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Magic was a supernatural force that changed aspects of the world at fundamental levels while allowing the possessors to perform feats outside the norm — feats like sensing what lay inside the deep, dense stones.
Quinn sat on the pedestal as an exceptional amount of magic flowed out of his body into the stone all around him; every knock and cranny of the vault room washed in his magic, filled to the brim, not a single grain of stone was left untouched by Quinn's magic.
'Uh-huh,' thought Quinn as he channeled Earth magic, 'I'm close. . . I'm really close; it just needs a little bit adjustment. . .'
Icy vault required his Ice magic to be excellent in both pure strength and fine laser control and skill. The Aquatic vault had the same arrangement with the solution to each trial being a mix of strength and skill, albeit each trial gave more weight to one than the other.
But now, as Quinn sat in the Architect's vault, he realized that this room only required pure skill for Earth magic without a requirement for power. Anyone with a decent amount of magic could train fine-train their Earth magic to succeed in this room, and currently, Quinn was close to making a breakthrough in his Earth magic skill. What he was trying to accomplish was to spread his magic into the stone and turn it into a sixth sense that would provide him a 'view' of the entire room.
'The fuzziness is because I lack control over my Earth magic.'
Quinn's magic in the stone shifted at his command — the density of his magic thickened in some places while in some areas, the magic thinned.
'Remember, it's not about the quantity of magic. The vault doesn't require floods of magic. Stigweard Gragg was an architect; he was the Architect. . . a profession that requires precision, calculation, and sureness to bring their creations to life.'
The design and nature of his magic changed. The days of him studying the type of this particular stone were ingrained in his mind, one of the most immersed memory books that he possessed in his mindscape.
'Imagine being present in every particle of stone. . . put yourself in the Architect's shoes. . . remember how to cast magic — focus your intent, apply the knowledge you have learned, and turn imagination into reality. . . and. . . bring about the blueprint, an architect's blueprint.'
Then it happened.
Quinn inhaled noisily as his magic clicked into place. The fuzziness that he experienced lifted in all but an instant, and everything became clear as if he was looking at the insides of the stone walls, floor, and ceilings in a brightly lit environment.
He opened his eyes and whispered, "Illusion. . ." and the next moment, the self-illusion he cast on himself translated his Earth sense into vision — granting him something akin to x-ray vision.
'Illusion magic is convenient like that,' thought Quinn.
That was the last errant thought in Quinn's mind as the awe of the sight in front of him overtook his mind.
"Stigweard Gragg. . . for the love of magic, he really was an architect through and through, wasn't he."
On the day, he had found that there were hollow spots inside the walls, floors, and ceiling; Quinn matched it with the solution to opening the archway but not in his slight imagination did he imagine that the fuzzy hollow would be something like this.
Every inch of the room, except the solid pedestal, was covered in gears of hundred sizes, shafts of different lengths and thicknesses, levers of different configurations, mechanical switches that locked into various places, rotating axils with screw-ends, oscillating half-wheels, deadbolts jammed into cam slots at dozens of sites, locking everything into place.
'The entire vault is god damned lock,' thought Quinn as he couldn't voice it in words.
Just below the pedestal were nine thick plates of stone, each connected to an intricate mechanism that, when solved, would separate the plates from the middle, pulling them apart, allowing the pedestal to sink a level with every solution.
"What a masterpiece," he muttered, "what ingenuity, what creativeness, what must his mind be like for him to create something like this."
Every vault before this had been 'magical' in nature, but the Architect's vault was purely mechanical, without a trace of magic except the fortification of stone and fail-safes in case someone tried to brute their way through the vault. Just the thought of someone turning the entire room into one huge lock mechanism.
". . . I don't know this level of lock-picking."
Believe it or not, he had ordered various locks to pick while doing extra research on Unlocking charms (he followed the same method he taught in DA), but this was another level — this was the level used in complicated safes and. . . vaults.
Quinn jumped down from the pedestal and put his hands to his sides.
"I suppose I need to learn how to pick safes now," he said while sighing but with a big smile on his face.
