stand hearing the truth? You act so bloody righteous, but you've turned your back on your friends before. More than once. It wouldn't surprise me if you ended up the next Wormtail—"


"ENOUGH!" Harry roared, his wand sparking with raw magic.


The air crackled with energy—sharp, heavy, suffocating. Draco froze, Ron flinched, and even Hermione's breath caught in her throat.


Harry took a slow, measured breath, and the pressure in the air began to fade.


"Draco," Harry said softly, his voice steady but firm. "Look… I can't thank you enough for this. I know you're risking everything by helping us. And I know it's not fair that Ron said those things."


Draco's shoulders relaxed slightly, though his pale face was still drawn tight with tension.


Harry turned to Ron next, his emerald eyes hard. "And you, Ron… I know you're scared. We all are. But if we start turning on each other now, we're as good as dead. Draco's helping us. We need to trust that."


The silence was heavy. Finally, Ron nodded stiffly, shoving his wand back into his pocket.


Draco sighed and ran a hand through his platinum hair. "Look, we're wasting time. You've got my notes. Use them. And for Merlin's sake, don't screw this up. I'm burning a fair amount of Galleons and goodwill for this shitshow."


With that, he turned on his heel and walked out of the dungeon, leaving the three of them standing there in silence.


Hermione finally spoke, her voice hesitant. "We need to stick together. All of us."


Harry nodded. "Look, I understand being hesitant about trusting Draco. But mate, you've got to admit that Malfoy is the only one who's actually helping us right now. We got more info than what Snuffles and Lupin told us that night at Headquarters. If we get this info to Dumbdore or Snuffles or even your dad, it'll put the Order ahead."


Harry put his hand on his friend's shoulder, gently squeezing it.


"We have to trust him. For better or for worse."


Hermione could see the indecision on Ron's face and the regret. But in the end, the red-haired boy just shrugged and muttered, "Whatever."


As they walked back towards Gryffindor Tower, Hermione couldn't help but feel the weight of Draco's words lingering in the air behind them.


He really was giving up everything to help them. The very least they could do was trust him as much as he seemed to trust them.


********************************************************


Draco let out a sigh of relief as he rounded the corner and let his back hit the wall.


That…had been too close. He could actively feel Felix slipping away from him, the haze of knowledge fading from his mind and body. But he had gotten the main objectives done. Harry and Hermione now trusted him the same way they would trust any Gryffindor.


Ron…he didn't really care about him. The kid was as ordinary as it got, and he had nothing to offer him, aside from access to the more skilled Weaselys. The aggression the kid had against him was annoying, but if it came down to it, he could just wait for the next fuck up Ron did, and then swoop in and take his place.


He doubted it'd get that far though. Still, it was something to keep in mind.


"Halfway there," he whispered to himself. "I'm halfway there…"
 
Interlude: Pansy Parkingson New
Pansy Parkinson sat in the dim glow of the Slytherin common room, her gaze fixed on the murky green light filtering through the enchanted windows. The depths of the Black Lake pressed against the glass, shadows of fish and drifting plants distorting the faint light. Once, this sight had filled her with awe. Once, she had felt untouchable down here, shielded from the world above by cold stone and water.


She vividly remembered her first days at Hogwarts—a wide-eyed first-year, clutching her new robes and staring at everything with barely concealed wonder. The dungeons had felt like their own little kingdom, cut off from the noise and warmth of the upper castle. The other houses treaded lightly down here, eyes wary, voices hushed. The common room had been it's own little haven, its dark leather couches and emerald banners whispering of legacy and power.


But it wasn't the grandeur or the secrecy that had captivated her most—it was the promise. She remembered the prefects—sharp-eyed and self-assured—standing before the assembled first-years that first night. "You are Slytherin now. That means you are family. You watch each other's backs, and you stick together. If you have a problem, don't show it out there, in front of everyone. Family takes care of its own business, at home."


Family.


The word had struck her like a spark in a dark room. Pansy had grown up in a home of lies and deceit, where it was made clear that as a person, she was unwanted. Her mother manipulated her and her father with soft words and colder silences, while her father barely acknowledged her, his disappointment etched into every glance. A girl wasn't what he'd wanted. A daughter wasn't someone he could mold into a legacy. Girls were for breeding and making alliances. Boys were the leaders, the ones who shaped the world and made it run. Perhaps if he hadn't been cursed by a lucky shot early in the first War, he would have tried again. But the Healers at St. Mungoe's had made it clear that Pansy was their miracle child, and the chances of another Parkinson heir was dead in the water.


But Slytherin had been different. Here, she could have brothers and sisters—peers who would stand with her, not above her. Snape, though enigmatic and severe, could be something like a father figure—or at least a protector. With how viciously he protected his Slytherins from the rest of the school, and how he so obviously favored them in their potion classes, it was easy to replace the only male role model in her life from her father to Snape. Snape would never hit her or belittle her if she made a mistake. He would tell her that he expected better, that she was a Slytherin, that she could be more than what the world wanted her to be.


She had clung to those words like an oath, following Draco's lead not just because of her family's debt to the Malfoys, but because he seemed to understand what Slytherin meant. When he sneered at Potter, she sneered too. When he dismissed the other houses, she dismissed them without hesitation. Who needed Gryffindor's bravery, Ravenclaw's wit, or Hufflepuff's loyalty when she had the strength and solidarity of Slytherin?


She had been so certain.


But now... now everything felt different. The common room that had once been her sanctuary felt suffocating, the emerald light casting eerie shadows on familiar faces twisted by fear and suspicion. Fifth year had changed everything. With the Dark Lord's return no longer in doubt, and every one of her classmates having felt the weight of his presence, the bonds that had once tied them together had begun to rot.


The camaraderie of her first years had turned brittle and sharp-edged. Whispers carried venom instead of secrets, and every conversation felt like a duel—words chosen carefully, weaknesses probed relentlessly. Everyone was looking for an edge, a way to make themselves valuable in the Dark Lord's eyes, or at least to ensure they weren't the first to be sacrificed. Because if you weren't in the Inner Circle, if you didn't get a Dark Mark…then you were just spell fodder, a sponge for curses and hexes, whilst the real players made their moves in silence, manipulating the Ministry and Wizengamot alike with honeyed words and heavy purses.


She had tried to keep her head down, to maintain the alliances she had once thought unbreakable. But the smiles of her friends felt paper-thin now, their laughter hollow. Every glance carried suspicion, every compliment an ulterior motive.


Except for Draco.


Draco Malfoy, who had always been the ringleader, the center of their little circle, was different now. His pale face was drawn and tired, shadows heavy under his eyes. He spoke less, avoided unnecessary confrontations, and carried himself like someone bracing for a fight.


Or a war.


He was kinder, he had made friends with Potter's little group, who had once been their greatest enemies. His soft edges had sharpened, and despite his tiredness, there was a presence about him now, a feeling that made all of them realize that over the summer, Draco had morphed into someone who couldn't be controlled by hissed demands and threats. Only real power could make Draco bow now, and with what he had planned, he was searching for that kind of power himself.


He wasn't playing the game anymore—at least, not the same one everyone else was.


Pansy wasn't sure when she'd realized it, but somewhere in the silence between their last conversation and the haunted look in Draco's eyes, she'd started to understand.


He was scared—truly scared—not of punishment from his family or the Dark Lord but of something deeper, something that clawed at him from within.


And, perhaps most terrifying of all, Pansy realized that Draco Malfoy—the boy who had once seemed untouchable, unshakable—was starting to crack.


The worst part? She couldn't blame him.


The promise of solidarity, the pledge of family, had unraveled into something twisted and hollow. Slytherin House no longer felt like a home. It felt like a prison, and she couldn't see a way out.


Her fingers tightened around the edge of her armchair as she stared out into the depths of the Black Lake, her reflection faintly visible against the glass. Somewhere, far above, the castle was bathed in sunlight, the other students were laughing and chattering in the Great Hall.


But down here, in the shadows of the dungeons, Pansy sat alone, and the weight of Slytherin's so-called legacy pressed heavily on her chest.


She wished she had made friends outside her house. She wished she'd earned the trust of other teachers besides Snape. She wished she had something—anything—to hold onto outside these stone walls.


But most of all, she wished she could believe in the promise of Slytherin again—the promise Draco swore he would make come true.


And speaking of Draco, she caught a glimpse of him as the door to his room opened. He stepped out, a cloak draped over his shoulders, his face set in a cold, impassive mask.


The soft hum of conversation in the common room stilled immediately, the silence pressing against her ears. But Draco didn't seem to notice—or care. He walked past them all, his gaze never flickering, his steps unhurried, his poise unshakable. The heavy door closed behind him with a final-sounding thud.


That silence? That was supposed to be Draco's punishment. Isolation. Estrangement. A barrier between him and Slytherin House until he came to his senses, renounced the Gryffindors, and begged for forgiveness.


But instead of breaking him, it had done the opposite. Draco didn't seek their approval anymore. He didn't look for their validation. Most days, he stayed in his room, away from their whispers and glances. But on others, he would emerge and sit by the fire, a book in hand, seemingly content amid the oppressive quiet.


Ignore me all you want. You aren't worth my time. I'm a Malfoy, and the opinions of the lesser masses don't concern me.


A bold statement, considering this had been going on for most of the term. And as far as anyone could tell, Draco hadn't cracked.


But cracks were starting to show elsewhere.


"Fucking prick," Goyle spat as the door closed behind Malfoy.


Case in point: Gregory Goyle.


Pansy had never thought much of him despite sharing space with him for years. Goyle had always been part of the background, silent and unassuming. Draco trusted him, sure, but the trust in Goyle and Crabbe often felt less confident and more convenient.


But ever since Draco had become a so-called "blood traitor," Goyle had… changed. Or maybe he had just stopped pretending. Crueler now, with a sharper edge, and far more willing to wield his strength like a cudgel. He had stepped into Draco's vacant space in their little hierarchy, and he ruled with a brutal fist.


He reminded her too much of her father, and that was something he didn't like.


"You see how he struts around here like he owns the place?" Goyle growled, his lip curled. "Bet he'd stop if we gave him a little reminder of where he stands now. Show him why Slytherin House never tolerated Mudbloods and Blood Traitors."


"That's not nice," Crabbe whispered, voice low and startlingly soft.


Pansy's stomach twisted. Crabbe—simple, awkward Crabbe—had surprised her this year. Away from Draco's shadow, he had started showing fragments of himself. Not much, and not always pleasant, but something. And yet, it was becoming clearer every day that Crabbe was stuck. Immature, emotionally stunted, struggling academically and magically. A child in a world that would swallow him whole. If you actually talked to him for about ten minutes, you would come to the quick conclusion that Crabbe had never mentally grown past their first year. And after Goyle took over, it became very clear that Crabbe had been placed under Malfoy's control for his own safety, rather than Draco's.


When Goyle's fist crashed into Crabbe's skull, the sound was loud enough to echo in the stunned quiet. And yet, no one reacted. No one cared.


Business as usual, Pansy thought bitterly.


"You stupid lump," Goyle hissed. "How many times do I have to tell you? He's not our friend. He's a traitor. He wouldn't piss on you if you were on fire. You think he cares about you?"


"That's enough, Goyle," Theo Nott interjected, his voice steady despite the tension thrumming through him. "Beating him isn't going to change anything."


Goyle's head snapped toward Theo, his glare sharp and dangerous. "Did I ask for your opinion, Nott?"


Theo raised his hands in mock surrender. "Just saying, mate. You know how he is. Violence won't fix it."


"He's my cousin, and I'll deal with him how I see fit."


A shadow crossed Theo's face, but he wisely said nothing more. Goyle, while not particularly powerful, knew a handful of nasty curses, and wasn't afraid to fight dirty. Add in his love for brawling like a muggle, and well…not very many of their yearmates wanted to tangle with Goyle.


Goyle turned back to the room, chest heaving. "We need to remind Draco where he stands. There hasn't been a blood traitor in Slytherin for five generations, and I'll be damned if one gets away with it now."


"You can't touch him."


The words slipped from Pansy's mouth before she realized she had spoken. Goyle's attention snapped to her like a predator scenting blood.


"Oh yeah? And why not? Still holding a candle for your little boyfriend?" His grin was sharp and unpleasant. "Face it, Parkinson. He never cared about you."


A wicked smile crossed his face.


"Unless it was for a quick shag in a broom cupboard."


Dark laughter echoed throughout the room, and her stomach churned, but she forced herself to stay still, to stay calm.


A part of her wanted to yell back that she had never done anything like that with Draco or anyone, but she knew that one wrong move would end with her on the floor, in pain, and Goyle the winner.


She needed to focus. To push away the fear and act confident. To appear untouchable.


Like Professor Snape.


Like Malfoy.


She straightened her spine, schooling her face into something cold and unimpressed.


"Go ahead, Goyle. Run your mouth. But you won't lay a finger on Draco."


"And who's going to stop me? You?"


"No," she said smoothly. "But Lucius and Narcissa Malfoy will. And if they don't, your father will. Do you really want to gamble on who they'll side with?"


Goyle froze. The mention of Lucius had rattled him, but the mention of his father had turned his face an ashen gray.


Despite what she had gone through in her home, Pansy knew she had been treated better than most people in Slytherin did. Goyle had never talked about his home life, but the few times she had seen him around his father, he'd always looked a few seconds from bolting out of there.


Pansy pressed her advantage.


"You think the Dark Lord will care about your petty grudges? Malfoy has power, influence, and a clear path to the Inner Circle. Do you really want to bet your family's standing on this?"


The common room had fallen silent again, every eye trained on them.


Goyle's scowl deepened, but he said nothing. Slowly, he dropped back into his seat, his arms crossed tightly over his chest. His hands were trembling.


So were hers.


She rose to her feet, smoothing down her robes, her face perfectly composed. Around her, she caught glimpses of something she hadn't seen in months.


Respect.


But it didn't feel like a victory. Not really. Slytherin House was broken, splintered beyond repair. And despite being surrounded by people she had known for years, Pansy Parkinson had never felt so utterly alone.


"I'm going out," she said quietly. "Don't bother waiting up."


As the common room door closed behind her, she couldn't help but wish—just once—that they could all go back to their first year.


And stay there. Forever.


***********************************************************


It wasn't a planned meeting.


Pansy liked the stars, even if she didn't care much for Astronomy itself. After finishing her nightly patrols, she had wandered to the Astronomy Tower, seeking a breath of fresh air and a quiet moment away from the simmering tensions in the Slytherin Common Room.


But Draco was already there.


He sat slumped against the battlements, back pressed to the cold stone, knees drawn up loosely. The dark rings beneath his eyes looked like bruises, stark against his pale skin. His head was tilted back, eyes closed, until the soft echo of her footsteps stirred him. One eye cracked open, bloodshot and sharp in the moonlight, before sliding shut again with a faint grunt of acknowledgment.


For several minutes, neither of them spoke. They simply existed in shared silence, the only sounds the whisper of the wind and the distant hoot of an owl on its hunt.


It was such a stark contrast to the Draco she knew. He had always been restless, filling quiet spaces with chatter or sarcastic quips. Even when he wasn't speaking, he enjoyed soaking in the chaotic energy of the Great Hall at mealtimes—the clatter of cutlery, the hum of a hundred conversations, the bustle of students moving about.


Chaos was comfort for Draco Malfoy. And yet, here he was: still, silent, utterly spent.


Pansy broke the quiet first.


"Have you eaten dinner?"


"Hmm."


"Is that a yes-hmm or a no-hmm?"


"It's a 'hmm-hmm,'" he rasped. His voice was low and scratchy, like parchment rubbed raw. "It means… I don't remember. I ate something today, I think. Couldn't tell you what or when."


She sighed, long and exasperated. "If you collapse in the middle of class, you won't be able to protect anyone, least of all the Slytherins you promised to look after."


One corner of his mouth twitched into a dry, humorless smirk. "I'm not that far gone. Not yet, at least. Things are… better now. Saint Potter actually trusts me. Granger, too."


"And Weasley?"


Draco's smirk sharpened into something colder. "Weasley and I will never be friends, but his opinion doesn't matter. He's a decent enough bloke, but his only claim to fame will be as Potter's sidekick or another entry in the oversized Weasley clan."


Pansy felt her lips curve into a small smile. It was oddly comforting to hear Draco like this—sharp-tongued, dismissive, familiar.


