Chapter 7: The Ritual
Hogwarts, June 29th, 1997
"Little Hangleton was a bust," Sirius said as they sat down in the Headmaster's office. "Nothing in the manor. Nothing in the graveyard. Nothing in that rotten, snake-infested hut in the woods. No trace of a Horcrux."
"And we didn't find any sign that a Horcrux might have been hidden at any of those locations," Petunia Evans added. "Just more traps and decoys." At least they hadn't come close to dying this time. Voldemort might be the most powerful Dark Lord in Britain's history, but when it came to traps, the ancient Egyptians had him beat, and Bill regularly dispelled their best curses. But after that cave at the coast and Godric's Hollow, this had been the last location Dumbledore had thought might hide one of Voldemort's soul anchors. They were out of options.
Dumbledore sighed. "I have feared - and anticipated - this. We will have to adjust our plans accordingly. I am reasonably certain that I have found an alternative, although a more dangerous one, but it will require a little more time to prepare." He smiled at them. "Once again, I have to thank you for your courageous help. I and Britain are in your debt."
Not all of Britain, Petunia thought. Certainly not a significant part of the richer purebloods who did Voldemort's bidding in subtle and not so subtle ways. But she knew what Dumbledore meant and nodded, as did Sirius, though he snorted.
"Just one thing, Headmaster," she said as she stood.
"Yes?" He pushed his glasses up his nose.
"Whatever you are planning," she said, knowing that he wouldn't tell her until he needed her, "Please stop assuming that you know how a man thinks just because you knew him as a child or a young man. People change over time."
He chuckled, once, and with a rather sad expression. "Wise words. My assumptions about our enemy were not just based on my knowledge of his childhood, but I might have underestimated the changes he went through in the time he spent as a shade. Please rest assured that I will not repeat this mistake."
At least he accepted her rebuke gracefully, even though it came from a squib not even a third his age. She nodded once more at him and left his office.
*****
Chateau D'Aigle, Côte d'Azur, France, August 1st, 1997
The ancestral home of the D'Aigles wasn't as large as Hogwarts or Beauxbatons, but it was almost as old as the British school and had been remodeled in the style of the French school, probably a few decades after stone castles had lost all military significance, Petunia thought as she walked through the grandiose entrance hall. For once, she added with a smirk and a glance to the man at her side, even Sirius wasn't making comments about how the Blacks had the older or better version.
At least he hadn't complained about the decision to hold the Bill and Fleur's wedding in France, unlike Molly. According to Bill, his mother had opposed this fiercely, but in the end, hadn't managed to hold out against the weight of a, as Fleur had put it, millennia-old Veela tradition. Petunia thought that Molly had mostly acted out of pride and was actually happy for the ceremony to be held in France, and not in Britain - there were no Death Eaters active here.
They reached the front gates, the massive construction swinging as the pins Petunia and Sirius had been given were recognised by the spells cast on the entrance. The wedding would be held outside, another tradition according to Fleur's mother. "Any such union has to be blessed by the open sky in which we fly."
A magnificent buffet had been laid out already, between the gates and the ritual circle, and several guests were sampling the appetisers already. Among them, Petunia noted, Harry, Ron and Hermione - and Gabrielle, Fleur's little, or not so little any more, sister.
Petunia heard the girl's melodic voice as she and Sirius walked nearer to them. "And what did you do when you had found the counter to the curse in the dungeons?"
"Ah, after Hermione dealt with the ghost, and Ron used the conjured rooster to trigger the trap… Hello, Auntie! You look great!" Harry's wide smile, mirrored by his friends', told Petunia that she wouldn't like to hear the details of that particular story. But to make a scene about their adventures would have been terribly rude - even more so since Harry and Hermione owed their invitations to becoming friends with Fleur during the months spent scouring the Room of Requirement, and were all legal adults now. At least in Wizarding Britain.
So she smiled. "Are you telling stories to Gabrielle?"
The little Veela nodded: "Yes! All the stories my soeur doesn't want me to hear!"
The grimaces that remark, said in the honest, innocent tone of a child, put on the faces of the trio made her grin. She let them worry a moment longer, then smiled and let them off the hook. "Don't eat too much," she told the three budding Curse-Breakers. "The main dishes are even better, or so I heard."
"They are!" Gabrielle piped up. "Grand-maman hired the best cook in France!"
Probably to impress or upstage Molly, Petunia thought - neither Bill nor Fleur had gone into details, but Petunia had overheard enough when they talked a little too loudly during work or a break. But this was neither here nor there. She exchanged a few more comments about the buffet with her nephew and his friends and wandered off with Sirius. It was time to gather for the ceremony.
Petunia grabbed a snack or two herself, Sirius doing likewise, before continuing to the stone circle set atop a hill overlooking the Mediterranean coast. For a moment, she was reminded of another such circle, in the desert, and she looked around for giant insects charging at her. But this wasn't Egypt. She took a deep breath and relaxed, then took her seat with Sirius.
The other guests were filtering in as well, not a few of them still eating even as they sat down. Such as her wayward nephew. It seemed Hermione had given up on teaching her friends better manners. On the other hand, when in Rome…
She looked around. The majority of the guests were eating and talking, laughing often. There was none of the stiff formality she had expected from a pureblood wedding - Lily's certainly had been far more formal, despite the best efforts of the groom's friends.
Thinking of that wedding, in the middle of a war whose second part was currently starting, Petunia couldn't help feeling guilty for being here in France, safe from any danger, enjoying the food and festivities, while at home others braved the danger, preparing or even fighting - doing something, instead of hiding. But what could she do? Dumbledore hadn't had any new task or mission for her, and she was but a squib. Apart from finding ruins and shooting a gun, she couldn't do much else that would help in the coming war.
Soft music suddenly filled the circle - probably magical, Petunia couldn't pinpoint the source - and conversation died down as the last guests took their seats. Fleur's grandmother appeared in the centre of the circle, spreading her arms like wings, and started to call upon the various goddesses the Veela revered in ancient times.
The archaeologist in Petunia listened with rapt attention as the ceremony continued. So much information was presented here, or hinted at, that might have been lost when Magic had been hidden from the world.