This was going to be different; he could feel it, and it made him excited all over again. He was going to learn something new, and that made his body fill up with giddiness.
"This is going to be grand."
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- (Scene Break) -
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The Golden Squad exited Hagrid's house after having a good long chat with the recently home half-Giant.
"He was in bad shape," said Hermione sighing.
Ron snorted in response, "Bad is saying it lightly. I'm pretty sure he had his ribs broken." Broken ribs weren't a severe injury in the magical world, but it was terrible anywhere if the injury was left unintended for days or yet more than a month, as in this case.
Hagrid's hair was matted with congealed blood, and his left eye had been reduced to a puffy slit amid a mass of purple-and-black bruises. There were many cuts on his face and hands, some of them still bleeding, and he was moving gingerly, which made Ron suspect broken ribs. It was evident that he had only just got home; a thick black traveling cloak lay over the back of a chair, and a haversack large enough to carry several small children leaned against the wall inside the door. They saw Hagrid himself, twice the size of a normal man and three times as broad, limped over to the fire and placing a copper kettle over it.
"We should inform Madam Pomfrey about him and tell her to heal him before Umbitch gets to him," said Ivy deciding the best course of action.
The other three nodded. Umbridge had been overbearing these days; it was like she was out looking for even the smallest things to blow them out of proportion.
"But to think that Voldemort has been going after Giants," said Harry, "I wondered why someone like that bastard was so quiet, but it seems he was trying to get the Giants to his side."
"Never knew that the Ministry was on a lookout for Portkeys," said Hermione. It took a month to get to the place where Giants lived, and because anyone associated with Dumbledore was being monitored, Hagrid couldn't take a Portkey to the location and had to physically travel there.
Hagrid had told them that when he, along with Maxime Olympe, had reached the largest tribe of Giants on this side of Europe — a total of eighty Giants.
There were hundreds of tribes of Giants dotting the entire world map, but because they lived in small groups, it wasn't feasible for Voldemort to send delegations to each tribe as giving gifts to every small tribe was too costly and required too much effort; that's why this eighty Giant tribe was the only attainable option and thus was the one where Dumbledore sent Hagrid and Maxime to.
Hagrid and Maxime presented the Giant chief, Karkus, with gifts to garner his and the tribe's support — Giants loved magic, but because they couldn't perform it, so they liked to collect magical items; Dumbledore had sent a branch of Everlasting fire to help them to keep warm in the winter and cook food. Other gifts included a goblin-made helmet for the chief of a battle-hungry race and a great roll of old dragon hide.
Unfortunately for the Order of Pheonix delegation, just when Karkus had finally sat down with them Hagrid and Maxime to listen to them, tragedy struck — Giants weren't meant to live in tribes with more than a dozen members, and it seemed like an outsider bearing gifts had offset turmoil in the large tribe as the very next night, there was great inner-fight in which a dozen Giants died along with Karkus, the chief.
Giants were a violent race and had no qualms about killing their fellow members over food, best sleeping spots near warm fires, women, and that's why Giant tribes weren't larger than a dozen Giants each as that was the highest number a deep mountain or forest could adequately provide for without inciting in-fighting.
The next day, a new chief was elected, Golgomath.
The new chief, it seemed, was on a power roll and wanted to assert dominance to consolidate his position as the head, as the moment Hagrid presented them with their final gift (a great roll of dragon skin), Hagrid and Maxime were captured and hung upside down. They only escaped because of Maxime Olympe whipping out her wand and injuring their captures before making a break for it.
That was the end of Hagrid's and Maxime's talk with the tribe, as Giants hated the wizardkind. The humans had been hunting Giants for a very long time and were one of the reasons why Giants had gone through a great thinning in population worldwide. The moment Maxime had used wanded magic, any chances of communication were closed.
And as Hagrid and Maxime hid in caves to heal themselves before heading out, they chanced upon the newly arrived Death Eater delegation. And they had sent a familiar face, Macnair, which was why Golgomath didn't hang them up on sight; the rest was handled by a series of gifts to appease and impress the new chief.
"In the end, Voldemort got the Giants' support," said Hermoine worriedly.
