Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
from
Two sad white roses
13:10GMT
It's been so long, hasn't it? Exams took me by total storm...
I cancelled my subscription. £10 each month for a blog I hardly write in and people hardly read is a lot for someone like me. Me and my best friend talked things out, and I told her about my two years of built up frustration, and it worked out. Maybe in the future when I enter a depressive slum again I'll hand over my money, but for now, it's not worth it.
Goodbye!
-TSWR
from Nerd for Hire
Tropes get a bad rap—and it's not entirely unearned. When they're over-used, or used incorrectly, then they can make a story feel predictable and cliche, stealing the potential for surprise and discovery that pulls readers into a story and makes them eager to get to the end. Tropes can also end up being crutches for writers, preventing them from reaching for more imaginative and distinctive ideas. When archetypes are used in place of fully developed characters, those people in the story feel flat, lacking in the depth, personality, and realistic flaws that make a character feel like a real person the reader can relate to. There are also some tropes that perpetuate stereotypes when they're used uncritically. This can happen even when the trope or archetype isn't overtly negative—having a old, wise Asian sensei, for instance, both feels derivative and dehumanizes the character, reducing them to one-dimensional traits based on their demographic identity rather than allowing them to be unique, fully realized individuals.
But while they have a lot of potential pitfalls, tropes aren't inherently bad. They're a tool in the writer's toolbox and, like any tool, whether they're effective depends on how you use them. Especially for writers in genres like romance, cozy mystery, fairy tales, or space opera, readers expect to see certain tropes employed in a story, and if they're not present at all that can leave those readers disappointed. Some genres are defined by their tropes and a story doesn't really qualify for that label unless it includes certain conventions. For something to qualify as “bad boy romance”, for example, it needs to have an innocent and rule-abiding protagonist, a rebellious and edgy love interest, and an ending where they're together and live HEA: happy ever after (or are at least HFN: happy for now).
Tropes can still be a useful tool in genres where they're more optional. I would say this is especially true for short fiction writers. When you're working under a word count constraint, employing a trope can serve as a useful shorthand to convey ideas to the reader without taking up much space on the page. It comes down to understanding where and how to deploy tropes, and how to balance them with more original details so the story’s not just a rehashing of something they’ve see a hundred times before. Here are some of the rules I follow when I'm integrating tropes into my writing.
The problem with dropping unaltered tropes into stories is that readers are familiar with them, and that makes them predictable. This familiarity is also a strength of the trope, however, because they quickly convey baseline expectations for what the reader will get out of the story. As the author, you can then either embrace or subvert these expectations—you don't need to follow the whole formula that comes along with the trope you're utilizing, but starting from the trope gives you a foundation to either build off of or push back against, turning it into a source of forward momentum.
I think cooking metaphors often apply well to writing, and in this case I think of it like one of those semi-homemade recipes. If you want to make spaghetti and meatballs, you could do the whole thing from scratch—make and roll out the pasta, cook down fresh tomatoes for the sauce, grind up your own meat, etc. That version has the potential to taste the best, but it's going to take a long time, and requires some skills and tools that not every home cook has. On the other side, the fastest way to put the meal together is to boil a box of pasta then heat up some frozen meatballs in a pot of jarred sauce. That's the easiest way to do things, but you'll sacrifice some flavor. For most people, the best option is a middle ground. Maybe you buy pre-ground meat but season it and form the balls yourself, or you start from a jar of pasta sauce but add some fresh herbs and seasoning.
This same concept can apply to writing from tropes. You could come up with every single character, location, and plot point entirely from scratch, but that's going to take a lot more effort that may or may not end up being worth it for the story. The more efficient option is often to focus on fully developing the story’s most interesting aspects, then taking a “semi-homemade” approach for the rest. So let's say you're writing a high fantasy story, and you've come up with an original magic system that's the core, unique aspect of your world. Instead of building the setting where you'll put that magic system from scratch, you can pick your favorite from common fantasy location tropes and adapt it to your story's needs—the writing equivalent of adding garlic and herbs to a jarred sauce to make it your own.
I'd call character archetypes a sub-category of tropes. It's the same basic idea, where you're using a common set of patterns, just applied to a type of character instead of broadly to other aspects of the story. A common issue you'll hear with using archetypes for characters is that they're less interesting and don't feel as fully realized as more unique and original characters. And while that is a problem with your protagonist, that can actually be an advantage for the other characters that populate your story. If your background characters are too interesting or well-developed, then they can pull the reader's focus and end up competing with your primary characters for attention. Using archetypes lets you quickly create characters the reader will recognize, and also sends a signal that the character is solely functional and not intended to be someone the reader gets too invested in.
Now, this doesn't mean you just want to copy-paste an archetype into your story. You often still want to do a little tweaking in that “semi-homemade” spirit I mentioned above. This could mean giving them a couple of unique physical traits, a specific accent or speaking pattern, or something else that links them firmly into your story's world. But when it comes to big-picture things like their personality and motivations, you can let the archetype do the heavy lifting.
The question, of course, is which characters in your story to develop fully and which are fine to leave as archetypes. With some, it's easy to tell. I already mentioned that the main characters should be three-dimensional. You can use an archetype as the frame, but will want to do some significant work beyond this, personalizing how the character looks, acts, and thinks, and giving them the complexity and layers that make them feel like a real individual. On the other end, any characters who only exist in the background or to move the plot forward are obvious archetype contenders.
The ones that can be the trickiest to determine the correct level of development for are secondary characters—the ones who aren't the main focus of the story, but do have an impact on the narrative or emotional arc. It usually makes sense to develop a few of these figures beyond the flat archetype level, but exactly how many and to what extend will often depend on the story. If you're writing a short story, for instance, you probably don't have space to really flesh out more than 3-4 characters, so if your story's cast list is bigger than this, you'll likely be best served by keeping the rest as flatter archetypes. On the other hand, if you're writing a multi-book fantasy series, having a broad array of fully developed characters can give the reader more to keep them invested in the story. A common approach here is to introduce secondary characters as archetypes then gradually layer in more depth as the story calls for it.
I mentioned in the intro that there are some genres that depend on their tropes. Readers of certain types of books expect specific things from stories. This doesn't mean you as a writer always need to hit every single one of those points, but if you don't hit any of them, then you're not living up to the expectations of the genre. A shifter romance must include at least one character that transforms into another animal or creature, and end with an HEA or HFN. If it's missing either of those elements, most would argue the genre label is inaccurate. The same goes for something like solarpunk. It requires the use of sustainable technology and a focus on commual over individualistic problem-solving. A story lacking those elements is probably better classified as another subgenre of sci-fi.
Many of the tropes associated with specific genres or subgenres directly tie into those key elements. This makes them an efficient shorthand to fill in details of the story that aren't central to the plot or character arcs. So for instance, if you're writing a solarpunk story, you send an immediate genre signal if it’s set it in a solar-powered city where skyscrapers have been repurposed into vertical gardens. Are those things solarpunk readers have seen before? Absolutely—and that's the point. Not every element of the story needs to be unique. Using tropes as needed lets you focus your creativity on the specific details you want the reader to focus on. It also gives you more freedom to do things that are unexpected or defy genre conventions because the tropes you’ve employed anchor the story to teh genre’s traditions.
These ideas also aren't exclusive to the genres they're associated with. You can use these genre-coded tropes to bring the spirit of a genre to a story, even if you're not fully writing within that tradition. When you take this approach, it can actually make the trope more interesting than when you find it in its expected turf. If you're writing gothic fiction and the story is set in an isolated, run-down estate that harbors family secrets, that's nothing particularly noteworthy—that's the set-up and setting for a lot of stories in the genre. But if you transport this trope into a genre where it's less common, then it becomes more interesting by virtue of its unexpectedness. Maybe that means having space adventurers dock on an obsolete and ominous space station, bringing a gothic flair to a space opera, or you could plop this mansion down on the outskirts of a Shire-like fantasy utopia.
The point here is, while there are some universal tropes, many of them have a link to a specific type of fiction. Because of that, the way they'll be perceived by readers will vary depending on the context, and you can use that to your advantage if you take the time to understand this link.
See similar posts:
#Tropes #Genre #WritingAdvice
from Faucet Repair
20 May 2026
Upper crust (working title): rubber ducks becoming animated towards a source/void. That began as a plug. I've been pretty stuck on a Graham Little gouache on paper painting from 2021 of a squirrel called Untitled (Squirrel) this week. Apparently he found a dead squirrel while cycling and kept it in his freezer for three years.
In the work the animal is on the left of the composition encircled by its own tail, peacefully at some kind of rest. There's a transparent triangle shape floating over or on part of the squirrel, looks like something cut out from one of those geometry templates required for high school math classes. It's connected by two thin lines pulled taut across the work that criss-cross into a little cluster of smaller triangles connected to tiny trompe-l'oeil nails; the effect is something like miniature barricade tape. Then just above those, there are sort of clumsily calligraphic marks that wind their way up to an ornamental glass object with a pine cone looking head that might be a stirrer or needle or pin. The feeling of the whole thing is something close to what I remember from seeing the Pietà in Rome. Delicacy in death. That's a heck of a comparison, I know, but it's the first thing that came to mind. Dürer's watercolors of animals too, of course.
Anyway, these ducks I went for were not destined for that kind of accuracy. There's been a desire recently to create a kind of generative soup, boil it, and then catch the bubbles before they pop to comprise the image. But I have to be careful not to create this environment for no reason. It could be that the next one causes a counter-reaction through rendering.
from Faucet Repair
18 May 2026
Some bits to get down from the most recent courthouse crit group: containment, levels of estrangement, Hallmark card framing, octogenarian colors, Bonnard's pocket calendar, Allen Ginsberg: return to the optical, fuddy-duddy speed, head swims, I own a human skeleton, tiny canvas big brush, In the Night Kitchen, elephant-wise.
from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter One: The Room That Remembered Too Much
Before the first bell rang over Hogwarts, Jesus knelt alone in the Defense Against the Dark Arts classroom with His hands resting open on the worn stone floor. Dawn had not yet reached the high windows, and the castle breathed in the dark like something old that had carried too many secrets. The desks stood in uneven rows, the suits of armor along the wall were still, and the portraits outside the corridor whispered less than usual, as if they knew the room had changed. Jesus prayed quietly, not with hurry and not with display, while the torches burned low beside Him. On the teacher’s desk, a roll of parchment lay unopened beneath a silver paperweight shaped like a shield. Someone had written the words Defense Curriculum in sharp ink across the front, but Jesus had not touched it yet.
By breakfast, nearly every student in the Great Hall already knew that the new Defense teacher was not a wizard anyone recognized. No one had seen Him arrive by carriage, broom, Floo powder, or Portkey. He had simply been there at sunrise, walking across the frost-bright courtyard in plain dark clothing with no wand visible and no trunk following behind Him. A fifth-year Ravenclaw near the far end of the hall had whispered that Jesus as the new Defense Against the Dark Arts teacher at Hogwarts sounded like the sort of thing someone would invent after too much pumpkin juice, but the whisper still passed from table to table until even the candles above them seemed to lean closer. The teachers did not laugh. Professor McGonagall sat very straight in her chair, watching Him with a look that was not suspicion, but recognition touched by concern.
The trouble had started the night before with a door no student was supposed to open. It was not the Chamber of Secrets, not the Room of Requirement, and not any passage marked on the oldest maps passed around in dormitories after lights-out. It was a narrow service door behind a cracked statue of a knight holding a broken spear near the Defense corridor, where the stone wall sweated in winter and the torches always hissed even when no draft moved through the castle. Three students had found it because Mira Vale had been crying behind the statue and did not want anyone in Gryffindor Tower to hear her. She had not meant to discover anything. She had only wanted a place where the sound of her own breathing did not feel like proof that she was weak.
Mira was fifteen, small for her age, and known for answering questions in class before anyone else had finished understanding them. She came from a family that had spent generations producing skilled spell-makers, curse-breakers, and Ministry examiners who wrote their names as if the ink itself should bow. Her older brother had been Head Boy. Her mother still sent letters folded in perfect thirds, each one asking about marks before asking about Mira herself. The last letter had arrived with a clipped note about excellence, discipline, and reputation, and Mira had read it three times beside the lake before tearing the corner off by accident. Later, when she found herself standing near that broken statue, the phrase the quiet mercy that waits behind locked doors came into her mind from a story someone had shared in the common room, though she did not yet know why it stayed with her.
She was not alone for long. Ellis Crowe, a Slytherin sixth-year with a prefect badge he wore like a warning, had come down the corridor carrying two books and a face full of anger he was trying to make look like boredom. Behind him came Tavin Brock, a Hufflepuff keeper with bruised knuckles from Quidditch practice and a kindness he hid under jokes because kindness was too easy to mock. None of them were friends. They had all chosen the same hallway for different reasons, which was often how Hogwarts arranged its most dangerous moments. The castle had a way of pulling people toward the place where they least wanted to be seen.
Mira wiped her face too quickly when she heard footsteps. Ellis noticed, because Ellis always noticed anything that gave him advantage, and Tavin noticed too, because he had learned to notice pain without naming it out loud. Before any of them could pretend the moment had not happened, the cracked statue shifted with a grinding sound. The spear in the knight’s stone hand lowered by itself and pointed at the wall. A seam appeared in the stones behind it, thin as a cut. Cold air slipped through the gap, and somewhere behind the wall, a child’s voice laughed once in a way that made none of them want to move closer.
“Absolutely not,” Tavin said, though he took one step forward.
Ellis narrowed his eyes at the door. “That is the sort of sentence people say right before someone else finds out what they were too frightened to learn.”
Mira hated that her voice shook. “Don’t open it.”
Ellis looked at her then, and the anger he had been carrying shifted into something sharper. “Why? Are you afraid it knows your exam scores?”
Tavin turned on him. “Leave her alone.”
The door opened before Ellis touched it. Darkness stood on the other side, but it was not empty darkness. Something inside moved like ink poured slowly through water. The air smelled of old parchment, rain on stone, and extinguished candles. On the floor just beyond the threshold sat a book large enough to cover a desk. Its cover was black leather with no title, and across the front ran a strip of dull metal etched with names too small to read from the hall. The pages rustled though no hand turned them. Mira should have run then. All three of them should have run, but shame has a strange pull when it believes the answer to its pain may be hidden nearby.
Ellis stepped over the threshold first. Tavin cursed under his breath and followed because leaving him alone seemed worse. Mira hesitated until the book opened by itself and stopped on a page where her full name appeared in red-brown ink. Mira Vale. The letters stretched like they had been written by someone who knew her hand better than she did. Under her name, a sentence began to form. She moved before she could think, crossing into the narrow chamber and grabbing for the page. The moment her fingers touched the parchment, the door slammed behind them.
By the time they forced it open again, nearly an hour had passed, though none of them could explain where the time had gone. The book was still inside. The chamber was empty except for a single tall mirror covered by a black cloth. None of them remembered seeing it when they first entered, and none of them admitted that to the others. Mira had ink on her fingers that would not wash off. Ellis had a thin cut across his palm shaped like a word no one could read. Tavin had forgotten his little sister’s name for seven terrifying minutes and then remembered it while sitting on the corridor floor with his head in his hands. They agreed to tell no one, which was the first lie the book took from them.
The next morning, the book appeared in the Defense classroom before the first lesson. It lay closed on the teacher’s desk beneath the silver shield paperweight, right where Jesus had seen the curriculum parchment before prayer. No one had carried it there. No spell trail shimmered around it. No house-elf had entered the room. The book simply waited, silent and heavy, as the third-year class filed in whispering about the new professor and the fifth-years lingered near the corridor pretending they had no reason to be interested. The Defense room had always carried the memory of difficult teachers, dangerous lessons, and old fear, but that morning the stones seemed to listen with a new kind of dread.
Mira saw the book when she passed the open doorway on her way to Charms. Her stomach tightened so hard she nearly dropped her satchel. Ellis was farther down the corridor, speaking to two other Slytherins in a low voice, but his eyes found the desk at once. Tavin came last, still tying his tie wrong, and stopped so suddenly that a second-year bumped into his back. None of them spoke. The book did not open. That made it worse.
Inside the classroom, Jesus stood beside the desk and watched the students take their seats. He did not touch the book. He did not pretend it was not there. He looked at each student as if He had known them long before they learned to raise wands, and the room grew quieter under the weight of being seen without being exposed. A Gryffindor boy in the second row lifted his hand before thinking better of it. Jesus gave him a small nod.
“Sir,” the boy said, glancing at the desk, “is that part of the lesson?”
Jesus looked at the book. “Not the lesson I brought.”
A few students shifted. Someone near the back gave a nervous laugh that died quickly.
Jesus rested one hand on the back of the chair nearest Him. “There are things in this castle that offer knowledge without love. When knowledge comes without love, it does not heal. It accuses, tempts, and binds.”
The students looked from Him to the book. Many of them had been taught that Defense Against the Dark Arts meant counter-curses, shields, quick reflexes, and knowing the names of things that wanted to kill you. They had not expected the new teacher to speak as if the first danger was not outside them, but already pressing on the sore places within. The torches brightened along the walls without a spell. In one of the portraits by the door, an old witch stopped pretending to sleep and opened both eyes.
Jesus turned to the class. “Put your wands on your desks.”
No one moved at first. Hogwarts students were not used to being asked to let go of their wands in a Defense classroom. A thin blond boy tightened his grip. A girl with ink stains on her cuffs looked ready to argue. Then the smallest student in the front row set his wand down with a soft tap. One by one, others followed, until the room was full of quiet wood touching old desktops.
Jesus said, “Today you will learn the difference between being defended and being hardened.”
Out in the corridor, Mira heard those words and felt something inside her resist them. She did not want a lesson. She wanted the ink gone from her fingers and the memory of her name forming on the page erased from her mind. She wanted her mother’s next letter to say something gentle without being asked. She wanted to be the kind of person who did not cry behind statues. Most of all, she wanted no one to discover what the book had begun to write beneath her name before she tore the page.
Ellis moved beside her, too close to ignore. “We need to get it back.”
Tavin stared through the doorway. “Are you mad? It followed us into a classroom.”
“That is why we need to get it back,” Ellis said. His voice stayed low, but the strain beneath it had become harder to hide. “Before he opens it in front of everyone.”
Mira looked at Jesus. He was speaking to the third-years now, asking them what fear promised when it came dressed as wisdom. No one had ever taught Defense that way. No one had ever made the room feel less like a place where students performed bravery and more like a place where false bravery could finally stop pretending. The book remained closed, but Mira knew it was not sleeping. She could feel the ink on her fingers warming, as if the hidden page had started remembering her again.
“We should tell someone,” Tavin said.
Ellis gave him a look. “You can. I am sure everyone would love to hear how you forgot your sister’s name after sneaking into a cursed room.”
Tavin’s face changed. It was not anger first. It was fear. Ellis saw that he had struck something real, and for one second regret moved across his face before pride covered it.
Mira stepped between them. “Stop.”
Ellis looked away. “Fine. But if that teacher reads it, whatever is in there becomes his.”
“You don’t know that,” Tavin said.
“No,” Ellis answered. “I know worse. It showed me enough.”
The bell rang, and the corridor filled with movement. Students spilled around them toward Charms, Potions, Transfiguration, and the long staircase that liked to change direction when people were already late. Mira let the crowd carry her because standing still would make her visible. As she passed the Defense doorway, Jesus looked up. His eyes met hers for only a moment. He did not call her out. He did not ask what she knew. He simply looked at her hand, where the ink had crept under the edge of her sleeve, and then back to her face.
Mira almost stopped. Something in that look made her feel as if she could tell the truth and not be destroyed by it. That frightened her more than being caught. She lowered her eyes and hurried after the others, while behind her the Defense classroom door closed softly, not with the cold slam of the hidden chamber, but with the quiet sound of mercy refusing to make a spectacle of a wounded child.
Charms passed in a blur. Professor Flitwick taught a revision lesson on Shield Charms, and Mira performed the spell perfectly on the first try. Her shield shimmered clear and strong, earning three points for Ravenclaw, yet the praise landed on her like a stone dropped into deep water. Across the room, Tavin’s shield flickered every time someone said the word sister. Ellis, who should not have been in that class but had been assigned a make-up practical for reasons he did not explain, cast with unusual force and shattered a teacup before anyone had asked him to defend against it. Flitwick blinked at the broken china and opened his mouth, but Ellis repaired it so quickly that the professor only sighed.
By lunch, rumors had changed shape three times. Some said the new Defense teacher had no wand because he had broken it in a duel and did not need one anymore. Others said he had been brought in by the Headmistress because something old had awakened under the school. A first-year insisted that Jesus had looked at a Boggart cabinet and the Boggart refused to come out. That story spread fastest because it was impossible to prove and too satisfying to ignore. Hogwarts loved fear when fear became entertainment, which was one of the reasons the book had found such easy ground.
Mira sat at the Ravenclaw table with her sleeves pulled down over her hands. She could not eat. The enchanted ceiling showed a pale winter sky, and snow tapped softly against the high windows though it had not begun falling on the grounds. She watched the teachers’ table from beneath her lashes. Jesus sat between McGonagall and Professor Sinistra, listening more than speaking. He had bread on His plate and a cup of water by His hand. No one seemed to know what to do with a teacher who did not fill silence.
An owl dropped a letter beside Mira’s plate. She knew the handwriting before it landed. The seal was blue wax pressed with the Vale family crest, a wand crossed over an open eye. Her throat tightened. For a moment she thought of pushing it away, but the Ravenclaw girl beside her glanced at it with polite curiosity, and pride made Mira break the seal. The letter contained six lines. Her mother had heard that Defense Against the Dark Arts would be handled by an unusual instructor this term. Mira was to observe carefully, maintain discipline, and remember that unusual instruction was no excuse for emotional distraction. The final line said, Your brother never allowed changes at school to affect his performance.
Mira folded the letter so carefully that the paper nearly tore. Her fingers trembled, and the ink stain beneath her sleeve pulsed once like a second heartbeat. She looked toward the teachers’ table without meaning to. Jesus was not looking at her. He was speaking quietly to McGonagall, but His hand rested open beside His cup, palm upward, the same way He had prayed in the classroom before dawn. Mira hated that the sight steadied her.
At the Slytherin table, Ellis had his own problem. A folded scrap of parchment had appeared under his plate with one sentence written in the same red-brown ink as the book. Tell them before I do. He closed his hand over it so quickly that pumpkin juice spilled across the table. The student beside him complained, but Ellis did not hear. He looked toward the Defense corridor as if distance could stop what had already entered him. On his palm, the cut shaped like a word had darkened. It now looked less like a wound and more like handwriting.
Tavin noticed from the Hufflepuff table. He had spent the morning trying to remember every detail about his little sister just to prove the book had not kept part of her. Her name was Lottie. She liked licorice wands, hated thunder, and once cried because a garden gnome looked lonely after being thrown over the fence. He repeated these facts silently while eating shepherd’s pie he could barely taste. Then, for half a breath, he forgot the color of her eyes. Panic struck him so hard that he stood up, knocking his bench backward.
The Great Hall went quiet in uneven waves. Tavin stared at nothing. His mouth moved, but no sound came out. His friends tugged at his sleeve, whispering his name. Ellis looked down. Mira gripped her folded letter. At the teachers’ table, several professors rose at once, but Jesus had already begun walking between the house tables. He did not hurry, yet no one seemed able to get there before Him.
He stopped a few steps from Tavin. “Look at me.”
Tavin tried. His face had gone pale.
Jesus spoke gently. “What was taken from you for a moment was not lost to God.”
Tavin’s breathing hitched. “I can’t remember.”
“Yes, you can,” Jesus said. “Do not chase it in fear. Receive it in peace.”
The hall stayed silent. Even the owls in the rafters seemed to hold still. Jesus stepped closer and placed one hand lightly on Tavin’s shoulder, not as a performance and not as a spell. Tavin closed his eyes. For a moment nothing happened. Then his face broke with relief.
“Brown,” he whispered. “Her eyes are brown.”
Jesus nodded once. “And she is not yours to protect by fear alone.”
Tavin looked ashamed that so many people had heard him. Jesus did not add to it. He turned slightly, and the attention in the room seemed to loosen, as if everyone remembered at the same time that staring at someone’s pain was not the same as caring for him. Professor McGonagall’s face remained stern, but her eyes had softened. She instructed the hall to return to lunch with such firm precision that forks and cups began moving at once.
Mira watched Jesus return to the teachers’ table. Something had happened without a wand, but it did not feel like magic as she knew it. Magic pushed, pulled, changed, lifted, hid, revealed, transformed. This had not pushed anything. It had restored something by refusing to panic before it. That was harder to understand. Mira looked down at her stained fingers and wondered whether whatever had started writing her secrets could be stopped by someone who did not fear knowing them.
After lunch, the three of them met in the corridor outside the Defense classroom because avoiding one another had become impossible. Snow showed through the windows now, falling thick over the courtyard and softening the edges of the stone walls. Students hurried past with scarves half-tied and books hugged to their chests. The castle smelled of wet wool, candle smoke, and the faint metallic scent that always came before moving staircases changed direction. Mira stood nearest the door, Ellis leaned against the wall like he had chosen indifference as a posture, and Tavin kept touching his temple as if checking that his memories were still there.
“We have to tell him,” Tavin said.
Ellis laughed once without humor. “You are very eager to kneel in confession before a stranger.”
“He helped me.”
“He saw weakness and used the right words.”
Tavin’s jaw tightened. “You know that is not what happened.”
Mira looked toward the closed classroom door. “What did the book show you?”
Ellis’s face hardened so fast that the question seemed to hit armor. “Nothing.”
“That’s a lie,” she said.
“Careful, Vale.”
She was tired enough not to be careful. “You keep acting like you are the only one who has something to lose. It wrote my name too.”
Tavin looked at her hand. “What did it write?”
Mira pulled her sleeve lower. “I tore the page before I could read all of it.”
Ellis’s eyes sharpened. “You tore a page out of it?”
“I tried.”
“Where is it?”
“I don’t know. It turned to ash.”
Ellis pushed himself off the wall. “That is why it came after us. You damaged it.”
Mira felt heat rise in her face. “You opened the door.”
“It opened itself.”
“You walked in.”
“So did you.”
Tavin stepped between them again, though this time his voice was quieter. “Listen to yourselves. That thing is doing something to us already.”
The Defense classroom door opened. None of them had heard footsteps inside. Jesus stood in the doorway, the light from the torches behind Him touching the edges of His plain dark coat. The book was no longer on the desk where the class had seen it. For one terrible second, Mira thought it had vanished again. Then she saw it on a small table behind Him, bound closed with a strip of ordinary linen.
Jesus looked at the three of them. “Come in.”
Ellis did not move. “Are we in trouble?”
“Yes,” Jesus said, and the answer was so simple that Ellis blinked. “But not only the kind you mean.”
Tavin entered first. Mira followed because the hallway suddenly felt too exposed. Ellis waited long enough to make clear that he was choosing, not obeying, and then stepped inside. The door closed behind them. The classroom was empty except for the four of them, the book, the desks, and the long winter light pressing against the windows. Jesus did not sit behind the teacher’s desk. He took a chair from the front row, turned it slightly, and sat where a student might sit.
Mira did not expect that. Neither did Ellis. Teachers stood when they corrected you. They used desks like walls and authority like height. Jesus sat at their level, but the room did not feel less serious. If anything, it felt more serious because He had removed every excuse they might have used to turn the moment into a battle of rank.
Jesus looked at the linen-bound book. “Tell me how it found you.”
Ellis crossed his arms. “Shouldn’t you already know?”
Jesus turned His eyes to him. “There is a difference between knowing and forcing truth from a person before he is ready to speak it.”
Ellis looked away first.
Tavin told most of it. He stumbled in places, especially when describing the moment he forgot Lottie’s name, but he kept going. Mira added the part about the page with her name and the ink that would not wash away. Ellis said very little until Jesus asked about his hand. Then he held it out with visible reluctance. The cut had formed clearer lines since lunch. It now spelled a word in narrow red script.
Coward.
Mira felt her anger toward him loosen before she could stop it. Tavin stared at the floor.
Jesus looked at Ellis’s palm for a long moment. “Who called you that first?”
The question struck harder than accusation would have. Ellis closed his hand. “No one.”
Jesus waited.
Ellis’s shoulders rose and fell once. “My father does not use words like that. He uses silence.”
Mira thought of her mother’s letters and felt the ink beneath her sleeve burn. Tavin rubbed one thumb across the edge of his sleeve, and she wondered what fear his family had placed in him without meaning to. The room had become too honest. The book sat on the table, bound in linen, but the true pages seemed to be opening among them.
Jesus said, “The darkness in that book did not create your wounds. It found them.”
Mira swallowed. “Can it show everyone?”
“It wants to.”
“Can it?” Ellis asked.
Jesus looked at him. “Not without agreement.”
Ellis frowned. “We didn’t agree to anything.”
“You crossed the threshold. You touched what promised power over shame. You chose secrecy afterward. Darkness often enters through smaller agreements than people expect.”
Mira wanted to defend herself. She wanted to say she had been frightened, that the door had opened by itself, that Ellis had gone first, that no one had explained the rules of cursed hidden rooms behind broken statues. But as soon as the arguments formed, she knew they were not the whole truth. She had stayed because her name was on the page. She had reached for it because part of her wanted to know what it knew. The thought made her feel exposed.
Tavin’s voice was rough. “How do we break the agreement?”
Jesus looked at the book again. “Truth breaks one part. Mercy breaks another. But pride will try to keep both out.”
Ellis gave a bitter smile. “That sounds convenient. We confess, and then what? Everyone sees us differently?”
“Some may,” Jesus said. “But they do not hold your life.”
Mira looked at Him. “You make that sound easy.”
“No,” He said. “I make it true.”
The words settled slowly. Outside, snow struck the window in soft bursts, and the castle groaned as wind moved around the towers. Somewhere overhead, students laughed on a staircase. Life continued around the room as if their world had not narrowed to one cursed book and three frightened students sitting before a teacher who did not need a wand to make them tremble.
Jesus stood and walked to the small table. He untied the linen. The book did not move at first. Then its cover flexed like something breathing. Mira stepped back. Tavin gripped the edge of a desk. Ellis lifted his chin, but his face had gone pale.
The book opened.
Pages turned violently, faster and faster, filling the room with a dry rushing sound. Names flashed past in red-brown ink, not only theirs but others too. Students. Teachers. Former teachers. Names Mira recognized from old trophies, detention records, and portraits. The book had been feeding a long time. It stopped on a blank page. Then three lines appeared.
Mira Vale fears she is loved only when she succeeds.
Tavin Brock believes love means never failing anyone.
Ellis Crowe would rather be feared than found wanting.
Mira could not breathe. Tavin made a small sound and covered his face. Ellis stepped forward with sudden rage, reaching for the book as if he could rip the page out by force. Jesus caught his wrist. He did not grip hard, but Ellis could not move another inch.
“Do not strike what has named your wound,” Jesus said.
Ellis’s voice shook. “Then what do I do?”
“Let it be healed.”
Ellis looked at Him with fury and humiliation tangled together. “You say things like healing is not a knife.”
Jesus did not release his wrist. “Sometimes it feels like one because the lie has grown around the hurt.”
Mira expected Ellis to pull away, but he did not. His eyes shone in a way he clearly hated. Tavin lowered his hands. The page remained open, the ink wet and gleaming. Then another sentence began forming beneath the first three.
Bring the school to the Mirror Room by moonrise, or I will read every hidden thing aloud.
The classroom grew colder. The torches bent toward the book as if air were being drawn into it. Jesus released Ellis and placed His hand flat on the open page. The ink hissed. A dark stain spread beneath His palm, then stopped.
“You will not shepherd children with shame,” Jesus said.
For the first time, the book answered. Its voice came from the pages and the walls together, soft and papery and old. “They belong to what they hide.”
Jesus looked down at it. “No.”
The single word filled the room without being loud. The desks trembled. The portraits in the hall fell silent. Mira felt the ink on her fingers cool for the first time since the hidden chamber. Tavin’s breathing steadied. Ellis stepped back as if something inside him had been pulled from the edge of a cliff.
The book slammed shut under Jesus’ hand. The linen wrapped itself around the cover again, but this time the cloth darkened where it touched the leather. Jesus lifted it without strain and carried it to the teacher’s desk. When He turned back to the three students, His face held sorrow, not fear.
“It will try another way,” He said.
Mira found her voice. “What do we do?”
Jesus looked at each of them in turn. “You begin by telling the truth you are most afraid will make you unloved.”
None of them spoke. The task sounded impossible. It would have been easier to learn a counter-curse in a dead language or face a monster with a name from a textbook. A monster could be pointed at. A spell could be practiced. This required standing where the book had already wounded them and refusing to let the wound rule them.