"You're underestimating the Weasel," she said lightly, tilting her head. "You always have. He has more potential than you give him credit for."


"How?" Draco scoffed. "The Wizarding World doesn't exactly hold eating contests in high regard."


"As annoying as they are, the Weasleys are never unskilled. Every single one of them finds their place eventually. Ronald just hasn't found his yet."


"And he never will." Draco's voice held an edge of finality, cold and resolute. "Look, I know being nice means pretending everyone is special, but there's nothing extraordinary about Ronald Weasley. He's the epitome of average. He's content to drift, to exist without forcing the world to notice him. He wants attention, but he won't fight for it. He wants praise, but he won't earn it. He wants fame, but he doesn't ache for it."


Draco shook his head, letting out a faint breath. "He'll be a footnote in the war. Maybe a chapter, if Potter insists."


Pansy chuckled softly under her breath. There it was again—that glimpse of the boy she knew, the one who measured the worth of things on how shiny they were: top-of-the-line broomsticks, enchanted items with fascinating powers, or even simple precious metals and gems.


Draco liked shiny people, too—Potter, with his immense power for an underaged wizard, and Granger with her voracious hunger for knowledge. But to Draco, Ronald Weasley wasn't shiny. He was dull, a common stone kicked along the side of the road.


What Draco couldn't see, what he refused to see, was the quiet strength in Ron's ordinariness. Ronald Weasley, for all his lack of sparkle, had followed Harry Potter into the jaws of danger time and time again. He might not have the hunger for power that Draco admired, but he never turned away when it was time to fight.


Lazy he might be, but cowardly he was not.


Bravery might not be a measure of talent, but with how many people had bowed their heads in the last war, even bravery on its lonesome was a valuable tool. And even so, she was sure that Ronald had something in him, a gift he hadn't tapped into yet. He just hadn't gotten the proper motivation to access it yet. Look at Draco: a year ago, he had been little better than Ron Weasley. But after the events of his summer, he had grown by leaps and bounds.


"Do you know what your problem is, Draco?" Pansy said finally, her voice soft but pointed.


Draco's tired gaze slid toward her, one pale brow raised in question.


"You can't see that not everyone shines the same way. People aren't like enchanted items; they don't have special abilities for you to use and exploit at your leisure. They need time to grow, become better, learn. Someone that's useless today might turn out to be the next Dumbledore if given enough time and incentive. "


Draco didn't answer. He just let his head fall back against the battlements, eyes closing once more.


For a while longer, they sat there in silence under the watchful gaze of the stars, two Slytherins getting ready for a war they weren't sure they'd survive.


And for that moment, it was enough.


Draco looked up at Pansy, still sitting on the cold stone floor, his silver eyes glinting faintly in the moonlight.


"Is your favorite animal still Potter's snowy owl?"


Pansy froze for a moment, her brows lifting slightly. That had been an offhand comment, made during their first year when they were still wide-eyed children trying to navigate Hogwarts' endless stone corridors. She hadn't expected him to remember—Draco never seemed like the type to hold onto small, trivial details.


Yet here he was, throwing it back at her years later.


Outwardly, she smirked, crossing her arms. "Yes. Why? Are you planning to get me one for Christmas?"


Draco reached into his robe pocket and pulled out a small golden ring. It was simple, unadorned, but even in the faint moonlight, Pansy could feel the subtle pulse of magic radiating from it. She took it gingerly, turning it over in her fingers as if it might bite her.


"There's magic on this," she said softly, her brow furrowing as she studied it. "Some kind of enchantment. I can feel it, but I'm not clever enough to tell what kind."


Her lips curved into a dry smirk. "If this is supposed to be a proposal ring, I'd like a few more diamonds on it."


Draco rolled his eyes, letting out a short huff of amusement. "As if the two of us are ready for anything big like that."


Pansy raised an eyebrow, placing one hand on her hip. "So, you can plot to dethrone the Dark Lord or whatever it is you're scheming, but marrying me is too big a thing for you?"


Draco's head snapped up, his mouth slightly open as if trying to form words. The look of pure, unfiltered bewilderment on his face was too much for Pansy, and she burst into laughter, the sound sharp and bright against the still night air.


Draco scowled, his face flushing a pale pink as he turned away from her, but the faintest hint of a smile tugged at the corner of his lips.


It was nice, Pansy realized, to joke like this with him—to feel at ease instead of walking on eggshells the way she did around the rest of their Slytherin yearmates.


"Shove off," Draco muttered, but his voice lacked any real bite.


After a brief pause, his tone softened. "Do you trust me, Pansy?"


She tilted her head slightly, considering him. "If you'd asked me that a year ago, I would've said no. But now...well, you're buddies with Potter. You can't be too mean to me anymore. So yes, Draco. I trust you."


Draco nodded, his lips pressing into a thin line before his eyes flicked back to the ring in her hand. "Put it on and say 'quintessence.'"


Pansy hesitated. "Why?"


Draco's lips curled into a mischievous smile. "It's a surprise."


For a brief moment, she considered refusing. But something in his expression—a rare openness, an earnestness she wasn't used to seeing—softened her resolve. Against her better judgment, and to her own surprise, she realized she genuinely did trust him.


Slipping the ring onto her finger, she took a deep breath and said, "Quintessence."


The change was immediate.


A strange warmth spread through her body, starting at her chest and unfurling outward like a ripple across still water. Her bones felt as if they were shrinking, condensing, her joints twisting and reforming in ways they never should. Her arms melted into soft, stiff appendages, her fingers fused and feathered. Her lips and teeth melted together, before hardening into a small, hooked beak. Her hair seemed to flow back into her scalp, replaced by downy white feathers, and her eyesight—Merlin, her eyesight—sharpened into something impossibly crisp and clear. When it was over, she felt weightless, alien in her own body, yet somehow... natural.


She opened her mouth to yell at Draco, but the only sound that emerged was a sharp, indignant, "Hoot! Hoot!"


Realization crashed over her like ice water.


He turned me into a owl. A bleeding snowy owl.


Before she could properly panic, Draco leaned forward, kneeling until his face was level with hers. "Okay, I see that you're starting to panic. Don't panic," he said, his voice calm but edged with guilt. "It's temporary. Five minutes, tops. I promise."


She let out an infuriated screech, flapping her wings aggressively.


Draco winced and gave her a sheepish grin. "Okay, okay, this whole scenario played out a lot better in my head, all right?"


Cupping his hands together, he lowered them towards her in invitation. Tentatively, Pansy gave a little hop, flapping her wings and landing in his palms. The moment she settled, her new owl senses overwhelmed her.


The cold no longer bit at her skin; it barely registered at all. Her entire body felt impossibly light, as if she could be carried away by the faintest breeze. And her vision—it was sharp, sharper than anything she had ever experienced as a human. Every minute detail of Draco's face was crystal clear: the faint stubble on his chin, the way his lashes caught the moonlight, even the individual fibers of his robes.


"Are you okay?" Draco asked softly.


Pansy stared up at him, her large golden eyes narrowing slightly in contemplation—before she lunged forward, pecking at his head and flapping her wings wildly as she beat him with them.


"Ow! Ow! All right, I get it! No more surprise transfiguration!" Draco yelped, unsuccessfully trying to shield his head with his arms all the while still holding her in his hands.


Satisfied, Pansy backed off, letting out a triumphant hoot.


Once Draco was certain the onslaught had ceased, he lowered his arms, a hesitant smile on his face. "Look, I know you hate flying. But that's as a human—dangling from a thin strip of wood, miles above the ground. This time, you're in a body made for it. You are flight. Do you want to try?"


Fear flickered in Pansy's chest. Her mind conjured up a dozen worst-case scenarios—what if the enchantment failed mid-air?


What if she couldn't fly like a natural owl?


What if a hawk decided she looked like a tasty snack?


But…for once, she pushed the Slytherin survival instincts aside. Just this once, she wouldn't think about what could go wrong.


She'd take a leap of faith.


With a determined hop, she leapt from Draco's hands and over the edge of the battlements.


For a brief, heart-stopping moment, she fell. Panic surged through her small chest, but then—


Her wings caught the air. Instinct took over.


She soared.


The night wind streamed over her feathers, lifting her higher and higher as she stretched her wings wide. Every tilt of her body, every flick of her feathers, guided her effortlessly through the sky. She could feel the currents of the air, the invisible hands of the wind cradling her, pulling her forward and upward.


She let out a triumphant hoot, her voice echoing through the vast night sky.


For once, Pansy Parkinson felt free.


Pansy soared through the night sky, exhilaration thrumming in every feather as she sliced through the cold winter air. The moon hung fat and bright above her, casting silver light across the vast expanse of Hogwarts' grounds. She tried a tentative dive, her small owl body tucking in its wings as she plummeted downward, going farther and farther, almost hitting the forest floor, before spreading them wide and rising sharply.


A Wronski Feint—in bird form. She almost couldn't believe it worked.


Letting out an excited screech, she leveled out and tried a barrel roll, spinning effortlessly through the sky. It felt natural, instinctual even, and when she righted herself again, she couldn't stop the joyful cry that escaped her beak. Who would have thought she'd acclimate so quickly to this form, that something as simple as air and wings could feel so freeing?


But then—movement. A shadow passed over her, followed by a sharp, familiar screech. Pansy tilted her head and spotted a brilliant, pure-white eagle gliding alongside her. Its wings were massive, sharp-edged, and regal, each feather catching the moonlight like polished porcelain.


She didn't need to guess who it was.


Of course, she thought, even as a bird, Draco Malfoy has to be the rarest, most eye-catching thing in the sky.


They flew together, wings beating in tandem, spiraling higher and higher until the wind turned thin and sharp. For a while, they simply glided side by side, but then the race began—a sharp, unspoken challenge.


Who could climb the fastest, who could dive the furthest, who could glide the longest without a single flap of their wings? Pansy let herself laugh inwardly, her competitive streak sparking to life. For the first time in months, she wasn't thinking about appearances or alliances or survival.


She was just flying. Free.


But as she began another ascent, she felt it—a faint buzzing deep in her chest. It wasn't painful, but it was growing stronger with every beat of her wings, every sharp pull of icy air into her small owl lungs. Warmth spread slowly, pooling under her feathers and building toward something undeniable. Her wide eyes blinked as realization crashed into her—the spell was fading.


With a screech of alarm, she angled herself back toward the Astronomy Tower, wings working frantically against gravity. The buzzing grew unbearable, vibrating through her bones, driving her forward with an urgency she couldn't ignore. She pushed harder, faster—


And then, just as she cleared the battlements, her small owl body turned gold in a flash of light.


Her triumphant screech morphed into a very human yelp as she tumbled through the air and landed hard on the stone floor with an audible thud.


"Merlin's bloody beard," Pansy groaned, flopping onto her back and clutching her ribs as she glared up at the sky. Every breath felt like gravel scraping against her insides, and she was pretty sure she'd have a spectacular bruise tomorrow.


But she couldn't stop the manic grin from forming on her lips.


A sharp cry from above caught her attention. The eagle—Draco—swooped down gracefully, landing on the battlement before transforming back into his usual self in a cascade of golden light. He hopped down from the ledge, his face lit with wild, boyish glee.


"Well? How was that? Tell me that wasn't the most fun you've ever had!"


Pansy let out a groan, playfully glaring at him from her spot on the floor. "You're insane."


Draco's grin faltered slightly, and he crouched beside her. "Are you okay?"


She waved him off, sucking in a deep breath as the ache slowly dulled into something manageable. "I'm fine. You, on the other hand, are an absolute menace."


Draco snorted, plopping down beside her on the cold stone floor as they both caught their breath. After a moment, Pansy lifted her hand, inspecting the golden ring still snug around her finger. The faint hum of magic still lingered, a whisper rather than the comparative roar it had been before.


"What is this, Draco?" she asked, turning the ring in the moonlight.


His smirk returned, softer this time. "Animagus rings."


Pansy barked out a laugh. "Bullshit."


Draco raised an eyebrow, but she pressed on. "Becoming an Animagus is insanely difficult. There've been, what, five successful transformations this century? Even Dumbledore isn't one. And you're telling me you managed to condense that entire nightmare ritual into a bloody ring?"


Draco laughed, the sound warm and unguarded. "No, of course not. The ring doesn't make you a real Animagus. It's enchanted to transform the wearer into a specific animal for five minutes. With how many human-to-beast spells there are, I was spoiled for choice. I have forms for combat, for stealth, for land, air, and sea. After a specific activation phrase is uttered, you turn into the animal each ring is enchanted to. After that, it needs ten minutes to recharge, before you can use it again."


Pansy stared at him, awe creeping into her expression. "That's… brilliant."


Her voice was barely a whisper, but Draco heard it. His smirk shifted into something softer, something almost shy.


"It's not perfect yet," he admitted, leaning back on his hands. "I want the final version to let the user transform into any animal at will, activate with a thought, and let them change back whenever they want. But this version works well enough for now. I just wanted you to be the first one to see it. To use it."


Pansy's heart gave an odd little flip, and her cheeks felt warm despite the cold night air. This wonderful, stupid, brave, idiotic mess of a boy-


She took a deep breath, steadying herself.


"What do you plan to do with it?" she asked, her voice quieter now.


Draco's expression turned serious. "Sell it. First to the Auror Corps, then to the general public."


Pansy frowned. "Why not keep it for yourself?"


Draco hesitated, then shrugged. "Two reasons. First, it's a powerful tool for survival. When the Dark Lord stops hiding and starts waging open war, being able to turn into a bird or a mouse for five minutes could mean the difference between life and death."


His voice dropped slightly, almost like he didn't want to say the next part aloud. "And second… I need my own money. When this is all over, I'm probably going to be disowned. I like being rich, Pansy. I'm not going to pretend otherwise. This thing can make me a lot of Galleons."


Pansy stared at him, realization settling heavily in her chest. He's giving up everything. His fortune, his future, the comfort of Malfoy Manor—all traded away for something as intangible as hope. For a different kind of future.


"Are you sure all of this is worth it?" she asked softly.


For just a moment, Draco's face crumpled, his sharp features softening under the weight of doubt. But then his chin lifted, and his silver eyes hardened with steely resolve.


"It has to be."
 
Chapter 6 New
"You know, Mr. Malfoy, not many of my students ask me for a duel," Snape said silkily, pulling out his wand. "The few who have angered me to this point usually realize they have made a mistake by the time the challenge has flown from their mouths."


His young charge gave him an arrogant smirk as he pulled out his own wand.


"Well, you know me, Professor. I live to make your day a bit more interesting."


The dungeon they stood in was one of the abandoned chambers beneath Hogwarts, dimly lit by flickering torches mounted on ancient stone walls. Dust clung stubbornly to the cracked stone floor, and the air carried the faint scent of mildew and old potions. A few dilapidated desks and tables, along with a single rusty cauldron, had been shoved against the far wall, leaving a wide-open space in the center of the room.


Snape's black eyes narrowed slightly as he surveyed Draco. "What is the real purpose of this duel, Mr. Malfoy? Surely you're not foolish enough to believe you can best me in straightforward combat."


Draco's smirk widened into something sharper, a blade's edge of confidence. "Oh, I wouldn't dream of it, Professor. I simply thought it was time to... show off one of my little inventions."


Snape raised an eyebrow, intrigued. He was well aware that Draco had been experimenting with spells, muting incantations, and modifying charms to give them unique properties—not entirely unlike his own Levicorpus. But Draco had spoken only in passing about these projects, leaving Snape with little more than tantalizing hints.


From his robe pocket, Draco withdrew a black iron sphere, roughly the size of a baseball. Its dark surface glinted faintly in the torchlight, and Snape immediately recognized the faint hum of enchantment. With a flick of his wand, Draco tapped the orb. The soft hum intensified, and suddenly, the golden Nordic runes engraved into the metal exterior flared to life, glowing brilliantly.


Snape squinted slightly, focusing on the runes. "What, precisely, am I looking at, Mr. Malfoy?"


Draco smirked. "An altered Bludger, Professor. With a few... enhancements."


"Hmm," Snape murmured, slipping into a dueling stance. His wand rose, precise and sharp. "Very well. Show me what it can do."


Draco's grin turned feral, and without uttering a word, he unleashed a roaring stream of fire from his wand. Snape's eyes widened slightly as the torrent of flames rushed toward him, and with a sharp flick of his wrist, he conjured a shimmering shield. The fire roared against the barrier, crackling like a living beast, and Snape inwardly marveled at the sheer power Draco was pouring into what seemed like a standard Incendio.