The four fell into silence as their minds turned in each's imagination of the repercussions of Giants falling into Voldemort's hands. Giants were hard to kill or even subdue.
"Hey, isn't that West there?" said Ron, breaking the silence as he pointed a short distance away from Hagrid's house.
Harry, Ivy, and Hermione turned to where Ron was pointing, and they saw Quinn leisurely walk out of the Forbidden Forest trees while stretching his hands over his head.
"Isn't he cold?" said Harry commenting on Quinn's attire; he only had a shirt and pair of pants on him, and they were already in peak snowing season.
Ivy raised her hand high and reached out to Quinn loudly, who stopped in his tracks and turned towards them. They say him raise his hand and wave back.
"How're you four doing today," said Quinn as both parties met halfway. His eyes went to where they previously stood and saw the smoke churning out of the hut's chimney, "Looks like Hagrid's back at Hogwarts. I suppose now that I'm here, I'll say hello to him."
"He has just returned," said Harry hiding a jump in his voice, "and is tired from his travels. . . we should probably leave him alone to settle back and rest; Hagrid did say that he wanted to get in a good nap in his own."
Hagrid's Giant adventure was a secret mission given to him by Dumbledore. It was wise if the news didn't spread, given Umbridge's close proximity to Dumbledore and Hagrid. Harry feared that if Quinn saw an injured Hagrid, the word would spread because they couldn't keep him quiet without telling him the reason behind the injuries.
"Is that so; then I'll just greet him when I see him in the Great Hall," said Quinn shrugging.
"Why aren't you wearing more clothes. It's freezing out here," said Harry changing the topic.
Quinn looked at his attire, and it was indeed not weather-appropriate, but on the other hand, he wasn't feeling cold right now, so he once again shrugged,
"I'm feeling fine now, but you're right. . . my clothes do seem out of place," he took out a wand and conjured a robe around his body, "do you guys feel comfortable now?"
The Golden Squad were confused, but they nodded.
"What were you doing on in the Forbidden Forest?" asked Ivy curiously.
Quinn tapped his pant pockets and smiled, "I was collecting a herb or two for making potions. Forbidden Forest is a great place to pick out some great herbs, and you know what the best part is; it's one hundred percent free."
The Golden Squad stared at the West heir, who was making a proud impression at saving money on potion ingredients.
'They seem to be buying it,' thought Quinn observing the Golden Squad. He couldn't tell them that he was stalking the magical wolf tribe that lived in the Forbidden Forest, watching them, their civilization, and their culture.
The clothes on his body were actually his transformed Noir-Suit, and he had, without any reason, turned them from a dark-forest camo to casual shirt and pants.
Last year, he had made plans to observe the tribe, and this year, he was executing them. His motive was to study the wolves and see if they held a clue to cure Lycanthropy in werewolves. They were the descendants of two Lycanthropy mating under the full moon in their werewolf forms. It was a good possibility that their unique birth could help solve Lycanthropy.
These wolves essentially had their human forms eliminated by birth, sure their intelligence came from the human side of their parents, but there were plenty of non-humanoid species with human-level intelligence. If these beings could have their human physical traits removed, why couldn't Lycanthrope be cured of their wolf aspects?
"So, did you guys inform Hagrid about Umbridge?" Quinn asked as they walked towards the castle as Quinn lazily waved his fake wand back and forth, shoveling snow out of their way.
"We did," said Harry, "Hagrid said that he has some interesting stuff planned for the year. . . I just hope Umbridge would find it interesting as well."
"I doubt it," said Ron scoffing with raging disdain. "She seemed chummy with that Grubbly-Plank lady; she'll try to make Hagrid's life difficult."
It was no secret that Ronald Weasley disliked the new Care for Magical Creatures' Professor. That dislike increased when Grubbly-Plank's inspection went surprisingly smoothly, with Umbridge being the least amount annoying she could be. Credit to Grubbly-Plank for being a good Professor and staying entirely out of politics.
"Speaking of. . ." Hermione jutted her chin forward, and the group looked up to see Umbridge standing in the Entrance Hall with a clipboard in her hand, scribbling things while looking around the Entrance Hall.