Ellis looked toward the door. “And if we don’t?”
Jesus’ answer was quiet. “Then the book will keep choosing the hour.”
A long silence followed. Mira felt the folded letter from her mother in her pocket. She could almost hear the exact tone of disappointment that would come if her family knew she had been caught in a cursed room, tangled in something dark, unable to handle herself with the clean brilliance expected of a Vale. Yet beneath that fear was another one, older and harder to admit. She was afraid that if she failed loudly enough, the people who claimed to love her would not know what to do with her. She was afraid love in her family had always been a prize, not a place.
Tavin spoke first. “I’ll tell Professor Sprout.”
Ellis looked at him sharply.
Tavin kept his eyes on Jesus. “Not everything. Not in the Great Hall. But I’ll tell her I’m scared, and I’ll tell her why I panicked at lunch.”
Jesus nodded. “That is a true beginning.”
Mira pressed her stained fingers into her palm. “I don’t know who to tell.”
Jesus said, “You may start with the one person before whom you are already known.”
She looked at Him. “You?”
“I will listen,” He said. “But I was not speaking only of Myself.”
Mira understood enough to look away. Prayer had always felt formal to her, like a polished speech given to a throne too high to see. She had never thought of it as telling the truth before she became impressive. The idea unsettled her. It also drew her in a way she did not want Ellis to notice.
Ellis moved toward the window. Snow blurred the grounds beyond the glass. In the distance, the Forbidden Forest stood black and still, while the lake reflected a sky the color of old pewter. He kept his injured hand closed. “My father is coming for the winter review tomorrow.”
Mira glanced at him. “Why?”
“Because I requested advancement into private curse study.” His mouth tightened. “Because I told him I was ready.”
Tavin stared. “Are you?”
Ellis’s answer came too quickly. “Of course.”
Jesus said nothing.
Ellis turned from the window. “Don’t look at me like that.”
“With what eyes should I look at you?” Jesus asked.
The question stripped the anger from Ellis’s face. For a moment he looked younger than sixteen, younger than his prefect badge, younger than the cold confidence he wore like school robes. He looked like a boy waiting outside a closed study door, hoping silence meant approval and fearing it meant disgust. Mira saw it and wished she had not, because seeing someone’s wound made hatred harder to keep.
Ellis whispered, “I don’t know.”
Jesus answered, “Then learn.”
The bell rang for the next class, but no one moved. Students began passing in the corridor. Voices rose and faded. A suit of armor clanked somewhere near the stairs, complaining about Peeves loosening its helmet again. The ordinary sounds of Hogwarts pressed around the room, strangely precious now. Mira realized the book had not simply threatened to reveal secrets. It had threatened to make ordinary life impossible by turning every hidden fear into public entertainment.
Jesus lifted the book again. “You will return to your classes. You will not go near the hidden door. You will not answer any voice that asks for secrecy as payment for relief.”
Tavin nodded.
Mira nodded too.
Ellis did not.
Jesus looked at him. “Ellis.”
The boy’s jaw tightened.
Jesus waited until Ellis met His eyes. “You cannot defeat darkness by becoming more useful to it.”
Ellis flinched as if the sentence had touched the cut on his palm. Then he gave one stiff nod, not surrender exactly, but something less proud than refusal. Jesus accepted it without pressing for more. He opened the classroom door, and the corridor noise spilled in. The three students stepped out, changed in ways no passerby could see.
Mira had Herbology next, but she did not go straight there. She stood for a moment beneath the broken statue with the spear. The seam in the wall was gone. The knight’s stone face looked as blank and noble as it always had, but she no longer trusted blankness. Some things hid because they were harmless. Other things hid because they were waiting to be desired. She touched the edge of her sleeve and felt the ink cool against her skin.
Tavin stopped beside her. “You all right?”
“No,” Mira said, surprising herself with the truth.
He nodded. “Me neither.”
Ellis was already halfway down the corridor, walking fast. Then he stopped. For a moment Mira thought he might come back. Instead, he looked over his shoulder toward the Defense classroom door. His expression held anger, fear, and something like hunger. Not hunger for power this time. Hunger for a way out that did not require him to become smaller first. Then he turned and disappeared around the corner.
Mira and Tavin walked toward the greenhouses together, not as friends exactly, but no longer as strangers who could pretend the other had not been present in the dark. Snow gathered against the windows along the corridor. The castle shifted around them, staircases groaning, portraits murmuring, pipes knocking in the walls. Hogwarts had always been full of hidden rooms, old spells, and secrets folded into stone. But now Mira understood that the most dangerous hidden places were not always behind doors.
Behind them, in the Defense classroom, Jesus set the linen-bound book on the desk and placed both hands beside it. He did not open it again. He bowed His head. The afternoon light thinned across the floor, and the room settled around Him as He prayed in silence for the children whose fears had been named, for the teachers who would soon have to decide whom they trusted, and for the old darkness beneath the castle that had learned many spells but had never learned mercy.
Chapter Two: The Boy Who Could Not Lower His Hand
Ellis Crowe did not go to Potions after leaving the Defense classroom. He walked past the dungeon stairs, past the stone arch where the air grew colder, and continued until the castle seemed to run out of patience with him. A staircase shifted while he was on it, carrying him away from the lower corridors and toward a narrow landing where a rain-streaked window looked out over the training grounds. Snow had softened the edges of everything below, but the Quidditch hoops still stood like dark rings against the white field. Ellis stopped there with one hand closed at his side, hiding the word written into his palm as if the skin itself had betrayed him.
He told himself he was thinking. That was the word he used when fear had him by the throat and pride would not let him call it fear. His father would arrive the next day for the winter review, and Ellis had already imagined the conversation too many times. He would stand straight, speak clearly, describe his progress in defensive theory, and explain why private curse study was the logical next step. His father would listen without smiling, and silence would decide whether Ellis had failed. In the Crowe family, silence had more power than shouting because it left a boy to fill the empty space with every possible disappointment.
The cut on his hand warmed beneath his closed fingers. He opened his palm just enough to look. Coward had not faded. If anything, the letters had settled deeper, thin and red against his skin. He tried a cleansing charm under his breath, though he already knew it would not work. The spell sparked and died before touching the mark, leaving only a pinprick of pain and the sour taste of embarrassment in his mouth.
A portrait beside the window cleared its throat. It showed a tired-looking man in faded traveling robes sitting under a painted tree. “That word has a way of growing if you keep feeding it.”
Ellis snapped his hand shut. “No one asked you.”
“No one ever does,” the portrait said. “That is the sorrow of being hung in a corridor used mainly by guilty students.”
Ellis turned away. The castle was becoming unbearable. Walls listened, portraits commented, staircases interfered, and now books crawled out of forbidden rooms to write what people had spent years burying. He wanted a place that did not know him. Hogwarts had been safe for a while because it let him become impressive enough to hide. Now even the stone seemed to have taken an interest in the part of him he hated most.
When he finally reached Potions, Professor Slughorn had already begun a thickening draught that filled the room with the smell of cloves and copper. Ellis entered without apology, went to his station, and began chopping knotgrass with such clean precision that no one dared whisper about his lateness. Across the room, a Ravenclaw girl watched him from behind a curtain of dark hair. Mira Vale looked away when he noticed. He was glad she had enough sense not to speak to him in public.
Tavin Brock was not there because Hufflepuffs in his year had Herbology that hour. Ellis told himself this was a relief. Tavin’s plain worry had become more irritating than accusation. It was bad enough that Jesus had seen the word on his hand. It was worse that Tavin and Mira had seen it too. The book had made private humiliation into a shared room, and Ellis did not know how to live with people who now knew where to aim if they wanted to hurt him.
His potion turned silver too quickly. Slughorn noticed at once and came drifting over with a careful smile. “Mr. Crowe, that is rather eager work. A fine color in the wrong minute can be as troublesome as a poor one in the right minute.”
Ellis lowered the flame. “Yes, sir.”
Slughorn peered at him more closely. “You seem unwell.”
“I am fine.”
“That is usually what students say right before they faint, explode a cauldron, or write an alarming letter home.”
Ellis forced his face still. “I am not going to do any of those things.”
“Good,” Slughorn said, though his eyes remained watchful. “Because your father has written to me about tomorrow’s review, and I would hate to report carelessness after such a strong record.”
The knife in Ellis’s hand pressed too hard into the cutting board. The sound was small, but Mira heard it. He could feel her hearing it. Slughorn gave his shoulder a kindly pat, which Ellis hated almost as much as he hated the concern behind it, then moved on to another table where a Gryffindor had turned his mixture the color of old socks.
Ellis worked through the rest of class without making another mistake. That should have steadied him. Instead, the effort tightened something inside him until every breath felt measured. When the bell rang, he packed quickly and slipped out before Mira could approach, but she caught up near the dungeon arch. Her satchel thumped against her hip, and her sleeves were still pulled low over her ink-stained fingers.
“Ellis,” she said.
He did not slow. “No.”
“You do not even know what I was going to say.”
“I know enough.”
She kept pace with him. “I am not trying to embarrass you.”
“People who say that usually are.”
Mira stepped in front of him near a low window where snow had gathered against the outside ledge. “The book wrote to me again.”
That stopped him. He looked at her sleeves. “When?”
“In Charms, before lunch ended. It came through the page of my notes.”
“What did it say?”
She hesitated, and he saw the same shame in her face that he had felt on his own. It made him want to be cruel because cruelty would restore the distance. He almost said something about Ravenclaws and their precious notes, but the sentence died before reaching his mouth. Jesus’ words returned without permission. You cannot defeat darkness by becoming more useful to it.
Mira swallowed. “It said my mother would know by morning.”
Ellis looked down the corridor, making sure no one was close enough to hear. “Know what?”
“That I am not what she thinks I am.”
The answer should have sounded vague. It did not. Ellis understood it too well. The words did not need details to wound because they were built from the fear underneath every detail. He leaned against the wall and looked at the vaulted ceiling. The stones there were blackened from centuries of torch smoke, and in the cracks between them, moisture glistened like the castle itself was sweating out an old fever.
“It is trying to move faster,” he said.
Mira nodded. “Because Jesus stopped it.”
He frowned at the way she said the name. Not mockingly. Not casually. She spoke it like someone testing whether the ground would hold if she stepped with her full weight. That unsettled him.
“You trust Him already?” Ellis asked.
“No,” she said. “But I think He is telling the truth.”
“That is not the same thing.”
“I know.”
For a moment neither spoke. A group of second-years hurried past carrying stacks of library books nearly higher than their faces. One of them glanced at Ellis’s prefect badge and straightened as if guilt had found him for no reason. Ellis watched them go and remembered how he had once moved through corridors like that, small under the weight of older students’ eyes. He had promised himself he would never be the boy who flinched first. He had kept that promise so well that he no longer knew what else he might have become.
Mira said, “Tavin told Professor Sprout.”
Ellis looked at her sharply. “Already?”
“She took him to the hospital wing. Not because he was in trouble. Because she was worried.”
“And now half the teachers know.”
“Maybe they should.”
“You say that because your secret is neat. Yours sounds sad enough to make people gentle.”
Mira’s face changed. He knew at once he had gone too far. The corridor seemed to draw in around them. She did not cry this time. That would have been easier. She only looked at him with a kind of tired disbelief, as if she had expected better and hated herself for it.
“My secret is not neat,” she said. “And sadness does not make people gentle. Sometimes it makes them decide you are too much trouble.”
Ellis looked away first. “I did not mean it.”
“Yes, you did. You just did not mean to say it where I could hear.”
That landed with more force because it was true. Mira left him there without another word. He watched her turn toward the hospital wing corridor, sleeves still pulled down, shoulders straight in the way of someone who had learned to survive by looking composed. For a second he wanted to call after her. The word sorry stood somewhere inside him, stiff and unfamiliar. He did not use it.
The rest of the afternoon moved under a low pressure that every student felt but few could name. In Transfiguration, quills refused to hold shape and kept twitching like insects. In the library, three candles went out at once near the restricted section though no one had walked past them. A suit of armor outside the trophy room began reciting names from plaques in a voice that grew hoarse and frightened before Professor McGonagall silenced it with one sharp spell. By supper, rumors had turned from the new Defense teacher to the old fear that something hidden under Hogwarts had woken again.
Jesus did not appear at the teachers’ table for supper. That fact spread faster than any rumor before it. Students looked toward the empty chair between McGonagall and Sinistra and whispered behind goblets. Some said He had gone into the Forbidden Forest. Others said He was in the Headmistress’s office with every portrait of every old headmaster shouting at once. Mira sat beside two Ravenclaws who were arguing about whether a book could be a Horcrux if it had never belonged to anyone living. She did not correct them because she did not know enough to correct anything.
Tavin came into the Great Hall late with Professor Sprout walking beside him. He looked embarrassed, but steadier. When he sat at the Hufflepuff table, two friends made room without asking questions, which seemed to help him more than any speech could have. Mira watched him take a piece of bread and butter it with hands that shook only a little. Then she looked toward Ellis at the Slytherin table. He was not eating either. His right hand stayed closed around his fork so tightly that his knuckles showed white.
Professor McGonagall stood before dessert appeared. She did not raise her voice, but the hall quieted with years of practice. “All students are to return to their common rooms immediately after supper. No student is to enter the Defense corridor without a member of staff. Any student found near the northwest service passages tonight will lose house points and face consequences more serious than detention.”
A ripple moved through the tables. The northwest service passages were nowhere near the Defense corridor, which meant either McGonagall was hiding the true location or there was more than one door. Mira’s stomach turned. Across the hall, Ellis noticed the same thing. Tavin stopped chewing.
McGonagall’s eyes moved over the room and seemed to pause, just briefly, on each of them. “This is not a request.”
The students began talking the moment she sat. The Great Hall filled with nervous guesses, half-brave jokes, and the scraping sound of plates pushed away by children who had lost their appetites. Then the ceiling changed. The pale enchanted sky darkened too quickly, as if night had poured into it. The floating candles flickered. Snow began falling from the ceiling, not real snow but an illusion of it, cold enough to make students gasp as it vanished above the tables.
Words formed in the dark overhead.
Moonrise.
No one spoke. The word spread across the enchanted ceiling in thin red-brown strokes, then dissolved into falling black flecks that disappeared before touching the tables. Professor McGonagall rose so fast her chair struck the stone floor behind her. Several teachers lifted wands. The candles flared back to gold, and the ceiling returned to its storm-gray winter sky, but the Great Hall did not recover. The threat had entered the one room where everyone was supposed to be gathered and safe.
Ellis stood.
At first Mira thought he meant to go to a teacher. Then she saw his face. He was not going toward help. He was going toward the door.
She left her bench at once. Tavin saw both of them and rose too quickly, muttering an apology when he stepped on someone’s foot. The three of them reached the entrance hall in the confusion that followed the teachers’ attempts to calm the room. No one stopped them because dozens of students were standing, turning, asking questions, and looking upward as if more words might appear. Ellis crossed the entrance hall with long, hard strides.
Mira caught his sleeve near the marble staircase. “What are you doing?”
He pulled free. “Ending this.”
Tavin arrived, breathing hard. “That is not a plan. That is how people die in school stories.”
Ellis ignored him.
Mira moved beside him again. “Jesus told us not to go near the hidden door.”
“I am not going near the hidden door.”
“Then where are you going?”
“To the owlery.”
That answer startled both of them. Ellis did not wait for their questions. He started up the stairs, taking two steps at a time. The owlery was far from the warm center of the castle, high in a tower where wind, feathers, and old droppings made every visit unpleasant. Mira followed because she did not trust his version of ending anything. Tavin followed because he had already learned that leaving Ellis alone made matters worse.
The climb was miserable. Staircases shifted twice, forcing them through a narrow corridor lined with portraits of stern witches who whispered about curfew. Cold air grew stronger as they climbed. By the time they reached the owlery steps, snow blew through the open slits in the stone, dusting the edges of each stair. Owls stirred above them, muttering in their sleep or irritation.
Ellis entered the owlery and went straight to the writing stand near the wall. Several school owls watched him with round offended eyes. He pulled parchment from the stack, dipped a quill, and began writing with sharp, violent strokes. Mira stood near the doorway, wrapping her arms around herself against the cold. Tavin leaned over enough to read, then frowned.
“You are writing your father?”
Ellis kept writing. “Yes.”
Mira stepped closer. “What are you telling him?”
“That the winter review is unnecessary.”
Tavin blinked. “That sounds good.”
Ellis’s mouth twisted. “Because I am withdrawing my request for private curse study and accepting disciplinary review for entering a forbidden chamber.”
The quill stopped. The words had surprised even him once they were written. The owls rustled above, and wind pushed snow through the narrow openings. For a moment Ellis looked like he might tear the parchment in half. His injured hand trembled against the edge of the stand.
Mira spoke softly. “That is the truth.”
“No,” Ellis said. “It is one piece of it.”
“Then write the rest.”
He looked at her with open anger, but it faded when he saw she was not attacking him. She knew what it cost him. That was almost worse.
Tavin moved closer. “You do not have to make it sound brave.”
Ellis gave him a cold look. “You think I need writing advice from a person who panicked in the Great Hall?”
Tavin’s face flushed, but he did not retreat. “Yes.”
The answer was so plain that Ellis had no clean place to put his contempt. Tavin took a breath and continued more quietly. “I told Professor Sprout I forgot Lottie’s name. I thought saying it would kill me. It did not. She looked sad. Then she told me fear is not proof that I love my sister more than everyone else. It is just fear.”
Ellis stared at him. “And that helped?”
“I hated it first.”
Despite herself, Mira almost smiled. The owl nearest her clicked its beak as if agreeing.
Ellis looked back at the letter. The first lines sat there too cleanly, too formal, still performing. He dipped the quill again and added a sentence beneath them. My request was not made from readiness, but from fear of appearing weak. He stopped, jaw tight, then wrote another. I do not know how to say this properly, but I am tired of needing your silence to mean I have done enough.
The owlery seemed to quiet around the scratching of the quill. Mira looked away because the letter felt too private. Tavin suddenly became very interested in a sleepy barn owl near the rafters. Ellis wrote two more sentences, sanded the ink, folded the parchment, and sealed it with green wax from the stand. He held it for a long moment before attaching it to a school owl’s leg.
The owl did not fly.
Ellis frowned. “Go.”
The owl stared at him.
Tavin said, “Maybe it knows something.”
“Do not start.”
The owl lifted one foot and shook the letter loose. It fell to the floor and landed open, though the seal had not broken. The words on the page blurred. New ink rose through Ellis’s writing, swallowing it line by line until the letter showed a different message.
He will despise you.
Ellis went still.
Mira whispered, “It is here.”
The temperature dropped. Owls burst into movement above them, wings beating against the dark rafters. Snow swirled through the openings and spun in the tower as if caught in a current. The message on the parchment lengthened.
He already does.
Ellis reached for his wand. Before he could lift it, the owlery door slammed shut behind them. Tavin ran to it and pulled, but the handle would not move. Mira drew her wand too, though her hand shook so badly the tip sparked against the stone wall. The parchment rose from the floor and unfolded in the air.
The red-brown writing spread across it.
Bring him the truth, and he will call it weakness. Bring him strength, and he will demand more. Bring him nothing, and he will leave you unnamed.
Ellis raised his wand. “Incendio.”
The parchment caught fire, burned blue for one breath, and then reformed untouched. The letters darkened. From somewhere below the tower, a bell began to ring, though no hour had struck. The sound moved through the stones like warning.
Tavin shouted over the wind. “We need Jesus.”
Ellis’s face twisted. “He is not here.”
The parchment answered.
No one comes for cowards.
That did what the book intended. Ellis stepped forward with his wand up, anger breaking through fear so sharply that Mira felt the air change. She had seen students cast in anger before. This was different. The cut on his palm opened, and the word there glowed dark red. His wand shook, not from weakness, but from the force of every year he had spent trying to become untouchable.
“Ellis, don’t,” Mira said.
He did not hear her. Or he heard and could not stop. The spell he began was not one taught in class. It sounded older, harder, and the first syllable made the owls scream. Tavin lunged for his arm, but a gust of cold threw him backward into a heap of straw and feathers. Mira cast a shield between Ellis and the parchment. His unfinished curse struck it and shattered the shield into bright fragments that stung her face.
The owlery door opened.
No spell burst it. No dramatic light filled the tower. It simply opened, and Jesus stood in the doorway with snow on His shoulders and sorrow in His eyes. The wind fell at once. Owls settled into uneasy silence. The parchment dropped halfway to the floor, still hovering, as if whatever moved it had recoiled.
Jesus looked at Ellis. “Lower your hand.”
Ellis’s wand remained pointed. His whole arm trembled now. “It is lying.”
“Yes.”
“It is using him.”
“Yes.”
“It knows exactly what to say.”
Jesus stepped into the owlery. “Yes.”
“Then why should I lower my hand?”
“Because rage tells the truth poorly.”
Ellis looked as if he wanted to argue, but the words could not find a place to stand. His wand arm remained raised. Mira saw tears in his eyes, though none fell. He looked furious that his body would betray him in another way.
Jesus came closer, stopping just beyond the point of the wand. “You have spent many years trying not to look afraid.”
Ellis swallowed hard. “Do not.”
“You believed fear would make you small.”
“Stop.”
“But the fear was not your master until you bowed to pride.”
Ellis’s face broke with anger. “You do not know my father.”
Jesus’ voice remained quiet. “I know what it is to stand before a father’s silence and choose obedience without performance.”
The words filled the owlery differently than any spell. Mira did not fully understand them, but she felt their depth. Tavin had gone still on the floor. The owls watched from the rafters as if the whole tower had become a courtroom without accusation.
Ellis’s wand lowered an inch, then rose again. “If I send that letter, he will come anyway.”
“Perhaps.”
“He will withdraw permission for advanced study.”
“Perhaps.”
“He may take me home.”
“Perhaps.”
Ellis’s voice cracked. “Then what is the point?”
Jesus stepped nearer. “That you do not lose your soul to keep his approval.”
The parchment writhed in the air. Ink whipped across it, forming new words too quickly to read. Jesus did not look at it. His attention stayed on Ellis with a steadiness that made the boy’s fury appear less like rebellion and more like exhaustion wearing armor.
Ellis whispered, “I don’t know who I am if I am not useful.”
Jesus answered, “A son is not a tool.”
For a moment nothing moved. Then Ellis lowered his wand. His arm fell to his side as if the strength had gone out of it all at once. The word on his palm bled without dripping. He looked down at it with a kind of stunned shame, then turned his hand toward Jesus.
“I hate it,” he said.
Jesus took his hand gently. “I know.”
“I hate that it is true.”
Jesus looked at him. “It is not your name. It is a wound speaking with borrowed authority.”
The parchment shrieked. It flew toward Ellis’s face, but Jesus lifted His free hand. The parchment stopped in the air, folded once, and fell at His feet. He did not burn it. He did not crush it. He stepped on it with calm finality, and the red-brown ink faded until only Ellis’s original letter remained.
Tavin pushed himself up, brushing straw from his robes. “How did you know we were here?”
Jesus looked at him. “A child who begins telling the truth should not be left alone with the first cost of it.”
Mira felt that sentence enter her quietly. She thought of her mother’s letter in her pocket, of the ink beneath her sleeve, of all the polished answers she had given adults who never asked the right question. The first cost of telling the truth. She had not thought of truth as having a cost before. She had thought of it as something good people praised after someone else had paid for it.
Jesus picked up Ellis’s letter and held it out. “Send it.”
Ellis looked toward the school owl, which had returned to its perch and now appeared deeply offended by the entire evening. “What if the book changes it again?”
“It cannot keep what is given in truth.”
Ellis took the letter. His fingers moved slowly as he tied it again to the owl’s leg. This time, the owl did not refuse. It spread its wings and flew through the open slit into the snow, vanishing almost at once into the dark over the grounds. Ellis stood with his hand still lifted from letting it go. No one spoke until the sound of wings had completely disappeared.
Mira expected Jesus to lead them straight back to the castle’s guarded halls, but He remained in the owlery, looking out into the storm. The moon had not risen yet. Somewhere beyond the tower, below the lines of snow and stone, the book was waiting for its threatened hour. The Mirror Room had become more than a hidden chamber now. It was a demand gathering strength.
Tavin rubbed his arms against the cold. “Sir, is it going to show everyone?”
Jesus turned from the window. “It will try to gather them.”
“How?” Mira asked.
“By offering each person the thing shame most wants.”
Ellis gave a humorless breath. “Which is?”
Jesus looked at him. “Control.”
That answer silenced him because he understood it first. Mira understood next, then Tavin. Shame did not only want to hide. It wanted to manage who knew, how much they knew, when they knew it, and what they were allowed to think after. The book had not threatened them because it loved truth. It threatened them because exposed shame could make frightened people easier to lead.
Mira pulled her sleeves down again by instinct. Jesus noticed, but He did not force the moment. That almost undid her. She had become used to adults who either ignored pain or demanded it on schedule. Jesus did neither. He waited in a way that gave truth room to stand up without being dragged.
She said, “It wrote that my mother would know by morning.”
Jesus nodded.
Mira stared at the stone floor. “I have never failed anything important. Not where anyone could see.”
Tavin spoke gently. “That cannot be true.”
“It is true enough,” she said. “I have failed inside. That is different.”
Ellis looked at her, and she could feel him remembering what he had said in the corridor. His face tightened. “Vale.”
She shook her head once. “Not now.”
He accepted that, and somehow the acceptance felt like a kind of apology, though not enough to replace the real one he still owed.
Jesus said, “What do you fear she will know?”
Mira looked at Him. The tower was cold, the owls smelled terrible, and snow had melted into the collar of her robe. It was not a holy-looking place. Yet the question made it feel more sacred than any polished room she had entered.
“That I do not want the life she keeps preparing for me,” Mira said. “That I am good at the work, but I am tired of being turned into proof that our family matters. That sometimes I wish I could be ordinary enough to breathe.”
The words left her before she could arrange them into something more acceptable. She pressed her lips together, horrified by the raw shape of them. Tavin did not look shocked. Ellis looked away, giving her privacy in the only way he knew how. Jesus looked at her as if every word had been heard in heaven before it was spoken aloud in the tower.
“And beneath that?” He asked.
Mira’s eyes stung. “I am afraid if I stop being impressive, she will not know how to love me.”
The mark beneath her sleeve cooled. She felt it immediately. Not gone, but weaker. She pushed up the fabric with trembling fingers. The ink had faded from black to gray.
Tavin smiled a little. “It did something.”
Mira almost laughed, but it came out more like a breath. “I thought telling the truth would make it worse.”
“Sometimes it does at first,” Jesus said. “Not because truth is cruel, but because the lie has been allowed to arrange the room.”
Mira looked at the faded ink. The phrase did not feel like a lesson. It felt like someone had opened a window in a place she did not know had grown airless. She did not feel fixed. She felt frightened, embarrassed, and strangely lighter. That was not the same as being healed, but it was the first honest thing that had happened inside her in a long time.
Tavin shifted near the doorway. “Do I have to say something too?”
Jesus turned to him. “You already began.”
“That was with Professor Sprout.”
“And here?”
Tavin looked at Mira and Ellis, then down at his hands. “I keep thinking if I remember everything, watch everything, and worry enough, then nothing bad will happen to Lottie or my mum or anyone I love. I know that sounds stupid.”
“It does not,” Mira said.
Ellis added, “It sounds exhausting.”
Tavin looked surprised by the softness in Ellis’s voice. Then he gave a small nod. “It is.”
Jesus placed a hand on Tavin’s shoulder as He had in the Great Hall. “Love can make sacrifices. Fear demands control and calls it love.”
Tavin closed his eyes. “I don’t know how to stop.”
“You do not have to become careless to become free.”
The words settled over him slowly. Tavin breathed in, then out, and the tension in his shoulders dropped a little. He did not transform into a different person. He did not grin or make a joke. He only stood there with the truth beside him and did not run from it. That seemed to matter.
A bell rang from deep in the castle. It was not the false bell from before. This one was real, low and formal. Curfew. The moon would rise soon behind the clouds.
Jesus looked toward the stairs. “We must go.”
They descended from the owlery together, with Jesus walking behind them rather than ahead. Mira noticed that and understood enough to feel protected rather than led like a prisoner. The corridors below were nearly empty now. Torches burned brighter than usual, and the portraits had either gone silent or pretended to sleep. Twice, they passed teachers moving quickly in pairs. Professor Flitwick hurried by carrying a stack of charmed lanterns that flickered blue at the edges. Professor Sinistra walked with him, her face grave.
Near the third-floor landing, a first-year girl stood alone in her night robe, staring at a blank wall. She did not seem to hear them approach. Her hand was lifted as if she had been about to touch the stones. Jesus stepped around the three older students and went to her.
“What are you looking for?” He asked.
The girl blinked up at Him. “My mum.”
Mira’s chest tightened.
The wall shimmered. For one second, it showed a kitchen lit by yellow lamplight, a woman sitting at a table with her head in her hands, and an empty chair across from her. The first-year made a small sound and reached forward.
Jesus gently caught her hand before she touched the wall. “That is not the way home.”
The girl began to cry. “She misses me.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “But this is not her voice calling you.”
The wall went dark. Professor McGonagall appeared at the far end of the corridor, moving faster than Mira had ever seen her move. She took in the scene at once, then gathered the girl with one arm and looked at Jesus with a question she did not ask aloud. He gave a small shake of His head, and McGonagall’s mouth tightened.
“It is spreading,” she said.
“Yes,” Jesus answered.
“Can you contain it?”
“Not by sealing doors alone.”
McGonagall looked at Mira, Tavin, and Ellis. Her eyes rested on them with a sternness that had no cruelty in it. “Return to your common rooms.”
Jesus said, “They will come with me first.”
The Headmistress did not like that. Anyone could see it. Her duty warred with something deeper, and the years in her face seemed to sharpen. At last she nodded once. “Then keep them close.”
“I will.”
She led the first-year away, murmuring something firm and kind while the child cried against her robe. Mira watched them until they turned the corner. The image on the wall had vanished, but the feeling it left behind remained. The book was no longer only writing secrets. It was using longing, grief, love, fear, and homesickness as doors.
Ellis spoke quietly. “Moonrise.”
Jesus looked toward the Defense corridor. “Yes.”
They followed Him through the castle as the windows grew silver with clouded night. The snow had stopped, but the world outside looked buried and waiting. By the time they reached the Defense classroom, the door was already open. The linen-bound book lay on the desk where Jesus had left it, but now the linen was torn down the center. The cover had opened halfway. A dark reflection moved across the blank first page, though no mirror stood above it.
On the board behind the desk, words wrote themselves in the same red-brown ink.
Bring them to the Mirror Room.
Mira felt the faded stain on her fingers begin to darken again.
Tavin stepped back. “Sir?”
Jesus walked to the desk and closed the book with one hand. The board wiped itself clean. The room warmed slightly, though the torches still shook.
Ellis stared at the closed cover. “It wants all three of us.”
Jesus turned to them. “It wants what you have begun to surrender.”
Mira understood then why the book felt angrier. It had not lost because the marks had faded. It had lost because truth had been spoken without the world ending. Shame could survive many things, but it could not survive being brought into mercy and finding no throne there.
Jesus moved the teacher’s chair aside and stood before the three of them. “Tonight, we do not chase it in fear. We do not obey its hour. We do not gather the school for its hunger.”
Tavin looked toward the corridor. “Then what do we do?”
Jesus’ answer came with quiet weight. “We wait where truth has already begun.”
Ellis frowned. “Here?”
“Yes.”
“With that thing?”
Jesus looked at the book. “With Me.”
No one argued. The distinction was too strong. Mira took a desk near the front and sat with her hands visible for the first time all day. Tavin sat beside her. Ellis remained standing longer than necessary, then finally took the desk on Mira’s other side without making a show of it. The classroom felt different at night. The old stone held shadows in the corners, but the room no longer felt owned by them.
Jesus walked to the windows and looked out toward the hidden moon behind the clouds. Then He turned back, took the linen-bound book from the desk, and set it on the floor in the center of the room. He did not raise His voice. He did not draw a circle with chalk or speak a spell in a language none of them knew. He simply stood over the book as the castle settled into curfew silence.
“When it speaks,” He said, “you will not answer it with bargains.”
The book opened.
This time, no pages turned. The first page showed a reflection instead of writing. Mira saw her mother’s face, pale with disappointment, looking at her across the Vale family dining room. Tavin saw Lottie standing alone in a storm. Ellis saw a closed study door and a strip of light beneath it. Each of them saw something different, and each reflection knew exactly where to press.
Jesus stood between them and the book.