But then, he heard it.


A faint, sharp whistle.


Snape's head snapped to the side just in time to see the altered Bludger hurtling toward him from the right. Cursing under his breath, he dispelled his shield and batted the Bludger away with a swift Knockback Jinx. But the flames were still advancing.


Thinking fast, Snape began Vanishing the fire, absorbing and dispersing the flames at an almost impossible pace. The air shimmered with heat, sweat beading on Snape's brow.


Then, suddenly, the flames stopped.


Through the rising steam, Snape caught a brief glimpse of Draco—his wand held high, a grin splitting his face—before the boy unleashed a thick cloud of black smoke.


Fumos, Snape realized, already preparing a silent Ventus to clear the air.


But the Bludger was back.


A sharp hum cut through the smoke as the iron sphere came hurtling toward his face. Snape barely managed to raise another shimmering shield, deflecting the Bludger with a resounding clang. Then, two red bolts shot through the smoke, impacting his shield with sharp cracks.


Stunners.


Snape retaliated with a volley of spells—bright flashes of light cutting through the darkness—as he kept Draco pinned down. But the Bludger returned again and again, grazing his robes and whipping past his hair. Snape snarled, frustration curling in his chest. The limited visibility, the relentless Bludger, and Draco's increasingly creative spells were beginning to wear on him.


The Bludger, ever persistent, swooped back into the fray. Snape conjured translucent barriers, only for the enchanted iron sphere to shatter them on impact, buzzing angrily as it zeroed in on him. The professor snarled in frustration, sidestepping just in time for the Bludger to narrowly miss his ear.


"Impressive, Mr. Malfoy!" Snape barked as he dodged a crackling whip of fire that Draco lashed toward him.


Draco smirked, sweat gleaming on his brow. "You haven't seen anything yet, Professor!"


Draco pressed his advantage, launching a ferocious torrent of smoke and flame. Snape, teeth clenched, spun his wand in a defensive arc, creating a whirlwind of air that sucked the smoke upward and dispersed it. He flicked his wand again, and a Stinging Hex zipped toward Draco, narrowly missing his cheek.


The duel became a dance.


Snape moved fluidly, sending rapid streams of spells—Stupefy, Flipendo, Petrificus Totalus—while dodging and blocking both the enchanted Bludger and Draco's attacks. The boy, for his part, was relentless, sending jets of green, blue, and red fire, manipulating the dungeon floor with spiked transfigurations and slippery patches of ice.


Snape had to admit—this was impressive.


Draco then cast a powerful Ventus, and the gust hit Snape squarely, pushing him back several steps. It was a fleeting mistake, but it was all the Bludger needed.


With a predatory hum, the Bludger lunged upward from below, striking Snape cleanly in the chin. His teeth rattled, his vision swam, and pain exploded through his jaw.


Before he could recover, Draco followed up with a low-powered Blasting Curse aimed at Snape's feet.


The explosion knocked Snape backward, and he hit the stone floor with a sharp grunt.


Draco froze, wide-eyed. "Holy shit, I actually got you! Wait—are you for real? Did I actually get you?"


For a split second, Draco's guard dropped.


Snape struck.


"Expelliarmus!"


The spell ripped Draco's wand from his hand, sending it clattering across the dungeon floor. The force of the spell threw Draco backward into the stone wall with a dull thud.


The Bludger let out an angry, vibrating hum, its golden runes glowing furiously as it lunged at Snape again.


But this time, Snape was ready.


"Immobulus!"


The Bludger froze mid-flight, slowing to a lazy float. Snape snatched it from the air, feeling it vibrate furiously in his palm, the runes blazing like molten gold.


When he turned, Draco was already back on his feet—his wand retrieved, pointed squarely at Snape's chest.


Snape's own wand was aimed at Draco's head.


For a long moment, neither moved.


Then Snape's shoulders relaxed, and his wand lowered slightly.


"Congratulations, Mr. Malfoy," Snape said, his voice low and silky. "You are now as skilled as an experienced Death Eater in the Dark Lord's inner circle."


The smile that spread across Draco's face was victorious.


"Well, one that is holding back in every aspect of the phrase, at least," he added, chuckling internally at how his ward's face fell.


Snape considered the altered bludger still enclosed in his fist, buzzing angrily as it tried to escape from his grip.


"What alterations did you add to this?" he asked, curious.


"Not much. I used the Reducio to make it smaller, but I modified the spell so that it kept its mass even though its size was reduced. That slowed it down some, but it's still faster than most wizards can track. There's a Finite Incantatum enchantment on it that's supposed to let it crash through magical barriers and wards and dispel spells, but, you could still use Immobulus on it, and it only broke a few of your Protego, so I need to work on that. It also has a Bombarda enchantment that I can activate by saying a certain phrase, but that's a last-stand kind of thing."


"Hmm. Interesting. Innovative, to be sure. Why did it not attack you, though? Bludger's are indiscriminate, as far as I know."


"Oh, that's easy," Draco said with a smile. 'It's part of the reason why Bludgers don't attack civilians or referees. You see, right now, the enchantment on it allows it to differentiate between a player, civilian or referee. The Bludger has designated me as a 'referee', and you as a 'player', so it'll listen to my commands and attack you. It's why Bludgers stop attacking when a referee calls a time-out. When I'm fighting with allies, I can enchant the Bludger to designate them as 'civilians', or people not playing the game, and enemies as 'players'. I want about three of them with me when everything is said and done, and I think it'd be really cool to add some more enchantments…"


As Draco continued to blather on about his new toy, Severus came to a sudden realization.


Draco had been deadly serious when he talked about defying the Dark Lord.


The wandless magic could have been a fluke: the Lucky Potion could enhance your abilities, but not to the point of absurdity. With Felix Felicis, a normal person could survive Albus Dumbledore, not defeat him. But creating something like this…


Even with the potion guiding him, Draco needed to have serious skills to get to this point. Certain enchanted items like Brooms and Quidditch gear were very hard to customize because the regulations by the Department of Magical Games and Sports required them to be ironclad. For the boy to have manipulated those enchantments, and add his own, turning the toy into a weapon, it spoke of power, creativity and ingenuity.


Draco would not go under the radar, that much was obvious. His masters, the men he had chained himself to-both of them would one day see Draco's power, and they would ask him why he had not told them.


Either the Dark Lord or Dumbledore would have to be alerted to the boy's hunt for power, if only to keep his cover as a double agent.


The question was…which one?


*************************************************************


The night was ink-dark and heavy with silence as Fred Weasley lay beneath his sheets, eyes wide open, waiting for the clock to tick closer to 2:30 AM. George, in the bed across from him, was similarly still, though Fred could tell by the faint rustling of fabric that his twin was equally awake.


The letter from Draco Malfoy had been gnawing at both of them all day—a mix of curiosity, suspicion, and an edge of something else.


Unease, perhaps? Distrust?


Draco Malfoy: the Slytherin prince, long-time tormentor of their little brother Ron, and a walking embodiment of everything they generally avoided in life. Malfoy thought they were scum on the boots of the world,and he thought the same of them.


But the meeting in the Hog's Head a few weeks back had planted a seed of doubt.


Malfoy had spoken in defense of Harry, and Harry and Hermione themselves had started vouching for him during D.A. meetings. Yet Ron—Ron was a different story. He'd scowled every time Malfoy's name was mentioned, never outright objecting, but never confirming the boy had changed either. And Ron—their usually hot-tempered, stubborn brother—had been distant these last few days. Quiet, morose, lost. Fred made a mental note to talk to him soon, get him out of his funk. For Ron, you couldn't let things run their course, or he'd fall into a rut. You had to push him, force him to open the curtains and let the sunlight in, or he'd be stuck in the dark for a long time.


The letter had been simple: a meeting at 3 AM, in an old, unused classroom on the fifth floor. Fred's first instinct had been to crumple it up and toss it into the common room fire. But curiosity was a Weasley trait, and the twins had it in spades.


At 2:30 sharp, the twins silently slid out from under their covers, fully dressed in dark robes. With synchronized movements, they aimed their wands at each other and whispered the incantation for the Disillusionment charm. The cold sensation of the charm washing over them was familiar—like an icy egg cracking over their heads. Moments later, their forms blurred and disappeared. Next came the Silencing Charms on their boots and robes, muffling every movement.


George moved to the dormitory door, pausing only to fire a nonverbal Silencio at the hinges, knowing well how they squeaked. When they had cleared that hurdle and reached the common room, Fred cast a quick Homenum Revelio—no one.


They slipped through the portrait hole, stirring the Fat Lady from her sleep.


"Hmm? Who is that? Who—?" she began, but the twins were already halfway down the corridor, silent as shadows and invisible to the naked eye.


The castle was alive at night in a way it never was during the day. The air was cooler, the stones seemed to hum softly underfoot, and the shadows twisted and stretched with every flicker of torchlight. Every sound could be a teacher. Every shadow could be hiding a prefect. With Umbridge in the castle, security had stepped up, and some sets of armor were even told to keep an eye out for troublemakers. It should have discouraged them, the danger.


Instead, it only invigorated them.


Fred grinned wildly, the same exhilaration coursing through him as it always did when they pulled off these late-night escapades. Beside him, though unseen, he knew George was grinning too.


They had spent countless nights like this over the years—exploring, pranking, dodging Filch, and discovering Hogwarts' secrets.


But tonight felt different. Heavier. Fred couldn't shake the thought that this was his last year—their last year—to feel this free. Adulthood loomed on the horizon, and while their joke shop was something to look forward to, it felt like they were leaving behind a part of themselves in these stone halls.


The thought made Fred's chest tighten. Hogwarts had been their home as much as the Burrow. He knew George felt it too, even if they never spoke about it. They didn't need to. George was more than his twin—he was a part of him. They had always been Fred-and-George, a singular entity against the world, and soon they'd be facing something much larger than prefects and cranky caretakers. They'd be facing responsibilities, taxes, and bills, a world they weren't used to. If Fred didn't know George would be by his side every step of the way, he wondered how he would even sleep at night.


Doors swung open for them without resistance, shortcuts revealed themselves as if the castle itself were guiding them.


Fred idly wondered if Hogwarts was alive—if it had been looking out for them all these years, aiding them in their mischief.


They reached the classroom that Draco had mentioned in his letter, with only a few seconds to spare.


Therefore, they were right on time.


George rapped on the door—three sharp knocks, a pause, then two more. The agreed-upon signal mentioned in the enigmatic letter. For a second, there was nothing but silence, and Fred began to wonder if this was some kind of trick or trap. But there was a click from the lock, and he knew that at the very least, someone who knew about the letter was in there. The door creaked open, and they slipped inside.


Draco Malfoy sat at one of the old desks, a single candle casting flickering light over his pale, exhausted face. Dark shadows clung beneath his eyes, and his pointed features were drawn tight with tension.


Fred flicked his wand at the door, casting a silent Colloportus, sealing it. George dispelled the Disillusionment Charm on Fred, and Fred did the same for George.


The twins stared at Draco, their expressions identical in their skepticism.


Fred broke the silence first. "So, what does the prince of snakes want from the lowly Weasley brothers?"


Draco sighed, shoulders sagging slightly. "I have a business proposition."


Fred and George exchanged a look, identical eyebrows arching.


George spoke next. "What possible business could the two of us have with you?"


Fred added, "We're not interested in curses or hurting people, Malfoy. That's been your main gig for the past four years, so why are we even here?"


Draco closed his eyes briefly, gathering himself. "I want to invest in your business. To become a primary shareholder."


Fred and George blinked, momentarily stunned into silence. It was rare for the twins to be at a loss for words, but Draco Malfoy offering to invest in their joke shop was about as likely as Peeves apologizing for causing chaos.


Fred recovered first, his grin sharp and incredulous. "Primary shareholder? Is this some sort of joke, Malfoy? Because we're usually the ones telling them."


George leaned against one of the old desks, arms crossed, his skepticism plain. "If it is a joke, it's not a very good one. You're barking up the wrong tree if you think we'd take Galleons from you of all people."


Draco's jaw tightened, but he didn't rise to the bait. Instead, he reached into his robes and withdrew a small leather mokeskin pouch, setting it on the desk in front of him. The faint jingle of coins was unmistakable.


Fred's eyes narrowed. "What's that? Your piggy bank?"


Draco's lips twitched, though it wasn't quite a smirk. "One thousand Galleons as an initial investment. Consider it proof that I'm serious."


The twins exchanged another look, this one more contemplative. A thousand Galleons wasn't just pocket change—it was equal to the amount Harry had given them. And right now, they needed that money. After the down payment for their spot in Diagon Alley, the ingredients they needed from vendors, how much they had paid for advertisements in the Prophet, the owls they had bought for the Owl Order service, the pay for the testers…well, right now, they were at an equilibrium. Not making enough cash for a profit, but not enough to make it a loss. This money could change that, and give them a lot more breathing room.


But the source of the money made their stomachs churn.


"Why?" George asked finally, his tone softer but no less suspicious. "Why us? Why now? You've spent years making Ron's life hell, sneering at our family, and now you want to fund our dream? Forgive us if we're not exactly lining up to shake your hand, Lord Malfoy."


Draco exhaled, his fingers drumming on the desk. For a moment, he looked almost... vulnerable.


"Because I believe in what you're doing. Your products—your ideas—they have potential. Not just for pranks, but for innovation. I've seen the way students flock to your inventions, and how your work inspires laughter even in the middle of all this…madness. People need that."


Fred and George were quiet, their usual banter tempered by the unexpected earnestness in Malfoy's voice.


Draco continued, his tone low and urgent. "I'm not asking you to like me. I don't even care if you hate me. But the world is changing, and we're all going to need... allies. Resources. If you think I'm doing this out of some misguided kindness, you're wrong. It's a strategic move—for both of us. Your shop could grow into something extraordinary, and I want to be part of that success."


Fred folded his arms, his expression unreadable. "And what's in it for you, exactly?"


Draco met his gaze evenly. "A share of the profits, of course. Some lessons on enchantments. I would also like to propose some…personal inventions, to sell through your shop: nothing dark, just useful. Useful enough that the Ministry will line up to buy them in droves. And... an association with something better than the family name I've been saddled with. Let's just say I'm diversifying my reputation."


George snorted. "That's one way to put it."


Fred tilted his head, studying Draco with uncharacteristic seriousness. "You really think our shop could be that big?"


Draco smirked faintly. "With the right funding and business strategy? Yes. But that's up to you. I'm just offering the means to make it happen."


The twins exchanged a long look, their silent conversation stretching for several beats. Finally, Fred turned back to Draco, his grin slowly returning.


"This is…a really nice amount, Lord Malfoy. But…we're gonna need a bit more than this."


Draco frowned. "How much more?"


George caught on to his plan immediately.


"I'd say…three more of these nifty little bags?" his brother said, taking the mokeskin pouch nonchalantly. "Yeah, three is fine."


"What?! That's wandpoint robbery!" Draco protested. "You cannot tell me Potter invested four thousand Galleons into your shop!"


Huh. Draco knew that Harry had given them the Triwizard Winnings? That was weird; he could have sworn that they'd kept that bit quiet…


"Yeah, but you see, you're paying the Tosser Tax," Fred said silkily. "And it looks like you've got a four-year backpay. And we're not even including how much time and effort it's gonna take for us to teach you the ins and outs of enchanting."


"Not to mention checking out what clumsy designs you've definitely made, and improving them to the point that they're worth selling in our shop," George ended. "And putting you under our name? That's a hit to our reputation, taking a suspected Death Eater's son as a business partner. Honestly, we're being very generous with you."


No, they weren't. Malfoy was right: they were robbing him at wandpoint. But they were also right in saying that they were taking a risk in taking him on. With how many people at the Hog's Head had confessed about how much of a berk Malfoy was, there was a significant chance that they could get boycotted by their target market just by having him as a partner. Not to mention, this was Newt Year, and they were definitely going to have to take time out of their pranking just to make sure he didn't blow himself up.


Plus, he'd been an arse for four years straight. Justice was needed; he could pay for it.


Draco's face turned red, and he looked like he was a few seconds away from having a meltdown.


But he calmed himself, and with a simple twitch of the eye, he said, "Fair enough. The rest will be deposited to you by the end of the week. Is that satisfactory?"