"What's she doing?" muttered Harry suspiciously.
"Some sort of inspections to find out. . . probably to undermine Dumbledore's upkeep ability of the school," Ivy garnered a guess as the group consciously turned into a different direction.
"But isn't she chummy with Filch?" asked Ron.
"This is Umbridge we are talking about; she won't hesitate a single second in betraying Filch; that woman is lower than a fleabag," said Harry with a nasty humph.
Filch, as few knew, was a Squib and thus couldn't use magic. Even though house-elves were excellent in upkeep, if Umbridge could find something directly related to Fudge, she could connect it back to Dumbledore and get him a demerit — a severe problem in these dire times. While Filch was in charge of cleaning, Dumbledore was in charge of Filch, and with Dumbledore's inability to retain a DADA Professor, it would seem like Dumbledore wasn't adequate in his role as the Headmaster.
"Ah, children, what might you be doing here, dears?"
The five stopped in their tracks, and four of them released groans and whines. They turned towards the High Inquisitor walking towards them with her stumpy legs, looking funny to Quinn, but he held back the smile, chuckle, laugh, and guffaw.
"What can we do for you, ma'am?" asked Quinn pleasantly, refusing to say the word Professor but still getting by just below the line.
Umbridge looked at Quinn up and down, and a sweet smile stretched over her human-like face. A shine of vigor shone in her eyes like a child finding her favorite candy.
"May I ask why aren't you in your school robes, Mr. West," said Umbridge.
"You may not," said Quinn shortly.
". . . You don't have your uniform on nor your outer robe."
"And there's nothing wrong with that."
"You're a student of Hogwarts, Mr. West," said Umbridge stressing her point.
"That I am," said Quinn smiling, "I'm even a sixth-year Prefect."
"That will be a detention, Mr. West," said Umbridge, smiling widely, giddy.
"As I said, I'm a Prefect, I know the rules," said Quinn smiling in return, "After classes for the day ends, students are no longer required to wear their uniforms. . . for reference, it's Policy Sec 1, Clause 1.5, Page 8."
He had memorized the rules years ago in case he was caught in some trouble and needed to weasel his way out. Umbridge reeled back in dissatisfaction. She, of course, hadn't bothered to read Hogwarts student rules and regulations.
"I'm the High Inquisitor—"
"And as I said before, you don't have the authority over the things you're trying to enforce. . . I expected more from the High Inquisitor," said Quinn non-chalantaly before clasping his hands in front, "Now, we'd leave you to the important work you're doing and leave as to not waste your time."
Quinn immediately walked away without waiting for a reply. The Golden Squad followed after a beat. They had heard that Quinn had shut down Umbridge, but this was the first time seeing him in action.
"That was a little weak," said Quinn in retrospection, "I could've gotten in a jab or two more; I will make sure to remember that for the next time."
The Golden Squad had no words for him except a strange sense of admiration and reverence.
Back in the Entrance Hall, Umbridge fumed in silence. She was getting angrier by the second. Her interactions weren't going well, and she was always on the losing front.
"Just because he's from a powerful family doesn't mean he can get away with this," said Umbridge, gritting her teeth. "He's just a kid. . . a naive, disciplinable rude brat," a glint appeared in her eyes, "he wants authority, then I will give him authority."
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Quinn West - MC - Bringing past projects to fruition.
FictionOnlyReader - Author - Mid-terms over!!!
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The link is also in the synopsis.
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EDUCATIONAL DECREE -> NO. TWENTY-FIVE
----------- By Order Of -----------
The High Inquisitor of Hogwarts
Broomsticks may not be flown on unless during AUTHORISED Quidditch practice.
The above is in accordance with Educational Decree Number Twenty- Five.
Signed:
Dolores Jane Umbridge
High Inquisitor
----------- Ministry of Magic -----------
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"What does this woman. . . toady-bitch(!) think she's doing?!" exclaimed Eddie along with the rest of the Ravenclaw Quidditch team, standing in the Ravenclaw common room with their housemates also reading the notice posted on the Ravenclaw house bulletin board.