And yet, despite this, she felt a stab of jealousy - and awe - when Fleur landed in the circle and transformed back from her avian form into her human form. The Veela seemed even more beautiful at this moment, radiant even, as she stood there in her ceremonial clothes - Greek, maybe Roman style, Petunia noted - waiting for her Bill. Her expression shone with so much love and happiness…
In comparison, Petunia felt like one of those housewives who were crying as they watched a royal wedding on the telly. If she ever married, she wouldn't look half that beautiful.
She wasn't the only one affected, she realised. Most witches were either crying, or gaping. Even Hermione, who was among the most pragmatic witches Petunia knew, had a slightly dreamy expression on her face.
As Petunia pressed her lips together - she wouldn't cry - she felt Sirius grab and squeeze her hand, rubbing his thumb against her palm. She squeezed him back and felt herself relax.
*****
Devon, Ottery St Catchpole, August 16th, 1997
"...and I thought about animating those 'Claymore mines' of you," Arthur said, his eyes shining as he pointed at the table in his shed, where he had spread his notes. "They could walk towards the enemy."
Petunia snorted at the remark, despite their rather grizzly topic. Arthur usually appeared to be a rather quiet and calm man, but once he got going about his passion - adapting muggle technology - she could see how similar he was to his children. She almost felt bad for shooting down the idea, but she had to. "That would certainly be possible, but I don't really see the use for such an innovation," she said. "The mines would be rather slow to move, and vulnerable to spells as they did so - and could be turned around against us. If we need to deploy bombs against the enemy, I think it's better to banish or shoot the bombs."
He frowned, almost pouting, but slowly nodded. "Yes, yes. I see. I didn't consider that." He sighed. "So, no walking Claymore mines." He perked up almost a once, though. "We'll still have the enchanted 'Bouncing Betties', though! What a marvellous idea!"
Petunia didn't think anyone should call those murderous devices 'marvellous', but nodded. At least Arthur's enchanted versions wouldn't get lost and cripple children years after the conflict. And they would bounce all over the battlefield, trailing enchanted smoke laced with various magical concoctions, before exploding. "Did you make any progress with enchanting rifles?" she asked.
"Ah… some." Arthur nodded and flicked his wand. A moment later, a magazine landed in his hand. "I managed to add extension charms to this and solved the problem with the feeding spring. It holds a thousand bullets now. My experiments with a self-reloading magazine weren't as successful, though."
"Oh, this will be enough. Thank you very much, Arthur!" It was more than what she had expected - as the only one to use firearms among the members of Dumbledore's Order of the Phoenix, having Arthur spend his time making things that only benefitted her would have been irresponsible, after all. His Ford Anglia was the best example of how capable Arthur was - and how useful for the Order.
He smiled, obviously pleased and slightly embarrassed by her gratitude. "Have there been any news from your home?" he asked.
He would have been told already if there had been any since he was involved in the whole plan, but she obliged him anyway. "No. The protections have fallen, but there's been no attack on the house yet."
"And the bomb is still good?"
"Yes." It should be - it was a proven design, after all, and there was nothing to interfere with it.
"Good. I mean, I hope you don't have to use it, but if there is an attack too strong to deal with, it would be better to do it yourself, wouldn't it?"
Sort of like shooting your own dog, Petunia thought. "Yes." She still didn't relish the idea of blowing up her parents' house - hers and Harry's childhood home, too. But it couldn't be defended against a Death Eater attack, and she'd rather see it turned into an ambush and a trap than see it destroyed for nothing. And, privately, she hoped that Voldemort would ignore her home altogether. Dumbledore had said there was a possibility that Voldemort would attack the house just because it was Harry's home, but she disagreed. Their enemy had acted far more cautious - and cunning - than that in the past. Harry might have beaten him twice - which had actually been Lily's doing both times - but that didn't mean Voldemort would be obsessed with defeating Harry.
At least she hoped so. That connection was bad enough.
*****
Cokeworth, Midlands, Britain, September 2nd, 1997
Gone. Everything was gone, Petunia thought as she stared at the ashes and ruins that were all that was left of her home. It had been literally burned to the ground. Not even the garden had survived. Even though she had taken all her belongings to Grimmauld place, replacing them with copies, in anticipation of such an outcome, to see the devastation was still a shock.
Voldemort hadn't ignored her home. But neither had he led a force to attack it. He or one of his followers had simply cast Fiendfyre at it, probably from a broom at night, high up in the air. That was all that it had taken to destroy her childhood home. A single wave of a wand.
She didn't think she had ever hated wizards as much as at this moment, as she stared at the results of a casual use of magic.
"Petunia…" she heard Sirius say behind her.
She shook her head before he could touch her. "He'll pay for this," she whispered. He'd pay for destroying her home. He, and all of his followers. She'd make them pay, even if it were the last thing she did.
And all their damned magic wouldn't save them.
*****
London, No 12, Grimmauld Place, September 5th, 1997
"We're having entrecôte Café de Paris for dinner," Sirius announced as Petunia arrived in the kitchen for breakfast. He was smiling brightly, too.
That was three days now that they had her favourites dishes. She shook her head, sighing. "Sirius, you don't need to do this. I'm fine." She didn't need to be pampered or humoured. She could handle this. She was over her loss.
"But I want to do this!" he insisted. "Besides, I love the dish myself."
That was news to her. She narrowed her eyes at him. "You never mentioned that before."
"Well, I didn't want you to think that I was simply trying to curry favour by claiming I liked your favourite dishes," he said. "Even though it's true!" He looked at her with an expression of innocence that made a four-year-old Harry look like a professional poker player.
She laughed despite herself, and he grinned.
"I knew that would do the trick," he said as he stood.
Petunia snorted. "That's easy to claim after the fact."
"That doesn't mean it's wrong." He wrapped her arms around her and kissed her cheek.
She huffed but hugged him back. Although she did squeeze him with a little more force than usual. And when she kissed him, it wasn't on the cheek.
But Hedwig's arrival interrupted what could have become a rather steamy breakfast. Or not breakfast. The snowy owl landed on the table, stretched out her leg with the letter tied to it, and was already looking around for bacon or any other unhealthy owl food. When she didn't find any, Hedwig looked at Petunia with what was clearly the owl version of an offended glare.