For a minute, Fred thought about tacking on a late fee…but, nah, that was a bit much.


With matching grins, the twins outstretched their hands for a shake.


"Welcome to Weasley Wizard Wheezes, Mr. Malfoy."


********************************************************


The study in Malfoy Manor was oppressively ornate, filled with unnecessary finery that grated on Voldemort's nerves. He lounged in Lucius's favorite armchair, its high back and soft cushions no comfort to him. The chandelier above, dripping with crystals, cast a faintly sickening glow, its gaudiness a constant reminder of Lucius's desperation to flaunt his supposed power. Everything here reeked of Malfoy's futile attempts to assert power and importance through wealth. It was laughable. No gilded mirror, no polished silverware, could mask the family's current impotence.


How dull this summer had been. At first, tormenting Lucius and his cowering family had provided some amusement. Watching the once-proud patriarch flinch at every word, seeing Narcissa pale as he dissected her failings, and observing the growing crack in Draco's trembling composure had been a satisfying distraction. But even the most exquisite suffering grew tiresome when the victims had no fight left in them. Lucius had been drained of defiance, Narcissa of pride, and Draco of courage. What was left but their empty shells?


Peacocks strutting in the garden, chandeliers cluttering the ceilings—everything here is an insult to simplicity and efficiency, Voldemort thought with disdain. His long, pale fingers drummed idly on the armrest as Nagini coiled near his feet, her scales glinting faintly in the firelight.


Nagini hissed softly, her voice slipping into his mind like silk. Bored, master?


"Yes, Nagini," Voldemort murmured. "These walls stifle me. I tire of this... decadence."


The serpent flicked her tongue as if in agreement, her sleek form coiling near his feet. Voldemort's hand brushed her head absently as his thoughts turned to more pressing matters.


The Ministry. He needed to move against it soon. The fool Fudge still clung to his delusions, but cracks were forming. The Ministry's resistance was a fragile dam holding back an inevitable flood. All it needed was the right pressure.


His lips curled into something resembling a smile. Yes, pressure. And who better to apply it than Nagini? She was perfect for the task. Intelligent, stealthy, and bound by loyalty far stronger than that of any of his Death Eaters.


But still, the thought annoyed him. He should not have to risk her. If he had more competent followers—if Bellatrix were free, for instance, she could carve a path through the Ministry with sheer ferocity. Her power was unmatched among his servants, save for him. And then there was Rookwood. His knowledge as a former Unspeakable would have been invaluable.


Two pawns, locked away with the others. What waste.


"The peacocks taste as ridiculous as they look," Nagini hissed in Parseltongue, her tone laced with disgust. "Too much feather. Too little meat."


Voldemort's lips twisted into something resembling amusement. "Patience, Nagini. You will feast on flesh that satisfies soon enough. Perhaps tonight, if my servant fails me." He gestured lazily toward the fireplace. "It has been too long since you tasted human blood."


Nagini's forked tongue flicked out, tasting the air, her amber eyes gleaming with anticipation. Humans taste better when their blood is spiced with fear, she remarked, coiling tighter.


Let me scare him first. I like the taste of adrenaline.


"You may play," Voldemort allowed with a faint smile. "But wait until we hear what he has to say. He might yet prove useful."


As if on cue, the flames in the fireplace flared emerald, and a cloaked figure tumbled out, landing on his knees. The man looked up, revealing Avery's pale, sweat-drenched face. His lips trembled as he opened his mouth to speak, but no sound came. Nagini had begun circling him, her movements slow and deliberate, her head weaving closer to his face with every pass.


Avery froze, his breath hitching as Nagini hissed softly, her fangs gleaming. Voldemort chuckled, the sound low and cold.


"She's only playing, Avery. She's been bored—and hungry. If you have not brought me what I asked for, however, her boredom and hunger will be solved... by you."


"My Lord," Avery stammered, his voice cracking. "I—I have it. The information you requested."


"Oh? Did you finally find the particulars of whatever contract the Ministry has with the Dementors?"


He remembered it clearly: during the first war, the Dementors had flocked to him, eager to serve, their hunger drawn to his power like moths to flame. They obeyed his commands without hesitation. But the one time he had dared to set foot on the accursed island, it had been different. They had swarmed him, their soulless, rattling breaths reverberating in his ears. They had not obeyed him, had not even recognized him as their lord, even though they were his natural followers.


Why? What did the Ministry wield that could control such creatures?


The Dementors were not truly allied to anyone but their hunger. So what bound them to the Ministry's will?


He had concluded that it was some kind of magical contract, bounding the creatures to the Minister's will, but something that allowed them a bit of legroom. After all, they had defied orders before. If he could figure out the particulars of that contract, he could make one himself, and gain the Dementor's loyalty, a tool that would give him unmatched power. Even Dumbledore would not be able to stop him.


To his surprise, however, Avery quickly shook his head.


"My Lord, there is no contract, no such thing. I had to break into the Department of Mysteries, into their Hall of Records using my Imperisued puppets, but…My Lord, you need to see this for yourself."


Voldemort's gaze sharpened. "Show me."


Avery fumbled inside his robes, withdrawing an ancient scroll. He held it out with trembling hands, but Voldemort made no move to rise. With a flick of his wrist, the parchment flew to him, settling neatly in his hand.


He smirked at the mix of awe and fear on Avery's face.


Wandless magic. Such a small feat, and yet they look at me as if I've torn the stars from the heavens, Voldemort thought with faint disgust. He unrolled the scroll, careful not to damage the brittle material. His sharp eyes took in the faded ink and an interesting image: a black crown with sharp edges, high above a mountain. And at the bottom of that mountain were the hooded figures of the Dementors. Beneath the drawing was a script, nearly illegible and written in Old Norse.


His lips curved in satisfaction. A challenge, at last. He was well-versed in Old Norse, among other magical and mundane languages, and his sight in this new bodyw as comparable to an eagles. Leaning forward, he began to read, translating the words with ease.


The tale unfolded as such:


Long ago, in the shadowed heart of the North Sea, there existed a place of such dark power that even the waves seemed to shy away from its jagged shores. This was Azkaban, a fortress of despair, built by the sorcerer Ekrizdis to house his unspeakable experiments. It was said that he alone commanded the Dementors, wraithlike creatures birthed from his twisted magic, their hunger for souls unquenchable. Under his rule, they prowled the island, their cold hands gripping any living thing that dared approach. But when Ekrizdis vanished—some said by death, others by madness—his creations were unleashed upon the world.


The Dementors spread like a plague, descending upon villages in the dead of night. Their approach was heralded by an unnatural chill, a biting cold that no fire could ward off. They drained not only the warmth from the air but the joy from the heart, leaving behind empty husks of those unfortunate enough to face them. Entire towns were silenced, their inhabitants consumed in a single night. No walls could keep them out, no plea for mercy could stay their hunger.


The Ministry of Magic fought valiantly but in vain. Wizards cast Patronuses, silvery shields of light and hope, to drive the creatures back, but even the strongest could only hold them at bay. The Patronuses scattered the Dementors like shadows before dawn, but the creatures always returned, unrelenting. The land was on the brink of collapse, and hope dwindled like a guttering candle.


In desperation, the Ministry called for volunteers to embark on what many believed to be a suicide mission: to storm Azkaban itself and destroy the fortress. They hoped that by erasing the source of the Dementors' creation, they might banish the creatures forever. A group of brave souls answered the call—men and women whose courage was only matched by their despair. They sailed through the stormy sea, reaching the blackened shores of Azkaban as lightning split the sky.


The moment their boots touched the cursed sands, the air turned to ice. The Dementors came, swarming like locusts, their skeletal hands clawing at the air. The volunteers lit their wands, conjuring their Patronuses, and the silvery forms leapt forward to drive the creatures back. The beach became a battlefield of light and shadow, of shimmering hope against the suffocating despair. But the Dementors were relentless, and the Patronuses, though valiant, could not destroy them. For every Dementor driven back, two more surged forward.


One by one, the volunteers fell. Their Patronuses faltered, their lights extinguished as despair took hold. The creatures closed in, their rattling breaths echoing in the storm. By the time the last survivor stumbled through the gates of the fortress, he was alone.


This lone wizard, whose name history has forgotten, barricaded himself in the tallest tower, the chamber once occupied by Ekrizdis himself. It was a place of horrors—a testament to the sorcerer's madness. Books bound in human skin lined the shelves, and jars filled with unnameable things glinted in the dim light. The wizard searched desperately for anything that could save him as the Dementors battered at the door.


His hands trembled as he rifled through ancient tomes and cursed artifacts, his breath clouding in the frigid air.


Then, his fingers brushed something cold.


He pulled it free and found himself holding a crown—a strange, black thing of jagged crystal, sharp-edged and glinting like obsidian. Its surface shimmered faintly, as though it pulsed with its own malevolent life. The air around it grew heavier, and despair sank into his bones, as if the crown itself shared the same dreadful aura as the Dementors.


The door shattered behind him, and the Dementors poured in, their cloaks rustling like dry leaves. Their empty faces turned toward him, and he felt their hunger clawing at his soul. In a final act of desperation, he placed the crown on his head.


The world seemed to still.


A voice, silent yet commanding, surged through him. Without thinking, he raised his hand and spoke a single word:



Stop.


And they did. The Dementors froze, their skeletal forms swaying as if caught in an unseen wind. Their hunger ebbed, replaced by something he could only describe as submission. They bowed low, their cloaked heads nearly touching the ground, as though he had become their master.


It was said that the wizard returned to the Ministry with the crown and a terrible tale. The Dementors, he explained, could not be destroyed, but they could be controlled. The crown was the key, binding them to the will of its wearer. Thus, Azkaban became not only a fortress but a prison, its very horrors repurposed to guard the most dangerous of magical criminals. The crown was passed down from warden to warden, ensuring the Dementors' obedience.


Yet, the crown's power was not without limits. It was strongest on the island where it was forged, and the farther the Dementors strayed, the weaker the crown's hold. It is why, even now, they act with greater freedom when far from Azkaban's shores.


And so, the Dementors remain, neither ally nor enemy, but a force leashed to the Ministry's will. Yet a prophecy exists, whispering that the crown's magic is as dark as the creatures it commands and that one day, it may find a master who will not wield it for imprisonment, but conquest.



And just like that, everything clicked.


Voldemort leaned back, his red eyes gleaming with triumph. This was perhaps the biggest coverup in England's history. He had never heard of such an event, neither in textbooks nor from the mouths of old men who ought to have died centuries ago. And yet, here it was; proof of a forgotten war, in which the Ministry had gained control of Azkaban and the Dementors in one lucky swoop. They framed it as if the Dementors feared the wrath of the Ministry, and didn't dare move against them. But in reality, the Ministry held their literal leash.


Who would have known that the Ministry was in possession of such lovely toys?


But the farther they were from Azkaban, and by extension, the crown, the more loose their restrictions became. This was why the Dementors had lost control two years ago, when Black had escaped, and those beautiful creatures had taken a chance to feed during the Quidditch game. This was why they had joined him on his hunts for Muggles and Mudbloods, but had turned against him and he had first landed on Azkaban's shores.


The crown. It explains everything.


He laughed, a sharp, high sound that made Avery flinch. "You have done well, Avery," Voldemort said, his tone almost pleasant. "You have repaid your debt to me at last."


Avery, still on his knees, pressed his forehead to the floor. "Thank you, my Lord. I am honored by your forgiveness."


Voldemort turned to Nagini, speaking in Parseltongue. "Avery is off the menu. He has finally proven himself useful."


Nagini hissed in disappointment, coiling closer to him. "He smells of fear," she lamented. "A pity."


"Patience," Voldemort said, stroking her smooth head. "You will feast soon. But first, a mission."


Nagini's head tilted, her amber eyes alight with interest.


"The crown lies in Azkaban," Voldemort continued. "But first, we must try and recover the Prophecy. You will infiltrate the Department of Mysteries and retrieve it as soon as possible. When that is done, you will go to Azkaban itself."


Wormtail had told him that Sirius Black had been able to escape Azkaban because of his Animagus form. The Dementors did not care about animals, preferring to feast on humans. Nagini would have an easier time searching the prison than any man he would send. She would locate where his faithful followers were, allowing him to see through her eyes and case the prison…and she would also find the warden and retrieve the crown for him.


Nagini hissed in agreement, her tail flicking eagerly. Voldemort's gaze returned to the scroll, his thoughts already racing. A crown to control Dementors. How fitting.


After all, who was more deserving of such a crown than he, a future king?
 
Chapter 7 New
The flickering light of the hearth cast dancing shadows across Hagrid's cozy cabin as Harry, Ron, and Hermione sat around the oaken table. Each of them held a steaming mug of tea—oversized tankards that were comically large in their hands but no more than a small wooden cup to Hagrid. Despite their joy at seeing their old friend again, the sight of his bruised face and bandaged arm weighed heavily on their spirits.


"So tha's it, then," Hagrid said gruffly, his massive hand clutching the cup as delicately as he could manage. "We tried our best. Olympe and me, we did. But the giants… they ain't comin'. The Gurg we talked to, Karkas, he listened ter us, but the Death Eaters got ter his lot not long after. They killed him." He paused, his beetle-black eyes filled with sorrow. "The new Gurg, Golgomath… he's a mean one, and he's taken a likin' ter You-Know-Who."


A heavy silence fell over the room. The only sound was the crackle of the fire and the occasional creak of Fang shifting in his spot near the hearth.


Ron broke the silence reluctantly. "Malfoy was right, then."


Hagrid's brow furrowed, his expression a mixture of confusion and surprise. "Malfoy? What're yeh talkin' about Malfoy fer?"


Hermione hastily jumped in, her voice a little too high-pitched. "It's all right, Hagrid! Malfoy's… he's on our side now."


Hagrid looked at her as if she'd grown another head. "Come again? Draco Malfoy? On yer side? What in tarnation happened while I was gone?!"


Harry exchanged a glance with Hermione before beginning. "It's a long story, Hagrid. Voldemort's been staying at Malfoy Manor—he took over their house this summer. He… hurt Malfoy for trying to defend his mum. And when we got on the train to Hogwarts, Malfoy told us everything. He apologized for… well, for everything."


Hagrid snorted. "Malfoy? Apologizin'? Pull the other one."


"I didn't trust him either," Harry admitted, "not at first. But he's been helping us. A lot. He's been giving us information about Voldemort's plans, helping us prepare. He even told us you were with the giants."


Hagrid's eyes narrowed suspiciously. "Yeh trust him? Malfoy and his dad have been nothin' but trouble fer years."


Harry nodded firmly. "We do. Or at least, I do. Malfoy's risking a lot by helping us. Slytherin's practically shunned him—none of them will even talk to him."


Hermione added, "He's taken a big risk, Hagrid. We wouldn't have come this far without his help."


Hagrid still looked unconvinced. "An' Dumbledore? Does he know about all this?"


Harry frowned. "We haven't told him yet. We haven't been able to. We can't send him an owl, and we can't just go to his office whenever we want anymore-"


It was at this point that Hermione suddenly brightened, sitting up straighter. "Hagrid, you can tell Dumbledore for us! You can give him a letter! Have you anything to write on?"


Hagrid looked bemused as she shot to her feet. "Er… I s'pose I could, yeah. There's parchment and ink in the drawer by the stove."


Hermione bustled over, rummaging through the drawer. She quickly found what she needed and began furiously scribbling notes, the quill scratching loudly in the quiet cabin.


Hagrid turned back to Harry and Ron. "What's this all about, then? What's Malfoy been tellin' yeh?"


Ron, absently scratching Fang behind the ears, muttered, "Oh, you know. Just that You-Know-Who wants to destroy the Statute of Secrecy in order to take over Britain."


Hagrid's tankard slipped from his hand, clattering onto the table. "WHAT?!"


Harry winced but launched into an explanation, with Hermione chiming in from the stove as she wrote. They explained Voldemort's plan: how he wanted to expose the wizarding world to Muggles, take over Britain, and declare himself ruler. With each new detail, Hagrid's expression grew grimmer, his face pale beneath his wild beard.


By the time they finished, Hermione returned to the table, ink-stained hands clutching the completed letter. "Here," she said proudly, placing it in front of Hagrid. "This has everything Malfoy's told us."


Hagrid picked up the letter, his massive hands dwarfing the parchment. "Are yeh sure Malfoy's right about all this?"