The one line on the Decree-notice spoke many things.
First was obvious in the face interpretation that brooms were banned outside of Quidditch practices, which meant that anyone outside of Quidditch players wasn't allowed to fly a broom. Not being on the Quidditch team didn't mean that people didn't enjoy flying brooms; in fact, a large majority of Hogwarts had their personal brooms and flew them regularly with their friends playing casual-versions of Quidditch or even flew solo to spend some time alone in the sky. And many people who wanted to be on Quidditch teams practiced on their own time to get better so they could pass the try-outs.
The second interpretation was to the Quidditch teams. As the sentence stated, brooms were only allowed during Authorized Practices, which meant that teams could only fly their brooms when practicing in the stadium and not anywhere else. This was a tremendous detrimental as teams practiced as much if not more outside the stadium than inside the stadium. The stadium and the pitch were shared between four teams, and none thought that their time during Authorized Practice was enough. There were even some Quidditch team members (picture Eddie Carmichael) who practiced alone out of team practice.
"The bitch and Snape are clearly in bed together," said Eddie scathingly.
The Slytherin Quidditch team had by far the most Authorized Practice time because of Snape abusing his power and assigning them the Slytherin Quidditch team the pitch.
"Eww. . ." said Cho making a disgusted face. "Don't say that; I just imagined what it would be like." That triggered many people's imaginations, and they too made disgusted expressions and groans while glaring at Eddie.
That's when Quinn came down the dormitory stairs into the common room to see the crowd gathered around in front of the bulletin board.
"What is it? What happened?" asked Quinn as he walked to the front with his eyes on his pocket watch to see if he was running late.
"Umbitch did something stupid again," said Terry Boot, not holding back the hatred in his voice.
Quinn finally looked up and saw the Decree-notice on the bulletin board. The realization dawned on him.
"Ah, Umbridge's being petty," he said, "we got Quidditch back before she would've lacked — she prematurely lost one of the leverages to power — so she does this, huh. . . but I would've to say, that's a good petty-jab she got in — Quidditch still goes on, but she restricted broom-time, and because Ministry isn't happy about the Hogwarts' academic performance, we can't complain about," he smiled, "a move well played."
"Why in Morgana's saggy tits are you smiling," said Eddie, frustrated, "this isn't good, not good at all; you do understand that, right?"
Quinn shrugged his shoulders, "There's nothing we can do about this, you know? She, as the High Inquisitor, does have that authority. . . If you do want this to be fair — fairer — then find a way to convince Professor Flitwick, McGonagall, and Sprout to do something about Snape's scheduling tyranny — that's the only way you'll get your deserved practice time."
Quinn was obviously Pro-Umbridge-opposition, but he couldn't hold their hands on every problem they encountered. He neither had time nor motivation for moving against Umbridge on every little move she made. He was only going to move against significant actions that were a bit too much.
"I would suggest that you grab Marcus and have him plan something involving Potter, Diggory, the other captains, and Eddie if you can keep your mouth clean to lobby the Professors to stop Snape from abusing his authority," said Quinn and then look around, "where is Marcus?"
"He went down to Great Hall with Luna to eat," said Eddie.
"Get him good things to eat. . . you know, butter him up to provide him some incentive; that'll get him moving," said Quinn, patting Eddie on his shoulder before leaving the common room leaving the gathered Ravenclaw crowd behind.
Eddie turned to the said crowd and spoke, all of them looking back at him. "Well, you heard what he said. . . now, dish out some money; we'll need a lot of food."
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- (Scene Break) -
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December arrived, and it was yet another dull and inane Defense Against the Dark Arts lecture with "Professor" Umbridge "teaching" to the best of her ability, trying to impart "crucial" knowledge to the future of the British Isle's magical community by silently sitting and ordering her students to read an impractical book with pointless "ethical" jargon.
Umbridge looked up from her teacup filled with tea poured from a pink bottle-gourd-shaped flask; she smiled pleasantly at the silent class with only the sound of pages turning and notes being scribbled from her class of fifth-year Gryffindor and Hufflepuff.