The reflection changed. For one breath, Mira saw Jesus kneeling in the classroom before dawn, praying over the room before any student knew danger had entered it. She saw His hands open on the stone floor. She saw no fear in Him. The page trembled, as if it hated being made to show what it could not understand.
Then, somewhere far below them, behind the broken statue and beyond the sealed service door, a mirror cracked. The sound traveled through the castle like ice splitting on a frozen lake. The classroom windows shuddered. Tavin grabbed the edge of his desk. Ellis half rose. Mira felt the ink on her fingers flare dark and then fade again, weaker than before.
Jesus looked toward the corridor.
“It has opened the room without you,” He said.
No one moved until footsteps began running outside the classroom. Not one pair. Many. Students were leaving their common rooms. Voices rose in confusion and fear from the staircases. The book had found another way to gather them after all.
Jesus lifted the book from the floor. For the first time that night, urgency entered His face, though it was not panic. He looked at Mira, Tavin, and Ellis, and each of them understood that the choice they had tried to avoid had arrived in a larger form.
“You will stay close,” He said.
Then He walked into the corridor, carrying the book toward the sound of frightened children being called by reflections that knew their names.
Chapter Three: The Corridor of Borrowed Voices
The corridor outside the Defense classroom had become colder than any winter air could explain. Students were moving through it in night robes, half-tied cloaks, slippers, school shoes, and bare feet, all of them drawn from different directions as if the castle had poured them into one passage. Some looked awake and terrified. Others walked with their eyes fixed ahead, listening to voices no one else could hear. The torches along the wall burned with a thin blue edge, and their light turned every face pale. Jesus carried the linen-wrapped book against His side, and the torn cloth moved as if something underneath it was breathing against His hand.
Mira stayed close enough to see the dust on His coat. Tavin kept beside her, one hand clenched around his wand though he did not lift it. Ellis walked on the other side with his marked palm open for once, the red letters dimmer now but still visible. None of them spoke at first because the hallway had filled with other voices. A boy near the stairs whispered, “Dad?” over and over. A girl from Ravenclaw smiled through tears at an empty patch of wall. Two first-years argued with a suit of armor that seemed to be answering in the voices of their older brothers.
Professor McGonagall stood at the far end of the corridor trying to turn students back, but she was outnumbered by the strange pull moving through the castle. Flitwick floated above the crowd on a charm, sending sparks of silver light into the air to wake sleepwalkers from the draw of the voices. Sprout had both arms around a sobbing second-year who kept insisting her grandmother was just beyond the wall. Sinistra stood at the foot of the stairs, wand raised toward the ceiling, tracing something like a net of starlight that slowed the students but did not stop them. Hogwarts was full of spells, but the darkness had not come at the children like a beast that could be stunned. It had come like longing, and longing had learned the secret passages better than any map.
The book shifted in Jesus’ hand. The torn linen blackened along the edges, and a whisper slid out from under the cloth, too soft for most of the corridor to hear. Mira heard it because the ink on her fingers answered with a cold pulse. Ellis heard it because his injured hand twitched. Tavin heard it because his face tightened in recognition before the words became clear. The book was not calling loudly anymore. It was speaking each child’s hidden sentence in the voice that would hurt most.
Mira heard her mother say, “You are making a scene.”
She stopped so suddenly that Tavin bumped her shoulder. The voice had not come from the book alone. It had come from the wall beside her, from the stone itself, clear and clipped and familiar enough to make her stomach twist. For one terrible second she smelled the sharp lavender ink her mother used at home. She saw the long dining table, the polished silver, the family portraits, and the narrow look her mother gave when Mira showed feeling in a room meant for achievement. Her fingers curled inward before she remembered Jesus had told them not to answer bargains.
Tavin saw her stop. “Mira.”
“I know,” she said, though her voice sounded thin.
Jesus turned, not fully, just enough for His eyes to meet hers. He did not correct her in front of the crowd. He only waited until she breathed again. That small mercy steadied her more than any command would have. She moved forward, and the voice in the wall faded into the general murmur of the corridor.
They reached McGonagall as a group of fourth-years tried to push past her toward the broken statue. The statue’s spear was no longer pointed down. It stood lifted, straight and rigid, and the seam in the wall behind it had opened wider than before. A dull silver light leaked through the crack, not bright enough to guide anyone but strong enough to make every frightened student lean toward it. Behind the door, mirrors were speaking in dozens of familiar voices.
McGonagall looked at Jesus, then at the book. “It is drawing them through memory.”
Jesus nodded. “And through desire.”
“Can you close the door?”
“Not while so many are reaching for what is behind it.”
Her jaw tightened. “Then we remove them.”
Professor Flitwick sent another burst of silver sparks across the corridor, and several students startled awake, crying out as if pulled from deep water. Sprout guided them back toward the stairs. Sinistra’s starlight net brightened, and for a moment the whole passage glittered with threads that clung gently to wrists and shoulders, slowing bodies without binding them harshly. It was working in pieces, but more students kept arriving. The castle itself seemed to be delivering them by staircase, portrait hole, and hidden turn.
Ellis stared at the door. “The book wanted us to bring the school. It did not need us.”
Jesus looked at him. “It needed agreement. It found many small ones.”
Mira understood before Ellis did. The book had reached into ordinary wounds, but it could not drag anyone by force alone. Each student had leaned toward something. A lost parent. A feared failure. A dead pet. A brother’s approval. A chance to undo one sentence spoken in anger. The darkness had not invented the longing, but it had learned to imitate the voice longing wanted most.
A younger Slytherin boy pushed through the crowd and slipped beneath Sinistra’s starlight net before anyone caught him. He ran for the door with both hands outstretched, laughing and crying at once. “Mum, wait! I’m coming!”
Ellis moved before anyone else. He caught the boy around the middle and pulled him backward. The boy fought wildly, kicking Ellis in the shin and clawing at his sleeve. Ellis gritted his teeth but did not let go. The boy twisted around, and his face crumpled in rage.
“Let me go!”
“No,” Ellis said.
“She came back!”
“No, she didn’t.”
The boy struck him hard across the face. A few students gasped. Ellis’s head turned with the blow, and for a second the old Ellis returned to his posture, cold and sharp and ready to punish. Then he looked at Jesus, who said nothing. Ellis looked back at the boy and held him more carefully.
“I know,” Ellis said, his voice rough. “I know it feels like she did.”
That changed something. The boy stopped struggling all at once, as if the words had cut the cord between him and the voice behind the door. He began to sob so hard he could not stand. Ellis lowered him to the floor without making a show of gentleness. Professor Sprout hurried over and gathered the boy into her arms, murmuring his name while he cried into her shoulder.
Mira stared at Ellis. He did not look at her. He wiped blood from his lip with the back of his hand and kept his eyes on the door. The word on his palm had faded another shade. It was still there, but it no longer looked like a command. It looked like a wound losing its authority.
Jesus turned to the three students. “You see what it does.”
Tavin nodded, shaken. “It uses the thing we miss.”
“It uses what we fear we cannot live without,” Jesus said.
McGonagall stepped closer. “If we cannot close it from this side, can we close it from within?”
The corridor seemed to tighten around the question. Mira looked at the door and felt her whole body reject the idea. Behind that seam was the chamber where the book had opened to her name, where the mirror had appeared after it was too late, where time had bent and memory had become uncertain. Going back felt like stepping into a mouth that had already learned her taste.
Jesus looked at the open seam. “Yes.”
McGonagall’s face hardened in the way of someone accepting an answer she hated. “Then I am coming.”
“No,” Jesus said.
The word was gentle, but it stopped her like a wall.
Her eyes flashed. “I have defended this school through more than you have seen in this room.”
Jesus held her gaze. “You have. And you are needed here.”
“I will not send children where I will not go.”
“You will not send them,” Jesus said. “They will choose, and I will go before them.”
Mira felt the words reach her before she wanted them to. Tavin looked down. Ellis’s shoulders stiffened. McGonagall saw all of it, and something in her face shifted. She was not a woman who liked helplessness. Yet she was wise enough to know that some battles were not assigned by age or office alone. The book had marked the three of them, and the Mirror Room had tied itself to what they had hidden.
“You are asking too much,” McGonagall said quietly.
Jesus answered, “I am asking no child to enter alone.”
The Headmistress looked at Mira first. Mira wished she would not. Then McGonagall looked at Tavin and Ellis. Her sternness remained, but beneath it was something protective enough to hurt. “If any of you refuse, no punishment will follow.”
That almost made Mira refuse. Punishment was easier to understand than freedom. If she had been ordered, she could have resented the order and obeyed it with clean anger. Being given the choice placed the truth in her hands. She looked at the open door and heard, faintly, her mother’s voice beyond it saying her name with disappointment folded into every syllable.
Tavin whispered, “If we do not go, will it keep calling them?”
Jesus said, “Yes.”
Tavin swallowed. “Then I am going.”
Ellis gave him a look. “You decided that quickly.”
“No,” Tavin said. “I am just saying it before I become too scared to say it.”
Mira almost laughed, but fear swallowed it. She looked at her hands. The gray stain beneath her skin had begun to move again, thin lines branching like roots from her fingers toward her wrist. If she walked away, maybe Jesus and the teachers would still find a way. Maybe they would close the door without her. Maybe no one would blame her. But she knew with a sick certainty that the book would keep her name somewhere if she refused to bring it into the light.
“I will go,” she said.
Ellis stared at the door for so long that the corridor seemed to wait on him. His father’s letter was already in the snow somewhere, carried by an owl into the dark. By morning, the truth would either reach him or the book would twist it first. Ellis flexed his marked hand, then looked at the younger Slytherin boy still crying against Professor Sprout. Something in his face settled.
“I will go,” he said.
Jesus did not praise them as if courage had made them clean. He simply nodded, and that felt better. McGonagall stepped aside, but before they moved, she caught Ellis by the sleeve. He looked startled, as if he expected rebuke.
“You will keep your wand lowered unless He tells you otherwise,” she said.
“Yes, Professor.”
Then her eyes softened by the smallest measure. “And Mr. Crowe?”
“Yes?”
“Do not confuse obedience with weakness tonight.”
He looked away quickly. “No, Professor.”
Jesus handed the linen-wrapped book to McGonagall. Mira’s eyes widened. The book shifted violently in the Headmistress’s hands, but she gripped it with both arms and a face like carved granite. Jesus placed His hand briefly over the torn linen. The movement was simple, but the pages went still.
“It cannot enter while she holds it in truth,” He said.
Ellis frowned. “Then what are we facing inside?”
Jesus turned to the door. “What it has already planted.”
That answer followed them through the seam in the wall.
The narrow chamber beyond was longer than Mira remembered. The first time, panic and darkness had made it feel cramped, but now it stretched forward like a corridor built inside the castle’s memory. The walls were stone, but not the same stone as Hogwarts. They seemed older, damp and veined with silver threads that reflected no torchlight. The floor sloped downward under their feet. Behind them, the noise of the corridor faded until it sounded as distant as rain heard from inside a cupboard.
Jesus walked first. He carried no wand and no lantern. Light seemed to gather near Him without coming from Him in any way Mira could explain. It was not bright, but it gave enough for each step. The air smelled of wet stone, old paper, and something bitter like burned herbs. Tavin stayed close enough to brush Mira’s sleeve twice by accident. Ellis kept behind them, not because he was afraid of leading, Mira thought, but because he could not bear the thought of something following unseen.
The voices began after the first turn. They came from the walls at shoulder height, whispering in small cracks between the silver veins. Some were adult voices. Some were children. Some sounded like professors. Others sounded like students speaking from behind hands in common rooms. The words were not loud at first, but they were precise.
“Mira needs everyone to think she is brilliant.”
“Tavin loves being needed.”
“Ellis only helps when someone is watching.”
Mira’s cheeks burned. Tavin closed his eyes for half a step. Ellis made a sharp sound through his nose but said nothing. Jesus did not stop walking. That steadied them. The voices could accuse, but they could not make Him turn aside.
The corridor opened into a round room with seven mirrors standing in a circle. Each mirror was tall and narrow, framed in black wood carved with tiny faces. The glass did not reflect the room. It reflected scenes. In one, Mira saw the Ravenclaw common room with students reading her exam results aloud and laughing. In another, Tavin saw his house table empty except for Lottie’s hair ribbon lying on a plate. Ellis saw his father standing beside Professor Slughorn, reading the letter in silence before tearing it across once, twice, three times.
Tavin took one step toward his mirror before catching himself. “That is not real.”
His voice shook, but he said it clearly.
The mirror answered in Lottie’s voice. “Tav, please.”
He froze.
Jesus turned to him. “What is true?”
Tavin’s breathing grew uneven. “She is home.”
The mirror showed Lottie turning in a dark field, calling for him. Rain soaked her hair. The image was so detailed that Mira’s heart twisted even though she had never met the child. Tavin’s hand lifted toward the glass.
Jesus spoke again. “What is true?”
Tavin squeezed his eyes shut. “She is home. She is loved. I am not God.”
The mirror cracked from top to bottom. The sound was small, but the room shuddered. Tavin backed away, shaking. Jesus placed a hand on his shoulder without speaking, and the boy bent forward with both hands on his knees, breathing as if he had run miles. The image of Lottie faded into plain dark glass.
Mira looked at him, then at her own mirror. Her mother sat at the long dining table, holding Mira’s torn page in both hands. Her face was not angry. That was worse. It was cold with disappointment, the kind that did not need to raise its voice because the damage had already been decided. Beside her stood Mira’s older brother, perfect in his school robes, wearing the badge she had always been compared to but had never wanted.
The mirror spoke in her mother’s voice. “You have made yourself difficult to defend.”
Mira swallowed. Her whole body wanted to answer. She wanted to explain that she had not meant to open the door. She wanted to list her marks, her awards, her perfect spellwork, her record of never being a problem until the problem found her. Instead she stood with her arms at her sides and felt how much of her life had been spent preparing defenses for a trial no one had officially called.
Jesus came to stand beside her. “What is true?”
Mira’s eyes stayed on the mirror. “I do not want to disappoint her.”
“That is not the deepest truth.”
The mirror sharpened. Her mother’s face leaned closer. “If you cannot carry the Vale name with dignity, what are you for?”
Mira flinched. Ellis stepped forward as if anger on her behalf had moved before thought. Jesus lifted one hand slightly, and Ellis stopped. This one belonged to Mira. She hated that, but she also knew it.
“What is true?” Jesus asked again.
Mira’s throat tightened around the words. “I am tired.”
The mirror did not crack.
She breathed in shakily. “I am tired of proving I deserve gentleness.”
The mirror flickered.
Her mother’s image rose from the table. “Do not be dramatic.”
Mira’s tears came then, hot and humiliating, but she did not look away. “I am not loved because I am impressive. I do not know how to believe that yet, but I know it is true because You are here and You are not impressed by me. You are not disgusted either.”
The mirror cracked so sharply that everyone startled. The image splintered into seven pieces, each one showing a different version of Mira’s face, younger and older, proud and frightened, angry and small. Then the glass went black. The ink that had crept toward her wrist faded back toward her fingers until only a faint stain remained beneath the nails.
She pressed a hand over her mouth, but no sound came. Jesus did not tell her to stop crying. He did not turn her tears into a lesson. He stayed beside her until she lowered her hand and nodded once to show she could stand.
Ellis had moved to the far side of the room. His mirror had not waited. It showed a study lined with dark shelves and a man standing with his back to the room. The man did not turn around. Somehow that was enough to make the air around Ellis harden. His marked hand opened and closed at his side.
Tavin whispered, “Ellis.”
Ellis did not answer.
The mirror spoke in a man’s voice, low and controlled. “You wrote poorly.”
Ellis’s face went blank.
The voice continued. “A confession without strength is a plea. A plea is unbecoming.”
Mira watched Ellis’s shoulders lock. She had expected rage. Instead, she saw something worse. He stood like a boy who had learned not to move while being measured and found lacking. The mirror did not show a monster. It showed a closed back, a quiet room, a father who did not need to shout because his son had already learned to do the shouting inside himself.
Jesus stood a few steps behind Ellis. “What is true?”
Ellis’s mouth tightened. “He will think less of me.”
“That may be true. What is deeper?”
The mirror’s man turned slightly, though not enough for the face to be seen. “You had one advantage, Ellis. Discipline. Now you have made weakness public.”
Ellis lifted his wand.
Mira’s breath caught.
Jesus said quietly, “Lower your hand.”
Ellis did not.
The mirror brightened. In it, the man turned fully at last. His face was sharp, pale, and composed in a way that made emotion seem like a household mistake. He looked at Ellis as if the boy were not hated, but worse, inconvenient. That look did what the word coward had not been able to finish. Ellis’s wand rose higher, and the air tightened around the first syllable of a curse.
Tavin stepped toward him. “Ellis, don’t answer it that way.”
The mirror spoke again. “Even your friends pity you.”
Ellis’s eyes cut toward Tavin. The spell gathered at the tip of his wand, dark and unstable. Mira felt the room recoil. The other cracked mirrors reflected the spell in thin black lines, multiplying its shape until the circle of glass seemed full of raised weapons.
Jesus moved between Ellis and the mirror.
The spell died before Ellis could speak it. His wand stayed raised, now pointed at Jesus. Horror crossed his face. He lowered it at once and stumbled back.
“I did not mean—”
“I know,” Jesus said.
Ellis looked wrecked by the fact that Jesus did not step away from him. “I keep doing it. I keep reaching for the ugliest thing first.”
Jesus came closer. “Because you believe the ugliest thing will keep you from being hurt.”
Ellis’s eyes shone again, but this time the tears did not shame him into anger as quickly. “It does not.”
“No.”
“It just makes me someone I despise.”
Jesus waited.
Ellis looked at the mirror, then at his hand. The word coward pulsed once. He turned his palm toward the glass, not hiding it, not weaponizing it. His voice was low, but clear enough for the room to hear.
“I am afraid of him.”
The mirror did not crack.
Ellis swallowed. “I am afraid I will never be enough for him.”
Still nothing.
The image of his father stepped closer, eyes cold. “You were not raised to whimper before strangers.”
Ellis shook as if the words had entered his bones. Then he said the truth that seemed to cost him more than the others. “I wanted power because I thought it would make me safe from wanting his love.”
The mirror shattered.
Not cracked. Shattered. Glass burst inward without touching anyone, falling into itself like black water collapsing. Ellis dropped his wand and covered his face with both hands. The mark on his palm flared red, then faded to a thin pale line. Tavin crossed the room and stood beside him, not touching him, but near enough that Ellis was not alone. Mira came too. For a moment the three of them stood in the broken circle of mirrors with Jesus before them and the sound of their own breathing filling the room.
Then the floor moved.
The shattered glass lifted from the ground, piece by piece, and spun toward the center of the chamber. The broken mirrors emptied their frames, pouring fragments into the air until a shape began forming above the floor. It was not a person, though it borrowed faces. Mira saw her mother’s mouth. Tavin saw Lottie’s frightened eyes. Ellis saw his father’s turned shoulder. Other faces flickered through it too, dozens of them, maybe hundreds, all the hidden fears the book had gathered from Hogwarts over the years.
The shape spoke with many voices. “They will return to me. They always do.”
Jesus stepped forward. “You have no claim.”
“They hide,” it whispered. “They bargain. They protect me and call it privacy. They feed me and call it survival.”
The room darkened at the edges. Behind the spinning glass, another doorway opened, revealing a larger chamber beyond. Mira knew without being told that this was the true Mirror Room. The first chamber had only been an entrance. Beyond the doorway stood rows upon rows of mirrors, each one lit from within, each one showing a student, teacher, ghost, or old memory caught in some private fear. Voices rose from them in a terrible hush.
Tavin whispered, “How many?”
Ellis answered, “Too many.”
The glass shape bent toward Jesus. “Even they will hide again. Children do not stay brave. Fear ripens. Pride returns. Shame is patient.”
Jesus did not argue with the truth of human weakness. That frightened Mira more than if He had. He looked past the shape into the larger room, where the mirrors flickered like hundreds of trapped candles. His face held grief deep enough to silence the chamber for a breath.
Then He said, “Mercy is more patient.”
The glass shape screamed. Every mirror in the larger chamber answered. The sound drove Mira to her knees, and Tavin fell beside her with his hands over his ears. Ellis staggered but stayed upright, reaching down to help Mira even as the sound cut through him. Jesus lifted His hand, and the scream broke apart into separate voices. Once separated, they were no longer powerful in the same way. They were only wounded voices, frightened voices, lonely voices, angry voices, each one trying to become the whole truth and failing.
Jesus turned to Mira, Tavin, and Ellis. “Call them by what is true.”
Mira looked at Him, confused and afraid. “Who?”
“The ones you can see.”
The larger chamber opened fully before them. At once Mira saw a mirror near the front showing the first-year girl from the corridor reaching for the image of her mother. Tavin saw the Slytherin boy Ellis had held, still pressing his hands against glass where his dead mother smiled with open arms. Ellis saw a seventh-year standing before a mirror that showed him being applauded by every teacher while another version of himself disappeared behind the crowd.
They understood slowly. Jesus was not asking them to fight the whole room. He was asking them to tell the truth where their own wounds had taught them how to see. The thought was terrifying, but it was also strangely fitting. The places where the book had hurt them were now the places they could recognize its work.
Tavin went first because the mirror with the first-year pulled him forward. He stopped before it, still pale, still scared, but with a steadiness that had not been there in the hidden corridor before. The girl in the mirror reached toward the false kitchen again.
“Your mum misses you,” Tavin said to the image, though the girl was not physically there. “That part may be true. But this is not love bringing you home. This is fear trying to make you leave where you are supposed to be.”
The mirror trembled. The kitchen image faded, and for one moment the glass showed the real first-year asleep in McGonagall’s care, wrapped in a tartan blanket near the Defense corridor. Tavin smiled through sudden tears. “She is safe,” he whispered.
The mirror went dark.
Ellis moved to the Slytherin boy’s mirror. He stood before the image of the smiling mother and looked as if every word scraped him on the way out. “Missing her does not make you weak,” he said. “Believing the lie will not bring her back. You can grieve her without obeying this.”
The woman in the glass turned her smile toward Ellis. “Would you deny a child his mother?”
Ellis flinched. Then his face hardened, not with cruelty, but with resolve. “You are not his mother.”
The mirror cracked and went dark.
Mira found herself before a mirror showing a Ravenclaw girl she knew only by sight. The girl stood in a classroom while exam papers burned around her. Her face in the glass twisted with panic. Mira understood that fear so well that it almost felt like her own reflection. She placed her stained fingers against the cold frame, not the glass.
“Failure is not the end of being loved,” Mira said. Her voice shook. “I do not know how to believe it all the time either. But this mirror lies when it says your marks are your life.”
The burning papers went out. The mirror darkened.
One by one, the nearest mirrors began to fail. Not all of them. Not even most. But enough to change the air. The glass shape in the center of the first chamber thinned as each mirror went dark. It shrieked again, weaker this time, and the voices beyond rose in confusion. Some called louder. Some pleaded. Some accused. The chamber filled with the terrible sound of shame losing control of its disguises.
Jesus entered the larger Mirror Room.
The three students followed Him.
It was wider than any hidden space should have been, stretching beneath the Defense corridor and perhaps beneath more of the castle than Mira wanted to imagine. The ceiling disappeared into darkness. The floor was polished black stone that reflected the mirrors without reflecting the people walking among them. Rows of glass stood in uneven aisles, some ancient, some newer, some framed in gold, iron, bone-white wood, tarnished silver, or plain schoolroom oak. Each mirror seemed to have been made from a different fear.
At the center of the room stood a mirror covered by a black cloth.
Mira remembered it from the first night. Back then, none of them had admitted they had seen it. Now it stood taller than all the others, waiting. The cloth did not move, yet the whole room seemed to lean toward it. Jesus stopped several steps away.
Ellis whispered, “That is the heart of it.”
Jesus looked at the covered mirror. “No. It is the place where the heart was surrendered.”
Mira did not understand, but the words made the room feel older than Hogwarts. Tavin looked around at the rows of mirrors. “Who made this?”
Before Jesus could answer, another voice spoke from behind the black cloth. It was not the papery voice of the book. It was human, tired, and bitter.
“I did.”
A figure stepped from behind the covered mirror. He wore old teaching robes, faded almost gray, and his hair hung thin around a face hollowed by years of being remembered by no one. He was not a ghost, but he was not fully alive in any ordinary way. His eyes were bright with a feverish intelligence, and his hands were stained with the same red-brown ink that had marked Mira’s fingers. Around his neck hung a cracked pair of spectacles tied with string.
Ellis lifted his wand, then lowered it when he remembered.
The man smiled faintly. “Good boy.”
Ellis went rigid.
Jesus looked at the man with sorrow. “Calder Wren.”
The name stirred something in the chamber. Several mirrors flickered at once. Mira had heard it before, but not in any class. Then she remembered a trophy case near the old Defense corridor, one with a missing plaque. Professor Calder Wren had taught Defense for less than a year long before any of them were born. Students used to joke that the position ate teachers even when curses did not.
Wren bowed with thin mockery. “You know my name. That is generous. The school preferred to misplace it.”
“You hid it,” Jesus said.
“I preserved what they threw away.”
McGonagall’s distant spells flashed somewhere beyond the walls, but here the Mirror Room held its own silence. Wren’s eyes moved over Mira, Tavin, and Ellis with hungry interest. “Children still enter where they are told not to go. That is comforting. The castle remains consistent.”
Tavin found his voice. “You made the book?”
Wren’s smile faded. “I made a record. Hogwarts trains children to defend themselves against creatures, curses, invaders, and fools with wands. No one trained them to defend against humiliation. No one taught them that shame is the oldest dark art. I did.”
Mira glanced at Jesus. Wren’s words held just enough truth to sound almost noble. That made them dangerous.
Jesus said, “You did not teach them freedom from shame. You taught shame to speak louder.”
Wren’s face tightened. “I taught the truth.”
“You used truth without love.”
“Love,” Wren said, and the word came out like something spoiled. “The favorite excuse of the gentle when they have no appetite for discipline.”
Ellis looked sharply toward him. Mira saw the sentence hit somewhere personal. Wren noticed too. His eyes settled on Ellis with cruel delight.
“Ah,” Wren said. “There you are. A boy who understands. Discipline is often mistaken for coldness by those too soft to receive it.”
Ellis’s marked hand twitched.
Jesus spoke his name quietly. “Ellis.”
The boy did not answer Wren. That refusal cost him. Mira could see it. Wren’s gaze moved on, annoyed.
The old professor touched the edge of the black cloth. “This room was meant to make students honest. Each mirror showed them what they feared others would see. I believed if they faced it, they would become strong. But they lied. They begged. They blamed. They broke. So I learned what every true teacher learns sooner or later.”
Jesus’ face held deep sadness. “You began to despise the children you were entrusted to help.”
Wren’s hand tightened on the cloth. “They despised truth first.”
“No,” Jesus said. “They feared exposure without mercy.”
The words seemed to strike the covered mirror. A ripple moved across the black cloth. Wren noticed and pulled his hand back. For the first time, fear crossed his face.
Mira understood then that Wren was not in command as fully as he pretended. The room had begun as his work, perhaps even his wounded mission, but it had grown beyond him. The book, the mirrors, the borrowed voices, the threat to the school, all of it had fed on his bitterness until it no longer needed his permission. He was not only the maker. He was also trapped.
Jesus stepped toward him. “Calder, uncover it.”
Wren laughed, but the sound broke in the middle. “You think I have not? You think I have not looked?”
“I know you have looked,” Jesus said. “I asked you to uncover it.”
Wren’s eyes flashed. “No.”
The mirrors around the chamber brightened. Voices rose again, angry and afraid. The covered mirror at the center seemed to draw the sound inward. Mira felt pressure build in her ears. Tavin reached for the nearest frame to steady himself. Ellis looked from Wren to Jesus, and something like recognition moved across his face.
“He is afraid of his own mirror,” Ellis said.
Wren turned on him. “Silence.”
Ellis stepped back, but he did not look away. “That is why all the others have to speak. If every student’s shame fills the room, yours stays covered.”
The chamber shuddered.
Mira stared at Ellis. He had seen it because it was his own pattern in another form. Attack first. Expose first. Control first. Keep the deepest wound hidden by making the room unsafe for everyone else. The insight cost him, but he did not retreat from it.
Wren raised his hand, and three mirrors behind Ellis burst with red light. Images flashed across them: Ellis as a small child outside a study door, Ellis practicing curses alone until his fingers bled, Ellis standing in the owlery with his wand pointed at Jesus. The old shame rushed toward him like a wave.
Jesus stepped beside him. “What is true?”
Ellis’s face was pale. “Those things happened.”
“And?”
“They are not all I am.”
The mirrors cracked but did not go dark. Ellis swallowed and added, “And I am not his to use.”
The red light failed.
Wren backed toward the covered mirror. “You have no idea what mercy costs.”
Jesus’ eyes filled with a grief so deep the whole chamber seemed to bow under it. “I do.”
The words did not sound like argument. They sounded like a door opening over a depth no one in the room could measure. Wren’s face changed, not softened exactly, but shaken. For a moment he looked less like a bitter old professor and more like a man who had been wounded long ago and built a kingdom out of the wound because no one came when he first bled.
Mira stepped forward before fear could stop her. “Professor Wren.”
He looked at her with irritation. “What?”
“You said the room was meant to make students honest. Then be honest.”
Tavin looked startled by her courage. Ellis did too. Mira felt her knees trembling under her robe, but she kept going.
“What did your mirror show you?” she asked.
Wren’s face twisted. “A child presumes to question me?”
“Yes,” Mira said, and the word came out stronger than she expected. “Because you keep questioning us.”
For a breath, the chamber held still. Then the black cloth over the central mirror moved as if wind had touched it, though the air was dead. Wren’s eyes darted toward it with naked fear.
Jesus stepped closer. “Calder, the room will not be healed by another child’s exposure. It will be healed when the first hidden wound is brought into mercy.”
Wren shook his head. “There is no mercy in that glass.”
“No,” Jesus said. “But there is mercy here.”
Wren looked at Him, and something inside the man seemed to fight itself. The mirrors whispered around him, urging him to refuse. They spoke in voices of old colleagues, former students, headmasters long dead, perhaps even family members. Some mocked him. Some praised him. Some told him he had gone too far to turn back. The chamber had learned him best of all.
Then, from far away, the sound of children crying reached them through the walls.
Wren flinched.
Jesus heard it too. “They are still being called.”
The old professor closed his eyes. His face tightened until it seemed pain had drawn every line deeper. When he opened them, he looked at the covered mirror not with authority but with dread. Slowly, with a shaking hand, he reached for the cloth.
The mirrors began to scream again. Frames rattled. Glass bent inward. The floor rippled like dark water. Mira stumbled, and Tavin caught her arm. Ellis planted himself in front of both of them, wand lowered but body ready. Jesus did not move. He stood before Wren as the old professor took the cloth in both hands.
Wren pulled it down.
The central mirror did not show Wren as an old man. It showed a boy in secondhand robes standing before a Defense class decades earlier. The students were laughing. A younger Wren held up a wand that had snapped during practice. At the front of the room stood a teacher whose face was blurred by memory, but whose voice filled the chamber with perfect cruelty.
“Some children are born to study defense because attack would never obey them.”
The boy in the mirror stood frozen while the class laughed harder. Then the image shifted. Wren as a young teacher stood alone in the same Defense classroom, holding a resignation letter after a student had been injured during one of his fear-facing lessons. The student lived, but the damage to Wren’s pride did not. Another shift showed him building the first mirror in secret, whispering that no one would laugh when everyone was finally made visible.
The mirror did not accuse him. It showed him.
That was worse.
Wren sank to his knees. The chamber did not soften. The mirrors leaned toward him like a crowd waiting to see whether he would lie again. He covered his face with ink-stained hands, and his voice came out as a broken whisper.
“I wanted them to stop laughing.”
No one spoke.
“I wanted the room to know I was not weak.”
The central mirror cracked at the top.
Wren looked at Jesus, and the bitterness in him faltered under the weight of a grief he had never let become sorrow. “I made children afraid so I would not have to be the only frightened one.”
The crack ran down the mirror. A sound like a long-held breath moved through the chamber.
Jesus knelt in front of him. “That is the truth.”
Wren looked almost angry at the gentleness. “After all this, you say only that?”
Jesus’ voice was quiet. “Would you prefer I strike you so you can remain defended?”
The question broke something pride had been protecting. Wren bowed forward, not in worship exactly, not yet, but in exhaustion. The red-brown ink on his hands began to fade. The central mirror cracked again, deeper this time, and every mirror in the room dimmed.
Then the book screamed from outside the chamber.