Hermione shrugged. "He was right about you and the giants, wasn't he? And Professor Snape could probably confirm whether the information's true or not."


Hagrid nodded slowly, his expression still troubled. "All right. I'll take it ter Dumbledore first thing in the mornin'. But I'm still keepin' an eye on Malfoy, mark my words."


Harry nodded. "We understand, Hagrid. But trust me—he's trying to help."


Hagrid grunted, still looking skeptical, but the conversation shifted to other matters as the fire crackled on, casting warmth and light over their tense gathering.



************************************************************


The Room of Requirement had outdone itself this time.


It wasn't the grand hall of polished wood and shelves of enchanted books that Harry had seen during DA meetings, nor was it stocked with arcane instruments or magical training dummies. Instead, it was a gym—a Muggle gym, by the looks of it. The weights were scuffed and scratched, the leather on the benches cracked, and faint stains and scuff marks marred the walls and floor. It wasn't pristine, but it felt... real, like it had been lived in, worked in, and sweated over. Harry knew this gym very well.


After all, it was Dudley's gym that he had asked the Room to remake for him.


Harry jogged in measured strides around the perimeter, his breath coming in ragged gasps. Sweat dripped from his brow and soaked into the collar of his oversized t-shirt. His legs ached with each step, his muscles burning from the exertion. He'd already done squats, pull-ups, and some light weightlifting—three sets of ten reps for each exercise, with a careful five-minute rest in between. Now, he pushed himself to finish his laps. After this, he'd tackle pushups.


As the soles of his trainers pounded against the scuffed floor, his mind churned through the events of the past two weeks.


Hagrid had finally returned. Bloodied and bruised, the half-giant had recounted his harrowing journey to the giants. The details he'd shared had been far grimmer than Draco's clipped report—stories of failed alliances, shattered diplomacy, and the looming shadow of Voldemort's influence. What few giants remained had pledged their strength to Voldemort. It was another piece in the madman's growing web of alliances with dark creatures, a reality that sent a chill down Harry's spine.


Hagrid's return had driven Harry to push harder, to prepare himself for the inevitable battles ahead. His training in wandless magic, as suggested by Malfoy, had been progressing—but slowly. He could cast spells like Expelliarmus and Accio without incantations, but removing the wand movements entirely still felt like trying to breathe underwater. Hermione, of course, had already surpassed him and Ron in this. He wouldn't be surprised if she managed her first wandless spell any day now.


Guiltily, Harry couldn't help but feel happy that he had surpassed Ron, at the very least. The redheaded boy was having trouble just performing the wordless incantation, and it was only adding to his sour mood.


But Harry wasn't just focusing on magic. Draco's other advice—to strengthen his body—had resonated with him.


Dudley had been his unlikely inspiration.


Over the summer, Harry had watched his cousin grunt and sweat his way through boxing workouts. Now, Harry found himself replicating those routines: running, lifting weights, doing pushups and pull-ups. Unlike Dudley, though, Harry's progress came steadily. Each day, he could lift a little more, run a little faster, push a little harder. Maybe it was the benefit of being a wizard—his body, after all, had endured injuries that would have killed a Muggle—but he was seeing results much faster than his cousin had.


As he rounded the last corner of the room, his chest heaving and his legs begging for mercy, he forced himself to keep going. His sweat-soaked shirt clung to his back, and his trainers squeaked faintly on the floor. Finally, he staggered to a halt.


For a moment, Harry stood there, bent over, hands on his knees, gulping air into his burning lungs. The ache in his muscles and the pounding in his chest were painful, yes—but they also felt good. They were proof of progress, evidence that he was getting stronger. He flexed his arm and smirked at the faint outline of muscle beneath his skin. His stomach, once soft and lean, was beginning to show the faintest trace of abs.


He only had two hours to spare each night, squeezed between classes, DA meetings, and Quidditch practice. Yet even in that short time, he had already noticed a difference. On the Quidditch pitch, he was faster, sharper. He could catch the Snitch quicker, dodge Bludgers with ease, and keep up with Angelina's grueling training sessions without feeling like he was about to collapse.


The transformation wasn't just physical, though. The exhaustion that came from working out so intensely had a welcome side effect: dreamless sleep. When he finally crawled into bed at night, his body shut down completely, sparing him the nightmares that so often plagued him.


Harry ran a hand through his damp hair, letting his thoughts drift to Ron and Hermione. Hermione, he knew, was too focused on her wandless magic practice to join him here. She was determined to master the technique, and Harry admired her focus even if he couldn't quite match it. Ron, on the other hand...


Ron had been in a funk since his argument with Malfoy. The other boy had accused him of becoming the next Wormtail, and he knew that those words had cut Ron deeply.


Harry knew his best friend wasn't like Pettigrew—Ron was loyal to a fault—but the accusation had struck at Ron's insecurities. Harry suspected it was tied to Ron's struggle to define himself, to step out of his brothers' shadows and prove he was more than "just another Weasley."


Ron had always felt overshadowed—by his brothers, by Hermione, by Harry himself. It was something he rarely talked about, but Harry had seen glimpses of it over the years: the Mirror of Erised, Ron's envy during the Triwizard Tournament, his occasional outbursts of anger and frustration. Malfoy's taunt had dredged all of that up and left Ron in a funk he couldn't seem to shake.


Growing up with the Dursleys had taught Harry one thing: emotions were dangerous. Anger, sadness, even joy—any show of strong feelings could earn him a slap or a sharp word, followed by Aunt Petunia's favorite threat: "Stop crying before I give you something to cry about." As a result, Harry had learned to bury his emotions deep, to shove them into a corner of his mind and lock them away.


Because of this, Harry wasn't sure how to help. Every disagreement he and Ron had ever had had been resolved by ignoring it until it faded away. This felt different, though.


Hermione had tried to talk to Ron about it, of course, but the two of them had ended up having a horrible row, and now they were barely speaking.


Maybe Fred and George could get through to him, Harry thought. Or perhaps Ginny. He'd bring it up with one of them when he got the chance.


In the meantime, though, he'd like to have someone here with him, if only so he could tackle some of the heavier weights safely. Though, he didn't know who'd be interested. He immediately crossed the girls from the D.A. of his potential list, and the pureblood boys who had spent their lives in the Wizarding World. Well, except maybe Neville.


Huh. Neville…


The idea made him pause. Neville had been gaining confidence lately, and maybe inviting him to work out here would be good for both of them. Harry could use a spotter, after all, and it'd be nice to have someone to talk to while he trained. Yeah, Neville would be a great choice, actually.


He stretched his arms over his head and let out a satisfied groan. Tomorrow, he'd invite Neville. For now, he had pushups to finish.


As he dropped to the floor and started his set, Harry smiled faintly to himself. Let Dudley throw a punch at him next summer—he'd be ready.


***********************************************************


Wingardium Leviosa


Hermione whispered the incantation in her mind, the words echoing through her thoughts in a clear, deliberate tone. The soft hum of magic responded, echoing throughout her body, and three quills lifted gently into the air. She sat cross-legged in the middle of her dormitory floor, her wand nowhere in sight, sweat beading on her forehead as her muscles trembled from the sheer effort of holding them aloft.


The dorm was unusually quiet; Parvati and Lavender had left for dinner, giving Hermione the solitude she needed for this experiment. Her breath came in shallow, uneven pants as the quills wavered slightly in the air, but she refused to let them fall. Despite the strain, an unmistakable glimmer of happiness lit her face.


She was finally doing it—wandless magic.


She licked her dry lips, feeling the exhilaration mix with exhaustion. Yes, it was more ambitious than she'd initially planned. Logic dictated she should have started with one object, not three, but that inner hunger—that relentless, well-hidden drive for power—had whispered in her ear, pushing her to aim higher. It always had. That voice had been with her all her life, urging her to study longer, to read more, to seek out every scrap of knowledge she could find.


It was a hunger she had learned to temper, but not ignore.


Magic had awakened that hunger like nothing else ever had. The day she received her Hogwarts letter, her quiet yearning transformed into an insatiable ravenousness.


Magic wasn't just a skill to learn; it was a universe to explore. Every spell, every charm, every theory—she wanted to dissect it, understand it, and master it. And now, it had led her to this: wandless magic, an ability that many adult wizards deemed impossible to achieve without years of practice.


Two minutes, she noted internally, her eyes flicking toward the clock on the bedside table. She needed to set a limit, to see how long she could sustain this fledgling ability of hers. Her arms quivered slightly as though the effort to hold the quills steady was physical, though she knew it wasn't her muscles straining.


No, it was something deeper—something within her core, her inner self, that part of her core that connected to magic like a second heartbeat.


When she reached her limit, she'd record the time, rest, and then push herself further. It was a methodical process, one that brought her a sense of control.


She couldn't understand how wizards could treat magic so casually, accepting it as an everyday convenience rather than an awe-inspiring gift. Didn't they want to know more? To push their limits? To push it's limits?


Perhaps it was because they'd grown up with it, she mused. They were inured to its beauty. But it wasn't just purebloods who seemed indifferent; even Muggle-borns and half-bloods like her eventually fell into the same complacency. After their first year, they embraced magic as part of their lives but never seemed to cherish it, never hungered to unravel its mysteries.


Hermione frowned, the quills wobbling slightly in the air before she steadied them again.


Even Harry—the Boy Who Lived, someone she thought might share her curiosity—didn't have the same relentless drive to uncover magic's secrets.


He was talented, yes, but he wasn't consumed by the need to understand the hows and whys.


But Malfoy was.


The thought came unbidden, and she bit her lip. Of all people, Draco Malfoy… the boy who had sneered at her, insulted her, tried to make her life miserable for years. And yet, after this summer, he had changed. Hermione couldn't deny it. Something in him had shifted, and it wasn't just the haunted look in his eyes or the scar that now marred his once-perfect face.


It was his mind. Malfoy, who had grown up in the lap of magical luxury, who had been surrounded by magic all his life, now shared her hunger for knowledge.


She wondered if it was terrible to be a little grateful for the trials he had endured. Without Voldemort's occupation of Malfoy Manor, without the horrors Draco must have witnessed, he might still be the same arrogant, shallow berk he'd always been. Instead, he had become someone who pursued knowledge with a fervor that mirrored her own.


It was…nice, having someone she could talk to on that level, someone who shared that yearning, just as it was nice for him to share his knowledge with her. A pureblood like him…he must have access to magic's she could only dream of. Didn't most magical families have their own personal libraries? And for someone like Malfoy, whose family riches dwarfed so many, he must have books from all over the world…


It certainly made befriending him a much more bearable task, she thought with a smile.


A bead of sweat rolled down her temple, stinging her eye. Her concentration wavered, and the quills dropped unceremoniously to the floor. Hermione collapsed back onto her elbows, gasping for air, her entire body trembling. The ache wasn't just in her muscles; it was in that deep, internal part of her that had reached out to magic, stretching itself thin.


And yet, a wide grin crossed her face. She pushed herself upright, running a hand through her damp hair as she glanced at the clock.


Five minutes.


Not bad for a first sustained effort. Not bad at all.


Her heart raced with excitement as she reached for her notebook, scribbling down her observations with a shaking hand. Tomorrow, she'd try again. Perhaps she'd start with one quill, just to see if she could push past five minutes. Or perhaps she'd add a fourth quill, challenge herself even further.


Her hunger whispered in her ear, and she smiled.


There was so much to learn. So much to achieve.


And she couldn't wait.


******************************************************


The Gryffindor common room was quiet, with the warm glow of the fire flickering against the stone walls. It was late, and the only occupant was Ron Weasley, slouched in a chair, his brow furrowed and his lips set in a tight line. The chessboard in front of him was alive with the clatter and clamor of tiny enchanted pieces locked in battle.


"Pawn to E4," Ron muttered, moving the white piece by hand. Across the board, a black pawn shuffled forward in response. "Knight to F3," he snapped. His frustration was palpable, and the pieces responded to it with a heightened ferocity. The white knight galloped forward, drawing its tiny sword, and with a swift blow, sent a black pawn flying off the board with a clatter.


The match was vicious and brutal, but despite how aggressive he was playing, there was only one thing on his mind.


Malfoy. That git had no right to say that shit to him; saying that he'd turned against his friends before. That he'd end up being the next Wormtail. Fuck him. Arsehole. He got to spew shite for four years straight, talking about how he wanted them to die, calling Hermione a Mudblood, talking about his family, mocking the death of Harry's parents-but he just got to take it all back, and everything was just fine, right?


The game was fast-paced and aggressive, reflecting Ron's simmering frustration. His fingers gripped the pieces tightly, his movements sharp and forceful. The enchanted chessmen mirrored his mood, their battles ferocious and unrelenting. The queen knocked over every piece in her path with one powerful swing, the rook rolled forward like a battering ram, and the knight bludgeoned his foes with calculated brutality. Were it not for the sturdiness of the enchanted pieces, the set would've been destroyed in moments.


"Bishop to C4," he snapped. The piece glided across the board, swinging its staff in a wide arc to flatten a black pawn. The attack brought a flicker of satisfaction, but the knot of emotions inside him didn't loosen.


Because as much as he hated the words that came out of that tosser's mouth…he couldn't deny that the other boy was right. He had turned his back on his friends multiple times; he'd fought with Hermione, making her cry on multiple occasions just because he wanted to be right. He'd turned his back on Harry in the Tournament, thinking his friend wanted to gain all the glory and fame to himself. He'd thought that Harry had left him behind like he always seemed to. And yet, if it had been him whose name had come out of the goblet, he would have died during the first task. It had taken seeing Harry face a Horntail to finally pull his head out of his arse.


"Queen to H5," Ron growled. The white queen stormed across the board with regal fury, knocking over every black piece in her path with one decisive strike. The black king quailed in his corner, surrounded and doomed.


Checkmate.


Ron slammed the queen down with a thud, leaning back in his chair with a frustrated sigh. He rubbed his hands over his face, feeling drained despite having done nothing physical all day. The tips of his ears burned, but not from exertion. He felt… useless. Like he was the dead weight in their trio. What did he bring to the table? Some knowledge of wizarding culture? Malfoy could teach Harry and Hermione that, and more. He was a pureblood, so he knew things about high society and wizarding culture that Ron probably hadn't even heard about. That was stuff Harry would need after school, right? And he knew enough about the Ministry that Hermione would need connections there to get the jobs that she wanted. Malfoy could do that stuff for her.


The thought made Ron's stomach churn. Rich, brilliant, and even—he admitted with great reluctance—handsome. He'd heard girls gush about it enough to know. "If he wasn't such a tosser," Ginny had once said, "he'd be very fanciable." At the time, Ron had been incensed; who would ever be interested in Malfoy, of all people? Now, it was just one more thing that Malfoy seemed to have over him. He was smart too. Wandless magic in months? That wasn't normal. If Malfoy was nicer, he'd probably have half the girls in every House chasing him.


Including Hermione.


That thought made Ron's chest tighten, a pang he didn't want to name. He shoved it aside. Focus. What could he do to be more useful? Learn more stuff? He wasn't really interested in that kind of stuff, and besides, that was where Hermione shined. Get better at magic? He was…okay, at magic. He was no Bill or Charlie, but he'd managed to work with a shitty wand for two years in a row and still managed to pass his classes. But with how hard learning this shitty wandless magic was for him, it was obvious that he probably wasn't as good as he thought.


So focused was he, that when two hands clapped his shoulders' and jumped.


His heart rate didn't climb down when he saw his twin elder brothers smiling down at him.


They had their pranking smiles on.


Blimey, Ron, you're jumpier than the ghoul in the attic," Fred said, grinning down at him.


"And just as mopey," George added, sliding into the armchair to Ron's left. "Which, by the way, isn't a compliment."


"Shove off George," Ron muttered, setting up the chessboard again.


"I'm Fred," George corrected, smirking.


Ron rolled his eyes. They always did this—swapping names to confuse people. But the family knew better. Fred's nose was slightly crooked from a childhood broom accident back when he was seven, and he had a faint scar on his bottom lip from stealing Dad's wand when he was eight. George, on the other hand, liked to keep his hair just a bit longer than Fred, and when he had been smaller, he'd been really clumsy, so he had scarred hands from gnome bites, when he'd been a bit too slow to throw them in time.


Tiny little differences, but they were enough to sort out who was who if you knew them long enough.