"Memorize well, children," she said with a thin smile curling up, "I'll be taking a surprise test next week of all the things I have taught you till now."
" "Yes, Professor Umbridge," " said the students in unison like a group trained in synchronicity.
Harry Potter sat at the backbench of the classroom (a popular seat in Umbridge's classes), as far away from the pink menace as it was physically possible(the fat cow never got up from her chair), glaring at Umbridge with intense hate in his eyes. He was feeling very much resentful towards Umbridge, greater than he had ever felt towards the woman. This year, he enjoyed only two things at Hogwarts — DA and Quidditch — the woman, had sucked out all that made Hogwarts and left it feeling like a prison.
If someone beat him half to death, Harry would give partial credit to Umbridge for the inception of DA. The other thing being Quidditch — Umbridge had tried her best to take that away, and even though they were able to wrestle it back, she had imposed the petty Educational Decree Number Twenty- Five and threw a Bombarda into what seemed to be turning out to be a good season.
His temper had been on an all-time high at the start of the year and had subsided for a while was now back in full force, nay it was stronger than before.
And so he raised his hand.
Umbridge caught the raised hand and spoke with her "honey" dripping voice, "Yes, dear. What is it?"
"Are we going to be tested in our casting ability in this test," asked Harry plainly, hiding all his true behind a facade.
In the middle of the classroom, Hermione and Ivy were looking back towards the back seat at Harry with baffled expressions, wondering what Harry, who had not said a word in Umbridge's classes for three months, had raised his hand now.
Hermione hurriedly grabbed Ivy's sleeve and tugged it hard.
"Cast. . . cast a Cheering charm or something, hurry, quick, do it, do it, do it now before he does something stupid," she said.
But it was too late.
Umbridge's smile got wider as she said in reply, "No dear, as I've been saying, there's no need for all of you to be casting spells and charms, so why would you need to be tested in your ability—"
"Peter Pettigrew," said Harry.
The quiet classroom somehow became more quieter than it was before as the entire class of thirty held their breath.
"What?" asked Umbridge.
"Peter Pettigrew, a trusted Death Eater of Voldemort," everyone in the room showed varied reactions, "that man escaped his prison and is now on the run. . . the Ministry tried to find him, but they were unsuccessful. . . what if Peter Pettigrew came after me, how would you expect me to defend myself if I can't cast spells?"
All eyes turned to Umbridge, who stood up and leaned toward them, her stubby-fingered hands splayed on her desk.
"Why would he come after you—"
"Because he originally came after me. That day Voldemort killed my grandparents; they were after me," then he paused, "and I am the Boy-Who-Lived, the one defeated Voldemort—"
"Don't say that name!" said Umbridge, hissing.
Harry stood up. Everyone was staring at him; Seamus looked half-scared, half-fascinated.
"Harry mate, no!" Ron whispered in a warning voice, tugging at his sleeve, but Harry jerked his arm out of her reach.
"Voldemort is dead, according to the Ministry. What if Peter Pettigrew, a deranged Death Eater, who had been in the presence of dementors, decides to take revenge and come after me, the Boy-Who-Lived, who killed his master Voldemort, tried to kill me," said Harry with force.
"The Ministry will take care of—"
"Ministry hasn't been able to take 'care' of him for two years now; how am I supposed to feel safe after such a long time of ineptitude. How would I feel safe when a high-ranking Ministry employee such as yourself shivers at the name of a supposedly dead man."
"Detention, Mr. Potter!" said Umbridge; she was so furious that her entire face had turned red. "Tomorrow evening. Five o'clock. My office. The Ministry of Magic guarantees that you are not in danger from any Dark wizard. If you are still worried, by all means, come and see me outside class hours. If someone is alarming you with fibs about escaped Dark Wizard, I would like to hear about it. I am here to help. I am your friend. And now, you will kindly continue your reading."
Professor Umbridge sat down behind her desk again, and so did Harry; both were fuming in their chairs, red down to their necks. But after a while, Umbridge's face went blank. Then she said, in her softest, most sweetly girlish voice, "Come here, Mr. Potter, dear."