The sound came through the walls with such force that dust fell from the hidden ceiling. McGonagall must still have been holding it in the corridor, but the book had felt its maker weaken. The mirrors flared in panic. The central mirror, though cracked, filled with red writing.
If he is forgiven, what becomes of what I have kept?
Jesus stood.
The words spread across the central glass, then across every mirror in the chamber. They wrote over faces, memories, fears, and scenes until the room became one vast page of accusation. Mira felt the book’s hunger then, not as a creature with teeth, but as a record terrified of mercy. If mercy entered, the record would lose its throne. If wounds became places of healing, shame would no longer be able to call itself truth.
Jesus looked at the writing. “It becomes testimony.”
The word struck the room like light.
The central mirror shattered from within. This time the glass did not explode outward. It fell in silver rain, and every piece turned clear before it touched the floor. The other mirrors cracked one after another, not all at once, but in waves moving through the chamber. Some went dark. Some showed sleeping students safe in teachers’ care. Some showed empty rooms, letters unsent, old griefs losing their borrowed voices. The screaming outside became a thin cry, then a hiss, then silence.
Wren remained on his knees, staring at his empty hands. He looked smaller without the room obeying him. Not weaker. Smaller in the way a man becomes when he stops using darkness to make himself large.
Tavin whispered, “Is it over?”
Jesus looked toward the entrance. “The room is broken. The children still need to be led back.”
Mira turned toward the chamber doorway. The corridor beyond no longer glowed silver. Warm torchlight flickered in the distance. The pull had loosened. She could feel it in her own body, like a rope cut from around her ribs. Her fingers still bore faint traces of ink, but they no longer felt claimed.
Ellis looked at Wren. “What happens to him?”
Wren laughed once, weakly. “Still eager for judgment?”
Ellis did not answer sharply. “No. That is why I asked.”
Wren looked at him then, really looked, and something like shame crossed his face without turning cruel. “You are young enough not to become what wounded you.”
Ellis’s mouth tightened. “I hope so.”
Jesus placed one hand on Wren’s shoulder. “Come.”
Wren looked terrified. “To the school?”
“Yes.”
“They will know.”
“Yes.”
He closed his eyes. “And if they despise me?”
Jesus said, “Then you will still tell the truth.”
Wren rose slowly, as if his bones had remembered age all at once. He did not look noble. He looked frightened, guilty, and worn down by the collapse of the thing he had hidden inside for years. That made Mira trust the moment more. False redemption would have made him glow with sudden peace. Real mercy left him standing in the first hard light of what he had done.
They walked back through the hidden corridor with Jesus leading, Wren behind Him, and the three students following close. The walls no longer whispered in familiar voices. The silver veins had gone dull. Twice, Mira saw old words appear in the cracks and then fade before forming. The chamber was losing its language.
When they stepped through the service door, the Defense corridor was full of stunned silence. Students sat along the walls wrapped in cloaks and blankets. Teachers moved among them, checking faces, asking names, returning children to themselves one gentle question at a time. Professor McGonagall stood in the center of the corridor holding the book. The linen had burned away completely, but the cover beneath had turned gray and brittle.
She looked at Wren, and the shock in her face was unlike anything Mira had ever seen. “Calder.”
He bowed his head. “Minerva.”
No one laughed. No one gasped. Perhaps the students did not understand who he was. Perhaps they were too tired. Perhaps the corridor had seen enough exposure for one night and had no appetite left for spectacle. McGonagall’s grip tightened on the book until the brittle cover cracked under her fingers.
Jesus stepped toward her. “Set it down.”
She did. The book lay on the stone floor between them. It tried to open once, but no pages rose. Red-brown ink seeped from the edges and ran across the floor in thin lines, reaching toward Wren, Mira, Tavin, Ellis, and the gathered children. Before it touched anyone, Jesus knelt and placed His hand on the cover.
The ink stopped.
The corridor held its breath.
Jesus said, “What is brought into mercy will not be ruled by shame.”
The book collapsed into dust.
No burst of light followed. No triumphant music filled the castle. The dust simply settled into the cracks between stones, and the last cold pressure left the hallway. Several students began crying then, not from terror exactly, but from the body’s late understanding that danger had passed. Teachers knelt beside them. Friends reached for friends. Somewhere down the corridor, the first-year girl with the mother’s voice asked if she could write home in the morning, and Professor Sprout said yes before anyone could make a rule about it.
Mira sat on the floor because her legs had begun shaking too hard to trust. Tavin sat beside her. After a moment, Ellis lowered himself to the stone on her other side, leaving enough space to be respectful but close enough not to pretend distance anymore. His lip was swollen from the younger boy’s blow. His palm had only a pale line where the word had been.
He looked at Mira without his usual armor. “I am sorry for what I said in the corridor.”
She looked at him. There were sharper answers available, and part of her wanted to use one. Instead she thought of Wren, the mirrors, and how easily wounds became weapons when no one stopped them early. She did not want to be another mirror.
“I know,” she said.
He nodded, not pushing for more than she gave.
Tavin leaned his head back against the wall. “I am going to write Lottie tomorrow and tell her I am not allowed to worry at her through walls anymore.”
Mira laughed softly, and this time it did not break. Ellis almost smiled. The sound felt strange in that corridor after so much fear, but not wrong. Around them, Hogwarts began to return to itself. Torches warmed. Portraits whispered in careful voices. A staircase somewhere groaned into place, as if embarrassed by its part in the night’s confusion.
Jesus stood with McGonagall and Wren near the broken statue. He was not far, but He gave the children room to be tired without being watched. Mira looked at Him and realized that His presence had not made truth painless. It had made truth survivable. That was different from what she had wanted at first, but deeper than what she had known to ask for.
Beyond the windows, the clouds parted. Moonlight fell across the snow-covered grounds, touching the courtyard, the training field, the dark line of the forest, and the lake beyond the castle. Hogwarts looked still from the outside, as if nothing had happened beneath its stones. But inside the corridor, children who had been called by borrowed voices were being led back by their real names, and the room that remembered too much had finally begun to forget its power.
Chapter Four: The Morning No One Could Pretend
By morning, Hogwarts had become a school full of children who had slept poorly and adults who had not slept at all. Snow lay thick across the grounds, bright under a pale sun, and the lake beyond the castle held the color of steel. The Great Hall opened for breakfast as usual, but nothing felt usual. Students entered in quieter groups, looking at one another with the strange caution of people who had heard too much in the night and did not yet know how much everyone else remembered.
Mira sat at the Ravenclaw table with porridge cooling in front of her and the last gray stains of ink tucked beneath her folded hands. She had washed them in the dormitory sink until her skin reddened, though she knew by then the water was not what had changed them. Around her, girls whispered about the corridor, the mirrors, the book, the first-year who had followed her mother’s voice, and the old professor who had walked out of the wall like a ghost with a body. Some students were already trying to make jokes because jokes were easier to carry than fear. Others looked angry that fear had found them in front of people who might remember.
At the teachers’ table, Jesus sat beside Professor McGonagall with a cup of water before Him and untouched bread on His plate. He looked neither triumphant nor troubled by the eyes that kept turning toward Him. That unsettled Mira in a different way. Everyone else seemed pulled between wanting answers and wanting the whole night locked away where no one would ever have to mention it again. Jesus carried the morning like a man who knew that being saved from a darkness was not the same as being finished with what the darkness had exposed.
Ellis was late to breakfast. When he entered the Great Hall, several Slytherins looked at his swollen lip, then at his hand. He did not close his palm quickly enough to hide the pale line there. Mira noticed that he had removed his prefect badge from his robe. It was not gone. He carried it in his pocket, because she saw the small silver edge flash when he sat down. Still, he did not wear it, and that made the space on his chest look louder than the badge ever had.
Tavin came in with Professor Sprout, which brought a few whispers from the Hufflepuff table. He seemed embarrassed but steadier than he had the night before. When he sat, a friend pushed a plate of toast toward him without speaking. Tavin accepted it with a nod, then glanced across the hall toward Mira and Ellis as if checking that they had survived the morning too. Mira gave a small nod back. Ellis did not look up, but one corner of his mouth moved enough that she knew he had seen.
The owls arrived late because the storm had slowed them. They poured through the high windows in a gust of cold air and wingbeats, dropping letters onto tables still heavy with the weight of last night. Mira’s heart tightened before she saw the blue wax. Her mother’s owl landed with perfect poise beside her plate, lifted one foot, and waited. The letter tied there was thicker than usual.
Mira did not touch it.
The girl beside her, Alina Fawley, glanced at the seal and then away with more kindness than curiosity. “You don’t have to open it here,” she murmured.
Mira almost said that she was fine. The words rose by habit, polished and useless. Instead she picked up the letter with fingers that did not feel like hers and slid it into her book bag. “I know.”
That was all she managed, but it was something. Across the hall, a school owl dropped a letter beside Ellis. It bore no family crest, only his name written in his father’s narrow hand. The air around him changed. A first-year near him continued talking until an older Slytherin touched his sleeve and shook his head. Ellis stared at the letter without reaching for it.
Tavin saw. So did Mira. So did Jesus, though He did not look directly at Ellis in a way that would expose him to the hall. He only lowered His gaze briefly to His cup, and Mira had the strange feeling that He was giving Ellis room to choose without leaving him alone. It was a kind of mercy she had not known how to name until the night before.
Professor McGonagall stood before the hall could fully wake into rumor. She looked more tired than Mira had ever seen her, but her voice was steady enough to make every student straighten. “There will be no ordinary classes this morning. Students will remain with their heads of house until noon. Any student who wishes to speak privately with a member of staff may do so. No student is to return to the Defense corridor without permission.”
A murmur spread, but McGonagall let it pass before continuing. “Last night, a hidden enchantment within the castle attempted to draw students into danger by imitating voices and memories. That threat has been broken. The school is safe.”
The word safe moved oddly through the room. Some children seemed relieved. Others looked doubtful, as if safety had become a word adults used when they needed children to stop asking questions. Mira understood both reactions. Hogwarts was safe in the way a body was safe after a fever broke. It could sit up and breathe, but it still needed tending.
McGonagall’s mouth tightened slightly. “You will hear many versions of what happened. Some will be foolish. Some will be cruel. Some will make entertainment out of the pain of your classmates. I strongly advise against becoming the sort of person who enjoys another person’s fear.”
The hall went very still. Even the floating candles seemed to hold their flames straighter.
“Those affected last night are not to be mocked, questioned for amusement, or treated as curiosities,” she said. “If you do not know what kindness requires, silence will serve until you learn.”
Mira looked down quickly because the sentence struck nearer than she expected. It was stern, but it did not feel cold. It felt like a wall raised around wounded children before the school could turn them into stories.
McGonagall turned her head slightly toward Jesus. For a moment Mira thought He might stand and speak to the hall. He did not. Instead, He remained seated, hands open on the table, letting the Headmistress carry her rightful authority. That restraint mattered. Mira had seen people seize a room after doing something powerful. Jesus seemed entirely uninterested in making Himself the center of attention, even while every eye kept returning to Him.
After breakfast, Ravenclaws were sent to their common room in orderly groups. Mira walked with them until the moving staircase shifted, and a gap opened between her and the others. She could have hurried. She could have called out. Instead she stopped on the landing with her book bag heavy against her side and the letter inside it burning through the leather as if her mother’s words were already alive.
A portrait of a woman in bronze robes watched her from above a painted window. “Best to open dreadful letters before they learn to grow teeth.”
Mira looked up. “Do all portraits give advice no one requested?”
“Only the useful ones,” the woman said.
Mira almost smiled. Then the staircase groaned again, and the route to Ravenclaw Tower swung away completely. The castle had not trapped her, exactly. It had simply made a quiet place and removed the excuse of company. She sat on the cold stone step and pulled the letter from her bag.
Her mother’s handwriting filled two pages. The first lines were controlled. News had reached home that an incident had occurred near the Defense corridor. Mira’s mother had been informed only in vague terms, which she found unacceptable. She expected Mira to provide a clear account, including whether any action of hers had contributed to the disruption. The next paragraph was worse because it was not angry. It explained that the Vale name had survived wars, scandals, Ministry changes, and lesser branches of the family who lacked discipline. It would not be damaged by schoolgirl emotionality.
Mira stopped reading there. Her throat tightened, but the tears did not come as quickly as they had in the Mirror Room. Something had changed in her. The words still hurt. They still knew where to land. But they did not become the whole room.
Footsteps sounded below. Jesus came up the staircase slowly, as if He had all the time in the world and no need to pretend He had arrived by accident. He stopped one step below her and did not look at the letter until she lowered it.
“May I sit?” He asked.
Mira shifted to make room. He sat beside her on the stone stair, not above her, not below her in a way that made a symbol of humility, but simply near enough to be present. For several breaths, neither of them spoke. A draft moved through the landing, carrying the faint smell of breakfast smoke and wet wool. Somewhere far off, students climbed another staircase, their voices softened by distance.
“She wrote exactly what I thought she would write,” Mira said.
Jesus listened.
“I thought after last night it might not hurt the same way.” She folded the letter once, then unfolded it because her hands needed something to do. “It still does.”
“Yes,” He said.
That answer almost frustrated her. She wanted a better one. Then she realized He had not minimized the pain or treated truth as a charm that made consequences gentle. Her shoulders dropped a little.
Mira looked at the letter again. “I do not want to hate her.”
“You do not have to hate her to tell the truth about what her words have done.”
“She would say I am being ungrateful.”
“What do you say?”
Mira stared at the slanted handwriting. That was a harder question than it seemed. She knew how to answer what others would say. She knew how to predict her mother, her brother, her professors, her housemates, and sometimes even strangers. She knew far less about her own honest answer when it was not shaped for approval first.
“I think she is afraid too,” Mira said slowly. “I think our family trained her before she trained me. I think she believes love must keep a certain shape or people will fall apart.”
Jesus nodded. “That is a clear seeing.”
Mira swallowed. “But I also think I cannot keep letting her fear become my life.”
The words frightened her after she said them. They sounded too large for a girl sitting on a staircase with a half-read letter in her lap. But they also felt like the first sentence she had spoken that belonged fully to her.
Jesus said, “Then begin with truth that honors without surrendering your soul.”
Mira looked at Him. “How?”
“Do not answer her from panic. Do not answer her from revenge. Tell her what happened, tell her what you chose, and tell her who you are becoming before God. Leave her response in hands larger than yours.”
Mira let the words settle. She imagined writing to her mother without begging, without performing, without building a polished defense. The thought scared her so much that it almost made her laugh. Facing a room full of cursed mirrors had been terrible, but at least the mirrors had shattered. Her mother would write back.
“I do not know if I can,” she said.
Jesus looked at the window, where the morning light had brightened the snow along the sill. “You can write one true sentence. Then another.”
That sounded possible. Not easy, but possible. Mira folded the letter carefully and placed it back in her bag. She was about to thank Him when voices rose from the corridor below.
Ellis stood at the bottom of the staircase with his father’s letter in one hand and Professor Slughorn beside him. Slughorn looked worried in a way he was trying to make cheerful, which only made the worry more obvious. Ellis’s face was pale, his swollen lip darker than before. He had opened the letter. That much was clear. Whatever it said had not left him untouched.
Jesus stood. Mira rose too, though she remained on the landing.
Slughorn glanced up and lowered his voice, but not enough. “Mr. Crowe, perhaps we should take this to the Headmistress before making any firm decisions.”
“My father is already here,” Ellis said.
Mira gripped the strap of her bag.
Slughorn sighed. “Yes, well, he arrived earlier than expected and in a state of some agitation. Understandable, to a degree. Parents do become concerned when words like hidden enchantment and threatened students enter the conversation.”
Ellis’s mouth tightened. “He is not concerned.”
Jesus descended the stairs. “Where is he?”
“In the antechamber off the entrance hall,” Slughorn said. “With Professor McGonagall, last I saw. I was sent to find Mr. Crowe before Mr. Crowe senior decided to search the school himself.”
Ellis looked at Jesus, and for a moment all the practiced coldness was gone. He looked like the boy in the mirror again, standing outside a study door. “The letter says I have disgraced our name.”
Slughorn winced. Mira felt something twist in her chest.
Ellis continued, each word controlled by force. “He says I am to come home immediately pending transfer to Durmstrang or private instruction, where discipline has not become theatrical.”
Slughorn cleared his throat. “Parents often write sharply under distress.”
Ellis looked at him. “He wrote before he knew most of it.”
No one answered that. The silence that followed felt too much like his father’s silence, and Mira saw Ellis begin to harden inside it. His hand closed around the letter. His eyes changed. The line on his palm, faint until then, flushed red.
Jesus stepped closer. “Ellis.”
“I told the truth,” Ellis said.
“Yes.”
“It changed nothing.”
Jesus held his gaze. “That is not true.”
“My father is still my father.”
“Yes.”
“He still thinks weakness is shameful.”
“Yes.”
“Then what changed?”
“You did not let his fear write your name.”
Ellis looked away, breathing hard. The sentence did not comfort him quickly. Mira was glad it did not. Quick comfort would have felt dishonest. She watched him fight the old instinct to turn hurt into something sharp enough to make everyone back away.
Slughorn shifted. “We should not keep your father waiting.”
Ellis gave a bitter breath. “No. We certainly should not.”
He started toward the stairs, then stopped. His hand went to the pocket where his prefect badge rested. Slowly, he took it out. For a moment Mira thought he would put it back on. Instead he held it out to Professor Slughorn.
Slughorn blinked. “What is this?”
“I used it to frighten younger students,” Ellis said, staring somewhere past the professor’s shoulder. “Not always. Enough. I should not wear it until the Headmistress decides whether I can be trusted with it.”
Slughorn’s face softened with real grief. “Ellis, perhaps we should discuss this after the morning has settled.”
“No,” Ellis said. “If I wait, I will find a cleaner way to say it.”
The professor looked down at the badge, then closed his hand around it with unusual seriousness. “Very well. I will keep it safe until Professor McGonagall decides.”
Ellis nodded once, but the movement cost him. The empty place on his robe looked even louder now. He turned and walked toward the entrance hall with Jesus beside him and Slughorn following. Mira did not ask permission to come. She simply followed at a distance. After a few steps, Tavin appeared from a side corridor with Professor Sprout’s scarf wrapped around his neck though it clearly did not belong to him.
“What happened?” Tavin whispered.
“His father is here,” Mira said.
Tavin’s face changed. “Oh.”
They followed together.
The entrance hall had been cleared of students, but portraits leaned from their frames along the walls, pretending not to listen. The great doors stood closed against the cold. Near the antechamber, Professor McGonagall’s voice cut through the heavy air with crisp restraint.
“Hogwarts does not permit parents to remove students from the grounds without proper review after a magical incident.”
A man’s voice answered, low and cold. “My son is not a public asset of this school, Professor. He is a Crowe. If this institution has placed him under the influence of an unregistered instructor and allowed some hidden curse to compromise him, I assure you the review will not be yours to control.”
Ellis stopped just outside the antechamber door. For the first time, Mira saw true fear in his face while he was fully awake and not under a spell. It was not fear of punishment only. It was fear of being reduced in front of the people who had seen him begin to become someone else.
Jesus stood beside him. “Do you want us to enter with you?”
Ellis looked at Him. The choice made his throat move. “Yes.”
They entered.
Mr. Crowe stood near the window with his gloved hands clasped behind his back. He was tall, pale, and dressed in dark robes of expensive cut, though nothing about him looked decorative. His hair was iron gray at the temples, and his eyes moved first to Jesus, then to Mira and Tavin, then to Ellis’s empty chest where the prefect badge should have been. His face barely changed, but Mira felt the judgment sharpen.
Professor McGonagall stood by the fireplace. Wren sat in a chair near the wall under a watchful charm, looking older in daylight and far less dangerous. His hands were folded in his lap, still faintly stained with ink. He did not look at Ellis’s father. Perhaps he could not bear another proud man in a room so soon after meeting the truth of himself.
Mr. Crowe looked at his son. “Where is your badge?”
Ellis’s jaw tightened. “With Professor Slughorn.”
“Why?”
“I surrendered it pending review.”
The man’s eyes narrowed slightly. “On whose instruction?”
“My own.”
That answer landed badly. Mira saw it, though Mr. Crowe showed almost nothing. His disapproval did not flare. It settled. That was worse.
“I see,” he said. “You have been here one night under this new moral atmosphere and have already learned to dramatize failure.”
Jesus looked at Ellis but did not speak for him.
Ellis swallowed. “I entered a forbidden chamber. I concealed it. I was marked by the enchantment because of what I chose and what I hid. The badge should not protect me from review.”
Mr. Crowe’s gaze hardened. “You will not recite your humiliation as if it were virtue.”
Ellis flinched, but he did not look away. “It is not virtue. It is true.”
For the first time, something like anger moved plainly across his father’s face. “Truth without strength is self-indulgence.”
The sentence struck Wren too. Mira saw the old professor lift his head. The room seemed to gather around the words because they belonged not only to Mr. Crowe. They belonged to a whole way of raising children, teaching children, shaping children into polished weapons and then acting surprised when they cut themselves.
Jesus spoke then. “Strength that cannot bear truth is only fear wearing armor.”
Mr. Crowe turned toward Him. “And you are?”
Professor McGonagall’s eyebrows lifted in warning, but Jesus answered with quiet simplicity. “Jesus.”
The man’s mouth tightened, as if the name irritated him by refusing the categories he had prepared. “I was not asking for a legend. I was asking for credentials.”
“I know.”
The room became dangerously still.
Mr. Crowe stepped closer. “My son will be leaving with me.”
“No,” McGonagall said. “Not today.”
His eyes snapped to her. “You overstep.”
“I protect my students,” she said.
“You allowed this.”
The accusation hit harder because it was not entirely baseless. McGonagall’s face changed in a way Mira would not have noticed before last night. The Headmistress was not ashamed of cowardice. She was wounded by responsibility. She had devoted her life to a castle that still had hidden rooms capable of reaching children through their deepest fears.
McGonagall drew herself taller. “Yes. Under my care, harm reached students. That will be answered for. But I will not allow your anger to become another hidden room.”
Mira almost stopped breathing. Tavin’s eyes widened. Ellis looked at his Headmistress as if he had not expected anyone in authority to speak that directly to his father.
Mr. Crowe’s voice lowered. “You should choose your words carefully.”
“I have,” McGonagall said.
Jesus looked at Ellis. “Speak what is yours to speak.”
Ellis’s face went pale again. “Here?”
Jesus did not answer with pressure. He waited.
Ellis turned toward his father. The boy seemed to grow younger and older at the same time. “I asked for private curse study because I wanted you to stop looking at me like I was unfinished.”
Mr. Crowe’s face froze. “This is not the place.”
“It never is,” Ellis said. His voice shook, but he kept going. “At home, it is not the place. In your study, it is not the time. In letters, it is not proper. At school, it is disgraceful. So there is no place, unless I make one.”
The line on his palm flushed bright, then faded again.
Mr. Crowe looked at Jesus with cold fury. “What have you done to him?”
Jesus answered, “I have not made him dishonor you by telling the truth.”
Ellis’s father turned back to his son. “You think this public display will make you stronger?”
“No,” Ellis said. “I think lying has made me cruel.”
The room went quiet in a deeper way. Wren closed his eyes. Mira felt the sentence reach him too. Tavin stared at Ellis with open admiration, which Ellis would have hated on any other morning.
Mr. Crowe looked at his son for a long moment. Something moved in his face, so slight that Mira almost missed it. Not softness. Recognition, perhaps. Or fear. Then it vanished.
“You will regret speaking to me this way,” he said.
Ellis nodded. A tear slipped down one side of his face, and this time he did not wipe it away quickly enough to hide it. “Maybe.”
The answer did not win anything. It did not transform his father. It did not make the room warm. But it stood. Mira realized that some truths were not doors yet. Some were stakes driven into the ground so a person could find the place again after the storm.
McGonagall moved to her desk and lifted a folded form. “Mr. Crowe, you may file a removal request through the governors. Until proper review is complete, your son remains in my care.”
His expression sharpened. “This will not end here.”
“No,” she said. “I expect it will not.”
He looked at Ellis once more. “You have chosen poorly.”
Ellis’s hands trembled at his sides. “I chose honestly.”
Mr. Crowe left without another word. The door closed behind him with controlled force, not a slam, which somehow made it worse. The sound faded into the entrance hall. No one moved until his footsteps disappeared.
Then Ellis sat down hard in the nearest chair.
Tavin took one step forward. “Are you all right?”
Ellis laughed once, and it came out broken. “No.”
Tavin nodded. “That seems fair.”
Mira crossed the room and stood near Ellis, not too close. “You spoke well.”
He looked up at her. “I spoke terribly.”
“You spoke truly.”
He looked at his hand. The pale line across his palm remained, but it no longer formed a word. It was only a scar now. His face changed when he saw it. He pressed his thumb against the place where coward had been and breathed out slowly.
Wren spoke from the chair near the wall. His voice was thin. “You did better than I did.”
Everyone looked at him. Wren seemed startled by his own words, as if kindness had escaped before pride could stop it. Ellis studied him with wary eyes.
“You do not know my father,” Ellis said.
“No,” Wren answered. “But I know what happens when a boy lets one man’s contempt become a school inside him.”
That sentence hurt the room. It hurt because it was true. It also seemed to hurt Wren to say it. He looked down at his stained hands, and for the first time Mira wondered how many decades he had spent teaching imaginary students after the real ones had been taken from him by his own bitterness.
Professor McGonagall’s face remained stern. “Calder, your own review has not begun.”
“I know,” Wren said.
“You will answer for what you made.”
“I know.”
Jesus looked at him. “And you will not answer alone.”
Wren’s mouth trembled. “Why?”
Jesus did not move toward him. He did not make mercy sentimental. “Because judgment without mercy may name the wrong, but it cannot heal what made the wrong grow.”
McGonagall looked at Jesus with a troubled expression. “Mercy does not remove consequence.”
“No,” Jesus said. “It makes consequence serve truth instead of revenge.”
The Headmistress turned that over in silence. Mira could see the weight of leadership pressing on her. She had students to protect, parents to answer, governors who would demand control, teachers who were shaken, and an old failure of the school now sitting in her antechamber with ink still on his hands. Last night’s darkness had been broken, but daylight had brought the work of repair, and repair was less dramatic than rescue.
A knock came at the door. Professor Sprout entered without waiting for a full invitation, which told Mira something serious had happened. Her face was flushed from hurrying, and the scarf Tavin had worn earlier was now missing, leaving her collar slightly crooked.
“Minerva,” she said, then noticed the room was full. “Oh. Good. Saves me finding everyone.”
McGonagall’s eyes narrowed. “What is it?”
“The students are asking to write home before rumors reach their parents first. Some are frightened that the mirrors showed things they did not choose to reveal. Others want to know whether what happened in the corridor will be recorded. A few older students are already saying the marked ones caused the whole thing.”
Mira’s stomach dropped.
Ellis stood too quickly. “Of course they are.”
Sprout’s eyes softened when she looked at him, but she did not lie. “Yes. Children can be frightened into cruelty almost as quickly as adults.”
Tavin’s shoulders tensed. “What do we do?”
Professor McGonagall opened her mouth, likely to give a school policy answer. Then she paused and looked at Jesus. He did not take the authority from her. He only met her gaze. Something passed between them, not magic, but understanding.
McGonagall turned to the students. “At noon, each house will gather separately with its head of house. We will tell the truth plainly enough to stop lies from taking root, without exposing private matters that do not belong to the public.”
Mira felt the rightness of that immediately. Shame thrived in secrecy, but cruelty thrived in careless exposure. The line between them was thin and holy.
Sprout nodded. “And the marked students?”
McGonagall looked at Mira, Tavin, and Ellis. “They will not be made examples.”
Ellis’s face tightened as if he expected a but.
McGonagall continued, “Nor will they be hidden as if they are stains on the school. They may speak if they choose. They may remain silent if they choose. Any official account will state that three students discovered the hidden enchantment, were harmed by it, and helped bring it to an end under Professor Jesus’ care.”
Professor Slughorn, who had remained quiet by the door, gave a soft cough. “That wording may cause questions.”
McGonagall looked at him. “Good. Better questions than lies.”
Mira saw Jesus’ eyes warm slightly. He said nothing, but the silence around Him felt pleased in a way that did not need praise.
By noon, the castle had divided into its houses like a wounded body checking each limb. Ravenclaws gathered in their common room beneath the painted stars and arched windows, though the daylight made the enchanted ceiling look faint. Mira stood near one of the bookshelves while Professor Flitwick spoke gently but firmly about the hidden room, the false voices, and the danger of turning fear into gossip. He did not name Mira. He did not have to. Several students glanced toward her anyway.
Alina Fawley stood beside her, close enough that the glances did not feel quite as sharp. That surprised Mira. Alina was clever, quiet, and usually careful not to stand near trouble. When Flitwick invited students to ask questions, a boy named Corbin raised his hand with the eager look of someone pretending curiosity was courage.
“Professor, is it true some students opened the room first?”
Mira felt the common room shift.
Flitwick’s expression became unusually grave. “It is true that students found the entrance. It is also true that the enchantment had already been reaching beyond it.”
Corbin pressed on. “But if they had told someone right away, would last night have happened?”
The question was not entirely cruel. That made it harder. Mira felt heat rise in her face because the answer was yes, maybe. Maybe not. Maybe partly. The book had moved through their secrecy. Their fear had given it time. She did not want that to be true, but mercy had not made truth optional.
Before Flitwick could answer, Mira stepped forward.
The room turned toward her.
“I should have told someone sooner,” she said.
Her voice shook, but the words held. Flitwick’s face softened with concern, but he did not interrupt.
Mira continued, “I was frightened. I was ashamed. I thought if I could hide my part, I could control what people thought. That gave the enchantment more room to work.”
The common room was so quiet she could hear the fire clicking in the grate.
“I am sorry,” she said. “Not for things I did not do, but for that.”
Corbin looked uncomfortable now. That helped a little.
A girl by the window asked softly, “Did it show your secrets?”
Mira’s first instinct was to close. She felt it like a hand grabbing her ribs. Then she remembered Jesus on the stair beside her, saying one true sentence and then another. She did not owe the room every detail, but she could tell enough truth to stop shame from writing the rest.
“It showed what I was afraid of,” Mira said. “That is not the same as knowing all of me.”
Flitwick nodded, his eyes bright behind his tiny spectacles. “An excellent distinction.”
Alina spoke next, surprising everyone. “Then maybe we should not act like seeing someone frightened means we understand them.”
The room shifted again, this time in a better way. Several students looked down. A few nodded. Corbin muttered something that might have been agreement. Mira breathed for what felt like the first time since standing up.
Across the castle, Tavin stood in the Hufflepuff common room while Professor Sprout sat in an armchair beside the fire and let the students ask what they needed to ask. Hufflepuffs did not turn pain into debate as quickly as Ravenclaws, but they had their own way of making kindness too crowded. Three people had already hugged Tavin that morning without asking, which left him grateful and overwhelmed. When someone asked whether he had really forgotten his sister’s name, the room went tense with embarrassment.
Tavin rubbed the back of his neck. “For a few minutes, yes.”
A younger student gasped. “That is horrible.”
“It was,” Tavin said. “But I remembered. And Professor Jesus said what was taken for a moment was not lost to God.”
Professor Sprout wiped her eyes with the corner of her sleeve and pretended she had not.
Tavin looked around the room, feeling the old desire to make everyone feel safe even while he was still shaken. He almost turned the moment into a joke. Then he stopped. “I want to say something, but I need everyone not to make it too sweet afterward.”
Several Hufflepuffs nodded with great seriousness, which nearly ruined it.
Tavin continued, “I have used worrying as if it were proof that I love people. Last night showed me that fear can pretend to be love and still hurt you. So if I seem different, or if I do not try to fix everything, I am not being cold. I am trying to learn.”
The room received that with a tenderness that did not rush him. For once, no one hugged him right away. Professor Sprout looked proud enough to burst, but she only said, “Well spoken.”
In the Slytherin common room, nothing was tender at first. The greenish light from the lake moved across the stone walls, making every face look guarded. Professor Slughorn stood near the mantel with Ellis’s badge in his pocket. He had explained the official account with careful dignity, but the room wanted more. Slytherins disliked being told only enough. They had a gift for hearing what was not said and turning it into leverage before anyone else reached the door.
A seventh-year named Cassian Rowle leaned back on a leather sofa. “So Crowe finds a cursed room, gets marked, loses his badge, and we are meant to call that helping?”
Several students looked toward Ellis. He stood near the far wall, arms at his sides, not crossed. That alone made him look different.
Slughorn began, “Mr. Rowle, I would advise—”
Ellis interrupted. “No. Let him ask.”