Fred leaned forward, his grin widening. "What's wrong, ickle Ronniekins? You've been sulking for weeks."


"Yeah," George chimed in. "It's bad for business for us, having a sad sack of a brother. If you don't cheer up, we'll have to take matters into our own hands."


Their Cheshire Cat grins sent a chill down Ron's spine. He did not want to be the target of their pranks.


With a grunt, he relented. "Fine, fine. I just… I want to help Harry and Hermione more. To be more useful. But I don't know how."


Fred tilted his head. "You're already plenty helpful."


"Yeah," George added, smirking. "They need a good meat shield."


It was like something just…snapped, when George said that. He'd been pissed for weeks now, just wallowing in his feelings, taking it out on Hermione when she tried to talk to him about it. That anger just came roaring out of him, and before he knew it, he had shoved the chessboard off the table, scattering the pieces, and had started yelling at his brothers.


"Seriously? Is that all you see me as? A meat shield?" His voice cracked with anger. "You think I like standing there, useless, while my friends figure out how to keep us alive? You think it feels good knowing I'm not smart like Bill, or brave like Charlie, or inventive like you two? You think it makes me feel all warm and fuzzy inside, that Draco Malfoy, has done more to help keep Harry alive longer than I've probably done in the last four years? I hate this! I hate feeling like this, not knowing what to do or how to help them, but I don't know how to fix it! I just… I need something! Something so You-Know-Who doesn't show up and blast Harry to pieces one day when he stops playing around!"


Breathing heavily, he slumped back in his chair, his ears burning as the twins exchanged a look. Their usual mischief was gone, replaced by something… serious.


Fred nodded. "Alright, okay. First, sorry about that: didn't realize this was something that serious to you. We would have spoken a bit differently then. And secondly….we'll help you."


Ron frowned. "Huh?"


George leaned forward, his grin returning. "Sit tight, little brother. We're about to help you find your Talent—with a capital T."


The confusion in his head only grew as they kept talking.


"My…my Talent? What are you two going on about?"


"Okay, so you've noticed that every Weasley kid is good at something. You've even noticed some yourself, even though you were wrong on what exactly each one is," George explained. "You see, this all starts with Dad. You've noticed how good he is at messing with Muggle machines, right? Like the car?"


"Yeah? What about it?"


"Well, Dad's talent isn't mucking about with Muggle tech," Fred continued. "It's mixing the two worlds together. Muggle and Magic. The car was his masterpiece: fully automatic, filled to the brim with Muggle parts, but working with the magic, the two of them coming together, to create something that represents both worlds. It's broad, way broader than any of our Talents, but Dad is the seventh son of a seventh son, so it makes sense that his would be a bit stronger than ours."


"So…all these skills that you guys have, like your pranking…that's a Talent?" Ron asked dubiously.


George let out a small huff of laughter. "No, no, Ronniekins. Nothing that simple. Look, we'll go through the list, alright? Bill: his Talent is warding. Breaking them, making them, twisting them how he wants, expanding, shrinking, etc. It's what makes him such a good Cursebreaker for Gringotts. It just clicks for him. Charlie's Talent isn't his strength; it's his empathy with animals. You might be too young to remember, but Charlie could make friends with the garden gnomes and talk to them in a way none of us could. When he got to Hogwarts and started doing Care of Magical Creatures, a lot of the beasts listened to him even more than they did with old Prof. Kettleburn. Dragons were just the natural progression for him; the ultimate creature, one that didn't bow to him.


"Then we move onto Percy," Fred said, taking over. "His Talent is kind of weak; it's just memory. Percy remembers everything though, from when he was about six months up till now. It's why he knows so many rules and regulations by heart. He doesn't really have to study. Just glancing at books is enough for him."


"And then there's you two."


George nodded. "And then there's us. Our Talent is the same: Enchantment. We just cover different areas of it. Fred's good at copying other enchantments, figuring them out, and then modifying them for our own use. For me, I can thread multiple enchantments together, even the ones that don't really fit together, and I can make them last way longer than the average enchantment should be able to."


"Ginny found her Talent back in your Third Year when Bill taught her the Bat Bogey Hex. She's a dab hand with hexes, curses, jinxes; not Dark Magic, but vicious magic. Magic that hurts, but doesn't kill. Scary stuff, that," Fred finished.


"But, I still don't get it. Where'd you two even hear about this, and what about me? What's my Talent?" Ron asked.


"Well, Dad told Bill, Bill told Charlie, Charlie told Percy, Percy told us, and Bill told Ginny," George answered. "We…kinda skipped you? But to be fair, we figured you already knew yours, and you just weren't really expanding on it."


"Wait, have a Talent? You know my Talent?" Rona sked excitedly.


The twins shared a look, and then gazed at him like he was a particularly stupid child.


Fred gestured to the scattered chess pieces on the floor. "Your Talents is currently on the Common Room floor. Is that enough of a clue for you, Merlin?"


"...chess? That's it? My Talent is…chess?"


Ron tried not to sound too disappointed but…Chess? That was it? After hearing about how his brothers were gifted with Wards, Enchantements, Magical Creatures, even Ginny's gift with hexes and curses…Chess just sounded so…lame. Even Percy's memory thing was way better than this.


"It's the one thing you've never had trouble with, the thing that just seems to click with you, right? It's the thing that you're undeniably good at. It's your Talent."


He'd always been good at chess, there was no doubt about it. He'd been able to beat everyone in the Burrow back when he was seven, and he'd only gotten better over the years. When he played chess, it was like he could see all the possible ways a match could go, the moves a person could make, and how to achieve the perfect checkmate.


But he couldn't apply that in real life; you can't treat people like pawns to take hits and sacrifice themselves. You can't designate someone as the Queen and let them be the only one to make offensive and defensive moves. You can't make someone the king and try and protect him from the rest of the fight.


He told the Twins that, but rather than refute this, they just…nodded.


"Yeah, that's true. You can't just play with people's lives like that. So, just fix that: make it so that you can bring chess onto the battlefield. When you can do that, you can be more than deadweight."


"Wait, what? How is that even possible?! You expect me to what, just pull out a board in the middle of a fight and start playing a game?"


George shrugged as he and Fred got up. "Shit, maybe. That's something you have to figure out on your own. If we spoonfeed you everything to you, it won't help you in the long run. You need to carve your own path, little brother. I wouldn't worry too much though.


"You're a Weasley. We always pull through."


****************************************************


You're a Weasley. We always pull through.


Fat load of good that shite was to him now, he thought angrily as he tried to get to sleep. Chess. Of all the Talents he could have gotten, it had to be a game. And why had no one brought it up before? As usual, he was the last to know something important, and Fred and George seemed to think that him having Chess as a talent was on the same level as any of his sibling's niches.


What a load of bull. It wasn't like he could bring a chessboard to a fight.


He was standing on a giant chessboard, Harry and Hermione behind him, waiting for him to make the first move. This was his empire; his decisions here would determine if they lived or died, and he couldn't deny it:


He loved it.



…Except, he thought as he sat up in his bed, his heart beating wildly, he had been in a situation where someone had brought a chessboard to life, and had he not been as good as he was, he would have lost that fight.


********************************************************


Ron sat nervously in the Transfiguration classroom, his mind far away from the lecture. Professor McGonagall's voice was a steady drone in the background, but he couldn't focus on a single word. His thoughts were like a storm, churning and raging, bouncing between frustration, determination, and doubt. When McGonagall finally dismissed the class, her clipped tone snapping him back to reality, he stayed put, watching his classmates shuffle out.


Harry paused by his desk. "You coming, mate? They're serving Shepard's Pie today."


Ron's stomach grumbled, and just for a moment, his will softened. He could do this another day, couldn't he? Fresh, hot Shepard's Pie would certainly make him feel better…


Except…how could he eat, when he had promised to find a way to become better? To help his friends?


To one-up Malfoy?


"I'll catch up," Ron muttered, not meeting his friend's eyes.


Harry shrugged, already turning to the door, but Hermione lingered. She studied Ron for a moment, her brow creased with concern, before giving him a small nod and following Harry out.


A small smile graced his lips. It was good to know that even with Hermione being mad at him, she still cared. Then again, that was Hermione; she always cared.


Soon, it was just him and McGonagall in the room. She was gathering the papers on her desk, her sharp movements slowing when she noticed him still seated. Her keen eyes narrowed slightly, and for good reason. He was usually one of the first out of the door.


"Mr. Weasley, is everything all right? You'll miss your friends if you stay too long."


Ron swallowed hard and forced himself to speak. "Yeah. I mean—yes, ma'am. I just... I need your help. With some extracurricular work, that is."


McGonagall straightened, one eyebrow arching elegantly. "Extracurricular, you say?" She studied him for a long moment, and Ron squirmed under her gaze. Finally, she nodded. "Very well. Pick up those papers on my desk and follow me to my office."


Ron grabbed the stack, his palms sweating as he trailed her out of the classroom. His nerves intensified with every step, and doubts swirled in his mind.


Would she even take him seriously? What if she dismissed his idea outright? He knew he wasn't a good Transfiguration student: he had a solid Acceptable in her class right now. She might tell him it wasn't possible based on his grades alone.


When they reached her office, McGonagall unlocked the door with a silent flick of her wand and cast a privacy charm with the same effortless grace. Ron couldn't help but envy the ease with which she performed magic. She set the papers on her desk and turned to him.


"Tea?" she offered, gesturing to a kettle on a side table.


"Uh, sure," Ron said, still trying to calm his nerves.


The kettle began to whistle almost immediately under her direction, and she summoned teacups and a tin of biscuits with another flick of her wand. The cups floated gently onto the table, and the kettle poured steaming water into them before she tapped each with her wand, darkening the liquid into rich, fragrant tea.


Ron marveled at the casual elegance of her magic. It wasn't like how his mum did things. When Mom did her household charms, it was always rushed, and sometimes overpowered, resulting in more of a mess than the one she'd started with. With McGonagall though—it felt refined, controlled, precise.


"Ginger newt?" McGonagall asked, offering the tin.


Ron grabbed one, and the animated biscuit wriggled in his hand before going still. He took a bite, savoring the mix of ginger's heat and the sweetness of sugar, but his thoughts were elsewhere. McGonagall took one as well, dipping the head of the wriggling newt into her tea before biting it off. The silence between them felt surprisingly comfortable, much like the quiet moments he shared with Harry and Hermione in the common room, rather than the nervous silence he expected he would experience with a teacher.


After finishing her second biscuit, McGonagall broke the silence. "I've noticed you've been... moody these past couple of weeks. Care to share?"


Ron swallowed his mouthful quickly. "I was just having a bad couple of days. Needed to figure some stuff out."


McGonagall's lips quirked in faint amusement. "Does that mean you'll be nicer to Miss Granger now?"


Ron's cheeks burned. "Yes, ma'am."


She gave a small huff of approval before fixing him with her piercing gaze. "Now then, Mr. Weasley, what is it you wished to discuss?"


Ron hesitated, then asked, "Do you remember the giant chessboard from our first year?"


McGonagall snorted. "Not likely to forget your first year anytime soon." She sighed, shaking her head. "What a disaster that was. Dumbledore keeping the Sorcerer's Stone in the school, employing Quirrell despite his odd behavior, and that absurd obstacle course..." She chuckled softly. "I had hoped my chessboard would be more of a challenge, but clearly, it wasn't enough if an eleven-year-old could solve it."


Ron shifted awkwardly. "I couldn't have won without... sacrificing myself."


"That was the point," McGonagall said. "The game was meant to eliminate the player. But it was designed for a single person. The fact that you led two others through it speaks to your skill. You were quite impressive, even better than your brother Percival was."


Ron gulped down a mouthful of tea. "How did you make it? The chessboard, I mean."


McGonagall looked at him curiously. "It's advanced magic. The pieces were marble, which is difficult to transfigure, far above your current skill level. I used animation charms to give them a level of sentience so they could understand the rules of the game and the instructions I gave them. I also layered enchantments to make them resistant to Vanishing and other spells that would remove them from the board. The board itself was warded to ensure no one could bypass the game without playing. As soon as you set foot on the board, you had no choice but to play: it would not allow to move forward or back."


Half of her explanation went over Ron's head, but he pressed on. "Could you... teach me? How to make the pieces move like that?"


Her sharp gaze pinned him in place. "And why would you need something like that, Mr. Weasley?"


Ron hesitated, considering lying, but he knew better. She had been Gryffindor's Head of House longer than he had been alive. She would see right through him.


"I want to help protect Harry," he admitted. "When... when You-Know-Who comes for him. I'm tired of being useless."


McGonagall's expression softened. "Mr. Weasley, the adults in this castle will make sure Mr. Potter is safe as long as he resides within these walls—"


"That's a lie," Ron interrupted, his frustration boiling over. "The adults in this castle have always failed to protect Harry when it mattered. First year, Harry had to stop Voldemort. Second year, he had to kill the basilisk. Third year, he had to learn the Patronus Charm because the Ministry put dementors here, and you couldn't do anything about them. Fourth year, his name came out of the Goblet, and then he was kidnapped—and no one realized Moody was a fake until it was too late. You've had four years, and you've failed every time. How can you promise to protect him now?"


McGonagall looked at him, startled into silence by his outburst. Slowly, her expression shifted to something far more serious, her eyes glinting with a mix of respect and resolve.


"And you intend to fight beside him?" she asked softly, her voice steady, "You will risk your life for his? Take his burdens as yours? Fight his enemies as if they are your own? This isn't anything like your feud with Mr. Malfoy. You intend to fight against the Darkest Wizard Britain has seen in quite some time. He has made his name unspeakable to the masses; only those who are utterly unafraid of him, like the Headmaster, can say it with any sort of ease.


"You know the stories. You've heard the tales. Are you prepared for the trials ahead?"


"...no. But that's why I'm here. So I can learn. And if you don't teach me, then I'll learn it myself," Ron said defiantly.


McGonagall let out a small snort of laughter. "Mr. Weasley, you run a considerable risk of killing yourself before you ever remake those pieces or that board."


With a sigh, McGonagall raised her wand and swished it twice. With a flash of light, four books appeared on her desk. None of them were the behemoths that Hermione liked to stick her nose into, but they were much thicker than he liked.


"Read all of these by the end of the week. They will give you a baseline understanding of Transfiguration, Animation, Basic Warding, and Arithmancy necessary for the Pieces and the Chessboard. You may ask Ms. Granger for help, but you must be able to understand these in your own terms."


Suppressing a groan, he nodded. He had hoped that he would be able to start working on the pieces immediately, and he didn't like all the extra reading she had given him.


But for once, he felt like he was advancing toward…something.
 
Chapter 8 New
"He's going to get himself chucked out by the end of the week," Draco said, looking faintly amazed.


That earned him a not-too-gentle punch on the arm from Harry. "Stop being a prick."


"The first thing he does, on the day he's getting evaluated by a known racist, is bring mythical death horses that are known for their bad luck and are categorized as Dark Creatures," Draco argued. "Thestrals are only a step or two behind werewolves in the Ministry's eyes, and trust me, Umbridge has no love in her heart for those furry bastards either."


"Oh, put a sock in it, Malfoy," Ron said easily. Whatever had made him stay back after class with McGonagall had apparently cheered him up, and he was back on speaking terms with Hermione. That was a win, as far as Harry was concerned. That friendliness had even extended to Draco; they were doing their best to be civil, and Harry and Hermione were gently trying to encourage it. "Hagrid's trying his best."


"His best will get him sacked or demoted," Draco replied dryly. "This is the equivalent of a Muggle teacher bringing a declawed and defanged Bengal tiger to class. Oh, it's technically harmless, but do you really want to take that chance?"


It was Hagrid's first class back, and it was going just as badly as they'd feared. He'd brought them to the edge of the Forbidden Forest, already terrifying enough, and then introduced the Thestrals, those demonic-looking horses that only he, Neville, and a few others could even see.


(It had sort of shamed Harry, being surprised that Malfoy couldn't see them. He'd just assumed, what with Voldemort living in his house now, and his family being steeped in Dark magic, that Draco must have seen… someone die. But he hadn't. And Harry had. It made him wonder if he should pity Malfoy or resent him for keeping what was left of his innocence.)


Predictably, things had only gotten worse with the arrival of Umbridge. You'd think he was daft, deaf, and blind because of the way she acted toward Hagrid. Hermione, however, wasn't taking it as stoically as the rest of them.