"Tough luck," Petunia told the bird after removing the letter. "You can have owl treats instead." She dropped a handful in the bowl mounted on the perch and waited until the temperamental post owl had vacated the table before she opened Harry's letter.
"What does he say?" Sirius asked, even as he was putting his chin on her shoulder to read it himself with her.
Dear Auntie
Please don't be sad about our home. We saved all the important things, after all. And we can rebuild it after Voldemort's defeat. Better. Larger. More luxurious.
"I would have thought he would use the opportunity to push for you to permanently move in with me," Sirius said.
"He knows better than that," she replied. Harry wasn't the most subtle wizard, but he could be discreet if he wanted. And cunning, of course. Rebuild it, better, larger, more luxurious? It wouldn't be the home they had lost. Might as well move. And he knew that.
There are Aurors patrolling at Hogwarts now - to protect us from Death Eaters. Half a dozen at any time of the day. Not counting Tonks. She told us that more Aurors are ready to travel through the Floo Network to the school at a moment's notice. But tell Sirius that he doesn't have to worry - we know Hogwarts much better than them, so we still can sneak wherever we want, whenever we need.
She turned her head, dislodging Sirius's from her shoulder, to glare at him. "What's he talking about?"
"Oh, nothing important!"
She narrowed her eyes.
"I just told him a few stories about my seventh year."
She closed her eyes. Lily had told her stories about that year.
"Well, if he tries to emulate me, he'll not try to play hero?" Sirius chuckled weakly.
She shook her head and resumed reading.
Tonks is great! She can impersonate anyone! Including the Aurors, since she knows all of them. When Snape tried to give us detention, she made him back off by copying the leader of the Aurors! And she doesn't let the Slytherins get away with anything! We have plans with her!
"Yes! I knew why Tonks was my favourite cousin!" Sirius cheered.
Petunia sighed. She would have expected better from an Auror. Even if she was a Black.
Ron and Lavender have split, as I said they would. He's single again. One of the fourth years, Romilda, likes him - Ginny told us - but she's too young for him. Or so he said. I think he should go out with her - with the war brewing, many students are scared to be seen with us. Hermione said that that just showed who had a spine and who didn't. I told her that I said the same about Lavender, and she got mad at me, but we made up again.
She doubted that this had been as simple as Harry told it. But it hadn't been the first row between the two teenagers and wouldn't be the last, she knew.
Also, don't worry about us sneaking out of Hogwarts to go to Hogsmeade despite the threat from Death Eaters.
Petunia hadn't been worried, but Harry's comment had changed that.
We found a much better way to relax: The Room of Requirement! Since it's still sealed off - even though not very competently - we're the only students who can use it, and so we can spend our weekends there, in whatever room we wish! Hermione said it would be stupid not to use such a resource, by the way.
Petunia had a hunch that Harry wasn't just talking about the Hogsmeade weekends. Or weekends. "Hogwarts: The Love Hotel," she mumbled.
"Hm?" Sirius tilted his head.
"Nothing." They were both adults in Wizarding Britain. And both of them were targets for the Death Eaters.
And Hermione was too sensible not to use protection, if it came to that.
Which, Petunia knew from both hers and Lily's experiences at boarding schools, had probably happened already.
As long as she didn't become a grandaunt at her age, she was fine with it. She had better and more important things to do than babysitting.
*****
Devon, Ottery St Catchpole, October 30th, 1997
"To think that we're trusting Snape…"
Petunia nodded in agreement with Sirius's whispered comment. He didn't actually have to whisper - the Range Rover in which both of them were sitting was spelt to be soundproof. And even if it weren't, Petunia doubted that there were many eavesdroppers six hundred feet above the ground.
Arthur had outdone himself with that car, in her opinion. Invisible, flying, sound- and water-proof, unlimited fuel, extension charms turning the interior into a small apartment - it was the perfect expedition vehicle.
Tonight would show if it was also a good combat vehicle. If they could trust Snape.
Dumbledore did. He had even vouched for the git. That had been enough for the Weasleys to trust their home, and possibly their lives to this plan.
Petunia didn't know if she would have agreed if she were in their place. She didn't trust Snape. Especially not now that she knew that he was Dumbledore's spy among the Death Eaters. Because she doubted that he had joined the Death Eaters as a spy. Not Snape. She remembered how he had acted as a teenager well enough.
She wasn't here because she trusted Snape. She was here because she loved the Weasleys. And because she wanted to take revenge upon the Death Eaters for the destruction of her home.
If those cowards actually showed up, as Snape had claimed they would, she would show them what a squib with a weapon and a grudge could do.
"I still don't see them," Sirius said. "I bet Snape is a double agent."
"He most certainly is a double agent," Petunia said. "He's too close to Dumbledore to be anything else. The question is: Whose side is he on?"
"His," Sirius replied.
He was probably right. "We'll find out soon," She said. "Whatever happens today, Snape's cover will be blown."
"Serves him right," Sirius muttered. "Still no… Merlin's beard!"
Below them, green flames erupted around The Burrow.
For a moment, Petunia feared that the building was lost. Then she saw that the wards were holding - the Fiendfyre couldn't reach the house. If only her home had had such wards… but she wouldn't have been able to control them. And calling a wizard each time a neighbour wanted to visit would have been impossible.
She pushed her petty jealousy away and stood. "Fly lower and watch out for broom flyers!" she told Sirius as she opened the hatch in the car's roof and grabbed the handles of Arthurs latest project: An M2 with practically unlimited ammunition and a permanent cooling charm. She pulled the charging handle back and chambered the first round, then flipped her night vision goggles down and started to look for targets.
Below them she could see spells flashing back and forth, and explosions erupt from the earth. Blasting Curses, and Arthur's mines. But where were the Death Eaters? Were all of them disillusioned?
No, there, near the pond, were three robed and masked wizards, sending spells at the building. "Tilt to the left!" she told Sirius, who obliged her. She fired as soon as she could aim the machine gun at the Death Eaters. You were supposed to fire in short bursts, but with the spells on the gun, she didn't have to limit herself and sent a stream of bullets at them, every third of them a tracer round.
She couldn't tell if they had cast Shield Charms or not - the bullets tore them to shreds in seconds. "Move!" she yelled - tracers worked both ways.