Slughorn looked pained but allowed it.
Cassian’s mouth curved. “Fine. Did you lose your nerve, Crowe?”
A few students inhaled. That was the kind of question that once would have started a quiet war. Ellis felt the old reflex rise like a wand hand. He could answer with humiliation. Cassian had plenty available. He could answer with threat. The room would understand that language quickly. Instead he looked at the black water moving beyond the common room windows and thought of the mirror that had shown his father’s face.
“Yes,” Ellis said.
The room went still.
Cassian blinked. “What?”
“I lost my nerve,” Ellis said. “Then I tried to cover it with anger. Then I nearly used a curse I had no right to use.”
The silence turned sharp. Slughorn looked stricken, but he did not stop him.
Ellis looked at the younger students first, including the boy who had struck him in the corridor and now sat very small in a corner. “I have used fear to make myself feel less afraid. Some of you know that. Some of you helped me because it felt safer than crossing me. That ends now.”
Cassian laughed, but it came out uncertain. “Very noble. Did the new teacher give you that speech?”
“No,” Ellis said. “He gave me enough silence to hear how ugly it sounded in me.”
The room did not know what to do with that. Neither did Ellis, completely. He felt exposed, but not destroyed. The difference was new enough that he could not trust it yet.
The younger boy in the corner lifted his eyes. “You held me back last night.”
Ellis looked at him. “Yes.”
“I hit you.”
“Yes.”
The boy’s face reddened. “Sorry.”
Ellis touched his swollen lip. “Accepted.”
That small exchange did more to silence the room than any speech could have. Cassian looked annoyed, but the moment had turned away from him. Slughorn removed a handkerchief from his pocket and dabbed at his eyes, then pretended to polish his spectacles though he did not wear any.
When the house meetings ended, students returned to the Great Hall for a subdued lunch. The school did not heal in one morning. Mira heard two girls whispering and stop when she approached. Tavin flinched when someone mentioned sisters in a harmless conversation. Ellis found a folded scrap of blank parchment on the Slytherin table and stared at it too long before realizing it was only someone’s abandoned notes. But the whole castle felt different, as if a window had been opened in a room no one admitted was stale.
Jesus did not sit for lunch. He walked the edges of the Great Hall, stopping when a student needed Him, moving on when they did not. He spoke little. Once, he knelt beside the first-year girl who had heard her mother’s voice and helped her tie a ribbon around a letter home. Another time, He stood with a Ravenclaw boy whose hands shook too badly to hold a spoon, saying nothing until the shaking eased. The students watched Him less now as a mystery and more as someone they might approach when their strength had run out.
That afternoon, McGonagall reopened the Defense classroom.
Mira, Tavin, and Ellis were asked to come, along with Professor Sprout, Slughorn, Flitwick, Sinistra, and Wren. The room had been cleaned, but not restored to the way it was before. That seemed intentional. The desks remained slightly uneven from the night’s tremors. The board still bore faint scratches where the red writing had appeared. On the floor near the teacher’s desk, a dark stain marked the place where the book had collapsed into dust.
Wren stood just inside the door, looking at the stain as if it were a grave. In daylight, his old robes looked more threadbare, and his face had lost the feverish brightness that had made him frightening. He seemed almost ordinary now, which made what he had done harder to understand and easier to fear. Evil that looked monstrous could be kept at a distance. Wrongdoing that wore a tired human face demanded a deeper honesty.
McGonagall spoke first. “This room must be addressed.”
Slughorn glanced around. “Addressed how?”
“As a place where harm occurred,” she said. “Not covered over with fresh paint and a new timetable.”
Flitwick nodded solemnly. “There are charms for cleansing residual enchantment, but memory is another matter.”
Professor Sinistra, who had been quiet near the windows, said, “Some rooms hold what happened in them because everyone agrees not to speak of it. That kind of silence has its own magic.”
Wren closed his eyes. “I taught here because I wanted the room to fear me.”
Mira looked at him sharply.
He opened his eyes but kept them on the floor. “I was laughed at here when I was a student. Later, when I returned as a teacher, every lesson felt like a trial. I told myself I would make students stronger than I had been. The truth is uglier. I wanted no child to look at me with pity again.”
Ellis stood very still.
McGonagall’s voice was controlled. “Why was there no record of the room?”
Wren’s mouth trembled. “Because I moved the records. Then I moved the memories.”
Flitwick’s face went pale. “You altered staff memory?”
“Not fully. Not cleanly.” Wren looked ashamed enough to fold inward. “I encouraged forgetting where forgetting already wished to happen. The curse on the Defense position helped. Teachers came and went. Incidents piled on incidents. My year became one more unpleasant chapter no one wanted to study.”
McGonagall turned away for a moment, and Mira could see how hard she was working not to answer from anger alone. When she turned back, her face had become stern again, but not cruel. “You will provide every hidden record you can recover.”
“Yes,” Wren said.
“You will submit yourself to questioning under proper safeguards.”
“Yes.”
“You will not teach children.”
Wren flinched. “No.”
Jesus watched him with quiet sorrow. “Calder.”
The old professor looked at Him.
“Do not answer only as a man accepting punishment. Answer as a man refusing to hide again.”
Wren swallowed. “I will not teach children.”
This time the words sounded different. Not merely imposed. Owned.
Mira looked at Jesus and wondered how He could make consequence feel heavier and more merciful at the same time. It was not softness. Wren was not being excused. If anything, he was being required to stand more fully in the truth than any prison of silence would have demanded. That frightened Mira because it meant mercy was not escape. It was a harder road walked with God.
McGonagall moved to the teacher’s desk. “The question remains. What becomes of this room now?”
Everyone looked around. The Defense Against the Dark Arts classroom seemed to wait.
Tavin raised his hand halfway, then looked embarrassed and lowered it. McGonagall saw.
“Mr. Brock?”
He cleared his throat. “Maybe it should not be only Defense Against the Dark Arts.”
Slughorn blinked. “It is the Defense classroom.”
“I know,” Tavin said. “But last night the dark art was not only a curse. It was shame. And fear. And using people’s pain to control them.” He glanced at Jesus, then back at McGonagall. “Maybe students should learn what to do when darkness sounds like something they already believe.”
The room went quiet. Mira felt the rightness of it immediately.
Flitwick’s eyes brightened. “A practical defense of the inner life.”
Sinistra nodded slowly. “Not therapy dressed as spellwork. Not moral lectures. Real discernment.”
Slughorn looked uncomfortable, which meant the idea had reached him. “That could become messy.”
Professor Sprout gave him a look. “Horace, children are already messy. We have merely been grading the tidy parts.”
Mira nearly smiled.
McGonagall turned to Jesus. “Is that what you intended to teach?”
Jesus looked at the desks, the old stones, the scarred floor, and the place where the book had died. “I came to teach them that darkness is not defeated by becoming darker. Spells may guard the body. Truth and mercy must guard the heart.”
No one spoke for several breaths.
Then Ellis said, “Students will mock it.”
McGonagall looked at him. “Would you?”
He considered lying, then shook his head. “Last week, yes.”
“And now?”
He looked at the stain on the floor. “Now I think I need it.”
That simple admission settled the question more strongly than any adult argument could have. McGonagall’s face softened, though only briefly. “Then the room will remain open. Not as if nothing happened. Because something did.”
Wren looked at the stain. “Leave it.”
Everyone turned toward him.
His voice was quiet. “Not the curse. Remove every trace of that. But leave some mark on the floor. If the room is made perfect, people will trust it too quickly.”
McGonagall studied him. “You are asking us to preserve a reminder of your wrongdoing.”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
Wren looked at the three students. “Because hidden shame nearly turned my wound into the school’s inheritance. Perhaps visible truth can do the opposite.”
Mira did not know whether she fully trusted him. She did not think she needed to. Trust would take time, and some trust might never be owed. But the sentence carried the weight of a man taking one step away from the mirror he had served.
Jesus nodded once. “That is a beginning.”
The meeting ended with decisions that were only the first bones of repair. Records would be recovered. Parents would be informed carefully. The hidden passage would be sealed, but not erased from school memory. The Defense curriculum would change. Wren would remain under watch until the Headmistress determined the proper authorities and protections. Students affected by the enchantment would be given time, not punishment disguised as order.
When Mira left the classroom, the afternoon had turned gold against the snow outside. Tavin walked beside her, quiet for once. Ellis followed a step behind, his hands in his pockets, the empty place on his robe still visible. They reached the broken statue and stopped without speaking. The spear had returned to its old lowered angle. The seam in the wall was gone. For once, the stone looked only like stone.
Tavin touched the statue’s base with two fingers. “I hate this thing.”
Mira said, “I do too.”
Ellis looked at it. “Good. We can agree on something.”
Tavin laughed softly. Then his face grew serious. “Do you think it is really over?”
Mira knew what he meant. Not the book. Not the mirrors. The deeper thing. The fear returning. The old voices finding new ways to speak. The family letters, the father’s silence, the habit of worry, the shame that might grow back if left untended.
“No,” she said honestly. “Not over like that.”
Ellis leaned against the opposite wall. “That is encouraging.”
She looked at him. “It is more honest than pretending.”
He accepted that with a small nod.
Tavin looked down the corridor toward the Defense classroom, where Jesus remained inside with the teachers. “Then what do we do now?”
Mira thought of her mother’s letter in her bag and the first true sentence she still had to write. Ellis touched his pocket where the badge no longer was. Tavin looked toward the windows as if home were somewhere beyond the snow, carrying a little sister he loved but could not protect by fear alone. None of them had been fixed overnight. None of them had become brave enough to stop needing mercy.
Mira looked back at the statue. “We learn.”
The answer was small, but it did not feel weak. It felt like the only honest answer large enough to begin again.
Behind them, the Defense classroom door opened. Jesus stepped into the corridor, and the warm light from the room fell across the scarred stone floor behind Him. He looked at the three of them standing near the place where the hidden door had been, and His face held the quiet approval of someone who did not need them to be finished before He called them forward.
“Come,” He said. “There is still daylight.”
They followed Him down the corridor, not away from what had happened, but through the first ordinary afternoon after it. The castle moved around them with its old sounds and shifting staircases, its portraits and drafts, its snow-bright windows and rooms full of children learning how to live with what they had seen. Hogwarts had not been made innocent by one night of mercy. But the silence had been broken, and in that break, something truer than fear had begun to take root.
Chapter Five: The Lesson Beneath the Wand
The next Defense lesson was not listed on any timetable, but every student knew about it before the bell rang. Hogwarts had never been able to keep a secret from itself once breakfast, staircases, portraits, and nervous children had touched it. By midafternoon, the corridors buzzed with guesses about what Professor Jesus would do with a classroom where a cursed book had died, an old shame had been uncovered, and three students had walked out looking older than they had when they went in. Some expected a grand cleansing spell. Others expected a lecture from McGonagall, detention for half the school, or the complete closure of the Defense corridor until the governors arrived with papers, outrage, and polished shoes.
Mira expected none of those things and feared all of them anyway. She stood outside the Ravenclaw common room with an unfinished letter to her mother folded inside her pocket. The first sentence had taken nearly an hour. I need to tell you what happened without trying to make myself look better or worse than I am. She had stared at that line until the ink blurred, not because it was complicated, but because it was the first letter home that did not begin by reporting marks, conduct, or achievement. She had not finished it because the bell rang before she could decide whether truth needed more courage or fewer adjectives.
Tavin met her near the staircase with a piece of licorice wand sticking out of his pocket and Professor Sprout’s scarf still wrapped around his neck. It was too large for him, and he seemed unaware that it made him look like someone’s worried aunt had dressed him in a hurry. He had written to Lottie that morning and told her, in the plainest words he could manage, that he loved her and that he was learning not to turn love into fear. Then he had added a drawing of a garden gnome wearing a hat because he did not want the whole letter to sound like a funeral. He carried the finished letter in his hand, waiting for a break long enough to take it to the owlery without remembering too sharply what had happened there.
Ellis arrived last, walking from the direction of the dungeons with his robe still bare where the prefect badge used to sit. The absence had become a kind of challenge around him. Some students stared at it with satisfaction, others with discomfort, and a few younger Slytherins looked relieved in a way that wounded him more than open mockery would have. He had spent the morning discovering that stepping away from fear did not erase the memory of how many people had learned to fear him. That knowledge sat on him heavily, but he did not put the badge back on in his imagination to make it easier.
They walked together without agreeing to. The staircases shifted, carrying them toward the Defense corridor as if the castle itself had decided not to delay the lesson. Snowlight filled the tall windows and made the stone look cleaner than it was. On the wall near the broken statue, a new brass plate had been fixed beside the sealed seam. It did not name the cursed book, Wren, or the students. It simply said, This door was once hidden. Let no wound be hidden so long that it learns to rule.
Mira stopped when she saw it. Tavin read it twice. Ellis stared at the words with his jaw set and his hands in his pockets. The plate was small, but it changed the corridor more than a larger memorial would have. It did not turn the harm into spectacle. It did not pretend harm had not happened. It stood there quietly, forcing anyone who passed to admit that hidden things could become dangerous when no one loved truth enough to face them.
“McGonagall does not waste words,” Tavin said.
Ellis looked at the sealed wall. “No.”
Mira touched the folded letter in her pocket. “I think that is why they land.”
The Defense classroom door stood open. Inside, desks had been rearranged into a wide circle. Not a perfect one. Hogwarts furniture resisted perfection after centuries of students scraping legs across stone, carving initials beneath tabletops, and dropping cauldrons in places cauldrons never belonged. The dark stain where the book had collapsed remained near the teacher’s desk, but it had been sealed under clear protective charmwork so no one could touch it or pretend it was dirt to be scrubbed away. Sunlight fell across it in a thin pale line.
Students entered slowly. This was not a regular class year group. McGonagall had allowed a mixed gathering by invitation, made up of older students, those affected by the Mirror Room, and a few younger ones whose parents had already written demanding reassurance. Professor Flitwick stood near the windows. Professor Sprout sat in the back with her hands folded over her apron. Slughorn hovered by the door, unusually quiet. Wren was not present, but the chair nearest the teacher’s desk had been left empty in a way that made his absence visible.
Jesus stood in the center of the room. He wore the same plain dark clothing, no teaching robes, no wand, no sign of rank. If anyone had expected Him to begin by proving He belonged at Hogwarts, they were disappointed. He did not look like a wizard attempting to impress children who had seen too much magic to be easily impressed. He looked like a man who had entered a dangerous room before the children arrived and prayed there until the danger had lost the right to own it.
When everyone had taken a seat, Jesus looked around the circle. He did not begin with the book. He did not begin with Wren. He did not begin with the broken mirror chamber, the midnight corridor, or the governors who were already sending letters tied in red tape. He looked at a seventh-year whose hands remained clenched in his lap, a first-year wrapped in McGonagall’s tartan blanket, a Slytherin boy who had lost his mother, and the three students who had first opened the hidden door.
Then He said, “Take out your wands.”
The room shifted with surprise. Students obeyed more quickly than they had when He told the first class to set their wands down. Wood appeared in hands around the circle. Some held their wands confidently. Others gripped them like they expected the wands to become witnesses against them. Mira felt the familiar comfort of hers settle into her fingers. A wand meant she could do something. It was easier to hold a tool than a truth.
Jesus looked at the circle of raised hands. “Now set them on the floor in front of you.”
The comfort left at once.
A few students hesitated. Ellis was one of them. His hand closed around his wand and did not move for several seconds. Mira saw the struggle in his face and understood that this was not about a piece of wood. Tavin placed his wand down first, then Mira did the same. The small sound of it touching stone seemed to move through the room. One by one, the others followed, until every wand lay between its owner and the center of the circle.
Jesus did not smile. “A wand can defend the body. It can also hide the heart. Today we begin beneath the wand.”
No one joked. No one looked away for long.
He walked slowly around the inside of the circle. “You have learned spells that block, disarm, stun, reveal, shield, and repel. Those are good skills when used rightly. But the darkness that entered this school did not begin by attacking your bodies. It began by speaking in voices you already trusted or feared. It asked for agreement. It offered control. It told you that exposure was the same as truth, and that shame was the same as correction.”
Mira listened with her hands folded tightly in her lap. It did not sound like a sermon because He was not dressing ordinary ideas in holy language. He was naming what had happened in the room where it happened. The stone floor, the sealed stain, the empty chair, the wands lying unused, and the tired faces of the students gave the words weight without needing them to become dramatic.
A Gryffindor girl raised her hand, then seemed embarrassed because no one had been told to raise hands. Jesus nodded to her.
“How do we defend against something that uses what is true?” she asked.
The question moved through the class with visible force. It was the question underneath every whispered fear since the night before. If the book had lied completely, it could have been dismissed as a monster. But it had used pieces of truth. It had shown real fears, real griefs, real pride, real failures, and real wounds. That made it harder to hate and harder to resist.
Jesus stepped toward the sealed stain on the floor. “Truth without love becomes accusation. Love without truth becomes weakness. The darkness used truth without love. You defend against it by refusing both the lie and the loveless use of the truth.”
The Gryffindor girl frowned with effort. “How?”
Jesus looked around the circle. “By learning to ask what the truth is for.”
Mira felt that sentence settle inside her. Her mother’s letter had used facts. The family name was real. Her record was real. The incident was real. Yet the truth in the letter had been arranged like furniture in a room where Mira was meant to stand trial. She wondered what it would mean to answer from another kind of room.
Jesus turned to the first-year girl wrapped in the tartan blanket. “When the wall showed your mother, was it true that she missed you?”
The child nodded, her eyes wide.
“Was the voice that called you through the wall loving you?”
She shook her head slowly. “No.”
“Why?”
The girl swallowed. “Because it wanted me to leave where I was safe.”
Jesus nodded. “Good. The truth was that your mother loves you and misses you. The lie was that fear should lead you because of it.”
The child held the blanket closer, but her face changed. She looked less ashamed of having followed the voice. That mattered. The room did not need her to become brave backward. It needed her to learn what had happened without becoming trapped inside it.
Jesus looked toward Tavin. “When fear speaks in the language of love, what question must you ask?”
Tavin froze because he had not expected to be called on. Several heads turned toward him. He flushed, then looked down at his wand on the floor. “Where is it leading me?”
Jesus waited.
Tavin lifted his eyes. “If it leads me to protect someone wisely, maybe I need to listen. If it leads me to control everything, accuse people, panic, or act like I am responsible for what only God can carry, then it is not love leading anymore.”
Professor Sprout pressed a hand to her mouth in the back of the room. Tavin noticed and looked away quickly, embarrassed, but not ruined by it. A Hufflepuff beside him nodded as if something important had finally been said in words he could use.
Jesus turned to Mira. She felt it before He spoke. Her back straightened, and every habit in her prepared a polished answer. Then she remembered her wand on the floor and the unfinished letter in her pocket. She tried to breathe.
“When truth comes through disappointment,” Jesus asked, “what question must you ask?”
Mira’s mouth went dry. She could feel the Ravenclaws listening. She could feel Ellis and Tavin listening too, but their attention was different now. They were not waiting for her to perform. They were standing near the same fire in another part of the room.
She answered carefully. “I need to ask whether the disappointment is calling me toward what is right or just trying to make me earn love.”
Jesus nodded. “And if you have done wrong?”
“Then I need to admit what is mine,” she said. Her voice shook, but she kept it steady enough. “But I should not accept a name God has not given me.”
The sentence surprised her after she said it. It sounded like something she would need to hear again later, perhaps while writing the rest of the letter. She looked down at her hands and saw that the last gray marks beneath her nails had faded to almost nothing.
Jesus turned to Ellis.
The room grew still in a different way. Everyone knew something had happened with Ellis. Not everyone knew details, but the empty place where his badge belonged had become its own rumor. Ellis sat with both hands on his knees, his wand lying on the floor before him. His face did not close this time, though it tightened.
“When strength is demanded without mercy,” Jesus asked, “what question must you ask?”
Ellis looked at the sealed stain, then at his hands. “Who is being served by the strength?”
The room seemed to lean toward the answer.
He continued with effort. “If strength protects someone, tells the truth, carries responsibility, or keeps me from making fear someone else’s burden, then it is strength. If it only keeps me from being embarrassed, or makes someone smaller so I can feel safe, then it is pride.”
Jesus looked at him with quiet approval. “Yes.”
Ellis did not smile. The approval seemed to hurt him almost as much as correction, but he did not reject it. That was new.
A seventh-year near the windows spoke without raising his hand. “What if someone deserves to be exposed?”
The question carried heat. Mira did not know the boy’s story, but she could hear it under his voice. Someone had wronged him. Maybe the Mirror Room had shown it. Maybe the whole talk of mercy sounded to him like another way to protect people who should have been named.
Jesus turned to him fully. “Then exposure must serve justice, not appetite.”
The boy’s jaw tightened. “What does that mean?”
“It means truth may need to be brought to light so harm stops. But if you enjoy another person’s humiliation, something in you is being fed that justice cannot bless.”
The boy looked away, angry because the answer had found him.
Professor McGonagall had entered quietly and now stood near the door. No one noticed until her voice joined the room. “There will be formal consequences for what happened. Let no one mistake mercy for disorder.”
Jesus looked at her with gratitude. “Yes.”
McGonagall stepped farther inside. “But there will also be care for the harmed. Let no one mistake consequence for healing.”
The students looked from her to Jesus. Mira saw something form in the room then, not a spell exactly, but a shared understanding that Hogwarts had missed before. Defense could not mean only stopping danger after it had grown teeth. It had to mean learning what kind of people they were becoming before fear and power taught them a darker lesson.
Jesus asked them to pick up their wands again. The movement was slow and thoughtful now. Wood returned to palms, but it did not feel the same. Mira held hers and wondered how many times she had used competence to avoid honesty. Tavin held his and looked as if he might apologize to it. Ellis picked his up last, carefully, without the old hunger.
Jesus walked to the teacher’s desk and lifted three small objects from it. A cracked teacup, a folded scrap of parchment, and a tarnished silver button. He placed them on the floor within the circle. No one understood. The objects looked ordinary enough to be forgotten.
“These were found near the Mirror Room,” He said. “Not cursed now. Only remembered.”
The first-year girl stared at the button. “That was on my mum’s cloak.”
Jesus nodded. “A memory used wrongly.”
A Ravenclaw boy near the back looked at the parchment. “That is mine.”
“What is written on it?” Jesus asked.
The boy’s face reddened. “A mark from last term. I hid it.”
Jesus did not ask him to explain further. “A failure used wrongly.”
Ellis looked at the cracked teacup. Something flickered across his face. “That was from Potions.”
Slughorn made a soft sound near the door.
Jesus said, “A mistake used wrongly.”
He stepped back from the objects. “You will now defend them.”
A murmur rose. Someone asked how. Jesus lifted one hand, and the room quieted.
“Not by destroying them,” He said. “Not by hiding them. Not by pretending they do not matter. You will use a shield charm, but before you cast, you will speak one true sentence about what you are defending.”
The room became uneasy. This was the kind of lesson Hogwarts students did not know how to categorize. It used magic, but it required something magic could not provide. Mira watched the first-year girl stand with her wand shaking in one hand. She faced the silver button on the floor.
Jesus spoke gently. “What is true?”
The child whispered, “I miss her.”
The button trembled.
Jesus waited.
The girl’s voice grew a little stronger. “Missing her does not mean I should follow every voice that sounds like her.”
She cast Protego. A small, clear shield formed around the button. It was not large, but it held. The girl looked stunned when it worked. McGonagall’s stern face softened, and Flitwick actually sniffed.
The Ravenclaw boy came next. His face had gone scarlet, but he stood before the parchment. “I failed the exam,” he said quickly.
Nothing happened.
He swallowed. “I failed the exam, and hiding it made me more afraid of it than the mark itself.”
He cast. His shield flickered, then steadied around the folded scrap. Several Ravenclaws looked down, perhaps remembering their own hidden marks, their own polished stories, their own terror of being ordinary.
Ellis was the last of the three. He stood before the cracked teacup with his wand at his side. Mira remembered Slughorn’s words in Potions, a fine color in the wrong minute. She had not known then that the cracked teacup would become part of the lesson. Ellis looked at it as if it were far more dangerous than a cursed mirror.
Jesus asked, “What is true?”
Ellis breathed out slowly. “I made a mistake because I was afraid.”
The teacup did not move. The room waited.
Ellis looked at Slughorn. “And I repaired it too quickly because I did not want anyone to see.”
Slughorn’s expression grew tender, but he did not interrupt.
Ellis lifted his wand. “A mistake I hide can start teaching me to lie. A mistake I admit can start teaching me to change.”
He cast Protego. The shield that formed around the teacup was stronger than anyone expected, clear at the edges and bright enough to throw light against the ceiling. Ellis stared at it in disbelief. The Slytherin boy whose mother’s voice had called him watched Ellis with something like hope and confusion mixed together. That might have been the first time some of them had seen strength look like confession without collapse.
The lesson continued for more than an hour. Students brought forward small things from pockets, bags, and memories. A broken quill. A ribbon. A detention slip. A pebble from the lake. A family ring. A sweet wrapper saved from the last Hogsmeade visit before someone’s parents separated. Not every student spoke aloud. Jesus did not force them. Some only whispered. Some stood and could not speak at all, and He sent them gently back to their seats without shame.
Mira did not go forward until near the end. Her object was the unfinished letter. She had not planned to use it. Her hand reached into her pocket almost before she agreed. When she stood, the room blurred at the edges because every Ravenclaw part of her still hated doing something important without knowing how it would be graded.
She placed the folded letter beside the other objects. It looked plain and terribly vulnerable. Jesus stood a few steps away, giving her the room to speak. Mira looked at the letter and saw her mother’s two pages in her mind, every controlled line, every sentence that placed family reputation above the frightened daughter receiving it.
“What is true?” Jesus asked.
Mira’s voice came quietly. “I love my mother.”
No one moved.
“She has hurt me,” Mira said. The words felt dangerous, but they did not burn her mouth. “Both can be true.”
The letter lay still.
Mira swallowed. “I do not have to answer her as the daughter she is trying to protect through pressure. I can answer as the daughter God sees.”
Her wand rose. “I am defending the truth without letting it become hatred.”
She cast. The shield around the letter was not as bright as Ellis’s, but it was steady. It held close to the parchment like a small clear dome. Mira lowered her wand, shaken by the sight of her own truth protected instead of hidden.
Tavin went forward after her, holding Lottie’s letter. He placed it down and stared at the folded paper with a tenderness that made the whole class look away a little, not from discomfort, but from respect. He spoke softly, yet the room heard him.
“I love my sister,” he said. “I cannot keep her safe by being afraid all the time.”
He rubbed his eyes with his sleeve and gave a small embarrassed laugh. “I am defending love from becoming fear.”
His shield formed around the letter, warm and clean, and this time Professor Sprout did cry openly. No one teased her. No one dared.
The last student to stand was the younger Slytherin boy Ellis had held back in the corridor. His name was Rowan Aster, though most people had only started using it after last night because grief had made him visible in a way no child should have to earn. He walked to the center of the circle with a small green thread in his hand. It had come from the sleeve of his mother’s old cloak. He knelt and placed it on the stone.
Jesus’ face softened.
Rowan gripped his wand so tightly his knuckles whitened. “I do not want to say it.”
Jesus said, “Then do not perform it. Speak only what is yours.”
Rowan nodded, breathing hard. “I miss my mum, and I hate that everyone keeps telling me she would want me to be brave.”
The room tightened with grief.
“I do not want to be brave,” Rowan said. “I want her back.”
No one corrected him. No one softened the sentence into something easier. It stood in the room, raw and honest, and because it was not forced to become pretty, it became something holy.
Jesus knelt several feet away, not touching the thread. “What else is true?”
Rowan’s face crumpled. “That was not her calling me last night.”
“No,” Jesus said.
“It felt like her.”
“I know.”
Rowan wiped his face angrily. “I hate that it felt like her.”
Jesus waited.
Rowan lifted his wand toward the green thread. “I am defending my love for her from the thing that pretended to be her.”
He cast. The shield flickered, failed, and disappeared. Rowan made a small wounded sound and lowered his wand quickly, humiliated before anyone had spoken. Ellis stood at once.
“Try again,” Ellis said.
Rowan looked at him, startled and embarrassed. “I can’t.”
“Yes, you can.”
The old Ellis might have made those words sound like pressure. This time they sounded like someone standing at the edge of a pit and refusing to let another boy believe it had no bottom. Ellis stepped closer, but not into the center.
“When I held you back last night, you hit me because you thought I was keeping you from her,” he said. “I was not angry.”
Rowan’s eyes filled again. “I am sorry.”
“I know. Try again.”
Rowan looked at Jesus. Jesus nodded gently. The boy raised his wand with a shaking hand. “I miss my mum,” he whispered. “And I can live without following a lie to find her.”
He cast again. This shield was small and uneven, but it formed. It trembled around the green thread like a bubble in wind, then settled. Rowan stared at it, crying openly now. Ellis stood beside him until the boy lowered his wand. Then Ellis returned to his seat without looking around to see who had noticed.
The class ended without applause. Applause would have been wrong. Jesus asked each student to retrieve their object only when they were ready. Some placed theirs back into pockets. Others left them on the desk for a while. Mira kept her letter in her hand, feeling its weight differently now. It was no longer only a threat from home. It had become a place where she could practice truth without surrendering gentleness.
As the students left, McGonagall stopped beside Jesus near the sealed stain. Her voice was low, but Mira heard because she was still gathering her bag. “The governors will not understand this lesson.”
Jesus looked at the emptying circle of desks. “Some will fear what they cannot control.”
“That is a generous way to describe them.”
He looked at her, and something like warmth touched His face. “You have led frightened people before.”
“Yes,” she said. “But frightened adults are often more dangerous than frightened children.”
“That is true.”
McGonagall watched Rowan leave with Professor Sprout. “Parents are arriving tomorrow. Not only Mr. Crowe. Several families have demanded private meetings. Some want assurances. Some want blame. Some want the whole matter hidden from public record.”
“And what do you want?” Jesus asked.
McGonagall did not answer quickly. She looked older than she had before the hidden door opened, but also clearer. “I want the children safe. I want the truth recorded. I want the school cleansed of what Calder made. I want parents to stop turning their fear into ownership. I want consequences that do not become vengeance. I want mercy that does not become foolishness.”
Jesus listened.
She gave a tired breath. “I also want one quiet hour and a cup of tea that does not come with a crisis attached.”
Mira almost smiled.
Jesus’ answer was gentle. “Begin with the tea when you can.”
McGonagall gave Him a look that would have frightened most students into silence. It did not frighten Him. After a moment, the corner of her mouth moved, not quite a smile, but close enough to change the air. Then her face grew serious again.
“Mr. Crowe’s father will return with counsel,” she said. “Mira Vale’s mother has requested an in-person review. Tavin Brock’s family is not angry, thank heaven, but they are frightened. And Calder Wren’s existence raises questions I cannot answer cleanly.”
Jesus looked toward the corridor where the students had gone. “Then tomorrow will reveal what today’s lesson has begun.”
Mira did not want Him to be right, but she knew He was. The classroom lesson had felt contained. The parents would not. Parents carried histories longer than children’s school records and fears older than their letters. They would bring bloodlines, reputations, griefs, expectations, money, influence, and pain into the castle. The Mirror Room was broken, but some of its voices would arrive in human mouths.
That evening, Mira went to the owlery alone before supper. She walked slowly past the landing where Ellis had written his letter and where the cursed parchment had tried to swallow it. The tower smelled as awful as ever, which comforted her in a strange way. Not everything had become symbolic. Some places were simply cold and full of owls.
She stood at the writing stand and finished her letter to her mother. It took three sheets because she kept starting sentences too defensively and crossing them out. She told the truth about finding the room, touching the page, hiding the incident, and helping Jesus and the others face what had grown from it. She did not make herself heroic. She did not make herself worthless. Then she wrote the part that made her hand shake most.
I want to honor our family, but I cannot live as if the family name matters more than the condition of my soul. I am afraid of disappointing you, but I am more afraid of becoming someone who only knows how to be excellent and never learns how to be honest. I hope one day we can speak without my achievements standing between us like proof that I should be loved.
She almost cut that last sentence. Then she left it.
When she tied the letter to the owl’s leg, she remembered Jesus telling Ellis that what was given in truth could not be kept by the book. The book was dust now, but Mira still needed to believe the sentence. The owl lifted into the dusk and disappeared into the cold sky, carrying the first letter Mira had ever sent home without trying to win.
On the way down, she found Ellis standing on the landing where the portrait of the tired traveler hung beneath the painted tree. The portrait was asleep with his hat over his face. Ellis had one hand resting on the stone window ledge, looking out over the snowy training grounds.