"You hag, you evil hag!" she whispered furiously as Umbridge waddled toward Pansy Parkinson. "I know what you're doing, you awful, twisted, vicious—"


"Easy, Granger," Draco said, and to Harry's surprise, he placed a hand on her back, rubbing gently. Even more surprising was how Hermione leaned into the gesture, her trust in him evident.


The seething glare from Ron was expected, though.


"It's what she wants," Draco continued calmly. "A chance to discredit the gamekeeper—or better yet, to provoke one of you into an outburst, so she can slap you with detention and write that he's encouraging violent behavior."


"You know you can just call him Hagrid, right?" Ron said irritably. "I doubt he'd care."


Draco gave him a bemused look, his hand still moving in slow circles on Hermione's back. "I'm not quite sure if that's appropriate. We're hardly friends—not even allies, really. It would be improper—"


"Oh, Hagrid doesn't care about that," Hermione sniffled, wiping her eyes. "He's never cared about what's proper. I just wish he'd listened to me. Now Parkinson's going to make fun of him and make him look even worse."


"I'd hold off on that judgment," Draco drawled, "and let Pansy speak for herself first. She's not quite the follower you think she is."


"Do you find," said Professor Umbridge in a ringing voice, "that you are able to understand Professor Hagrid when he talks, Miss Parkinson?"


Pansy looked distinctly uncomfortable under Umbridge's scrutiny. She licked her lips nervously but answered anyway.


"I don't mind Professor Hagrid's way of speaking if that's what you mean," she said quietly. "He's easier to understand than some of our yearmates. I would, however, appreciate it if he explained more about the creatures he brings to class rather than just going on about how beautiful their fangs are."


Umbridge looked faintly disappointed but waddled away, scribbling furiously on her clipboard.


While Hermione and Ron gawked at Pansy's unexpected answer, Harry turned to Draco, who wore a small, satisfied smirk.


"Parkinson works for you," Harry said suddenly.


Draco rolled his eyes. "Works for me implies I pay her. Let's just say Pansy has no interest in bowing to a psychopath who tortures people for fun."


Hermione frowned, dabbing at her eyes as she glanced between Draco and Pansy. "I don't understand. Are you saying she's not loyal to Voldemort?"


"Not everyone in Slytherin is eager to play footstool for the Dark Lord," Draco said, his tone clipped. "Some of us actually think for ourselves. Pansy's… practical. She knows her family's position depends on survival, not blind obedience."


"So she's hedging her bets," Harry said, narrowing his eyes.


"Smart of her, isn't it?" Draco said, his smirk deepening. "Unlike others, she doesn't put all her eggs in one basket. Now, if only Hagrid could apply the same logic." He gestured toward the Thestrals. "These things scream bad press. Honestly, he should've stuck with Hippogriffs. At least those have a shiny reputation—when they're not mauling students, of course."


Hermione huffed. "The Thestrals are fascinating creatures, and they deserve respect. It's not their fault the Ministry classifies them as Dark."


"No," Draco agreed mildly, "but that classification will get Hagrid sacked if Umbridge has her way. You should be thinking about how to defend him when she inevitably writes her report."


"Defend him how?" Ron demanded, his eyes narrowing. "We can't exactly argue with her during her evaluation."


"No," Draco said with a sigh. "But maybe you can convince Hagrid to play her game—for now."


"Fat load of good that'll do," Ron muttered. "Hermione tried to get him to change his lesson plans and look at what we got. Horses from hell."


"To be fair, this is a good lesson from…Hagrid," Draco said after a moment's hesitation. "I mean, compared to his Skrewts, these are practically cuddly. And no one's been savaged! That's a major improvement."


"When will you stop whining about Buckbeak giving you what you deserved? You walked up to him and called him a stupid brute. If I was Buckbeak, I would've done worse to you and your fat head," Harry shot back, his tone sharp but laced with humor. "You already admitted it was your fault."


"Yeah, but I like whining," Draco replied with an easy smile. To their collective surprise, he draped an arm over Harry's shoulder. "It's how I show affection."


The black-haired boy rolled his eyes but made no move to dislodge Draco.


"You know, normal people show affection by actually being tolerable, instead of whining like a first year that lost his wand."


"Boys, really," Hermione interjected, her tone exasperated. "At least try to get along while Umbridge is busy sabotaging Hagrid."


Draco withdrew his arm with a smirk, but the tension between him and Harry had practically disappeared. Despite their constant sniping, the atmosphere between them didn't feel hostile—just…normal. Harry had worried that adding Draco to their group would make things awkward, but surprisingly, he seemed to fit in just fine. Yes, he was intense, sarcastic, and still very much an arse, but he was also brilliant, fiercely loyal, and unexpectedly funny. It was like a little niche they didn't know was there had been filled by him.


Harry felt confident in calling him a friend now. He wasn't sure if Ron and Malfoy would ever be friends, but they seemed to be settling into becoming rivals pretty well.


He could get used to this.


**************************************************************


Harry's body felt unnervingly smooth and supple, his movements effortless yet alien. He was gliding—no, slithering—between bars of cold, gleaming metal, their dull sheen flickering in a strange, otherworldly light. The stone beneath him was icy, its chill radiating up through his belly as he slid soundlessly across the floor. A faint hiss escaped him, unbidden, and he realized it wasn't from his mouth—it was from his entire being.


The air was thick, heady with scents he had never known. Every molecule was alive with information, painting an eerie, vibrant picture of his surroundings. Shadows became shapes, their outlines shimmering in vivid, pulsating colors that weren't visible to human eyes. It was both beautiful and terrifying, this new world of scents and vibrations, but a growing hunger gnawed at the edge of his consciousness, sharp and primal.


His head swiveled smoothly, the motion instinctive yet foreign, and the corridor came into view. At first glance, it was empty—silent and still—but as his senses sharpened, he noticed the faint outline of a figure ahead. A man sat slumped against the cold stone floor, his head bowed, chin resting heavily on his chest. Harry flicked out his tongue and was startled by the clarity of the man's presence. He tasted him on the air: the salt of sweat, the faint musk of fear, the underlying tang of flesh. Alive, yet drowsing. Vulnerable.


Harry's heart—or whatever now pulsed within him—quickened. The hunger roared, urging him forward, but he wrestled with the impulse. There was work to be done. Important work. He pushed down the animalistic desire, though it trembled beneath the surface, ready to erupt.


As he slithered closer, the man stirred. A silvery glimmer fell from his lap, pooling around his feet, and he stood, his outline snapping into sharp focus. Harry's senses screamed warnings: movement, danger. A wand appeared in the man's hand, and Harry's mind filled with a sudden, overwhelming command—a voice not his own, yet somehow part of him.



Strike. Now.


Before Harry could resist, his body reacted. He reared up, muscles coiling with terrifying speed, and lunged. His fangs sank into the man's flesh with a sickening crunch. He felt bone splinter beneath the force of his jaws, a flood of warmth spilling into his mouth. The taste of iron—blood—was overwhelming, intoxicating. The man yelled, his cries echoing down the corridor, but the sound was short-lived. Another strike, and another, silenced him. He slumped back against the wall, his vibrant outline fading, dimming, until only stillness remained.


Harry recoiled, a wave of revulsion crashing over him. His body—no,
Nagini's body—was still. Blood pooled around the fallen man, its metallic scent overwhelming. The hunger had abated, replaced by a terrible ache in his own head. His scar burned, searing like fire, the pain so intense it was blinding.


"Harry... HARRY!"


The voice broke through the haze, distant yet insistent. He was pulled upward, away from the scene, the vivid sensory world of the serpent falling away. His own heartbeat thundered in his ears as he woke with a gasp, drenched in sweat and clutching his scar, the phantom taste of blood still on his tongue.


********************************************************


Bloody hell. And to think the day had started so well.


Everything had been a blur after his dream. Neville had dashed off to fetch McGonagall, who, upon hearing the story, had wasted no time leading Harry and the other Weasleys to Dumbledore's office. Dumbledore had listened intently, confirming Harry's account with some sort of strange device—a delicate instrument that emitted green gas, which coiled into the shape of a snake before dissipating. Without hesitation, he'd conjured a Portkey and sent them all to Grimmauld Place.


But just before they'd left, Dumbledore's piercing eyes had locked onto Harry's, and for a fleeting moment, Harry had felt something…alien stir within him. A sharp, gnawing hunger, paired with a violent, inexplicable urge.


He'd wanted to bite Dumbledore, to feel the old man's blood and bone break in his mouth.


The thought made his skin crawl even now, hours later. Whatever it was, it wasn't just his weird dream about Voldemortsnake.


There was something inside him, something darker.


Now, they were at Grimmauld Place, waiting for news on Mr. Weasley. The Weasleys were huddled together in the kitchen, their fear and grief palpable, while Harry had drifted to the hallway with Sirius. They sat side by side on the staircase leading up to Harry's old room from the summer. The house felt colder than usual, as if it could sense the anxiety simmering within its walls.


Sirius broke the silence, his tone gruff but tinged with regret. "Sorry about what I said earlier. About there being things worth dying for. That was—stupid. Especially since the twins are right; I've got no room to talk about sacrifice when I can't even fight for the cause."


Harry stared down at his hands, his voice quiet but firm. "Forget the twins. I get it—their dad's in the hospital. But they're wrong about you. You're doing more than enough."


Sirius turned to him, startled. "More than enough? Harry, I'm hiding in this house. I've done nothing but mope around and bark at people who don't deserve it."


"You spent twelve years in Azkaban," Harry replied evenly. "This isn't their house we're hiding in. And I'm pretty sure you've been using your money to help, haven't you? That's more than a lot of people in the Order have done, I reckon."


For a moment, Sirius looked completely taken aback. Then he gave a small, lopsided smile. "I…guess you're right. Still, I figured you'd be more upset at me. I have a habit of running my mouth when it's not needed. Moony was always the one to rein me and James in, but—well…"


He trailed off with a shrug, but Harry could feel the familiar pang of loss in his chest that surfaced whenever James was mentioned.


"You're looking good, though," Harry said, eager to shift the subject. "Have you been working out or something?"


Sirius gave a roguish grin, his cheeks a little rosier than usual. His face was clean-shaven, his clothes uncharacteristically neat, and there was a faint, spicy scent clinging to him—something like whiskey, sandalwood, and cinnamon.


"Well, no," Sirius admitted with a conspiratorial smirk. He made a big show of looking left, then right, before saying in a stage whisper. "Don't tell Dumbledore… but I've been sneaking out to Muggle London for the past month."


Harry's eyes widened, and he immediately smacked Sirius on the arm.


"Ow! What the hell, pup?"


"Are you mental?" Harry whispered furiously. "You'll get caught by the Aurors!"


"Not in Muggle London," Sirius said confidently, rubbing his arm. "They wouldn't know a Tube station from a bus stop. And I don't go out looking like Sirius Black. I shave, wear a hat, sunglasses—sometimes even a fake mustache if I'm feeling especially Marauderish. I've been to pubs, cinemas, and even that stuffy old library two streets over. Lovely librarian there, Milly—she's got the rack and arse of a Veela—"


"Merlin's beard, Sirius." Harry rolled his eyes, but he couldn't help the small laugh that escaped him.


It was strange seeing Sirius like this—animated, happy. He looked less like the grim, haunted man Harry had first met and more like the mischievous figure in his parents' wedding photos.


Strange, but good.


"I'm surprised you even know your way around Muggle London," Harry said, still smiling. "Figured you'd be clueless."


Sirius's expression softened, his grin turning nostalgic. "Your mum dragged us everywhere after she started dating James. Coffee shops, bakeries, her old neighborhood in Cokeworth… She wanted us to see her world as much as we showed her ours. I think she liked watching us stumble around like idiots."


Harry felt a pang in his chest. Everyone always talked about his dad—how charming, bold, and talented James Potter had been. But hearing these little glimpses of Lily made Harry feel closer to her, as if he were piecing together fragments of a life he'd never known.


"We'll go out together," Sirius said suddenly, his excitement contagious. "I'll take you to all the places she loved after all this is over. We'll get you a suit, something tailored. Maybe a nice watch—no, we'll save that for your seventeenth. But we'll get you new clothes, proper ones. No more of that rubbish from your relatives."


"You don't have to—"


"Oh, hush," Sirius cut him off. "This'll be fun. We'll sneak out at night, so Molly doesn't catch us. Hell, maybe we'll hit a club! Imagine it, little Prongslet breaking it down on the dance floor! I might shed a tear."


Harry laughed, the sound echoing softly in the dim hallway. It was insane—Mr. Weasley was probably fighting for his life in St. Mungo's, Voldemort might be inside his head, and there was the ever-looming threat of a war they couldn't yet win.


But right now, sitting on the staircase with Sirius, talking about clubs and suits and memories of his mum, Harry felt something he hadn't ever felt in his life.


He felt like a kid with a family.


*************************************************************


"What happens when you take Polyjuice Potion with animal hairs?"


Snape paused mid-mark, the quill in his hand dripping a blot of red ink onto the parchment. He looked up, his dark eyes narrowing.


"Bad things," he said flatly, before returning to his grading with an air of irritation.


Draco leaned back in his chair, his feet propped up on the edge of the desk as he twirled a quill between his fingers. "Bad things like what?"


Snape exhaled slowly, pinching the bridge of his nose. "Draco, you are here to help me grade these abysmal attempts at brewing, not to fill my office with incessant chattering."


"You said you wanted to talk about something important!" Draco argued, the whine in his tone unmistakable.


"And I will," Snape replied, his voice like silk wrapped around steel. "After we finish grading these... essays," he said, disdain dripping from the word as he gestured to the stack of parchment on the desk. "Though calling them essays is an insult to proper composition."


Draco groaned, dramatically rolling his eyes as he picked up the nearest essay. "Honestly, why not just vanish the lot of them? It's not like anyone's going to learn anything from this drivel."


"Because," Snape said in a clipped tone, "it is my job to impart knowledge to dunderheads like yourself. And if I must endure the agony of their ignorance, so must you."


"Rude," Draco muttered under his breath, scanning the essay with a grimace. "Merlin's beard, someone actually tried to substitute lavender for knotgrass. Do they want to explode?"


"I wouldn't be surprised if they did," Snape muttered darkly. "Half of them are too thick to even read the instructions correctly. One might think they'd prefer to be rid of their limbs entirely."


Draco snorted, then held up the essay he was reading. "This one tried to add crushed doxy wings to a Calming Draught. Should we dock points for attempted homicide?"


Snape's lips twitched—just barely—but he smoothed his expression before Draco could notice. "Deduct ten points. And make a note to inform Madam Pomfrey to prepare for a spate of vomiting first-years."


Draco dutifully scribbled a note in the margin before glancing at Snape again. "You're dodging the question."


Snape's quill stilled, his gaze sharp as he leveled it at Draco. "And you are testing my patience."


"Oh, come on!" Draco said, his voice taking on an edge of curiosity laced with mischief. "You can't just say 'bad things' and expect me to let it go. What happens if someone takes Polyjuice with animal hair? Do they turn into some horrible hybrid? Or—"


"They turn into an incomprehensible mess of limbs and fur," Snape snapped, his tone brooking no argument. "Possibly with claws, tails, or other appendages sprouting in places they do not belong. The transformation is unstable, excruciating, and potentially irreversible. Does that satisfy your morbid curiosity?"


Draco frowned, leaning back in his chair. "That's not what happened to Granger, though."


Snape's quill stilled, his gaze cutting toward Draco with a mixture of disdain and impatience. "Firstly, different people have different reactions depending on constitution, magical aptitude, and the sheer luck—or lack thereof—of the brewing process. Secondly, Granger's abysmal attempt at the Polyjuice Potion saved her in the end. True, perfected Polyjuice Potion can last for an entire twelve hours. Granger's barely lasted an hour, I believe. Its utter inadequacy spared her from the worst of the effects."


Draco's brow furrowed as he considered this. "So… the better the Polyjuice Potion is, the worse the effect would be when the drinker imbibes the botched formula. And the worse that the Polyjuice is, the more curable the effects of the failed transformation would be."


"Precisely," Snape confirmed, returning to his grading with the air of someone who had no patience left to spend. "Though why you're so fixated on such lunacy is beyond me."


Draco rubbed his chin thoughtfully, his eyes narrowing as an idea formed. "...So what if a person uses magical creature DNA?"