The Range Rover banked and went into a dive as several curses flew towards them but missed them. She returned fire with a few bursts but couldn't see if she hit anything before she ceased firing when Sirius jerked left and right to avoid more curses from below - and from above!
There was a Death Eater flying above them! She snarled as she crouched a little so she could aim higher. Where was the bastard? She couldn't see anyone, not even with her night vision goggles. Disillusioned then. And she couldn't cast a spell to detect them.
"Watch out! We're going to ram them!" Sirius yelled.
"What?" She ducked down, just in time for the Rover to accelerate upwards, and then there was a crash, and something scraped along the left side. She jumped up but still couldn't see the Death Eater.
"Oh, he fell right down into the Fiendfyre!" Sirius commented. "One less pesky broom flyer!"
Petunia nodded, swallowing the envy she felt at being able to spot disillusioned enemies, and looked for another target on the ground. She found one - curses kept flying towards The Burrow from a cluster of trees. "Hold the car steady for five seconds!" she shouted, then saturated the entire area with a few hundred rounds.
No more spells were cast there.
Bill's voice sounded through her necklace. "They're retreating!"
"They're routed!" Sirius cheered, and the Range Rover took another dive. "Let's get a few more!"
She couldn't disagree with that and cut down two more Death Eaters right before they managed to leave the area of their own Anti-Apparition Jinxes, or so Sirius told her. Hoisted by their own petard then.
Sirius flew a few searching patterns in the air but couldn't spot anyone else loitering around, and so they descended to meet up with the other Order members involved in this ambush.
They had dealt Voldemort's forces a heavy blow, but Petunia was certain that it hadn't come without a cost.
*****
Hogwarts, October 31st, 1997
Dumbledore looked both tired and happy this time, Petunia noticed. And wary, or so she thought.
"Petunia. Sirius. I am happy to see that you both came through the battle without harm."
"Not everyone was as lucky," Sirius said.
Not everyone had had a flying Range Rover with a heavy machine gun, Petunia thought as she nodded. She was keeping the car, and whoever disagreed with her decision could talk it out with the M2.
Dumbledore sighed. "No, not everyone. Young Mister Weasley will recover, but he won't be creating any more items for his shop for several months. And I dare say that Molly will now have an easier time to tell her twins apart."
Not even Sirius laughed at that.
"Unfortunately, Kingsley was killed in the fighting. As far as I was told, it was the Killing Curse, so at least he didn't suffer."
That had to be one of the Aurors who had come to help them. Petunia hadn't known any of them except for 'Mad-Eye' Moody, who had helped them out in the Room of Requirement. And that Auror probably wouldn't notice a few more curse scars among the dozens he had acquired already. Petunia pressed her lips together, both amused at and ashamed of that thought.
Sirius glanced at her, but addressed Dumbledore: "We struck the Death Eaters harder, though."
"Oh, yes." Dumbledore nodded. "Thirteen of Voldemort's followers were left dead or dying on the field, a number of those who escaped had been wounded, no doubt about that - it was a victory for the Order, and for Britain. The Prophet's calling it a turning point in the war." He chuckled. "Which is an achievement since before yesterday, the Prophet never called it a war but faithfully copied Cornelius's opinion that this was a criminal matter."
Sirius and Petunia both snorted at that. The Daily Prophet made The Quibbler look like The Times when it came to politics. Which said a lot about Wizarding Britain.
Dumbledore sighed. "As impressive as this battle was, it was not decisive. As long as Voldemort retains his soul anchors, he will always return - and I fear that he will always find willing followers in Britain. Further, with Severus being revealed as a spy for us, we have lost our best source of information about the enemies' plans. I fear that Voldemort will become more cautious, and therefore even harder to predict."
"Well, we couldn't let the Weasleys die just to keep the git's cover," Sirius said.
"Of course not," Dumbledore agreed. "Even though Voldemort is likely to launch more such attacks to ferret out more spies."
Sirius muttered a curse under his breath. "Do you have any good news? You make it sound as if the battle was a victory for our enemies."
Dumbledore hesitated, then nodded. "I have devised a plan to lure Voldemort into a trap. However, while I am quite certain that the plan has a very good chance to succeed, it is also rather dangerous for those involved."
Sirius shrugged. "Last night's battle wasn't exactly safe."
"That is correct. But everyone who participated was a grown man or woman who joined the Order in the full knowledge of the risks." Dumbledore looked at Petunia with a rather peculiar expression. As if he were wary of her.
She frowned as she wondered if this was a dig at her being a squib. But no, he wouldn't be wary of her. So what… Her eyes widened. "You want to use Harry!"
"What?" Sirius yelled jumping up as Dumbledore inclined his head. "Are you crazy?"
The old wizard shook his head. "Crazy? No. Desperate, though, might not be wrong."
"He's just a boy!" Petunia spat. At least in muggle Britain. And he was her boy. Her Harry.
"I know." Dumbledore sighed. "But I fear that despite the risk for Harry, this is his best chance of survival."
"What?" Sirius blinked.
"It's his scar, isn't it?" Petunia said, barely refraining from shouting. "It ties them together - but it does more, doesn't it?"
Dumbledore took a deep breath. "The scar is a result of their connection. But their fates were entwined even before Harry was born. There was a prophecy."
Petunia felt as if her blood froze in her veins. "A prophecy?" Those were bad. Very, very bad.
"A true prophecy?"
Dumbledore nodded. "It was made by a Seer and recorded in the Department of Mysteries. I was present when the prophecy was made." He cleared his throat and began to speak, and Petunia felt a shiver run down her spine: "The one with the power to vanquish the Dark Lord approaches…"
*****
"...for neither can live while the other survives…"
"That's it?" Petunia stood, trembling. This was… this was… she clenched her teeth to avoid screaming with rage. "That's the Prophecy? Harry has to kill Voldemort, or die at his hand?" Her Harry? Facing Voldemort?
Sirius's mouth was moving, but he wasn't saying anything.
"It doesn't have to be literally his hand," Dumbledore said. "I am convinced that the protection Lily granted Harry is the power Voldemort does not know."
"That's why they went into hiding, wasn't it?" Petunia shook her head. "That's why you were convinced that he'd attack our home. Why didn't you tell me?"