Harry kicked his chair aside, strode around Ron and up to the teacher's desk. He could feel the rest of the class holding its breath. He felt so angry he did not care what happened next.
Umbridge pulled a small roll of pink parchment out of her handbag, stretched it out on the desk, dipped her quill into a bottle of ink, and started scribbling, hunched over so that Harry could not see what she was writing. Nobody spoke. After a minute or so, she rolled up the parchment and tapped it with her wand; it sealed itself seamlessly so that he could not open it.
"Take this to Professor McGonagall, dear," said Professor Umbridge, holding out the note to him.
He took it from her without saying a word and left the room, not even looking back at Ron and Hermione, and slamming the classroom door shut behind him. He walked very fast along the corridor, the note to McGonagall clutched tight in his hand. When he reached her office, he rapped the door more aggressively than politely.
The door flew open, and McGonagall emerged from her office, looking grim and slightly harassed.
"What on earth was that rapping, Potter?" she snapped. "Why aren't you in class?"
"I've been sent to see you."
"Sent? What do you mean, sent?"
He held out the note from Umbridge. McGonagall took it from him, frowning, slit it open with a tap of her wand, stretched it out, and began to read. Her eyes zoomed from side to side behind their square spectacles as she read what Umbridge had written, and with each line, they became narrower.
"Come in here, Potter."
He followed her inside her study. The door closed automatically behind him.
"Well?" said Professor McGonagall, rounding on him. "Is this true?"
"Is what true?" Harry asked, rather more aggressively than he had intended. "Professor?" he added in an attempt to sound more polite.
"Is it true that you shouted at Professor Umbridge?"
"Yes."
"You called the Ministry inept."
"Yes."
"You told her that Peter Pettigrew might come to kill you."
"Yes."
McGonagall sat down behind her desk, frowning at Harry. Then she said, "Have a biscuit, Potter."
"Have — what?"
Have a biscuit," she repeated impatiently, indicating a tartan tin of cookies lying on top of one of the piles of papers on her desk. "And sit down."
There had been a previous occasion when Harry, expecting to be caned by McGonagall, had instead been appointed by her to the Gryffindor Quidditch team. He sank into a chair opposite her and helped himself to a Ginger Newt, feeling just as confused and wrong-footed as he had done on that occasion.
Professor McGonagall set down Professor Umbridge's note and looked very seriously at Harry.
"You had been very good, Potter. You had been good for more time than I thought you'd be," she said with a sigh, "I won't lie by saying that I didn't see this day coming."
Harry swallowed his mouthful of Ginger Newt and stared at her. Her tone of voice was not at all what he was used to; it was not brisk, crisp, and stern; it was low and somehow much more human than usual.
"What do you — ?"
"Potter, use your common sense," snapped McGonagall, with an
abrupt return to her usual manner. "You know where she comes from; you
must know to whom she is reporting."
The bell rang for the end of the lesson. Overhead and all-around came the elephantine sounds of hundreds of students on the move.
"It says here she's given you detention every evening this week, starting
tomorrow," Professor McGonagall said, looking down at Umbridge's note
again."
"Every evening this week!" Harry repeated, horrified. "But, Professor, couldn't you — ?"
"No, I couldn't," said Professor McGonagall flatly.
"But —"
"She is your teacher and has every right to give you detention. This happened inside her classroom, so I can't even cancel it. You will go to her room at five o'clock tomorrow for the first one. Just remember: Tread carefully around Dolores Umbridge."
"But I was telling the truth!" said Harry, outraged. "Wormtail could come after me; he was there that night, you know it, Professor Dumbledore knows it—"
"For heaven's sake, Potter!" said Professor McGonagall, straightening her glasses angrily (she had winced horribly when he had used Voldemort's name). "Do you really think this is about truth or lies? It's about keeping your head down and your temper under control!"
She stood up, nostrils wide and mouth very thin, and he stood too.
"Have another biscuit," she said irritably, thrusting the tin at him.
"No, thanks," said Harry coldly.
"Don't be ridiculous," she snapped.
He took one.
Thanks," he said grudgingly.