There was a sharp scratch as Snape's quill gouged the parchment he was marking. He lifted his gaze slowly, dark eyes narrowing. "...What?"


Draco straightened in his chair, the faintest hint of a smirk tugging at his lips. "If someone took shitty Polyjuice Potion with something like dragon scales, phoenix ash, or Thunderbird feathers—"


"They would most likely die. Horribly. In extreme pain." Snape's voice was as sharp as broken glass, each word dripping with incredulity. "Draco, why are you asking this?"


"...No reason?" Draco said, feigning innocence with an unconvincing shrug.


Snape's nostrils flared, and he set his quill down with deliberate care. "If you are even considering experimenting with magical creature remains in conjunction with Polyjuice Potion, allow me to disabuse you of the notion immediately. The outcome would be catastrophic. What, exactly, do you imagine would happen?"


Draco leaned forward slightly, his expression serious, but with a slight smirk on his lips. "I'd become a hybrid beast, unlike anything the world has ever seen. And destroy my enemies in a wave of pure power and magic."


For a moment, there was silence. Then Snape's lips pressed into a thin line as his knuckles whitened against the edge of his desk. "Yes," he said finally, his tone like ice cracking beneath pressure, "and then you would die. Painfully, I might add. Draco, I can only make educated assumptions, as no one has been mad enough to attempt such idiocy, but the most likely effects would be that while you might transform into a hybrid of some kind, your mind would also change. You would no longer be Draco Malfoy. You would be some mindless beast to be hunted down and put out of its misery."


Draco tilted his head, as though considering this. "It'd be a hail-Mary sort of thing. Like, if I'm facing down the Dark Lord—"


"If you are facing down the Dark Lord," Snape interrupted sharply, his voice rising, "you will be dead in less than two seconds. He will not give you the luxury of ingesting some idiotic concoction. He will see to it that your life ends before you can so much as uncork a bottle. Cease this madness immediately."


"But—"


"No, Draco!" Snape snapped, standing abruptly. The force of his motion sent a few loose parchments fluttering to the floor. "This is not clever. This is not inventive. This is the kind of reckless stupidity that gets good wizards killed. Do you think magical creatures' essences come with no consequences? That you could imbibe the essence of a dragon or a phoenix and walk away unscathed? Their magic is primal, Malfoy—untamed, ancient, and utterly incompatible with the human form."


Draco's smirk faltered, but his curiosity burned brighter. "What about controlled experiments? I mean, if you modified the potion—"


"I said enough." Snape's voice was dangerously low, the finality in his tone enough to make Draco's mouth snap shut. "If I hear so much as a whisper about you meddling with this kind of idiocy, you'll find yourself scrubbing cauldrons in the dungeons for the remainder of the year."


Draco slumped back in his chair, muttering under his breath. "Fine. No hybrids. Got it."


"Good." Snape returned to his grading, though his gaze flicked up occasionally to ensure Draco wasn't plotting further nonsense. The silence was heavy for a moment before Snape added, "And if you're so determined to destroy your enemies, I suggest you focus on improving your dueling skills, not indulging in suicidal alchemical fantasies."


Draco nodded reluctantly, and the two worked in silence for a good hour. The air between them was heavy, laden with unspoken thoughts and the gravity of Draco's mad ideas. Snape graded essays with sharp, precise strokes of his quill, but his eyes flicked up occasionally, watching the younger Malfoy. Draco, for his part, remained unusually subdued, his normally glib tongue silenced by his mind undoubtedly racing to possibly bring his insane hybrid idea to fruition without Severus' help.


But there was a much more important manner at hand.


Finally, Snape spoke. His voice was low, almost a murmur, yet it cut through the stillness like a blade. "You have been reported. To your parents. And the Dark Lord."


Draco froze mid-motion, his quill poised above a paper. For a moment, his expression was unreadable, and then he let out a resigned sigh, his shoulders slumping. "Huh. That was… fast. I'd thought I'd have more time."


Snape set down his quill and leaned forward, his dark eyes drilling into Draco's. "The Dark Lord wishes to meet you when you return to the Manor this Christmas. To talk to you, to see if he can bring you back to the right path. To enquire why you have been fraternizing with Mudbloods and his greatest enemy since Albus Dumbledore."


Draco let out a humorless chuckle, the sound brittle. "And I'm guessing a refusal—"


"Would see you dead in days," Snape finished bluntly.


The words hung in the air like a death knell. Draco leaned back in his chair, running a hand through his pale hair. "Well, that's comforting. I suppose congratulations are in order for whoever snitched. They've earned themselves a nice spot on his good side."


Snape's face twisted in exasperation. "I told you, Draco. I warned you this was dangerous! Cavorting with Potter, betraying Slytherin House with such brevity—did you think there would be no consequences? That you would slip free, unnoticed? When your father is Lucius Malfoy and your mother is a Black?"


Draco licked his lips, his face pale but resolute. "I have a plan."


Snape scoffed, leaning back in his chair and crossing his arms. "A plan. Do enlighten me. How does one plan to deceive the most powerful Legilimens alive?"


Draco met Snape's gaze steadily. "I won't lie to him."


Snape's eyes narrowed. "You cannot tell him the truth either."


"I won't. Not completely." Draco's voice was calm, his words deliberate. "I'll tell the truth… but in a way he can't parse. Half-truths, omissions. I've been preparing for this."


Snape stared at him, his skepticism palpable. "And what will you do should he decide to enter your mind?"


Draco hesitated, his fingers tapping a nervous rhythm on the edge of the desk. "I've thought about that. It's why I haven't been taking any Felix Felicis these past couple of weeks. I got the results I wanted, but I figured I'd need all the luck I could get this Christmas. I'll take it before the meeting."


"If you're going to rely on Felix Felicis," Snape said grimly, "I suggest you take it before you even step off the train. The Dark Lord's spies are everywhere, Draco. A single misstep—"


"I know." Draco's voice wavered, but he straightened in his seat, his jaw tightening. "I know what's at stake, Professor. But this is my best shot. If I can convince him that I'm still… useful, that I'm playing Potter and Granger, then maybe—just maybe—I'll survive this."


Snape studied him for a long moment, his face inscrutable. Then he sighed, the weight of his own burdens evident in the lines of his face. "You are playing a dangerous game, Draco. One miscalculation, and you won't live to regret it."


"I've already made my choice," Draco said quietly. "I just need to see it through."


Snape rose from his chair and crossed the room with deliberate precision, his robes whispering against the stone floor. He reached a locked cabinet and muttered a series of complex incantations under his breath. The lock clicked open, and he retrieved a small vial of liquid gold that shimmered faintly in the dim light, as though it pulsed with life itself. He placed it on the desk before Draco with the reverence of one presenting a sacred relic.


"Take it," Snape said, his voice clipped but not unkind. "I will not condone your recklessness, but I will not leave you unarmed. Pray it's enough."


Draco's fingers curled around the vial, trembling slightly as he lifted it. "You made this?" he asked, his voice barely audible, as though afraid that speaking too loudly might shatter the fragile hope the potion represented.


"No." Snape's tone carried a rare note of humility. "But I have a contact in South America—one of the best potion masters alive. His work surpasses even the finest apothecaries in Europe. I can tell from the consistency of your last batch that you procured yours from Romania—a decent brew, but amateur in comparison. This," he gestured to the shimmering liquid, "is perfection. The best Felix Felicis in the world. I had to barter many secrets and favors to secure it. A week's worth in total."


"A whole week?" Draco's voice cracked as he stared at the vial, disbelief etched on his pale face.


Snape inclined his head. "Yes, but understand this: it is all the time I can buy for you. And you must consume it all in one sitting before you step into that house. You will have no time to dose yourself as you do here—not when every word, every gesture, and every heartbeat will be under scrutiny."


Draco swallowed hard, his throat dry as parchment. "Thank you, Uncle Sev."


Snape stiffened slightly at the use of the old nickname, his gaze softening despite himself. "Do not thank me. Luck is a fickle ally at best. Even with this, you must tread carefully. The Dark Lord is not easily deceived."


Draco slipped the vial into his pocket, his movements measured and deliberate. His expression was resolute, but Snape could see the faint flicker of fear in his silver eyes. "I'll be fine," Draco said, though his words rang hollow, even to himself.


As he turned to leave, Snape's voice cut through the silence. "Draco."


Draco stopped, his hand resting on the doorframe, and glanced back.


"If the worst should happen…" Snape hesitated, his dark eyes locking onto Draco's with an intensity that bordered on desperation. "Remember, you are not alone in this. There are those who will fight for you."


Draco's throat tightened as conflicting emotions surged within him—gratitude, fear, and a profound sense of isolation. "I'll keep that in mind," he murmured, his voice barely above a whisper.


Snape watched as Draco stepped out into the corridor, his shoulders stiff beneath the weight of an impossible choice. The heavy sound of the door closing echoed in the room, leaving Snape alone with his thoughts.


The boy would not be killed. Of that, Snape was certain. Draco was too valuable—an heir to both the Malfoy and Black fortunes, a pawn too useful to discard. But there were other fates worse than death. The Dark Lord had little patience left for Lucius, and if Draco faltered… if he failed… he could be shattered, remade into something unrecognizable.


Snape stared at the empty doorway, his hand clenching into a fist. He would do everything in his power to shield Draco and salvage whatever pieces of the boy might remain intact after this ordeal. But ultimately, it all depended on how Draco performed.


******************************************************


The weight of the Felix Felicis in his pocket felt like both a blessing and a curse. A week's worth of the world's best luck. A week to convince the most dangerous wizard in history that he was still loyal.


Draco couldn't help but let out a hollow laugh, the sound echoing faintly in the empty corridor. It was absurd, really. Luck might help him avoid missteps, might guide him through the labyrinth of deceit he was walking into, but it couldn't change who he was. It couldn't make him believe in the Dark Lord's cause—not anymore.


Not after the attack in the summer.


The pain had been excruciating, but the aftermath was worse. The so-called Messiah of his people had scarred him, not just physically but mentally, flooding his mind with alien memories that didn't belong. Memories of a different world. A world where all of this—magic, Hogwarts, Voldemort—was nothing more than a story. A child's fantasy, spun into books, movies, and fan discussions.


It had nearly broken him. The new memories didn't slot neatly into place; they crashed over him like a tidal wave, drowning the boy he had been, twisting and reshaping him until he could barely tell where Draco Malfoy ended and the new mind began.


But he had survived. Somehow, he had clawed his way through the storm of identity and come out the other side. He wasn't sure who he was anymore—a strange amalgamation of Draco and something else—but he knew one thing for certain: he had work to do.


The foreign memories weren't just a curse; they were a gift. They buzzed with creativity, brimming with fantastical ideas that didn't belong in this world but begged to be made real. His enchanted Bludgers were inspired by Naruto's Truth-Seeking Orbs. His Animagus rings were a nod to Maui's hook from Moana. His method for mastering wandless magic, cribbed from Jujutsu Kaisen's principles of subtraction being a sign of Cursed Technique Mastery.


And there were so many more ideas, all clamoring for his attention, all promising power and ingenuity. He felt like a fledgling god standing at the edge of creation, his mind teeming with possibilities.


He should be worried about the imminent meeting with Tom Riddle—like hell he was going to call him Voldemort or You-Know-Who in his head. Draco might slip and call him the Dark Lord in conversation (old habits died hard), but in his mind? It was Tom Riddle, Government Name Supreme.


But he wasn't worried. Not about the meeting itself, at least. For all Voldemort's vaunted Legilimency, he hadn't noticed that the Draco he'd tortured into a coma wasn't the same boy who'd woken up. Voldemort had no idea that his prey was now a predator, biding his time and sharpening his teeth.


Draco's hatred burned hotter with every passing day. The Draco part of him hated Voldemort for making him feel small, powerless. The other part—the nameless, foreign part—despised the Dark Lord's hypocrisy. For all his power, Riddle was just another bully trying to force the world to bow and keep everyone in the dirt.


But the meeting wasn't what scared him. What truly worried Draco was what would come after. Because Fifth Year was the last book he remembered in any real detail.


Everything beyond this point was a blur—a mishmash of wiki summaries, YouTube clips, and spoilers from the internet's loudest assholes. He knew the broad strokes: Snape dies. Dumbledore dies. Harry and Dumbledore delve into Voldemort's past through memories. Slughorn gives up a key piece of information after Harry doses him with Felix Felicis. There's a final battle at Hogwarts where everyone from Fred to Lupin to Tonks bites the dust. Nagini's death is critical.


And Harry somehow wins the last duel with Expelliarmus.


That was it. That was the extent of his knowledge past this year.


But the problem was, this world was… different. It wasn't just that his presence had changed things—though it had, irrevocably. The world itself was stronger, more vivid. The spells hit harder, the consequences felt sharper, and the people were more complex than the characters he remembered. The Dark Lord was more terrifying, the stakes higher.


And then there was Harry himself.


Draco's lips curled into a faint smile at the thought of the Boy Who Lived. He'd expected to hate Potter, to resent him for being the center of everything: If he had been reborn as him, everything would have gone so much smoother. But instead, he found himself… intrigued.


Harry Potter was braver than Draco had expected, kinder too. There was a naivete about him, something that made you both doubt him and believe in him. He well and truly believed that people deserved second chances and that doing the right thing was worth the trouble you went through. And despite everything—despite the years of enmity and mistrust—Harry had extended an olive branch. Draco still wasn't sure why he'd given it, because even in spite of Felix, he was still sort of an ass, but he was glad he had. For the first time in this life, Draco felt like he had allies, people who might actually care if he lived or died.


But he wouldn't be able to rely on the fractured scraps of his memories soon enough. He needed new plans, new contingencies, new weapons, and new ideas to make this world of his more bearable.


Like that idea he'd just had the other day: a magical search engine. A book that could absorb the contents of other books, cross-reference information, and provide instant answers to questions written inside it, inspired by Tom Riddle's Diary. A kind of wizarding Google. He could already imagine how useful it would be—whether for research or just saving time in the library. And the name… SpellSearch? Magipedia? OwlQuill?


No, too tacky. He'd workshop it later.


This might all go horribly wrong, though, the more he thought about it.


He might die the minute he stepped foot in the Manor, his body crumpling to the floor as Voldemort's laughter echoed through the halls. Tom could rip his mind apart piece by piece, leaving only a hollow puppet behind—obedient, subservient, and utterly devoid of the person he had fought to become.

The thought made his stomach churn.


But if he managed to do this… if he managed to pull this off…


Well, that would be a feat worthy of Dumbledore himself, wouldn't it?


The idea sent a flicker of bitter amusement through him. The great Albus Dumbledore, revered leader of the Light, the man who had outwitted Grindelwald and held the Dark Lord at bay for decades. And then there was Draco Malfoy, a boy raised to kneel at Voldemort's feet. Nothing more than a minor antagonist in Harry Potter's brilliant story, standing before the Dark Lord with a smirk and a week's worth of luck in his veins.


Draco Malfoy, the first snake to bite back at the Dark Lord.


He could already picture the headlines:


Heir of Malfoy Defies Darkness!


Silver-Tongued Savior!


The Snake Who Outplayed a Serpent!



Or better yet, his autobiography.


Draco Malfoy: The Boy Who Survived the Dark Lord's Wrath.


No, that was too derivative. Something sharper, more dignified.


The Snake's Gambit: My Life Among Lions, Shadows, and Monsters.


Yeah, the Draco part of him really shined in times like this. His greed, his want to become something more egged him on as much as his hatred and fear, fuelling him even when he was exhausted. Being able to earn his right to be recognized, well, it was something that appealed to his pureblood sensibilities immensely.

After all, even if Lockhart was a fraud, he'd still been a massively popular figure in the Wizarding World. With so few distractions in their day-to-day lives, and with how gullible the average wizard was, a book series on his life and successes would undoubtedly be a best-seller.


Of course, that was assuming he lived long enough to write it.


Draco's smirk faded as reality settled over him like a heavy cloak. The road ahead wasn't a chessboard with clean-cut strategies and predictable moves. It was a minefield, and every step could trigger disaster. But he wasn't walking blind—not with this boosted Felix at his side. If he could play this right, maneuver his pieces just so, maybe he'd find his way to the other side of the game intact.


And when he did, the world would remember his name—not as some lackey to a shitty Dark Lord, not as his father's heir, but as Draco Malfoy.


The boy who had played the Dark Lord's game—and won.
 
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