"People have died for this secret," Dumbledore replied. "And there was no need to tell you. I told you about the blood protection, and that Voldemort was still alive. I also told you that he would be coming for Harry sooner or later. I merely gave you an alternate explanation for his reasons."
"You lied!"
He nodded, not contesting her accusation. "Even if you had known the Prophecy, you couldn't have done anything - but you might have endangered him. Trust me, I've been working to circumvent the prophecy for years, but I failed."
She glared at the reminder that she was just a squib and couldn't help or save her nephew from this.
"But he hasn't come after Harry - he just destroyed their home," Sirius said. "And it happened after school had started, so he knew that Harry wasn't at home any more."
"I know. But Voldemort is aware of the Prophecy, if not of its entire content. But he knows that Harry holds the power to destroy him. Should we make him believe that we are preparing to use this power, he will be forced to intervene, lest he might risk his final defeat."
"Harry won't serve as bait!" she protested. Sirius nodded and grabbed her hand in support.
"As much as I loathe to say it, Harry cannot escape his destiny." Dumbledore looked as if he was honestly sad, but his voice was firm as he went on. "He will be facing Voldemort - the Dark Lord will ensure this. The only question is whether this confrontation happens at a time and location of our choosing, when we are prepared and he is not, or if it happens after Voldemort has laid waste to Britain again and hounded Harry as he hunted his parents."
He made it sound so rational, so inevitable, she wanted to hit him in the face. Break his nose - or his neck. He was talking about using Harry as bait to trap the worst Dark Lord in Britain's history. And he was talking as if there was no choice in the matter. "No." She shook her head. "Not Harry. Find someone else. Something else."
He shook his head. "There is nothing else. You told me that I shouldn't forget that people change. And Voldemort has changed. I cannot predict his actions any longer - with one exception: He is tied to Harry, and he knows it. Harry is the one person he will face. There is no one else."
She looked at Sirius, but he was staring at the ground, shaking his head. Tears appeared in her eyes as she, too, shook her head, searching for something to throw into the old wizard's face. "No."
"Shouldn't we let him decide that?" He asked, in that mild tone of his, so full of understanding, that made her loathe him even more.
*****
"I'll do it!"
Harry was pale, and if he weren't seated he'd probably tremble on his legs, in Petunia's opinion, and his voice was a little shaky, but she knew his expression. He was serious.
She still tried to change his decision. "No Harry! We'll find another way!"
He looked at her. "And how long will that take? How many people will die while we search for an alternative? If there's even another way - no plan so far has worked, has it?"
"That means that this one might not work either!"
"I know." He smiled thinly. "But we'll have tried." He shook his head. "I can't hide while he kills people. Mum didn't give me her protection for that."
Petunia wanted to yell that Lily didn't sacrifice herself for this plan… but she couldn't. Harry was too noble for his own good. And if he were so determined, she wouldn't be able to stop him if he tried.
She nodded, not willing to admit her defeat out loud. She turned to Dumbledore. "I hope that, for once, you'll not be wrong about the Dark Lord."
"So do I, Petunia. So do I."
*****
Eastern Sahara, Lost Temple of the Sun, Egypt, November 27th, 1997
Standing in the shadow of the easternmost pillar at the entrance of the temple, Petunia watched the single road leading to the temple. There were no other routes that led to it. When it had been sealed away millennia ago, the last high priest had ordered the entire valley struck from any maps, and sealed its borders. And even after it had been rediscovered, the wards remained - only those protecting the entrance of the valley had been removed. You couldn't enter if you came from any other direction - you were redirected instead. You couldn't enter by air at all.
That made it a great location for an ambush - or a trap. There was only one way in or out. If Voldemort decided to not take the bait, he could simply blockade them in here. To crack the valley's defences and create another exit would take weeks if not months. Ian Selwyn had taken half a year to open the valley's entrance in 1882, although he hadn't been a Dumbledore. On the other hand, Dumbledore wasn't a Curse-Breaker.
She sighed. Not even one day here, and she was already getting lost in hypothetical scenarios.
"Isn't it weird to call this the 'Lost Temple of the Sun' if has been found a hundred years ago?"
That was Ron.
"A hundred and fifteen years ago, to be precise."
And that was Hermione. Petunia turned around the pillar and spotted Harry and his friends just as Hermione started into her lecture.
"It was called 'The Lost Temple of the Sun' for millennia. You do not change such a term lightly. It is one of the oldest temples in Egypt, dating back to the time before the first dynasty. No one knows why it was abandoned and sealed - the records were purged. But it was a famous place to 'purify your soul'. Ancient Egyptians believed that such a ritual would lessen the weight of your sins, once they were weighed in the afterlife. Further… Oh! Hello, Petunia!"
"Don't stop on my behalf," she told the flustered looking girl. "You were doing great." For a lecture in history, at least.
"Yes," Harry chimed in.
The two teenagers exchanged a sappy look. Petunia shook her head.
"Don't look like that, Auntie, just because Sirius is busy!"
She frowned at her nephew. "What are you doing up here? Aren't you supposed to be safely in the temple's sanctum?"
"Only once Voldemort actually shows up," he retorted. "Which might not happen since he might not even know where we are."
"He knows," Petunia assured him.
"Are you sure?" Hermione looked unconvinced. "Apart from leaking the full Prophecy through the Department of Mysteries, we've done what we could to hide our movements."
"If we hadn't, he would suspect a trap," Petunia said. Voldemort might suspect one anyway. "And trust me, he'll know." His followers had found her before, after all - despite her best efforts to hide a new tomb. Voldemort had to know his way around Egypt, especially if he managed to complete a dark ritual here without anyone in the Magical Ottoman Empire's garrison noticing it. Or raising the alarm about it.
Hermione nodded with obvious reluctance.
Harry put his hand on her shoulder. "You heard her!"
She huffed. "You were doubting her a minute ago."
"Well… not really?" He grinned, then winced and rubbed his forehead.
"Is your scar hurting?" Petunia asked.
He nodded.
"He's coming. Get inside!"
She turned and raised her Omnioculars to her eyes again. Zooming in, she spotted small dust clouds on the street.
Something was moving towards the temple.