"Didn't you listen to Dolores Umbridge's speech at the start-of-term feast,
Potter?"
"Yeah," said Harry. "Yeah. . . she said. . . progress will be prohibited or. . . well, it meant that . . . that the Ministry of Magic is trying to interfere at Hogwarts."
Professor McGonagall eyed him for a moment, then sniffed, walked around her desk, and held open the door for him.
"Well, I'm glad you at least listened," she said, pointing him out of her office.
Harry got up with the biscuit in hand and headed towards the door.
"Oh, and Potter."
He turned back to McGonagall, "Yes?"
"She also you banned from Quidditch."
"WHAT?!"
.
- (Scene Break) -
.
Quinn sat in the Architect's vault, near a part of the wall. Above his hands floated a small replication of a portion of lock mechanism inside the vault's walls.
It turned out that when one could see the lock mechanism from the inside with every single piece visible, it got so much easier to figure out how things worked and moving which parts would get the mechanism to open up. In this case, Quinn could see everything as such; he had no problem replicating a miniature version of the lock mechanism inside into one of the models in his hands.
He then practiced on miniature hundreds of times to find the correct combination of moves he needed to make the first stone disc below the pedestal split and move to allow the pedestal to fall one level.
"Rinse and repeat for the remaining discs, and this will be over in a zilch," said Quinn with a smirk on his face and laugh in his voice, "Architect must not have thought that someone would go this deep into earth sensation, hehehe, I'm indeed one good challenger. . . Now, let's do this."
Quinn looked down at the miniature, and immediately, multiple parts started to move at once. Shafts moved, gears spun, links locked together, others snapped open, deadbolts snapped out of places — every piece served a purpose, and Quinn knew every single one of them.
"Click, clack, and another tick, tack," Quinn smiled as he did some fancy jazz hands, and with every small solve, two pullies with stone-linked chains pulled on the two sides of the miniature disc and pulled them apart.
"Voila~! That's how it's done!"
He twirled on the spot to celebrate and did the running man before transmuting the miniature back into a block of stone(he had the layout and dimensions memorized by heart) and threw the stone block into his pockets.
"Now, let me show you how it's done."
He placed his hands on the wall, exhaled deeply. His breath touched the wall as he closed his eyes and extended his magic into the stone. There was the usual fuzziness, but as Quinn adjusted his magic, his senses became clearer and clearer until he had the 'look' of precisely the same thing as the miniature.
"Time for some magic."
With the phrase, the magic began its charm. The grand pieces started to shift. The map in his mind shifted at the same time the actual gears inside the walls. The room vibrated, shook, trembled as the heavy stone pieces moved under the effects of Quinn's magic.
After a long series of shifts, turns, twists, pulls, pushes, and a wide range of motions, Quinn opened his eyes and moved away from the wall. He looked down the floor as a tremor moved from the wall inwards to the pedestal until everything stopped, and with a huge boom, the pedestal sunk in one level. Quinn immediately looked to another part of the wall and saw an archway portion retreat inside a few inches, setting of dust as more tremors settled inside the room.
"That's too many tremors, damn it," said Quinn after everything was over.
He smiled as he ran towards the newly revealed archway, but before he could even take a few steps, the teal ring on his hand abruptly glowed, making him stop in his track.
"What, what?"
Before he could form another thought, a stronger teal glowed from his back. Quinn's breath skipped a beat as he realized where the light was coming from. He immediately turned to see the murky-teal entrance to the vault shrinking on its self, and within mere seconds, the teal had vanished, leaving behind the same simple wall just like those everywhere in the vault.
"Oh, you've got to be kidding me!"
.
-*-*-*-*-*-
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Quinn West - MC - Not cool. Locked rooms are not cool!
Harry Potter - Boy-Who-Lived - The inheritor of the Potter temper.
Dolores Umbridge - Hem, Hem - Educational Decree, Detention, Ban. . .
Eddie Carmichael - Potty mouth - That day, he whispered tales of toads and snakes in many ears.
Marcus Belby - Food lover - What, what is this?! Why're you giving me all of this food?!
.
-*-*-*-*-*-
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