“I sent it,” Mira said.
He did not ask what. “Good.”
“Was it?”
He thought about that. “I do not know. But it was probably right.”
She stood beside him, leaving space between them. The sky over the grounds had turned violet, and the first stars were appearing above the forest. Below, a group of students crossed the courtyard in a tight cluster, their laughter rising thinly through the cold. Life was already trying to become ordinary again, though it had not decided what ordinary meant now.
Ellis said, “My father will come back.”
“I heard.”
“He will not come alone.”
“I heard that too.”
Ellis’s mouth tightened. “Part of me wants to ask for the badge back before he sees me without it.”
Mira looked at him. “Will you?”
“No.” He sounded annoyed by his own answer. “But I want to.”
“That seems different from doing it.”
He looked at her then. “You sound like Him.”
Mira did not know how to answer that. The words might have felt like teasing yesterday. Today they felt like a responsibility she was not ready to hold. She looked back out the window.
“Do you think people can change before the people who hurt them change?” Ellis asked.
The question was quiet enough that she knew it had cost him.
Mira thought of her mother’s letter now flying into the night, and the many possible responses waiting at the other end. “I think we have to. Otherwise they remain in charge of who we become.”
Ellis absorbed that without speaking. The portrait stirred under his hat but did not interrupt. For once, even painted advice seemed to know better than to enter.
Tavin arrived breathless at the top of the stairs with a small package in hand. “There you are. I have been looking everywhere.”
Ellis turned. “Why?”
Tavin held up the package. “Lottie sent this before my letter could have reached her. It arrived late because of the storm. I wanted to open it where the owlery would not feel like a nightmare.”
Mira smiled. “That seems wise.”
Tavin unwrapped it carefully. Inside was a crooked drawing of him in Quidditch gear, standing beside a garden gnome wearing an enormous hat. Beneath it, in a child’s uneven handwriting, Lottie had written, Don’t let the castle eat you. Also Mum says remember socks.
Tavin read it twice and laughed until his eyes filled. The laugh did not erase the fear from the night before. It did something better. It made room for love to be ordinary again. He folded the drawing carefully and pressed it flat against his chest for a moment before tucking it into his robe.
“She is very bossy for someone who cannot spell remember without help,” he said.
Mira and Ellis both smiled. It was a small thing, standing in a cold tower with a child’s drawing and a future full of hard conversations. But for the first time since the hidden door opened, the three of them stood together without the cursed book, without the mirrors, without anyone demanding proof of what they had survived. They were not finished. They were not healed in any simple way. They were only there, and sometimes being there without hiding was the first honest form of courage.
Far below, the supper bell rang. The sound moved through the tower and out across the snow. They started down together, slower than students usually moved when food waited. None of them said they were friends. The word might have made the moment too neat. But when the staircase shifted beneath them, Ellis reached back without looking, caught Tavin’s sleeve before he stumbled, and kept walking as if the gesture had been nothing at all.
In the Defense classroom after dusk, Jesus knelt once more beside the sealed stain on the floor. The room was empty now, the desks still arranged in their uneven circle, the students’ voices gone into the wider life of the castle. He prayed quietly for the letters traveling through winter air, for the parents whose fear would soon enter the school, for the children learning to defend their hearts without hardening them, and for the old professor sitting under watch with his first honest night ahead of him. Outside the windows, Hogwarts glowed against the snow, beautiful and wounded, guarded not by secrecy anymore, but by a mercy strong enough to keep bringing truth into the light.
Chapter Six: The Parents Who Brought Their Own Mirrors
By the time the parents arrived, Hogwarts had learned how to look almost calm. The staircases moved with their usual stubbornness, the portraits resumed their usual complaints, and the Great Hall filled with the familiar noise of spoons, benches, owls, and students pretending they were not watching the doors. Snow still covered the grounds, but the paths had been cleared from the gates to the entrance, leaving high white ridges on either side like quiet walls. The castle looked ancient, beautiful, and secure from a distance, which made the fear inside it harder to explain to anyone who arrived already certain of what they wanted to believe.
Mira stood with her back against the wall near the entrance hall, waiting because Professor McGonagall had asked her to be available but had not asked her to stand in the center of the room like evidence. That distinction mattered. Her mother had replied by owl before dawn with only two sentences. I am coming. We will discuss what has become necessary. Mira had read the note in the Ravenclaw common room while the fire burned low and everyone else slept. The note had not accused her in detail, but it carried the whole house of Vale inside its small folded shape.
Tavin waited too, though he had been told he did not have to. His mother was coming not to accuse the school, but because frightened love needed to see with its own eyes that her son was standing. He had tried to pretend that made the meeting easier. It did not. Gentle fear could still smother if it arrived carrying blankets, tears, and questions that expected him to become reassuring before he had recovered himself. He stood beside Mira with Lottie’s drawing folded in his pocket and Professor Sprout’s scarf finally returned, though he looked a little colder without it.
Ellis stood across the hall beneath a portrait of a stern wizard who kept pretending to read a scroll while listening closely. He wore clean robes, no badge, and a face that had become too still again. His father had returned with a solicitor from the wizarding law offices in London and a second man from the Board of Governors who looked as if every stone in Hogwarts should have requested permission before being placed. Ellis had seen them crossing the grounds through a high window and had gone quiet in a way that made Mira and Tavin stop speaking at once.
Jesus stood near the main doors, not in front of McGonagall and not behind her. He had not taken the place of Headmaster, judge, advocate, or guard. He simply stood where frightened people would have to pass near Him on their way into the room. Some parents looked at Him quickly and away. Others stared. A few seemed angered by the peace in Him before He said a word, as if calm were an insult to the urgency they had carried up the path.
The first to enter were parents of younger students who had followed voices in the walls. Some came pale and trembling. Some came with anger already sharpened. A mother in a dark traveling cloak crossed the hall and dropped to her knees in front of the first-year girl who had heard her own mother’s voice. She held the child so tightly that the girl winced, and Jesus stepped closer without intruding.
“She is here,” He said softly.
The mother looked up, tears on her face. “I nearly lost her.”
Jesus’ voice remained gentle. “Do not hold her so tightly that fear teaches her she is lost still.”
The mother’s face changed. For a moment she looked ready to defend herself. Then she felt the child’s small shoulders tense beneath her hands, and her grip loosened. She pulled back enough to see her daughter’s face. The girl took a breath that sounded like relief. It was a small correction, but Mira saw how it worked. Jesus had not rebuked love. He had separated love from panic so love could breathe again.
More parents entered. The entrance hall filled with damp cloaks, snow-cold air, raised voices, and the hard sound of adult fear trying to become authority. Professor McGonagall guided them toward a larger meeting room off the hall where chairs had been arranged in rows. She looked exhausted but immovable. Flitwick and Sprout helped direct families. Slughorn greeted several parents with careful warmth and looked relieved when none of them demanded brandy before noon.
Mira knew her mother had arrived before she saw her. The air seemed to tighten in a familiar pattern. Then Celeste Vale stepped through the doors in a blue traveling cloak fastened with a silver clasp shaped like an open eye. Her dark hair was pinned perfectly despite the wind outside. Her gloves were pale gray, her posture exact, her face composed in the way Mira had spent years trying to imitate and quietly resenting. She did not look around like other parents. She assessed.
Her eyes found Mira at once.
Mira’s body wanted to straighten into the daughter expected of her. She felt it happen before she could stop it. Shoulders back. Chin level. Face calm. Hands still. She hated that obedience could live in muscle memory even when the soul was trying to become free.
Tavin leaned slightly toward her without looking. “Breathe.”
Mira breathed.
Her mother crossed the hall. “Mira.”
“Mother.”
Celeste’s gaze moved over her face, her robe, her hands, the faint marks nearly gone beneath her nails. “You look tired.”
It might have been concern. It might have been criticism. In her mother’s mouth, the two often wore the same coat.
“I am,” Mira said.
Celeste’s eyes sharpened slightly. Mira had not answered the expected way. She should have said she was fine, or apologized for appearing unwell, or explained that the situation had been difficult but manageable. The truth stood between them, small and plain.
“We will speak privately,” Celeste said.
“Yes,” Mira answered. “But not before Professor McGonagall’s meeting.”
Her mother glanced toward the meeting room. “I did not travel here to be managed by school procedure.”
Mira felt the old panic rise. It told her to soften, explain, win back approval, and make the moment smooth. Instead she remembered the Defense classroom, the letter under the shield charm, and Jesus asking what the truth was for.
“I know,” Mira said. “But this involves the school too.”
Celeste looked at her for a long moment. Something like surprise passed behind her controlled expression. Then she turned toward the meeting room without another word. Mira stayed where she was because her knees needed a moment before they could be trusted.
Tavin let out a quiet breath. “That was not nothing.”
“No,” Mira said. “It felt like standing in front of a dragon made of table manners.”
He nodded solemnly. “Very dangerous breed.”
Mira almost laughed. The sound steadied her.
Then the doors opened again, and Ellis’s father entered.
Septimus Crowe did not look winded from the walk. He removed his gloves slowly while the solicitor beside him brushed snow from his own sleeves with visible annoyance. The governor who followed them had a round face, polished boots, and the expression of a man preparing to be deeply concerned in a way that would later be written into minutes. Mr. Crowe’s eyes found his son and moved immediately to the empty place on his robe. He did not speak across the hall. He did not need to. Silence crossed the space between them and took Ellis by the throat.
Ellis did not lower his eyes. Mira saw the cost of that. The pale line on his palm showed when his fingers opened at his side. For one breath, it reddened. Then Jesus stepped into Mr. Crowe’s path, not blocking him aggressively, only making it impossible for him to reach Ellis without first being met.
“Good morning,” Jesus said.
Mr. Crowe looked at Him. “We have already been introduced.”
“No,” Jesus said quietly. “You asked for credentials. You did not meet Me.”
The solicitor’s eyebrows rose. The governor looked offended on behalf of procedure. Mr. Crowe’s face remained cold.
“I am not here for conversation,” he said.
“No,” Jesus answered. “You are here for your son.”
Something in that sentence landed differently than Mr. Crowe expected. His eyes flicked toward Ellis, then back. “My son will be leaving after the formal record is established.”
“He has not chosen that.”
“He is a minor.”
“He is not property.”
The entrance hall seemed to hear the words before the people in it did. Several parents went still. Professor McGonagall, standing by the meeting room door, looked toward them but did not intervene. Mr. Crowe stepped closer to Jesus, his voice low enough that only those nearby could hear.
“You speak dangerously for a man with no standing in our world.”
Jesus looked at him with steady sorrow. “A father speaks dangerously when he confuses standing with love.”
Mr. Crowe’s face tightened. For a moment the solicitor seemed ready to object though no formal proceeding had begun. Ellis looked away, not because he was ashamed, but because being defended in his father’s presence hurt almost more than being criticized. He had spent years learning to survive without anyone stepping between them. Now someone had, and his body did not know what to do with the protection.
McGonagall called the parents into the meeting room before the moment could split the hall. Chairs scraped. Cloaks rustled. Children who had been asked to attend sat near the front with their heads of house nearby. Mira sat between Tavin and Alina Fawley, who had come because she had spoken in the Ravenclaw common room and refused to let Mira sit alone. Ellis sat across the aisle, two rows ahead, with an empty chair on either side of him. It was not clear whether the space had been left out of fear, respect, or uncertainty.
Jesus did not sit at the front. He stood near the wall beside the sealed doorway that led back to the entrance hall. Wren sat in a plain wooden chair at the front under a quiet watch charm. He looked smaller under the eyes of parents than he had in the Mirror Room. His old robes had been cleaned, but they still hung on him like a life he no longer knew how to wear. Several parents whispered when they realized who he was, or at least understood that he was connected to what had harmed their children.
McGonagall began without ornament. “Thank you for coming. I will not waste time with false reassurances. Your children were endangered by a hidden enchantment created years ago by a former Defense Against the Dark Arts professor. That enchantment used memory, grief, fear, and shame to draw students toward a concealed mirror chamber beneath the Defense corridor. The chamber has been broken. The object through which it spread has been destroyed. The hidden passage has been sealed and marked. The school is conducting a full review.”
A parent near the back stood before she could continue. “How could such a thing remain hidden?”
McGonagall looked at Wren, then back at the room. “Through wrongdoing, magical concealment, institutional failure, and the dangerous human habit of forgetting what is inconvenient.”
That answer unsettled the adults more than a cleaner one would have. Mira saw it. Parents wanted one villain, one broken lock, one negligent teacher, one cursed object. McGonagall had given them something harder. A hidden enchantment had survived because an entire school, over many years, had allowed discomfort to become silence.
The governor cleared his throat. “Surely the Headmistress does not mean to imply fault across the institution before an inquiry is complete.”
McGonagall turned her gaze on him. “I mean to imply nothing. I am stating that harm hidden long enough becomes easier for institutions to misplace. The inquiry may choose more expensive words.”
A few parents murmured. Professor Flitwick looked down quickly, perhaps to hide a smile. Jesus remained still by the wall, but Mira saw warmth in His eyes.
The solicitor stood. “On behalf of Mr. Crowe, I must raise the matter of unauthorized instruction, student exposure to emotional coercion, and the apparent involvement of minors in neutralizing the threat.”
Professor McGonagall’s face hardened. “The minors you refer to were already marked by the enchantment before staff were aware of its nature.”
“Because they entered the chamber,” the solicitor said.
Ellis flinched, though the words were not aimed only at him.
Mira felt Tavin tense beside her. Her own hands curled around the edge of her chair. This was what she had feared. Adults could take the truth and arrange it without love just as well as any cursed book. The solicitor had not lied. The three of them had entered. They had hidden it. Their choices mattered. But the sentence had been shaped into a weapon, and everyone in the room could feel the edge.
Jesus spoke from the wall. “Be careful.”
The solicitor turned. “Excuse me?”
“Be careful,” Jesus repeated. “You are speaking of children who were harmed before you are speaking of facts to be managed.”
Mr. Crowe’s eyes narrowed. “They are not too young to bear consequences.”
“No,” Jesus said. “But they are too beloved to be reduced to your argument.”
The room went quiet. Mira felt the words move through parents and students differently. Some adults stiffened. Some children looked down as if the sentence had reached a hunger they did not know they were allowed to have. Too beloved to be reduced to your argument. Mira thought of her mother’s letters and wondered how many children needed someone to say that before the law, the family name, the school record, or the public explanation swallowed them whole.
Celeste Vale stood. Mira’s whole body tightened.
“My daughter wrote to me,” Celeste said. Her voice was controlled, clear, and impossible to ignore. “She admitted that she entered the hidden chamber, concealed the incident, and contributed to the delay in adult intervention.”
Mira felt every eye come toward her. Tavin’s hand moved slightly on his knee, not touching her, but near enough to show he was there. Alina shifted closer. Ellis turned in his chair and looked back, his face sharp with anger on her behalf.
Celeste continued, “She also wrote that the enchantment exploited fear of failure and conditional acceptance. I do not appreciate private family matters being placed inside school correspondence as if they are relevant to institutional security.”
The words struck Mira harder than she expected. Even now, her mother cared about the shape of the record. Private family matters. Institutional security. She had taken Mira’s trembling truth and translated it into categories that could be filed away.
Jesus looked at Mira, not Celeste. His eyes did not tell her to speak. They reminded her she could.
Mira stood.
The chair legs scraped softly against the floor. Her mother’s face changed just enough to show disapproval. Mira felt it like cold water, but she remained standing.
“They are relevant,” Mira said.
Celeste’s eyes sharpened. “Mira, this is not—”
“They are relevant,” Mira repeated, voice shaking but clear. “Not because the school needs to study our family. Because the enchantment used the place where I was already afraid. If I pretend that does not matter, I help the same silence that made the room dangerous.”
The meeting room held very still. Mira felt heat in her face, but she did not sit. Her mother looked at her as if she had spoken another language.
“I am not blaming you for the hidden room,” Mira said. “I am not blaming our family for what Professor Wren made. I am saying I was vulnerable to it because I have been afraid that being loved and being impressive were the same thing. I do not want that fear to keep deciding for me.”
Celeste’s mouth tightened. “You are a child.”
“Yes,” Mira said. “That does not make this untrue.”
Something moved through the room. It was not agreement exactly. It was recognition. Several parents looked away. A father near the back stared at his hands. One mother pressed her lips together as if she were holding back tears or anger. The children understood faster than the adults because many of them knew what it was to have their inner lives dismissed as immaturity when they had simply said something inconvenient.
Celeste did not sit, but her certainty had been touched. Mira saw it. Her mother looked not ashamed, not softened, but unsettled. That was more than Mira had expected.
Professor McGonagall spoke into the silence. “Thank you, Miss Vale.”
Mira sat down before her legs failed. Alina leaned close and whispered, “Still a dragon, but you did not get eaten.”
Mira breathed out shakily. “Not yet.”
Tavin’s turn came without warning.
A man with a weathered face and kind eyes stood near the side aisle. Mira recognized him from Tavin’s nervous description as his stepfather, Hal Brock, a Muggle-born wizard who repaired greenhouses and always smelled faintly of soil. Beside him stood Tavin’s mother, round-faced, red-eyed, and trying not to run to her son in the middle of the meeting. She held a handkerchief twisted so tightly that it might never recover its original shape.
Mrs. Brock spoke before Hal could. “I do not want anyone blamed unfairly. I truly do not. But I need to understand how a school full of teachers did not notice children being called by dead people and frightened memories.”
Her voice broke on the last words. Tavin looked down, visibly pained.
Sprout stepped forward from the side. “Elsie, I am sorry.”
Mrs. Brock covered her mouth. The apology undid more than any explanation could have.
Sprout continued, and her voice shook with a rare lack of concealment. “I saw pieces. We all did, perhaps. A child unusually quiet. A corridor colder than it should be. A rumor. A frightened look. I have spent many years trusting that Hogwarts is strange before I assume it is unsafe. That trust failed your children here.”
Hal put an arm around his wife, but his eyes stayed on Sprout. “What changes?”
A practical question. Tavin looked relieved by it.
McGonagall answered. “A new reporting charm will be placed on sealed or restricted corridors. House heads will meet weekly with students affected by the incident. Defense instruction will include recognition of coercive magic that uses memory, shame, grief, and fear. Records of prior staff incidents will be reviewed. No room connected to Professor Wren’s work will be concealed from institutional record again.”
The governor shifted in his seat. “Pending approval.”
McGonagall did not look at him. “Beginning today.”
The room murmured. Hal Brock nodded once. Mrs. Brock looked at Tavin, and the ache of wanting to hold him filled her face. Tavin stood before she could ask.
“Mum,” he said.
That one word nearly broke her. She stepped into the aisle, and for a moment Mira thought Tavin would be swallowed by the kind of embrace he feared. But Mrs. Brock stopped herself halfway. She opened her hands instead, asking without words. Tavin’s face changed. He crossed the space and hugged her. She cried into his shoulder, but she did not clutch him too tightly.
“I am not all right yet,” Tavin told her, his voice muffled.
“I know,” she said. “I hate it.”
“I know.”
“I want to take you home and put you somewhere nothing can happen.”
“I know that too.”
She gave a wet laugh against his robe, then pulled back enough to see him. “I will try not to.”
Tavin nodded, and his own eyes filled. “I will try to tell you the truth before I turn it into jokes.”
Hal put one hand on Tavin’s shoulder. “That would be helpful, since your jokes are terrible under pressure.”
Tavin laughed, and this time the whole room breathed more easily for a moment.
Then Mr. Crowe stood.
The room hardened again.
He did not look at Tavin’s family. He did not look at Mira or her mother. His gaze moved straight to McGonagall. “This display may satisfy those who confuse emotion with repair. It does not satisfy me. My son was exposed to illicit magical influence, encouraged to make public admissions under the guidance of an unverified instructor, and placed in opposition to his family authority.”
Ellis sat very still.
Mr. Crowe continued, “I am removing him.”
McGonagall’s voice remained calm. “As I stated, formal review is required.”
“I have spoken with Governor Cresswell.”
The round-faced governor stood with importance. “Given the extraordinary circumstances, temporary parental withdrawal may be considered pending board review.”
McGonagall’s eyes narrowed. “May be considered is not permission.”
The solicitor lifted a document. “We are prepared to file emergency petition.”
Jesus looked at Ellis. The whole room seemed to fade around that look. Mira saw Ellis’s face, pale but no longer blank. His father was turning him into a matter of custody, reputation, and influence. The school was turning him into a protected student. Both were closer to truth than the book had been, but neither could make the choice inside him.
Jesus said, “Ellis, stand.”
Mr. Crowe’s voice cut in. “My son will remain seated.”
Ellis stood.
The movement was quiet. It did not look rebellious in the way students liked to imagine rebellion. It looked costly. He stood with his hands open at his sides, the pale scar visible across his palm.
Mr. Crowe turned toward him slowly. “Sit down.”
Ellis swallowed. “No.”
The word was not loud. It did not need to be. It carried the whole owlery, the mirror, the letter, the badge, and the empty place on his robe.
His father’s face went cold in a way that made even the solicitor look uneasy. “You will not shame me further in public.”
Ellis’s voice shook. “I am not trying to shame you.”
“You are succeeding without trying.”
The old wound opened across Ellis’s face. Mira saw it. Tavin saw it. Jesus saw it too, but He did not rush to cover the pain. Ellis had to speak from inside it, or the room would belong to his father’s silence again.
Ellis looked down at his hand. “When the mirror showed me your face, I wanted to use a curse. Not because of the mirror only. Because I have been angry for so long that anger became the only place I felt strong.”
Mr. Crowe’s jaw tightened. “This is grotesque.”
“No,” Ellis said. “It is what happened.”
A few parents shifted, uncomfortable with truth that did not stay tidy.
Ellis continued, “I entered the hidden room. I hid it. I wanted power I was not ready to carry. I misused my badge. I frightened younger students because being feared felt safer than being dismissed.”
The younger Slytherin boy, Rowan, sat with his mother near the side aisle. He looked down at his hands, but not with the same fear as before.
Ellis turned back to his father. “I will answer for that here.”
“You will answer at home.”
“I do not think I can heal there right now.”
The sentence struck the room with terrible softness. It was not an attack. That made it harder to dismiss. Mr. Crowe’s face changed, and for a moment something raw moved under the cold surface. Then pride covered it.
“You have been made weak.”
Jesus spoke. “No. He has been made honest.”
Mr. Crowe rounded on Him. “You have no claim over my son.”
Jesus’ answer came quietly. “I do not claim him. I call him.”
Ellis looked at Jesus, and a tear slid down his face before he could stop it. This time he wiped it away, but not in shame. More like a boy clearing his sight.
Mr. Crowe’s voice lowered. “If you remain, you remain without my support.”
The sentence had the force of a curse. Not magical, but powerful. Mira heard several adults draw breath. McGonagall’s face sharpened. Slughorn looked stricken. Ellis closed his eyes briefly, and the whole room seemed to wait for him to break.
He opened them.
“I am sorry you believe that is the only way to reach me,” he said.
His father stared at him.
Ellis’s voice trembled, but he kept it clear. “I hope one day you choose differently.”
Mr. Crowe looked as if he had been struck. Not humiliated. Not defeated. Struck in a place he had armored so long he no longer remembered it could feel. The solicitor whispered something near his ear. The governor shifted again, sensing the room had turned in a way procedure could not easily reclaim.
Jesus looked at Mr. Crowe with a grief that held no contempt. “Septimus.”
The use of his first name made the man go rigid.
“You were not born hard,” Jesus said.
Mr. Crowe’s face became dangerous. “Do not presume.”
Jesus stepped closer. “You learned hardness as a language. You taught it to your son as if it were inheritance. It has not saved either of you.”
The room was so silent Mira could hear snow sliding from a high window ledge outside.
For one moment, Mr. Crowe looked old. Not in face, but in spirit. A man tired from holding a line he had mistaken for life. Then he turned away from Jesus and picked up his gloves.
“This meeting is over,” he said.
He left with the solicitor and governor following in unsettled silence. He did not take Ellis. He did not look back. That absence might have hurt more than an argument, but Ellis remained standing until the door closed. Then he sat down slowly, as if his body had been waiting for permission to feel what had just happened.
No one applauded. No one spoke too quickly. Even the parents who had arrived angry seemed to understand that a child had just paid a price in front of them that no policy could measure.
Celeste Vale sat very still. Mira looked at her mother and saw something she had never seen before. Not surrender. Not softness exactly. A crack in certainty. Celeste had watched Ellis speak to a parent who used dignity like a blade. She had watched the blade fail to produce obedience. She had watched the child remain standing. Perhaps she had heard something of herself in Mr. Crowe and did not like the echo.
McGonagall brought the meeting to a close with instructions, appointments, and the promise of written follow-up. Parents rose slowly, no longer held together by the same anger they had brought in. Some still demanded answers. Some went straight to their children. Some avoided eye contact because they had seen too much of their own homes inside the school’s hidden wound.
Mira’s mother approached her near the side wall. Tavin was with his family now, his mother holding his hand loosely enough to show she was trying. Ellis remained seated while Slughorn spoke to him in a low voice. Jesus stood near the door, and though He was not looking at Mira, she knew He was aware.
Celeste stopped in front of her daughter. “You spoke publicly against me.”
Mira’s heart sank, but she held her ground. “I spoke about myself.”
“You made our family sound cruel.”
“I made my fear sound real.”
Her mother’s mouth tightened. “You are too young to understand how words spoken publicly can follow a family.”
Mira looked at her carefully. “I think I am old enough to understand how words spoken privately can follow a child.”
Celeste inhaled. For a moment Mira expected anger. Instead her mother looked away toward the window where snowlight lay across the floor.
“When I was your age,” Celeste said, each word measured, “my father returned every letter I sent from school with corrections in the margins. Spelling, phrasing, tone, magical theory, posture if I mentioned a public event. Once, he wrote that affection was no excuse for imprecision.”
Mira stared at her. Her mother had never told that story. Not once.
Celeste’s face remained composed, but her eyes had changed. “I promised myself I would prepare you so thoroughly that no one could dismiss you the way he dismissed me.”
Mira felt the sentence open a door she did not know existed. Behind her mother’s pressure stood another room, older and colder, with a girl sitting over returned letters marked by a father’s red ink. The knowledge did not erase what Celeste had done. It did not make the letters gentle. It did something more complicated. It made her mother human in a way Mira had not been ready to see.
“I wish you had told me that before,” Mira said.
Celeste looked back at her. “I did not know how.”
The answer was not enough. It was also the most honest thing Mira had ever heard from her.
Mira’s voice softened. “I do not want to be dismissed either. But I cannot survive being prepared like love is an examination.”
Her mother closed her eyes briefly. When she opened them, tears had gathered but not fallen. “I do not know how to do this differently.”
Mira’s own eyes stung. “I do not know either.”
For once, neither of them rushed to solve it. They stood in the awkward, holy difficulty of truth without a script. Then Celeste reached for Mira’s hand, slowly enough that Mira could refuse. Mira let her take it. Her mother’s glove was cool and smooth. Her grip was careful, uncertain, and much lighter than Mira expected.
Across the room, Ellis watched them for a moment before looking away. Jesus moved to sit beside him. He did not ask how Ellis felt, perhaps because the answer would have been too large for words.
“My father left,” Ellis said.
“Yes.”
“He meant it.”
“Yes.”
Ellis’s jaw tightened. “I thought I would feel free.”
Jesus looked toward the closed door. “Freedom can grieve what bondage promised.”
Ellis gave a small bitter laugh. “That sounds unfair.”
“It often feels that way.”
Ellis rubbed his thumb across the pale scar on his palm. “What do I do if he never changes?”
Jesus answered with quiet weight. “You keep changing without hatred.”
Ellis looked at Him. “That may be harder than standing up to him.”
“Yes.”
He absorbed that in silence. Then Rowan Aster approached with his mother beside him. Ellis straightened, uncertain. Rowan held a small folded parchment.
“My mum says I should give this to you,” Rowan said.
His mother corrected gently, “I said you may give it if you want to.”
Rowan rolled his eyes, which made him look like a child again instead of grief walking in school robes. “Fine. I want to.”
He handed Ellis the parchment. Inside was a drawing, not very good, of someone holding another person back from a mirror. Under it were the words, Thank you for not letting me go.
Ellis stared at the page for so long that Rowan began to shift nervously.
“You do not have to keep it,” Rowan said.
Ellis folded it carefully. “I will keep it.”
Rowan nodded, relieved, and went back to his mother. Ellis held the parchment like it weighed more than paper. Jesus said nothing. He did not need to. Some answers came through children who did not know they were carrying them.
By late afternoon, most parents had left or been assigned rooms for the night. The castle felt drained but clearer. The meeting room emptied. The Great Hall prepared for supper. Outside, the snow began again, fine and steady, softening the footprints left by angry adults, frightened mothers, officials, solicitors, and children who had walked back into the school unsure whether home had become safer or stranger.
Mira walked with her mother toward the guest corridor. They did not speak much. There was too much to say and no safe habit for saying it yet. At the turn near the broken statue, Celeste stopped to read the brass plate. This door was once hidden. Let no wound be hidden so long that it learns to rule.
Her mother stood before it for a long time.
At last she said, “That is an uncomfortable sentence.”
Mira looked at her. “Yes.”
Celeste touched the edge of the plate with one gloved finger. “Perhaps necessary sentences usually are.”
Mira did not answer. She did not want to make the moment too neat. But when they continued walking, her mother stayed beside her instead of half a step ahead.
Tavin spent supper with his family at the Hufflepuff table, which caused great excitement among several younger students who had never eaten near visiting parents before. His mother asked too many questions, then caught herself and stopped. Hal told a story about a greenhouse roof collapsing under snow and being saved by a goat, though no one understood how the goat had helped. Lottie’s drawing remained in Tavin’s pocket. He touched it only twice.
Ellis ate almost nothing. Slughorn sat with him for part of the meal, then left him alone when solitude became kinder than conversation. Near the end of supper, Mira came by and placed a small folded note beside his plate. He looked up at her.
“It is not advice,” she said.
“That is wise.”
“It only says you did not sit down.”
Then she left before he could answer. Ellis opened the note. The words were exactly as she said. You did not sit down. He read them once, then folded the note and placed it inside his robe with Rowan’s drawing. It was not comfort exactly. It was witness. That mattered more.
When night settled over Hogwarts, Jesus returned to the Defense classroom. The desks remained in a circle from the lesson. The sealed stain on the floor held the torchlight without giving any darkness back. He knelt beside it as He had before, hands open, head bowed. Beyond the walls, parents slept uneasily or lay awake with thoughts they could no longer arrange as cleanly as before. Children wrote letters, hid letters, read letters, folded drawings, and stared at ceilings. Teachers prepared reports that would never capture the full truth of what had happened.
Jesus prayed quietly for the mothers and fathers who had brought their own mirrors into the castle, for the children learning that honor did not require surrendering their souls, for the old wounds still trying to speak through family names, and for the fragile beginnings that had appeared that day in trembling voices and loosened hands. The castle around Him creaked under the cold, but the room did not feel haunted now. It felt watched over. Not finished. Not safe because nothing could ever go wrong again. Safe because mercy had entered the place where shame once taught in secret, and mercy was not leaving.
Chapter Seven: The Archive That Did Not Want the Light
The next morning began with rain instead of snow, which made the whole castle sound restless. Water ran down the high windows in trembling lines, tapped against stone ledges, and slipped from the roof in steady streams that splashed into the courtyards below. The white grounds turned gray at the edges, and the paths became dark where hundreds of feet had pressed yesterday’s fear into slush. Hogwarts felt less like a castle from a storybook and more like an old house after company had left, full of damp corners, tired rooms, and things still waiting to be put back in order.
Mira woke before the bell and lay still in her dormitory bed, listening to the rain and the quiet breathing of the girls around her. Her mother had stayed in the guest corridor overnight. They had not solved their life in one conversation, and Mira was beginning to understand that real healing did not move as neatly as a story people told afterward. Celeste had not suddenly become warm in every word. Mira had not suddenly become brave in every silence. But at breakfast, her mother had asked whether Mira had slept, and for the first time Mira could remember, the question had not carried a second question about readiness, performance, or discipline underneath it.
At the Slytherin table, Ellis had received no letter. That was worse than a cruel one in some ways. Cruelty at least announced itself. Silence left him to wonder whether his father was planning, punishing, withdrawing, or simply done with him. He ate two bites of toast, drank half a cup of tea gone cold, and kept touching the inside pocket of his robe where Rowan’s drawing and Mira’s note rested together. He had not told anyone he carried them there. He did not need to. The fact that he had not thrown them away was already a private rebellion against the life he had known.