She pulled out her enchanted mirror and alerted Sirius, who handed his mirror to Dumbledore. "Someone's on the road - several people, at least. And Harry's scar is hurting," she said.
"He's coming then." The old Wizard nodded. "We'll be outside in a moment. Join your nephew and the others inside."
She bit her lower lip to keep herself from arguing again that she would be more useful outside, where she could use the longer range of her weapons. Dumbledore had insisted that she would be needed in the temple's sanctum, protecting Harry and the others.
It was just an excuse to get her out of the way, but she couldn't argue that she should leave Harry alone.
On the way down the stairs leading to the sanctum, she met the rest of the Order. Bill and Fleur were among them. And Sirius. He stopped for an embrace and kiss, a whispered promise not to die, then he was on his way again.
She reached the sanctum a minute later. Harry and his friends were there, looking both mulish and nervous. Doge, an old friend of Dumbledore, and Vance, a witch Petunia's age, were preparing the ritual circle in the centre with the help of 'Ali', an Ottoman wizard Dumbledore apparently had known for decades.
They would start the ritual once Dumbledore had lured Voldemort onto the temple grounds. With the temple's magic acting as a focus, the dark Lord would find his soul bound to the urn in the middle of the centre - which would be destroyed as soon as the ritual was completed.
Petunia wasn't needed for that; she could just wait. Technically, she was supposed to help guard them, but the sanctum had one entrance. The other door led to the crypts - and they were a dead end. Petunia had explored them during a past visit.
"We've spotted them," she heard Sirius on her mirror. "Two dozen wands. And their leader looks exactly like Voldemort in Harry's vision. They're almost at the buried bombs… Merlin's arse!"
"What?" Petunia yelled. Next to her, Harry jerked.
"The area where we buried the bombs just collapsed. Undermined."
Petunia clenched her teeth. Voldemort apparently had seen through that plan. Still, to collapse an entire area required a mind-boggling amount of power.
"He's not getting closer," Sirius said. "Just standing there. Taunting us."
"He wants to draw you out of your prepared positions," Petunia said. That was obvious.
"Yes. We're not going to charge him, though. And we have a few surprises left, as soon as Dumbledore gives the signal." Sirius chuckled, but she could tell that it was forced.
Banishing bombs at them. Arthur's Bouncing Betties. Napalm. The Order was prepared. But Petunia couldn't help feeling that it wouldn't be enough.
"A-Auntie!"
She whirled around. Harry was holding his head. Hermione was steading him. Ron was at his side with his wand out.
"He… he's here. Close. Very close," Harry said.
That wasn't possible. He was at the edge of the temple grounds. Petunia gasped. Polyjuice Potion?
Before she could inform Sirius, the floor erupted beneath the entrance to the sanctum, and two figures floated up through the dust cloud that had formed. Two almost identical figures.
Petunia had seen their faces before. Both looked like a younger Voldemort.
She fired a long burst into the closest, but the bullets bounced off his Shield Charm. His Killing Curse, though, struck Doge in the chest before the old wizard could move. The other Voldemort killed Ali, then started exchanging curses with Vance.
They were ignoring her, Petunia realised, as her target turned towards Harry, his shield still holding despite her constant fire.
Harry and his friends had taken cover behind the closest pillars and were setting up an effective crossfire, sending curse after curse at the first Voldemort.
That one was moving behind cover himself now - so he wasn't invulnerable. Petunia grabbed the mirror and yelled "Two Voldemorts are here!" while she dove behind a bench near the side.
She rolled to the side, then came up firing - and almost froze when Vance suddenly screamed and thrashed on the ground. Petunia switched targets, firing at the Voldemort torturing the witch, but once again she couldn't stop him in time. The monster stopped his spell, then pointed his wand at the shivering witch on the ground and hit her with a Killing Curse before she could recover.
That left Petunia and three kids against two dark wizards - or Dark Lords. There was only one course of action - they had to run. But the Voldemorts blocked the only exit.
"Harry! Retreat into the catacombs! I'll cover you!" They were vast and full of hiding spots. The kids only had to stay hidden until help arrived. Petunia took a deep breath and jumped up, dashing towards the next pillar, firing as she ran. A curse struck the bench she had just left, blowing part of it up, and another missed her by what felt like inches. She threw herself into a roll and landed behind the pillar. "Harry! Run!"
"No, Auntie!"
To her horror, Harry emerged from the pillar behind which he had been hiding and started walking towards the Voldemorts, casting as if he were in a duelling ring.
"No!" she yelled when the first curse struck him - then gaped when it had no effect. Another curse struck him with the same result.
And Harry laughed. "You can't hurt me!" His own curses struck the Shield Charm of the younger Voldemort, shattering it. Petunia swung her rifle around, but the older stepped into her line of fire, blocking her shots with his shield. Ron and Hermione started to flank the Voldemorts, despite Petunia's yells. She kept firing, trying to at least distract their enemies, to give Harry and his friends a chance.
Until the whole floor collapsed.
Petunia felt the stone under her feet shift and fall, and jumped, trying to reach the edge of the intact floor. She succeeded, but before she could pull herself up, the stone she was gripping started to give way as well. She pulled herself to the side with her arms, hands scrambling for purchase on the crumbling ledge that was all that was left of the floor of the sanctum, but she wasn't quick enough. All she could do was to get on top the falling block of stone so she wouldn't be squashed by it landing on top of her.
Then she hit the ground, the stone block shattering, and desperately rolled to absorb the shock. Sharp stone dug into her back as she landed on a floor covered with debris, rocks and splinters scratching and tearing at her skin as she rolled over them until she came to a rest at the foot of a wall - an intact wall.
She was in the catacombs. In the now destroyed grand chamber under the sanctum, where the mummies had been prepared. She looked around. Some sun rays from the skylights in the roof above provided scant illumination, together with the glitterstones set in the walls, or what as left of them - much of it blocked by the dust thrown up by the collapse. But she knew where she was, at least relative to the stairs.
She stood, clenching her teeth as her battered body ached everywhere, and started to make her way towards the stairs hidden behind the mounds of cracked stone. Her rifle was gone, as was her mirror - ripped away sometime during her fall. But she had her Glocks and her knife.
She had to climb over a broken wall and was about to reach its top when she saw movement above her - someone was floating there. And turning towards her.
She pushed off the wall, dropping into the darkness below, and rolled to the side, Something red hit the ground next to her, and she jumped in that direction, behind another mound of debris. More spells struck the ground and rocks, seemingly at random.
He didn't know where she was. She grinned - he wasn't perfect. But she had to move, or he could find her with a spell. And the only way away from him led deeper into the catacombs, to the star chamber.
So she ran, dashing from corner to corner, then leaned against the wall as soon as she was out of the debris-filled grand chamber and in the intact parts of the catacomb. She had to hide. Tend to her wounds. Prepare a trap. Maybe if she bundled her remaining grenades, span a tripwire…
Before she could complete the thought, the corner next to her blew up. She started running again, deeper into the catacombs. Mocking laughter followed her. "Give up, squib! You cannot escape a wizard!"
They knew who she was. That wasn't a surprise, of course - Voldemort would have research Harry and his family. She sped up. She needed more distance, more time to prepare a trap. Pushing her aching body, she reached the middle catacombs. That should do it. She quickly bundled the grenades she carried and spun a tripwire across the corridor. It was primitive, but the best she could do.
Now to lure him in. She took a deep breath and yelled: "You can't catch me, a mere squib? Harry will defeat you!"
Then she waited. She wouldn't hear him - he was flying. And she couldn't wait too long. But she couldn't run too soon. She snorted - she had to trust her instincts. Or her luck. After counting to forty, she started running.
Half a minute later, the grenades went off. Yes! She stopped behind the next corner, peering behind her. Had this killed him? Or knocked him out? The blast would have been channelled in the narrow hallway, hitting with more force… it might have been enough...
Once more, the corner exploded, this time throwing her to the ground. Pain shot through her side - something had struck her. Her hand on her side came away covered in liquid. Blood. Cursing her stupidity, she ran on. She needed to stop the bleeding, or she'd die. But she needed time for that. Time she didn't have. She couldn't hide, and she couldn't run forever.
The Star Chamber! She blinked as she remembered her visit to that chamber. 'The counterpoint to the sanctum', it had been called, since it mirrored that arrangement. But it had no skylight - unlike the sanctum. The sun wouldn't reach it for the temple rituals.
But there were two doors leading to the chamber. She might be able to double up behind the murderer hounding her. And maybe there were some protections left that repelled a split soul.
It was a very faint hope, but it was all she had, and she pushed on, stumbling as much as running, her hand pressed on her bleeding side. She wouldn't be able to keep this up for much longer.
A minute later, she reached the chamber. Glitterstones in the ceiling, arranged like the night sky over Egypt millennia ago, provided light. Enough to read the hieroglyphs, if she wanted to. Which she didn't. She needed to get away. But first, she had to bind her wound, or she would bleed out. She pulled her hand away, wincing at the renewed pain, and pulled her shirt off, clenching her teeth at the paint that caused, then started to wrap it around her midriff, under her sports bra. She fumbled it the first time, and blood fell to the ground - and the ritual circle blinked for a moment.
Blood magic? She stumbled over to the altar. She recognised those hieroglyphs! She had seen them in the grave of the court wizard who had executed the Nameless Necromancer. It was a blood ritual. The Star Chamber was a blood magic chamber. But someone would have surely tested that, even if it was illegal…
She blinked. It wasn't blood magic. It was sacrificial magic. And no wizard she knew would be pouring their own blood on altars or onto circles. That was a quick way to get cursed. Kneeling down - falling to her knees - she smeared the blood on her hands over the closest hieroglyphs forming the ritual circle. The circle lit up - and stayed lit for a while until it started to dim. A little more blood and it lit up again, longer this time.
A temple to purify the soul.
Maybe… Suddenly, she felt as if a thousand hot needles pierced her skin. Barbed needles, ripping out her skin. She screamed and screamed and screamed, there was nothing but pain, pain, pain…
Then she was on the ground, panting and hurting, and someone was laughing at her.
"You've led me on a merry chase, squib, but the outcome was never in doubt. How does it feel, your feeble, stupid hopes being dashed by the cold reality of a wizard's superiority? Do you know that you are an abomination? A mudblood squib. Doubly damned."
She raised her head and saw him float towards her, a Shield Charm covering him - not that she could have drawn her pistols anyway. But she was bleeding, and he was inside the circle. Closing her eyes, she rolled on her side - her hurt side - and yelled as her wound bled again before she ended up outside the circle, on her stomach, panting and hurting.
But the circle was lit, and her tormentor trapped inside it. But for how long?
"What? A circle?" He wasn't laughing any more. "How did you… a trap. Clever, clever." He chuckled. "But it won't last. It can hold me for a short time, nothing more. You're a squib. Your blood won't work."
She coughed, blinking as he seemed to split into two wizards. She hadn't much longer. "We'll see," she spat, then took a deep breath and rolled back, onto her bleeding side, feeding the circle.
The last thing she heard before everything went dark was Voldemort's scream.
*****
The first thing she saw when she opened her eyes was a tent above her head. She blinked. She would have expected the afterlife to be more impressive.
"Auntie!"
"Petunia!"
Harry? Sirius? She tried to call their names, but could only croak - her throat was dry.
"Wait! Here's water!"
That helped. "Harry? Sirius?"
"Yes!" Harry grabbed her hand. "You're back."
"Back?"
"Back among the living," Sirius said. "You had us worried."
"What happened?" she asked.
"That's a good question."
She turned her head. There was Dumbledore, too. Was everyone here? She couldn't see anyone else. But maybe they were hiding.
"What happened?" she asked again.
"Voldemort outsmarted us," Dumbledore said. "It was my mistake. I should have anticipated this possibility after the Basilisk incident."
"We killed it."
"Yes. But it was released by a Horcrux, which regained human form by feeding on the life force of a student - Theo Nott - almost killing him in the process. I foolishly assumed that this was an aberration; that Voldemort would never tolerate anyone, not even his own past selves, who could rival his power. I was wrong; he activated two more such Horcruxes - as far as we know. And he sent them into the temple, through a tunnel they dug with spells, while he drew our attention to himself. And then all three struck at the same time." Dumbledore sighed. "Poor Elphias… I shouldn't have let him alone there. He, Emmeline and Ali paid for my mistake."