Tavin arrived late because he had gone to the owlery again, this time to send the letter he had written to Lottie after rereading her drawing so many times the fold lines nearly tore. He looked tired, but lighter. His mother had left before dawn after hugging him once and then stopping herself from hugging him a second time. Hal had handed him a pair of dry socks with great seriousness and said that no boy ever became spiritually mature with wet feet. Tavin had laughed, then cried after they left, which he told Mira and Ellis in the hallway with an embarrassed shrug, as if crying were weather and not something that needed a speech.
Classes remained altered, though not canceled. McGonagall believed structure helped frightened children, but she did not believe in pretending. Charms became a lesson in spells that revealed hidden magical residue. Herbology became a lesson in plants that flourished only when old roots were separated from dead ones. Potions became quieter than usual when Slughorn asked the students to identify ingredients by scent while blindfolded, then told them that not everything powerful announced itself by appearance. Every lesson seemed to bend toward the same truth without saying so directly. Hogwarts was teaching around the wound because the wound had reached every room.
By midday, word spread that the archive review would begin below the staff wing. That was not supposed to be student knowledge, but portraits leaked information like cracked pitchers, and Peeves turned the phrase archive review into a song no one wanted to hear. The Board of Governors had sent notice that all records related to Calder Wren’s year of teaching were to be secured. McGonagall had responded by calling for witnesses before any record could disappear into polite language. That was why Mira, Tavin, Ellis, Rowan Aster, and two older students who had been drawn most strongly by the mirrors were summoned after lunch.
The archive entrance stood behind a tapestry near the staff corridor, showing three witches trying to teach a troll to bow. The troll never learned, and the witches looked more irritated each time the tapestry was passed. Professor Flitwick tapped the stone behind it with his wand in a pattern too quick for Mira to follow. The wall sighed, then opened inward on a narrow stairway smelling of dust, candle wax, old leather, and rain trapped somewhere deep in the castle.
McGonagall went first. Jesus followed, then Wren, who walked with his head lowered and his hands clasped in front of him. Slughorn, Sprout, Flitwick, and Sinistra came behind the students. Governor Cresswell arrived last with a clerk, two rolls of parchment, and a face arranged into concern. He had not wanted children present. McGonagall had not asked his preference twice.
The archive was larger than the entrance suggested. It stretched beneath the staff wing in long rows of shelves that rose higher than any ladder could safely reach. Some shelves held leather-bound volumes chained in place. Others held boxes labeled by century, headmaster, incident type, or magical category. Glass jars floated near the ceiling with sealed memories turning slowly inside them like pale smoke. A long table stood at the center of the room beneath a circle of lamps that lit themselves as the group entered.
Mira felt the room’s age immediately. The Mirror Room had been old in a hungry way. This archive was old in a tired way, as if it had held too many explanations written by people who wanted events to sound manageable after they were over. She looked at the labels on the nearest shelves. Student Injury, Unclassified. Staff Misconduct, Sealed. Parental Complaint, Resolved. Magical Anomaly, No Further Action. Each phrase sounded tidy enough to hide a living room full of pain.
Tavin leaned toward her. “I hate official words.”
Ellis murmured, “Official words are useful when someone wants blood cleaned without saying blood.”
Mira looked at him. He did not seem proud of knowing that. He seemed tired.
Governor Cresswell cleared his throat. “Headmistress, I must again record my objection to student presence in a sensitive review.”
McGonagall removed her gloves one finger at a time. “Record it.”
The clerk dipped his quill with nervous speed.
Cresswell’s mouth tightened. “This process requires discretion.”
Jesus looked at the shelves. “Discretion can protect the wounded. It can also protect the wounder.”
The governor did not like that. “With respect, Professor, governance requires more than moral phrasing.”
Jesus turned toward him. “So does truth.”
No one spoke for a moment. Wren stood beside the table, looking at the shelves as if each one might accuse him by name. Mira had seen him frightened before, but this was different. In the Mirror Room, the truth had been terrible and immediate. Here, truth would have to become record, detail, sequence, date, and testimony. That seemed to frighten him more than shattered glass.
McGonagall faced him. “Calder, where are the missing records?”
Wren lifted a trembling hand toward the far end of the archive. “Not missing. Misdirected.”
Flitwick’s voice sharpened. “You altered archive indexing?”
“Yes.”
“For decades?”
Wren closed his eyes briefly. “Yes.”
Slughorn looked pained. “How?”
Wren opened his eyes and stared at the long table. “The archive does not only store paper. It stores the school’s agreement about what matters. I learned that if a record became inconvenient enough, and if enough staff preferred not to revisit it, the archive would accept a softer name.”
Mira felt a chill. “You mean the room helped hide it?”
Wren looked at her. “The room obeyed the habits of the people who used it.”
That answer made the archive feel suddenly less neutral. The shelves were not evil, but they had learned from the hands that filed things away. If people called harm an incident, pain became an incident. If people called fear a disciplinary matter, fear became a disciplinary matter. If people called shame a private family concern, shame disappeared behind a label that sounded responsible.
Jesus looked around the room with deep sorrow. “A place that keeps records must also keep repentance, or it becomes another hiding place.”
McGonagall nodded once, the motion small but grave. “Show us.”
Wren walked to a shelf labeled Teaching Irregularities, Historical. He reached for a slim volume marked 1943, then stopped and moved two shelves lower to a box labeled Broken Equipment, Nonessential. He opened it. Inside were splintered wand handles, cracked practice shields, torn lesson cards, and beneath them, a small black ledger tied with thread. The moment he touched it, the lamps flickered.
Ellis stiffened. “That feels like the book.”
“No,” Wren said, voice low. “The book fed. This remembers.”
He placed the ledger on the table. Its cover was worn soft at the edges. No title marked it. When Wren untied the thread, the pages opened by themselves, not violently like the cursed book, but with a reluctant whisper. The first page held a list of names. Mira recognized none of them. Beside each name was an age, house, date, and a phrase written in Wren’s younger hand.
Emotional collapse during mirror exposure.
Refusal to continue defensive exercise.
Memory distortion after shame response.
Disciplinary transfer recommended.
No lasting harm observed.
Mira read that last line three times. No lasting harm observed. It sat beside six names on the first two pages. The phrase felt worse each time because she knew who had written it. A teacher had harmed a child, then recorded the absence of evidence as comfort. Or as defense. Or as permission to continue.
Tavin looked pale. “No lasting harm observed by who?”
Wren’s mouth trembled. “By me.”
Rowan stood behind Ellis, holding his mother’s green thread in one hand. He had asked to bring it, and no one had told him no. His face had gone very still as he looked at the names. “Were they all students?”
“Yes,” Wren whispered.
Governor Cresswell stepped forward. “This ledger must be entered into restricted board evidence immediately.”
McGonagall placed one hand flat on the table. “It will be copied first.”
“For security reasons, that is unwise.”
“For truth reasons, it is necessary,” she said.
The governor’s face flushed. “Headmistress, you are allowing emotion to govern procedure.”
McGonagall’s eyes flashed. “No. I am allowing truth to govern procedure, which I understand may feel unfamiliar.”
Professor Sprout made a sound that might have been a cough or approval. The clerk wrote very fast without looking up.
Jesus stood beside Wren. “Continue.”
Wren turned the page. More names appeared. Some entries were written sharply, as if the young professor had been angry while recording them. Others grew messier. One page had ink blots where words had been scratched out and replaced with colder ones. Mira watched the handwriting change over time from controlled to feverish, then from feverish to strangely calm. That calm frightened her most. It showed the moment Wren had stopped struggling against what he was becoming and started calling it method.
Flitwick read one entry aloud in a voice that shook. “Student reported hearing deceased father through mirror frame. Instructor continued exercise to test emotional resilience.”
Wren flinched as if struck.
Sprout whispered, “Calder.”
“I know,” he said.
“No,” she answered, and her kindness did not make the words gentle. “I do not think you can know the whole of it yet.”
Wren bowed his head.
Mira looked at Jesus. He had not moved to comfort Wren quickly. His face held mercy, but not the kind that rushed past damage. Mira had begun to recognize that now. Jesus did not humiliate a sinner, but He also did not rescue a sinner from the truth necessary to heal what had been harmed.
Sinistra lifted one of the floating memory jars from above the table with a quiet spell. The pale smoke inside swirled faster. “This memory is linked to the ledger.”
McGonagall’s face tightened. “Can it be viewed safely?”
Sinistra examined the seal. “Only in fragments unless opened by the one who placed it here.”
Everyone looked at Wren.
He stared at the jar. “I do not know which one that is.”
Jesus said, “Open it.”
Wren’s hands began to shake. “If it is one of the lessons—”
“Then it must be seen truthfully.”
Wren looked at Him with fear that had no pride left to hide behind. “Will they have to see it?”
Jesus turned to the students. “Only if they choose.”
Mira wanted to say no. The ledger was enough. The names were enough. The room already felt too heavy, and the afternoon rain pressed against the unseen windows above them like the whole castle had been lowered underwater. But she thought of the children whose stories had been filed as nonessential broken equipment. She thought of the brass plate in the corridor. This door was once hidden. Let no wound be hidden so long that it learns to rule.
“I will stay,” she said.
Tavin swallowed. “Me too.”
Ellis nodded once. Rowan moved closer to his mother, who had been permitted to attend as his guardian, and she placed a hand on his shoulder. “You do not have to.”
Rowan looked at the jar. “I want to know what tried to take her voice.”
His mother’s face broke with pain, but she nodded.
Wren lifted the jar. The seal opened with a sound like a sigh leaving a locked room. Pale smoke spilled onto the table and rose into the shape of the Defense classroom as it had been decades earlier. The desks were different. The windows were the same. A younger Calder Wren stood near the front, thin, intense, and hungry for control. Before him stood a boy of about thirteen with sandy hair and a wand gripped in both hands. Other students sat watching, some uneasy, some cruelly interested, some relieved not to be the one in front.
The memory did not show everything clearly. Faces blurred at the edges. Sound came in waves. Younger Wren stood beside a tall mirror draped in gray cloth. He spoke with the hard certainty of someone trying to make fear seem intellectual.
“Defense requires exposure to the shape of weakness,” the younger Wren said.
The boy whispered, “Sir, I do not want to.”
“You do not need to want discipline.”
Mira’s stomach tightened. She looked at the real Wren. He watched the memory with his hands pressed flat to the table, knuckles white.
In the memory, Wren pulled the cloth away. The mirror showed the boy standing alone outside the Great Hall while everyone inside laughed. The laughter grew louder. The boy’s face crumpled. He tried to step back, but younger Wren lifted a hand to stop him.
“Name what you fear,” Wren demanded.
The boy shook his head.
“Name it.”
The memory flickered. The boy’s voice came in pieces. “That they know. That everyone knows. That my mother left because of me.”
Several people in the archive drew breath. Rowan’s mother covered her mouth. Tavin stared at the table.
The younger Wren looked almost pleased, as if the lesson had reached its purpose. “And what does defense require?”
The boy whispered, “That I stop caring.”
“Again.”
“That I stop caring.”
The mirror brightened. The boy said it louder, crying now. The students around him shifted. Some looked scared. A few laughed, not because it was funny, but because children sometimes laugh when fear enters the room and no adult tells them what to do with it. The memory shook, then collapsed back into smoke and sank into the jar.
The archive was silent.
Wren stepped away from the table, then sat hard in a chair as if his legs had failed. “His name was Albie Trent.”
No one asked how he remembered. His face said enough.
McGonagall’s voice was low. “What happened to him?”
Wren stared at the ledger. “He left before the end of term. Officially, homesickness.”
Flitwick shut his eyes.
Governor Cresswell spoke carefully. “This is grievous, of course, but we should avoid drawing conclusions from one instructional memory without context.”
Ellis turned toward him. “Without context?”
Cresswell’s eyes narrowed. “Young man, I understand this is emotional, but you are not in a position to interpret administrative standards.”
Ellis stood very still. Mira saw the old anger rise, but it did not take him the way it once had. He looked at Jesus, then at the ledger.
“The context is written there,” Ellis said. “He did it more than once.”
The governor stiffened. “That remains to be properly reviewed.”
Tavin spoke before he could stop himself. “Reviewed by people who want it to sound smaller?”
The clerk’s quill froze.
Cresswell looked offended. “That is an unfair accusation.”
Tavin flushed, but he did not retreat. “Maybe. But I heard a boy say he thought his mother left because of him, and the first thing you wanted was a better frame around the memory.”
Mira looked at Tavin with sudden fierce pride. He looked terrified of his own boldness, but he stayed standing. His hands shook. That made the courage more real, not less.
Jesus looked at the governor. “A record is not faithful because it is controlled. It is faithful because it serves what happened.”
Cresswell’s voice tightened. “And who decides what happened?”
Jesus looked at the ledger, the jar, the old professor, the students, and the teachers. “Truth is not owned by the most powerful person in the room.”
The governor had no easy answer to that. He looked toward McGonagall, perhaps expecting her to restore order in the familiar direction. She did not. She turned another page of the ledger.
More records surfaced over the next hour. A detention slip hidden inside a book of supply orders. A stack of parent letters charmed to appear blank unless held by someone named in the ledger. Three memory jars mislabeled as weather anomalies. An old staff note from a deputy headmistress who had questioned Wren’s methods and then mysteriously withdrawn the concern after a meeting she could not later remember. With each discovery, the archive seemed to breathe more freely and more painfully. Shelves shifted. Labels changed. Boxes once marked Miscellaneous began naming themselves with sharper truth.
Student distress reports.
Suppressed parental warnings.
Unauthorized mirror exercises.
Memory interference by staff member.
Mira watched the labels transform and felt a strange grief. The truth had been there, but under names chosen by fear. It made her wonder how many places in a life could look organized while hiding the thing most in need of care.
At last they found the earliest record. It was not about Wren as a teacher. It was about Wren as a student. The file came from a narrow drawer that had been sealed with a charm so old Flitwick had to sit down after opening it. Inside was a single report written in a headmaster’s hand, describing an incident in the Defense classroom where a student named Calder Wren had been publicly mocked after a failed practical examination. The report noted that the instructor’s comments had been “severe but not outside the educational norms of the period.” No corrective action had been taken.
Wren took the report with trembling fingers. He read it once, then again. His face did not show surprise. It showed confirmation of something he had remembered alone for so long that seeing it written by someone else almost broke him.
“They knew,” he said.
McGonagall’s eyes filled with tears she did not let fall. “Someone knew enough to write it down.”
The distinction mattered. Knowing enough to record was not the same as knowing enough to repent. Mira felt the weight of that settle across the table. Wren had been wounded in a room, then left to become his own explanation for the wound. Years later, he returned and made others stand where he had stood. The first failure did not excuse the second. It revealed the path.
Jesus stepped toward Wren. “What will you do with that record?”
Wren’s hands tightened around the file. “Part of me wants to hold it up and say this is why.”
“And is it why?”
Wren looked at the names in the ledger. “It is part of why.”
Jesus waited.
Wren’s voice broke. “But it is not permission.”
The file trembled in his hands. Then he placed it beside the ledger, not above it. Mira noticed that. So did McGonagall. The old wound would be recorded, but it would not be allowed to sit on top of the wounds he had caused as if it canceled them.
Wren looked at Rowan, then at Mira, Tavin, and Ellis. “I am sorry.”
The words were quiet. Too small for what had happened. Yet perhaps all first honest apologies felt too small because they could not repair what they named. Rowan did not answer. Mira did not either. Tavin looked down. Ellis met Wren’s eyes for a moment, then gave a slight nod that was not forgiveness in full, but recognition that the words had been spoken without performance.
Governor Cresswell stood again. “This material must be removed to board custody.”
McGonagall turned. “Copies will remain at Hogwarts.”
“That is irregular.”
“Yes,” she said. “So was hiding harm under broken equipment.”
The governor’s face hardened. “You risk scandal.”
McGonagall’s voice became very quiet. “No. The scandal happened when children were harmed and the record learned to whisper. What comes now is consequence.”
The archive lamps brightened. It might have been a draft, a spell responding to her wand, or the room itself recognizing a truer name for what had happened. The shelves behind her shifted one final time, and a new section appeared at the end of the long table. Its label formed slowly in black letters on brass.
Truth Kept for Healing.
No one spoke for several seconds.
Professor Sprout wiped her eyes. Flitwick smiled sadly. Slughorn looked as if he wanted to say something charming and had wisely decided against it. Sinistra bowed her head slightly toward the new shelf, as if acknowledging a star that had finally appeared through cloud.
Jesus looked at the label, then at McGonagall. “This room has begun to learn.”
McGonagall’s mouth moved in the faintest tired smile. “Then let us hope it studies harder than some of my first-years.”
Tavin made a small sound that might have become a laugh if the room had not still been so heavy. Even Governor Cresswell seemed unable to object to the shelf immediately, which gave the clerk enough time to write the label into the minutes.
When the archive review ended for the day, copies of the first records were made under supervision. The original ledger remained on the table, sealed but visible. Wren asked to stay until the copying finished. McGonagall allowed it on the condition that two teachers remain with him. He accepted without complaint. That, more than anything, told Mira he understood he was no longer owed trust simply because he had begun telling the truth.
The students climbed back toward the staff corridor slowly. Rain still tapped the castle windows. The air aboveground smelled fresher after the dust of the archive, but none of them seemed eager to speak. Rowan walked with his mother, holding the green thread in one hand and her fingers in the other. When they reached the entrance hall, he stopped and looked back at Ellis.
“Do you think that boy, Albie, ever got better?” Rowan asked.
Ellis looked caught by the question. “I do not know.”
Rowan’s mother squeezed his hand gently. “We may be able to find out.”
Rowan nodded, though the answer clearly did not satisfy him. Mira understood. Some questions wanted a living person, not a file. Some wounds wanted more than proof that they had happened.
After Rowan left, Tavin sat on the bottom step of the marble staircase and looked toward the rain-dark doors. “I keep thinking about him saying he had to stop caring.”
Mira sat beside him. “Albie?”
Tavin nodded. “That is such a terrible thing to teach a child.”
Ellis stood near them, hands in his pockets. “It is taught all the time. Usually with better manners.”
Mira looked up at him. “Were you taught that?”
He stared toward the Great Hall. “Not in those words.”
Tavin leaned back on his hands. “I think I was taught the opposite problem. Care so much you forget you are not in charge of the universe.”
Mira gave him a tired smile. “My family taught me to care about the right things in the right order, which always seemed to place my soul somewhere after reputation.”
Ellis looked at her. “That is a very Ravenclaw way to describe suffering.”
“It is accurate.”
“It is.”
For a moment they were quiet together. The entrance hall around them carried ordinary movement again. Students crossed toward late lessons. A group of first-years argued about whether the giant squid could understand board governance. A portrait complained about damp air ruining painted velvet. Somewhere, Peeves dropped what sounded like a bucket and shouted an apology no one believed.
Jesus came from the staff corridor and paused near them. “What did you see below?”
Tavin answered first. “That records can lie without using false words.”
Mira looked at her hands. “That truth needs a place to live after people speak it.”
Ellis took longer. “That being wounded does not give you the right to wound others.”
Jesus looked at him with solemn tenderness. “Yes.”
Ellis shifted under the kindness, but he did not turn away.
Mira asked, “What happens now?”
“Now the school must keep telling the truth after the fear of the night has passed,” Jesus said.
Tavin frowned. “That sounds harder.”
“It often is.”
Ellis looked toward the staff wing. “And Wren?”
“He will answer for what he did,” Jesus said. “And he will have to live without the room that made his bitterness feel powerful.”
Mira thought of Wren sitting beside the ledger and the file from his own childhood. She did not know what justice should look like for him. She only knew she no longer wanted a justice that pretended mercy and consequence were enemies.
The supper bell rang. The three students rose, but Jesus did not move toward the Great Hall. He looked toward the Defense corridor instead. For a moment Mira saw the tiredness in His face, not weakness, but the weight of loving people who kept finding ways to bury pain until it became dangerous.
“Are you coming?” Tavin asked.
“In a little while,” Jesus said.
They understood enough not to press. They went to supper without Him.
That evening, after the hall emptied and the rain softened to a mist against the windows, Mira returned to the Defense corridor alone. She did not know why at first. Her feet simply took her there after she left the library with three books she was not ready to read. The brass plate by the sealed door caught the torchlight. She stopped before it and read the sentence again.
This door was once hidden. Let no wound be hidden so long that it learns to rule.
Behind her, footsteps approached. She turned, expecting Tavin or Ellis, but found her mother instead. Celeste Vale had a shawl over her traveling robes and a folded paper in her hand. For one nervous second, Mira thought it was another corrected letter.
“I wanted to see the plate again,” Celeste said.
Mira nodded. “So did I.”
They stood side by side. The silence was awkward, but not empty. Celeste looked at the sealed wall with an expression Mira could not fully read.
“I wrote something,” her mother said.
Mira’s throat tightened. “To me?”
“No.” Celeste looked down at the folded paper. “To my father. He is dead, of course. It will not be sent.”
Mira did not know what to say.
Celeste continued, “Professor Jesus said truth may need to be spoken before God even when the person who first needed to hear it can no longer answer.”
Mira looked at her mother in surprise. “You spoke with Him?”
“Yes.”
“What did He say?”
Celeste’s mouth tightened faintly, not in anger this time. “Very little. It was deeply inconvenient.”
Mira almost smiled.
Her mother touched the folded paper with one thumb. “I told my father that affection was not imprecision. I wrote that sentence three times before I believed I had the right to keep it.”
Mira felt tears rise, but she held them quietly. “Do you?”
Celeste looked at her. “I am trying.”
That was not an apology. Not yet. But it was a door no longer pretending to be stone. Mira looked back at the brass plate and let the moment remain unfinished because forcing it to become complete would have made it false.
At the same hour, Ellis stood outside Slughorn’s office with his hand raised to knock and no desire to do so. He had come to ask about earning trust back without turning repentance into performance. It seemed like the kind of thing an adult should know, though he suspected many adults only knew how to reward usefulness. Before he could knock, the door opened, and Slughorn appeared with two cups of cocoa floating behind him.
“Ah,” Slughorn said, as if he had expected him. “Mr. Crowe. I was just about to find someone who looked in need of cocoa and difficult conversation.”
Ellis stared at him. “That is oddly specific.”
“I am a gifted teacher.”
Ellis nearly smiled despite himself. He entered. The office smelled of candied pineapple, parchment, and the faint bitterness of potion smoke. Slughorn did not mention the badge at first. That helped. He gave Ellis a cup, sat in the chair opposite him instead of behind the desk, and waited until the silence became less hostile.
Ellis looked into the cocoa. “I do not know how to become trustworthy without trying to look trustworthy.”
Slughorn’s jovial face softened into something more honest. “That is a hard distinction.”
“I thought you might know it.”
The professor gave a sad little laugh. “My boy, I have spent a great deal of my life collecting promising students because their promise reflected well on me. I know more than I wish about confusing people with what they can become for you.”
Ellis looked up.
Slughorn folded his hands over his round stomach. “I should have noticed your hunger for approval before it turned so sharp. I praised your skill. I admired your discipline. I did not ask enough about the fear underneath either.”
Ellis did not know what to do with another adult admitting fault. It made the room feel less predictable and more possible.
“What do I do?” he asked.
Slughorn nodded toward the place where the prefect badge had once been. “You begin by doing small right things when no one needs them to prove you have changed. Not dramatic things. Not public penance. Small right things. You tell the truth. You repair what you can. You accept that some students may need time before they stop flinching around you.”
Ellis looked down. “I hate that.”
“Yes,” Slughorn said gently. “That may be one sign that it is true.”
In the Hufflepuff common room, Tavin sat by the fire writing a second letter to Lottie. He told her the castle had not eaten him. He told her that a teacher had said fear was not the same as love, but he did not write it like a lecture because Lottie would draw a monster called Fear and make it wear his face. He added that he would still worry sometimes because learning took longer than one brave sentence. Then he drew himself wearing dry socks, since Hal would ask.
He paused near the end and added one more line. If I get scared, I will try to tell someone before I start acting like the whole world depends on me. He stared at it, decided it was true, and left it there.
Later, when the castle settled and the rain stopped completely, Jesus went alone to the archive. McGonagall had left two lamps burning by the long table. The ledger remained sealed in clear charmwork. Wren’s childhood file sat beside it, no longer hidden beneath another name. Around the room, shelves rested under their corrected labels, still holding pain, but no longer pretending it was only broken equipment.
Jesus stood before the new shelf marked Truth Kept for Healing. He touched the edge of the brass label, then knelt on the cold archive floor. There were no students there to see Him, no parents to challenge Him, no governors to misunderstand Him, and no portraits awake enough to report it with embellishment. He prayed quietly for Albie Trent, wherever life had carried him, for Calder Wren and every child harmed by a wounded man’s false lesson, for Minerva McGonagall as she chose hard truth over clean reputation, and for every record in every life that had been mislabeled because pain was easier to file than face.
Above Him, the castle stood dark and rain-washed under a clearing sky. The hidden room was broken. The cursed book was dust. But deeper work had begun now, the slower work of keeping truth in the light after fear no longer forced anyone to look. Jesus remained kneeling in the archive until the lamps burned low, and the room that had once learned to hide began, in the silence of prayer, to learn how to remember with mercy.
Chapter Eight: The Letter Written to a Grown Boy
The morning after the archive opened, Hogwarts woke under a sky so clear it seemed almost unfair. The rain had washed the windows clean, and sunlight came into the corridors with a brightness that made every scar in the stone more visible. Snow still clung to the shaded edges of the grounds, but the courtyards shone wet and sharp, reflecting towers, passing students, and the slow movement of clouds. It was the kind of morning that made some people want to call the danger over because the world looked repaired from a distance. Mira no longer trusted distance.
She found Jesus in the Defense classroom before breakfast. The door stood half open, and the room beyond was quiet except for the small sound of a broom moving across stone. He was sweeping the floor around the sealed stain where the book had died, gathering dust, ash, and bits of old wax into a plain wooden pan. Mira stopped in the doorway because she had never seen a teacher sweep a classroom at Hogwarts. There were charms for that. There were house-elves for that. There were ways to make labor disappear if a person had enough magic or rank.
Jesus looked up before she knocked. “Good morning, Mira.”
She stepped inside. “Why are You doing that by hand?”
He glanced at the broom. “Some rooms should be tended slowly.”
Mira looked at the desks, still in their uneven circle, then at the stain under its clear protective charm. “I could help.”
He handed her a cloth from the teacher’s desk. She took it and began wiping the nearest desktop, though it was already clean enough by school standards. The work gave her hands something honest to do. She had not slept well after standing with her mother by the brass plate. Her dreams had not been nightmares, but they had been full of letters, doors, and mirrors that reflected rooms instead of faces.
After a while, she said, “Professor Wren’s records named a boy. Albie Trent.”
Jesus swept under a chair. “Yes.”
“Do You think he is still alive?”
“Yes.”
Mira stopped wiping the desk. “You know?”
Jesus looked at her. “I know he is not forgotten.”
That was not the exact answer she wanted, yet it carried more weight than the answer she had asked for. She folded the cloth in her hands. “I keep thinking about him. Not because I want another terrible thing to follow. I just hate that his name was sitting under Broken Equipment.”
Jesus set the broom aside. “Then let his name come back into the light rightly.”
Before Mira could ask what that meant, footsteps sounded in the corridor. Tavin appeared first, hair still damp from a hurried wash, followed by Ellis, who looked like he had already argued with himself twice before breakfast and lost both times. Tavin carried Lottie’s latest drawing folded into the front of his book. Ellis carried nothing visible, which meant he was probably carrying something important inside his robe.
Tavin looked around the classroom. “Are we early?”
Mira raised the cloth. “Apparently we are cleaning.”
Ellis glanced at the broom in Jesus’ hand. “That seems like a use of time designed to confuse pure-blood tradition.”
“It has many uses,” Jesus said.
Tavin took another cloth without being asked and began wiping the chalk ledge. Ellis stood still for a moment, as if helping might require a formal invitation that would let him decide whether to accept. Then he removed his robe, draped it over the back of a chair, and straightened two desks that did not need much straightening. The four of them worked in quiet until the room felt less like a classroom waiting for a lesson and more like a place being made ready for truth to keep living there.
Professor McGonagall arrived with Flitwick, Sprout, and Sinistra just as the breakfast bell rang in the distance. She paused at the door, taking in the scene with one eyebrow raised. “I see the Defense curriculum has expanded into housekeeping.”
Jesus leaned the broom against the desk. “Only where needed.”
McGonagall’s eyes moved over the room, and her expression softened before she restrained it. “There is a matter to discuss before the day begins. The archive gave us Albie Trent’s name. Professor Flitwick was able to locate a trace of his school record, though it had been folded into transfer files under several incorrect references.”
Flitwick lifted a small folder no thicker than a hand. “He left Hogwarts in his third year. He did not transfer to another magical school. His family withdrew from wizarding society soon after, at least officially.”
Tavin’s face fell. “Because of what happened?”
“We do not know,” McGonagall said. “We will not assume more than we can prove.”
Ellis looked at the folder. “Do we know where he is?”
Sinistra answered. “There is a possible address. It may be old. It may lead nowhere. The records are poor.”
Mira felt the room tighten around the possibility. A name had become a file. A file had become a person. A person might still be alive somewhere, carrying a sentence a cruel teacher had made him repeat in front of laughing children. Stop caring. The thought made her hands curl around the cloth until her fingers hurt.
Sprout looked at Jesus. “Do we write?”
McGonagall answered before He did. “We must. Carefully. The school owes him notice that records concerning him have been found and corrected. He may want nothing from us. That must be honored.”
Ellis’s voice was low. “A school letter will sound like a school letter.”
Everyone looked at him. He seemed to regret speaking, but he continued.
“If I received a formal notice from the place where I was humiliated, telling me my file had been corrected, I would burn it before the second paragraph.”
McGonagall studied him. “What would you suggest?”
Ellis looked uncomfortable. “I do not know. Something true before it becomes official.”
Mira nodded slowly. “The official part matters, but it should not be the first voice he hears.”
Tavin leaned against the chalk ledge. “Who writes it then?”
The question rested in the room. Wren was the obvious answer and the impossible one. He had caused the harm. He owed truth. Yet a letter from him could reopen a wound before the wounded person had chosen to face it. McGonagall seemed to think through the same difficulty, her face stern with the burden of doing right when no option felt clean.
Jesus said, “Calder should write. The school should write. I will write first.”
Mira looked at Him. “You?”
“Yes.”
Flitwick blinked. “Forgive me, but how does one introduce that letter?”
“With truth,” Jesus said.
McGonagall folded her hands over the back of a chair. “And what truth will you tell him?”
“That a wound done to him in this room was hidden under the wrong name, and that God did not misplace him even when the record did.”
No one answered quickly. The sentence did not sound like policy. It sounded like rescue arriving very late and still refusing to call itself useless.
McGonagall nodded once. “Then we will prepare three letters. Yours first, if he chooses to read further. Mine as Headmistress. Calder’s sealed separately and clearly identified, so Mr. Trent may decide whether to open it.”
“That is wise,” Jesus said.
Ellis looked at the folder again. “What if he does not answer?”
Jesus looked at him. “Then truth will still have gone out without demand.”
That sentence followed them to breakfast.
The Great Hall was louder than it had been the day before, which was both comforting and unsettling. Students were beginning to behave like students again. Someone at the Gryffindor table spilled pumpkin juice and blamed a spoon. A group of Ravenclaws argued about whether the archive shelves could be persuaded to study for exams on behalf of students since they had clearly learned to relabel themselves. Hufflepuffs passed toast down the table with serious attention to fairness. Slytherins watched everything and pretended not to be relieved that ordinary rivalries still existed.
Mira sat with Alina but kept glancing toward the teachers’ table. Wren was not there. He had not been permitted to join meals with students, and Mira was glad for that even though part of her felt sorry for him. Feeling sorry did not mean he belonged in the hall. She was learning that mercy had boundaries not because mercy was weak, but because harm had to stop being centered for healing to begin.
Her mother sat at the guest table near Professor Sprout. Celeste looked out of place there, straight-backed and elegant among cups of tea, travel cloaks, and concerned parents, but she had not left. That alone felt strange. She did not watch Mira constantly. Twice, Mira caught her looking toward the Defense corridor with a faraway expression, as if the brass plate had followed her into the hall.
At the Slytherin table, Rowan Aster sat near Ellis. Not beside him exactly, but close enough that the choice was visible. A few older students noticed. Cassian Rowle whispered something to another seventh-year, and both laughed quietly. Ellis’s shoulders tightened, but he did not look at them. Rowan did. He was younger, smaller, and still grieving enough that people expected softness from him. Instead he stared at Cassian until the older boy stopped laughing first.