"Hermione? Ron?" she asked.
"They're alive. They were hurt, but nothing too serious," Sirius said.
"Ron's going to have some interesting scars to impress his next girlfriend," Harry said.
She glared at him, but he kept beaming at her.
Dumbledore cleared his throat. "In any case, I managed to overcome Voldemort - he underestimated me, or overestimated the resilience of his new body - and Harry managed to defeat one of his Horcruxes."
"Burned him to death!" Harry bared his teeth. "Jumped him when he was trying to kill Ron, and held on to him until he stopped moving."
"Good." She nodded at him.
"But it would have been all for nought," Dumbledore went on, "if you hadn't trapped the second Horcrux. We found you, just in time to save you, I have to add, and him, still trapped in the circle. I managed to complete the ritual as planned, if slightly adapted."
"He's dead? For good?"
Dumbledore nodded.
She smiled. Defeated by a mudblood squib. A fitting end for Voldemort.
*****
Epilogue
Eastern Sahara, Egypt, July 30th, 2001
Petunia Evans knelt next to the withered stele and brushed away the last remains of the sand that had covered it for centuries. Tracing but not touching the hieroglyphs at the base, she translated them from memory - twice to be sure she hadn't made a mistake.
"And? Is that the marker we're looking for?"
She smiled as she stood - Sirius might have become a decent Curse-Breaker, but patience wasn't something he'd ever learn. Which made the patience he had shown in courting her even more remarkable.
"Come on! Is it the right marker? Or do we have to comb the desert again?"
She chuckled, then nodded. "Yes, it's the right marker." The one mentioned in the text she had found in the Library of Alexandria a month earlier, misfiled in some agricultural records from Roman times. The one who would lead them to a new wizard graveyard - or rather, an old one. Possibly the oldest such graveyard ever, if her theory was correct.
She turned to the south. "A hundred leagues. As the crow flies."
Sirius squinted as he stared south. "Should make it before nightfall."
"We'll make camp before that. Far away from any guardians," Petunia said. One encounter with Animated Warrior Statues while looking for a river bend to take a bath was enough.
"And high up in the air," Sirius added when they went back to their Range Rover. At her glance, he quickly added: "But not too high!" and muttered something about amateur flyers she pretended not to hear.
She geotagged the stele's location - it was outside any magical interference - and climbed into their expedition car, her hand brushing over the dent left by a wild hippogriff with poor eyesight. Sirius had offered to cast a Mending Charm numerous times, but Petunia liked the dent; it gave the car character and a history. No one would mistake it for an overpriced family car, even without the ring mount for the machine gun.
Two hours later, they reached the area indicated by the stele, and Sirius 'parked' the car about thirty feet high in the air above a wadi. "What's for dinner? Please no MREs!" he said as he joined her at the table in the back.
"It's traditional expedition food," she said, snorting.
"For muggles!" he retorted.
"Well… do you feel like cooking?" She certainly didn't.
He didn't feel like cooking either, but he wanted to eat any rations even less, so they finally settled on pasta. The spaghetti were still cooking when they heard a familiar knock on the car's windshield. Sirius grinned widely and flicked his wand, and a moment later, a large snowy owl landed on the table.
Petunia made a point of staring at the perch she had had mounted in the car's living room. Hedwig made a point at staring at the food on the table. Sirius grabbed the letter. "It's from Harry!" he exclaimed - as if that wasn't obvious from the owl who had brought it.
He quickly read it as Petunia filled the bowl on the perch with treats and kept Hedwig from tasting the meat sauce on the table.
"They're still in the Amazonas," Sirius said, chuckling. "Hermione thinks that they have found the ruins of an Atlantean outpost. Harry disagrees and thinks it was a fortified camp of the Conquistadores."
"Probably a camp erected on the ruins of the outpost," Petunia said. The Conquistadores hadn't been interested in ancient ruins - unless they hid treasure. Which Atlantean ruins seldom did.
Sirius nodded and read on. "According to Harry, Ron's having an affair with a member of a local tribe of Jaguar-Shapeshifters."
Petunia shook her head. While Harry tended to exaggerate Ron's amorous escapades, their friend's love affairs tended to be rife with all kinds of troubles.
"Luna and Ginny probably asked him to make contact," Sirius said. "They're planning an expedition up the Amazonas, hunting a rumoured Hide-Behind variant."
"Oh?" She hadn't heard about that.
"Bill told me," he explained, "when we met in base camp."
She sniffed. 'When we went drinking' would be more precise.
"Anyway, he wishes us well, and tells us not to take any risks."
"Us?" Petunia raised her eyebrows.
"Alright, he means me." Sirius pouted. "I've been working with you for three years now, and he still thinks I'll get myself killed every time I step into a tomb."
She laughed, which earned her a frown and she leaned over and patted his shoulder. "He simply worries about you." Not entirely unjustified, in her opinion. Sirius had had a few close calls when he started working with her as a Curse-Breaker. Too brave for his wand, as the saying went. He had grown more experienced since then, of course.
But Petunia still didn't think that he was up to challenging the most dangerous tombs, those created by the ancient Egyptian Wizards at the height of their power. Which is why they were looking for new tombs to explore - tombs older than those, erected in a time when wizards didn't know as many curses. It was less lucrative, but safer. Sirius was filthy rich anyway.
She noticed that Hedwig had finished her treats and was staring at her.
Petunia shook her head. "We've got no letter for you yet," she told her. "I'll write one tomorrow. You'll need the rest anyway."
That literally ruffled the feathers of the proud owl, but Petunia was correct Hedwig needed the rest if she was to cross the Atlantic again, even aided by the magic of post owls.
Later, when Sirius had already fallen asleep next to her, Petunia suddenly realised that it had been exactly ten years since a different owl had brought Harry's Hogwarts letter to Egypt. To think she had been afraid she'd lose Harry like she had lost her sister…
Things had changed. She had changed. But most importantly, she had learned a lot. About others, and about herself.
She wasn't just a squib. She was a woman. An archaeologist. A tomb raider. Holder of an Order of Merlin, First Class. An aunt. A wife. Some called her a hero. Some still called her an abomination - behind her back. None of them was correct.
She was Petunia Evans. Nothing less.
*****