Ellis glanced at Rowan. “You do not need to do that.”
Rowan returned to his porridge. “I wanted to.”
“You might make things harder for yourself.”
Rowan stirred his spoon through the bowl. “Maybe. My mum says hard is not always wrong.”
Ellis had no answer for that. He looked down at his own untouched breakfast and decided that Rowan’s mother was inconveniently wise.
After breakfast, Jesus went to the small room McGonagall had set aside for the letters. It overlooked the inner courtyard, where rainwater still dripped from the eaves and a few students crossed the wet stones with their collars turned up against the cold. The room held a table, ink, parchment, three chairs, and no portraits. McGonagall had ordered the portraits removed for privacy, and one of them had complained loudly about censorship until Flitwick carried it down the hall facing the wall.
Wren sat in the far chair with his hands folded. He looked as if he had aged again overnight. A sealed file lay before him, along with a blank sheet of parchment he had not touched. McGonagall stood by the window. Jesus sat at the table and took up the quill.
Mira, Tavin, and Ellis had not been invited into the room, but they had been asked to wait outside in case McGonagall needed student perspective on phrasing. That was the official reason. Mira suspected Jesus also knew that waiting near the door would teach them something about truth that instant involvement could not. The three of them sat on a bench in the corridor, close enough to hear low voices but not words.
Tavin leaned back against the wall. “This feels like waiting outside the hospital wing.”
Ellis looked toward the closed door. “It feels like waiting outside a disciplinary hearing.”
Mira held her book unopened in her lap. “It feels like waiting for an owl to decide whether it trusts your hand.”
Tavin glanced at her. “That is very specific.”
“I have had a difficult week.”
He nodded. “Fair.”
Inside the room, Jesus wrote slowly. He did not compose like someone trying to sound important. He wrote as if each sentence needed to be true enough to stand before the person receiving it and gentle enough not to force the door open. McGonagall watched with arms folded, though not impatiently. Wren looked at the blank parchment in front of him and did not move.
When Jesus finished, He read the letter aloud.
“Albie Trent, peace to you. My name is Jesus, and I am writing from the Defense classroom at Hogwarts, where harm was done to you when you were a child. A hidden record has been found. It named what happened poorly, and the school is beginning to correct that. I will not force memory upon you, and I will not ask you to return to pain because others are ready to discuss it. I only want you to know that what happened to you was seen, even when it was hidden, and that the shame placed on you did not tell the truth about your life. If you choose to read further, the Headmistress has written to you with the school’s formal account. Professor Calder Wren has also written, though his letter is sealed separately so you may choose whether to open it. You owe no answer. You owe no performance of healing. You are not forgotten by God.”
The room remained still after He finished. McGonagall looked out the window, blinking more than usual. Wren bent forward with one hand over his mouth. It took him several breaths before he could speak.
“You say I wrote also,” Wren whispered. “I have not.”
“You will,” Jesus said.
Wren shook his head. “What words could possibly matter now?”
“True ones.”
The old professor’s hand trembled when he reached for the quill. “If I ask forgiveness, it will sound like I want something from him.”
“Then do not ask for what he may not be ready to give.”
Wren stared at the blank page. “Then what do I say?”
McGonagall answered, voice quiet. “Say what you did.”
He flinched.
She continued, “Not what you intended. Not what shaped you. Not what you now understand. Begin with what you did.”
Wren looked at her, and something like gratitude crossed his face because she had given him no softness to hide inside. He dipped the quill. The first line took a long time. The scratching sound reached the corridor, and Mira stopped pretending to read. Tavin sat forward. Ellis looked at the closed door as if he could feel every word being dragged into the light.
Wren wrote for nearly an hour. Twice he stopped and pressed both hands over his eyes. Once Jesus spoke too quietly for those outside to hear. Once McGonagall said, “No, Calder. That sentence explains before it confesses.” The quill scratched again. The rain began softly, then stopped. Students passed through the corridor and were redirected by Professor Sinistra before they could linger and speculate.
At last the door opened. McGonagall stepped out holding three sealed letters. Her face looked tired in a clean way, like someone who had done a hard task without making it smaller. Behind her, Wren remained seated with his head bowed. Jesus stood near the table, not triumphant, not relieved, simply present.
McGonagall looked at the three students. “I need one sentence tested.”
Mira closed her book. “From which letter?”
“Mine.”
She unfolded a draft copy and read, “Hogwarts acknowledges that harm was done to you by a member of staff and that institutional failure allowed that harm to be hidden and mislabeled.”
Ellis nodded. “Keep that.”
Tavin said, “It sounds official, but not slippery.”
Mira looked at the page. “Maybe change acknowledges to confesses.”
McGonagall’s eyebrows rose. “Confesses?”
“Acknowledges can sound like you noticed something,” Mira said. “Confesses sounds like the school is not standing outside it.”
The Headmistress looked at the sentence again. For a moment she seemed to wrestle with the weight of the word. Then she took out her quill and made the change against the corridor wall.
“Hogwarts confesses that harm was done,” she read softly.
Tavin swallowed. “That is stronger.”
“Yes,” McGonagall said. “It should be.”
She sealed the final copy herself and sent the letters by school owl, but not with an ordinary owl. She chose an old tawny bird named Bishop, who had carried difficult letters for three headmasters and had once returned from a Ministry office with a bite mark on his tail and a look of moral superiority. Bishop accepted the bundle as if he understood its weight. He flew from the owlery into a sky of broken clouds and pale winter light.
The answer came sooner than anyone expected.
It arrived just before supper the next day, carried not by Bishop but by a small gray owl with one bent feather and a fierce expression. The bird flew straight to the teachers’ table, dropped a plain envelope in front of Jesus, and bit Professor Slughorn when he tried to offer it a sugared almond. The hall went quiet because everyone had become sensitive to unusual owls. Jesus lifted the letter and looked toward McGonagall. She nodded for Him to open it there.
He read silently first. Then He folded the page and rose.
“Headmistress,” He said, “Mr. Trent is coming.”
The Great Hall stirred at once. McGonagall stood. “Here?”
“Yes.”
“When?”
Jesus looked toward the doors.
They opened before He answered.
A man stood in the entrance hall beyond them, rain on his coat though no rain was falling outside anymore. He was thin, perhaps in his seventies, with sandy-gray hair combed back neatly and a face that seemed to have learned caution so deeply it no longer knew when danger had passed. He held a hat in both hands. Behind him stood Bishop the tawny owl, looking smug on a suit of armor’s shoulder.
No one spoke. It was one thing to read a name in an archive. It was another to watch that name walk into the Great Hall carrying a lifetime no record could hold.
Jesus left the teachers’ table and crossed the room. McGonagall followed, slower but no less moved. Students turned on benches, whispering until one look from the Headmistress silenced them. Mira felt her pulse in her throat. Tavin had gone pale. Ellis sat very still, eyes fixed on the man by the doors.
Jesus stopped a few steps from him. “Albie.”
The old man looked at Him for a long moment. “I was called Albert after I left.”
“What would you like to be called here?”
The man’s mouth trembled. “I do not know.”
Jesus waited.
“Albie,” he said at last, so quietly that only the front tables heard. “Here, I suppose it was Albie.”
McGonagall stepped forward. Her face was composed, but her voice carried grief. “Mr. Trent, I am Minerva McGonagall, Headmistress of Hogwarts. You are welcome here.”
Albie looked at her, then at the hall beyond. His eyes moved over the floating candles, the long tables, the enchanted ceiling, and the students watching with wide faces. “It looks smaller,” he said.
McGonagall’s eyes softened. “It often does when one returns grown.”
He gave a small, strained laugh. “I did not feel grown when I read the letter.”
No one knew what to say. Then Jesus said, “You did not have to be.”
The old man’s face changed, and for a moment he looked like the boy in the memory, standing before a mirror while the room laughed. He looked down quickly, gathering himself with effort. “I nearly burned it. The first letter. Yours. I put it in the stove. Then I took it out again before the edge caught.”
“I am glad you did,” Jesus said.
“I am not sure I am.” Albie looked toward the Defense corridor entrance as if he could feel the room from there. “Is he here?”
McGonagall answered carefully. “Professor Wren is under supervision. He will not approach you unless you request it.”
Albie flinched at the title. “Professor.”
“He no longer teaches,” she said.
That seemed to steady him slightly. “Good.”
Jesus asked, “Would you like to sit?”
Albie looked at the Great Hall again. The attention of so many students made his face tighten. Ellis stood suddenly from the Slytherin table. Mira thought he might speak, but he did not. He only turned to the hall.
“Stop staring,” Ellis said.
It was not loud, but it carried. Several students looked away at once. A few bristled, then remembered enough to lower their eyes. McGonagall did not correct him. Neither did Jesus. Albie looked at Ellis with brief surprise, then gratitude he seemed too overwhelmed to express.
McGonagall guided Albie to a smaller chamber off the hall. Jesus went with them. After a moment, McGonagall looked back and called, “Miss Vale. Mr. Brock. Mr. Crowe. If Mr. Trent permits, I would like you nearby.”
Albie looked at the three students, uncertain.
Mira stood slowly. Tavin followed. Ellis came last, his face guarded. They approached without crowding him.
Mira said, “We can wait outside.”
Albie studied them. “Were you the ones?”
The question could have meant many things. The ones who found the room. The ones in the letter. The ones harmed by the same hidden thing. Mira answered only what she knew.
“We were marked by what came from the room,” she said. “We helped break it.”
Albie looked from her to Tavin to Ellis. “You are children.”
Ellis’s mouth tightened. “Yes.”
The old man seemed wounded by that answer, not because Ellis had spoken harshly, but because the truth of their age reached him. “So was I,” he whispered.
They went into the side chamber.
It was a quiet room used for visiting officials and families, with a fire lit low and chairs arranged without ceremony. Jesus sat only after Albie sat. McGonagall remained standing near the mantel. Mira, Tavin, and Ellis took chairs near the wall, present but not central. Albie held his hat in his lap and turned it slowly.
“I did not come for an apology,” he said.
McGonagall nodded. “You do not owe us a reason for coming.”
He looked at Jesus. “Your letter said I owed no answer. That made me angry.”
Jesus listened.
“I thought, after all these years, now Hogwarts says I owe nothing. That would have been useful then.” His voice sharpened, then faltered. “I built a whole life around owing nothing. I told my wife I disliked crowds. I told my children I preferred ordinary work. I told myself magic was childish, dangerous, foolish, ornamental. I became very good at not caring.”
Tavin’s eyes filled. He looked down quickly.
Albie noticed. “You know the phrase.”
Tavin nodded. “We saw the memory.”
The old man shut his eyes.
Mira spoke softly. “Only because the record had to be understood. Not because anyone wanted to watch you suffer.”
Albie opened his eyes and looked at her for a long moment. “Did they laugh?”
Mira’s throat tightened. “Some did.”
He nodded as if confirming a weather report from decades ago. “I remembered that correctly, then.”
Ellis leaned forward slightly. “You remembered many things correctly. The record lied by making them sound small.”
Albie looked at him. “And you know this because?”
Ellis held out his palm. The scar was faint but visible. “Something from the same room wrote a name on me that was not mine.”
Albie stared at the scar. “What did it say?”
Ellis’s face tightened. “Coward.”
The old man’s mouth moved slightly, not quite forming a word. “Mine would have said weak.”
“No,” Jesus said.
Both of them looked at Him.
Jesus’ voice was quiet. “That is what the room called you. It was not your name.”
Albie looked toward the fire, and his face crumpled before he could hide it. He did not sob. He had spent too long not caring to let grief return all at once. But his eyes filled, and his hand tightened around the hat until the brim bent.
“I had a son,” he said. “He was magical.”
McGonagall’s face changed.
Albie swallowed. “We did not send him here.”
The room went very still.
“My wife wanted to. She said one wounded schoolboy should not decide a child’s whole life. She was right, perhaps. I could not bear it. I told myself I was protecting him from a world that enjoyed breaking children into shapes and calling it education. He went to a small program abroad for two years, then stopped using magic almost entirely.” He rubbed one thumb along the hat brim. “He died young. Dragon pox. He left a daughter.”
Mira felt the story open another room of grief. Not a new plot, not a distraction, but the long shadow of one classroom humiliation stretching across generations. Albie had not only left Hogwarts. He had carried Hogwarts into every decision he made about magic, belonging, risk, and trust.
Albie looked at McGonagall. “My granddaughter received her letter last summer.”
McGonagall drew a breath.
“I burned it,” he said.
No one spoke. The confession sat in the room like a heavy object placed on a table.
Then Albie pulled an envelope from his coat. It was scorched along one edge but still readable. The green ink had blurred slightly from water or old tears. He held it toward McGonagall with trembling fingers.
“I saved it from the stove too late for courage,” he said. “Then I kept it in a drawer and called that wisdom.”
McGonagall took the envelope with both hands. Her voice was gentle. “What is her name?”
“Clara Trent.”
“How old?”
“Eleven.”
Mira saw McGonagall calculate school timing, terms, missed arrival, procedural possibility, and human consequence all at once. Then she looked at Jesus, and her face softened with a grief that had become action.
“We can write to her again,” McGonagall said. “If she still wishes to come. If her guardian permits.”
Albie looked down. “Her mother is gone. I am her guardian.”
“Then if you permit.”
He laughed once without humor. “That is the trouble, is it not?”
Jesus leaned slightly forward. “What do you fear will happen if she comes?”
Albie’s answer came quickly. “She will be hurt.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
The old man looked up, startled.
Jesus continued, “Not as you were harmed, I pray. But she will be hurt in life. Here or elsewhere. You cannot give her a life where no room ever wounds her.”
Albie’s face twisted. “Then what can I give her?”
“A place where wounds are not allowed to become masters in the dark.”
Mira felt the sentence move through her like the first warm air after winter. She thought of the brass plate. She thought of the Defense classroom. She thought of her mother writing a letter to a dead father because some truths needed to be spoken even when the first listener was gone.
Albie looked at the scorched envelope in McGonagall’s hands. “She asked me why it smelled like smoke.”
No one answered. The grief in that small detail was too complete.
“She is clever,” he said. “Too clever. Kind in ways that make me afraid for her. She talks to birds as if they are old friends. She turned the kitchen curtains blue last month because she thought the room looked sad.” His face trembled. “She would love this place.”
McGonagall’s voice was soft. “Many children do.”
“So did I,” he whispered.
The admission broke him. He covered his face with one hand, still gripping the hat with the other. He cried then, quietly but fully, not as a man performing pain for people who had wronged him, but as an old boy finally allowed to say that the place that wounded him had first been a place he loved. That was the deeper cruelty of what Wren had done. He had not harmed Albie in a place Albie hated. He had harmed him in a place where wonder had lived.
Jesus moved closer but did not touch him until Albie lowered his hand. “Would you like to see the classroom?”
Albie’s whole body recoiled. “No.”
Jesus nodded. “Then not now.”
The old man looked ashamed of the refusal. “I came all this way.”
“You came far enough for today.”
Mira saw him receive that with difficulty. People who had spent years surviving often believed they had to complete every hard thing once they began, as if stopping made the first courage invalid. Jesus did not let him think that.
Albie looked at the three students. “You went in?”
Tavin nodded. “Yes.”
“Were you not afraid?”
Tavin gave a small laugh. “I was very afraid. I said yes quickly before I could become more afraid.”
Albie looked at him with a faint, sad smile. “That was honest.”
Mira said, “It helped that He went first.”
Albie looked at Jesus. “Did He?”
Ellis answered before anyone else. “Yes.”
Something in Ellis’s voice made Albie study him. “You needed Him to?”
Ellis did not hide from the question. “Yes.”
Albie sat back, absorbing that. “When I was there, no one went first. They watched.”
McGonagall closed her eyes briefly. When she opened them, her voice carried the weight of the school she loved and the failure she had inherited. “I am sorry.”
Albie looked at her. “You did not teach the lesson.”
“No,” she said. “But I am Headmistress of the school that hid it. I will not apologize for what is not mine, but I will confess what is.”
He nodded slowly. “That is better than the letters I imagined for fifty years.”
“What did they say?” Mira asked before she could stop herself.
Albie did not seem offended. “Mostly nothing. Sometimes I imagined a letter saying I had been right to leave. Sometimes one saying I had been weak. Sometimes one saying the whole thing never happened.” He looked at Jesus. “I never imagined one saying I did not owe an answer.”
Jesus’ face held deep tenderness. “Many wounded people are asked to comfort the places that wounded them. I did not come to ask that of you.”
Albie bowed his head.
The meeting lasted another hour. McGonagall explained what had been found and what would be corrected. She did not press Albie to provide testimony, though she asked permission to include his name in the restored record with his chosen statement if he ever wished to give one. Albie said he would think. That answer was accepted. No one dressed it up as closure.
Before he left the room, Albie stopped beside Ellis. “The scar on your hand. Does it still hurt?”
Ellis looked down. “Sometimes.”
“Good,” Albie said, then winced at his own wording. “I mean, do not let anyone tell you it should disappear quickly. People like quick scars. They are easier to praise.”
Ellis nodded. “I will remember that.”
Albie looked at Mira. “And you?”
She was surprised. “Me?”
“You looked like someone who knows how to hold herself still so other people will feel successful.”
Mira felt the words touch an old place. “I am learning not to.”
“That may trouble people.”
“It already has.”
“Good,” he said again, then sighed. “I sound like a bitter old man.”
Tavin smiled gently. “Maybe a useful one.”
Albie gave him a tired, grateful look. “And you. Do not stop caring.”
Tavin’s eyes filled again. “I am trying to care without trying to be God.”
Albie stared at him, then laughed through sudden tears. “That would have saved me a great deal of trouble, had someone said it plainly.”
When Albie left the side chamber, he did not go to the Defense classroom. He stood in the entrance hall with the scorched Hogwarts letter in one hand and McGonagall’s promise to send another in the other. Bishop the owl waited near the doors, apparently having appointed himself escort. Before stepping outside, Albie looked back toward the great staircases, the hall, the torches, and the students pretending not to watch.
“It still smells the same,” he said.
McGonagall’s voice softened. “I have never been able to decide whether that is comforting or alarming.”
Albie almost smiled. “Both.”
Then he left.
The doors closed behind him, and the entrance hall remained quiet for several seconds. It was not the silence of fear. It was the silence of people realizing they had just seen a record become a man, a man become a boy, and a boy hand back a burned letter that might still become a doorway for someone else.
That evening, Mira found her mother in the guest corridor packing her trunk. Celeste’s folded letter to her father lay on top of the clothes. Mira did not read it, though part of her wanted to. Her mother noticed and did not hide it away, which felt like its own small change.
“You are leaving?” Mira asked.
“In the morning.”
Mira nodded. She had known it would happen, but the thought still unsettled her.
Celeste placed a pair of gloves into the trunk. “I spoke with Professor McGonagall. You will remain here.”
Mira looked up quickly.
Her mother’s face remained composed, but her voice had changed. “I do not fully understand what happened in that room. I do not fully understand what is happening in you. I am not comfortable with either.”
Mira waited.
“But discomfort is not always warning,” Celeste said. “Sometimes it is simply the sound of a locked room opening.”
Mira felt her throat tighten. “Did Professor Jesus say that?”
“No,” her mother said. “I am capable of producing one useful sentence without assistance.”
Mira laughed, and after a moment Celeste did too. It was brief, uncertain, and gone quickly, but it was real.
Across the castle, Ellis sat in the Slytherin common room with Rowan and two younger students who had begun asking him questions without flinching every time he moved. He did not mistake that for trust restored. He answered carefully, helped one of them revise a Shield Charm essay, and did not use the moment to build a new following. When Cassian Rowle walked past and muttered something about fallen prefects collecting strays, Ellis felt the old answer rise. Then Rowan looked at him, worried.
Ellis only said, “Your introduction is weak. Start with the spell’s purpose, not the history of people arguing about it.”
Rowan blinked. “That is it?”
“That is it.”
Cassian walked on, unsatisfied. Ellis returned to the essay and discovered that not answering cruelty could feel less like defeat when someone younger was watching what kind of strength he would choose.
Tavin spent the evening in the owlery, not sending a letter this time, only sitting on the cleanest step with Lottie’s drawing and looking out at the dark. He thought about Albie’s granddaughter, a girl who talked to birds and turned curtains blue because a room looked sad. He hoped she came. He hoped Hogwarts would be kind to her. Then he corrected himself because hope was not enough to make a place safe. People would have to be kind. He would have to be part of that if she came.
Later, Jesus returned to the Defense classroom after the corridors quieted. He found Albie’s scorched envelope resting on the teacher’s desk. McGonagall had left it there with a note saying it would be copied and preserved in the new archive section after Albie gave final permission. Jesus touched the burned edge lightly. The letter had nearly become ash, yet there it lay, damaged and still able to speak.
He knelt beside the sealed stain and prayed in the dim room while the castle settled into night. He prayed for Albie Trent, who had walked back into a place that once taught him to stop caring and left with the possibility of letting a child love it freely. He prayed for Clara, who did not yet know that a burned letter might be rewritten. He prayed for Mira and Celeste as truth began to alter the shape of their love, for Tavin as care learned to loosen its grip, for Ellis as strength learned to kneel without becoming small, and for every child whose name had been placed under the wrong heading in someone else’s record.
Outside, the clouds parted over Hogwarts, and the stars appeared one by one above the wet towers. The castle looked almost peaceful from the grounds. Inside, the work remained unfinished, but a name had returned to the light that day, and the room that once taught children to stop caring had heard an old man remember that he had cared all along.
Chapter Nine: The Child Who Had Not Yet Arrived
Clara Trent’s new Hogwarts letter was written before breakfast, sealed before lunch, and sent before anyone could decide that waiting would feel safer. Professor McGonagall wrote the formal invitation herself, but this time she did not let the school’s old language carry the whole weight. She included the ordinary things a child deserved to know. She wrote of classes, houses, books, robes, the train, the castle, the lake, and the teachers who would receive her if she chose to come. She also wrote one sentence that Mira heard about later from Professor Flitwick, who had cried when he read it and then insisted he had only been affected by fireplace smoke. The sentence said, Hogwarts failed someone who loved it once, and we are trying to become a place where that failure is no longer hidden.
The letter left with Bishop, who seemed to understand that ordinary owls could carry school notices, but certain letters required a bird with scars, pride, and a deep dislike of sugared almonds. By afternoon, the whole castle seemed to know that a girl named Clara Trent might come to visit. Nobody was supposed to know her name. Nobody was supposed to know that she was Albie Trent’s granddaughter, that her first letter had been burned along the edge, or that the school might be given a chance to welcome someone whose family history with Hogwarts had almost ended in a stove. But Hogwarts was made of stone, magic, portraits, gossip, and children. Secrets there did not always travel from cruelty. Sometimes they traveled because hope made people careless.
Mira heard two Ravenclaws discussing Clara in the common room as if she were already a first-year with a trunk by the door. One wondered which house she would enter. Another said it would be strange if she came after missing the beginning of term. A third suggested that anyone who turned curtains blue because a room looked sad clearly belonged in Ravenclaw or Hufflepuff, which began an argument about whether emotional curtain judgment counted as intelligence or compassion. Mira listened for a minute, then closed her book.
“She is not an idea,” she said.
The others looked at her.
Mira felt the old discomfort of interrupting a room, but she did not take the words back. “She is a girl who may be frightened to come here because of something that happened before she was born. Maybe we should let her arrive before we decide who she is.”
Alina Fawley, sitting near the window with a blanket around her shoulders, nodded without looking up from her notes. “That seems fair.”
The argument faded, but not with resentment. At least not much. Mira returned to her reading, though the words on the page did not settle. She kept thinking about a girl who talked to birds and turned curtains blue. She wondered whether Clara knew that a castle could be both wonderful and wounded. She wondered whether anyone had ever told her that love for a place did not require blindness to its failures.
At supper, Tavin was asked by three Hufflepuffs whether he thought Clara would like the common room. He said he had never met her, which everyone agreed was technically relevant but emotionally unhelpful. They then began planning what kind of welcome would feel warm without feeling like a trap. Hufflepuffs could turn kindness into a construction project when left unsupervised. By the time pudding appeared, someone had suggested a basket of biscuits, a hand-drawn map, a knitted scarf, and a rotating schedule so she never had to walk to class alone unless she wanted to. Tavin listened with growing alarm.
“Maybe we should not welcome her so hard that she needs rescuing from us,” he said.
A second-year frowned. “But we are being nice.”
“I know,” Tavin said. “That is the dangerous part.”
Professor Sprout, who had been passing behind the table, stopped and looked deeply pleased. “Mr. Brock, that may be the finest sentence you have ever produced.”
Tavin looked embarrassed. “That cannot be true.”
“It is certainly near the top.”
At the Slytherin table, the talk of Clara took a different shape. Some students were curious. Some were bored. Some were irritated that the school seemed to be making such a large matter out of one old student and a girl who had not yet stepped through the doors. Cassian Rowle leaned back with his arms crossed and said the whole thing had become sentimental theater. He spoke loudly enough for Ellis to hear.
“First the badge disappears,” Cassian said, “then everyone cries over mirrors, then the archive decides it has feelings, and now we are supposed to welcome some half-forgotten girl as if she is the future of Hogwarts.”
Rowan Aster stiffened beside Ellis.
Ellis kept cutting his food. “Eat your dinner.”
Cassian smiled. “Is that an order?”
“No.”
“Difficult to tell without the badge.”
Several students went quiet. The old Ellis would have answered quickly. A sharp word, a cold look, a threat dressed as wit. The new Ellis did not feel new enough to be safe from the old response. He felt it rise in him, hungry and ready. His hand moved toward the inside pocket where Mira’s note rested. You did not sit down. He touched the edge of the folded paper through the robe and let the sentence do its work.
He looked at Cassian. “You are angry that weakness is being discussed without being punished.”
Cassian’s smile thinned. “Careful.”
“I am being careful.”
“No. You are being reformed in public.”
A few Slytherins snickered. Rowan looked ready to speak, but Ellis gave him the smallest shake of his head.
Cassian leaned forward. “Tell me, Crowe. Does honesty feel better than influence?”
Ellis held his gaze. “No.”
That answer confused the table.
Ellis set down his knife. “It feels worse most of the time. That is how I know I am not doing it because it makes me look impressive.”
Cassian’s face hardened. The students who had laughed did not laugh this time. Ellis did not feel victorious. He felt tired, exposed, and faintly sick. But he had not used fear, and Rowan was sitting beside him breathing easier. For that moment, it was enough.
Across the hall, Jesus saw but did not intervene. He sat at the teachers’ table with a small plate of bread and a cup of water, listening to Professor Sinistra speak quietly about the stars appearing unusually clear after the rain. His eyes moved often through the hall, not like a guard searching for threats, but like a shepherd counting the living after a storm. He saw the Hufflepuffs trying to turn welcome into overprotection. He saw the Ravenclaws trying to turn Clara into a puzzle before she arrived. He saw Cassian using contempt as a shield because the new lessons had made cruelty less fashionable and therefore more desperate. He saw Ellis choose restraint and feel no reward except the absence of damage.
That night, the Defense classroom did not host a lesson. Instead, McGonagall asked the students most closely connected to the Mirror Room to meet in the smaller chamber near her office. Mira, Tavin, Ellis, Rowan, Alina, and two older students arrived after supper. The room held a low fire, a round table, and chairs that seemed chosen for conversation rather than authority. McGonagall sat with them, which felt strange enough. Jesus stood by the mantel at first, then took the last chair when Rowan quietly pushed it out with his foot.
McGonagall noticed and gave Rowan a look that would have terrified most first-years. Rowan looked back with the innocent defiance of a child who had survived worse than disapproval. After a moment, she sat.
“We may receive Miss Trent for a visit,” McGonagall said. “Not enrollment yet. A visit. Her grandfather has asked whether she may see the school before any decision is made.”
Tavin nodded. “That seems good.”
“It also raises a question,” she continued. “How does a school welcome a child without turning her into a symbol?”
The students looked at one another. This was not the kind of question students were usually asked. Schools made plans, then students lived inside them. Being asked to help think made the room heavier.
Alina spoke first. “Do not announce her.”
McGonagall nodded. “Agreed.”
Rowan said, “Do not make everyone be extra nice.”
Professor McGonagall looked amused despite herself. “A difficult policy to enforce.”
“I mean it,” Rowan said. “When people are extra nice, you can tell they are thinking about the sad thing.”
Mira felt the truth of that. “Let her be new before she has to be wounded.”
Jesus looked at her with quiet approval.
Ellis leaned back, thinking. “Give her a choice of where to go first. Not the Great Hall if she does not want all eyes on her. Not the Defense corridor unless she asks.”
Tavin added, “And if she likes birds, maybe the owlery. But clean it first.”
McGonagall’s eyes narrowed. “The owlery is cleaned.”
Tavin gave her a careful look. “By owl standards or human standards?”
No one spoke for a moment. Then Alina coughed into her sleeve. Rowan grinned. Even McGonagall’s mouth moved slightly before she regained control of it.
“Human standards,” she said.
Jesus asked, “Who should meet her?”
The room quieted again.
Rowan shrugged. “Someone who will not try too hard.”
Everyone looked at Tavin.
“What?” Tavin said. “Why is that a look?”
Mira smiled. “Because you might try very hard not to try too hard.”
“That sounds unfairly accurate.”
Ellis looked at Jesus. “You should meet her first.”
Jesus shook His head gently. “Her grandfather should walk with her first.”
Mira understood at once. Albie had lost Hogwarts once. If Clara came, he should not be replaced at the door by the school’s eagerness to repair itself. He needed to be the one to bring her across the threshold if he could. That was not only for Clara. It was for the old boy who had left believing the castle no longer had room for him.
McGonagall folded her hands. “Then Mr. Trent brings her. I meet them at the entrance. No assembled students. No formal welcome. If she wishes to see more, she may choose from a few places. The owlery, the library, a common classroom, the grounds, perhaps the Great Hall after it has emptied.”
“The Defense classroom?” Ellis asked.
“Only if she asks,” McGonagall said.
Jesus added, “And only if Albie is ready to pass the corridor.”
The room received that with the silence it deserved. The visit was not only about a child seeing a school. It was about a grandfather deciding whether the place that had taught him to stop caring might be trusted with the child he loved. No plan could force that trust. It could only refuse to make trust harder by being careless.
The next day, Bishop returned before noon with a letter tied so securely to his leg that Professor Flitwick had to use a charm and an apology to remove it. Albie had written in a careful hand. Clara wished to come. He did not know whether he wished to let her. They would arrive Saturday morning for one hour. He requested no ceremony, no crowd, and no contact with Calder Wren. At the bottom, in smaller writing, he added one sentence. She has asked whether the owls are friendly.
McGonagall read the sentence twice. “The owls will be instructed.”
Flitwick looked doubtful. “Can owls be instructed in friendliness?”
“No,” Sprout said. “But they can be bribed into temporary dignity.”
The visit gave the castle two days to prepare, which was almost too much time. Hogwarts could handle emergencies with startling grace, but anticipation made it fidget. The owlery was cleaned to human standards, then to McGonagall standards, which were stricter and involved a lecture to three owls who looked personally wronged. The Great Hall was not decorated because McGonagall forbade it with such force that even the candles seemed to behave plainly. The Defense corridor remained open but quiet, the brass plate polished only once after Jesus asked that it not be made to shine like a trophy.
Mira spent the two days trying to help without turning Clara into a project. That was harder than expected. She kept wanting to prepare a map, a note, a list of things she wished someone had told her when fear first began speaking in the castle. Each time, she stopped. Clara was not coming to receive Mira’s wisdom. She was coming to see whether a place could be more than the wound it had given her family.
Mira’s mother left the morning before Clara’s visit. Celeste stood with her trunk near the entrance hall, gloves buttoned and cloak fastened, looking once again like the woman who had arrived with certainty in every line. But when she faced Mira, something had changed in the space between them.
“I wrote to you,” Celeste said.
Mira blinked. “Already?”
“I thought it might be better to hand it to you without an owl making it dramatic.”
Mira took the folded letter. Her name was written on the front without the family crest. Just Mira. That alone made her throat tighten.
“Should I read it now?”
Celeste looked almost alarmed. “No.”
Mira almost smiled. “All right.”
Her mother drew a breath. “It is not perfect.”
“I would not know what to do with perfect.”
That sentence stayed between them, and for once perfection did not seem to know how to enter. Celeste reached for her daughter’s hand. Mira let her take it. The grip was still careful, still uncertain, but not as strange as before.
“I do not want excellence to be the only language between us,” Celeste said.
Mira held the letter a little tighter. “Neither do I.”
Celeste nodded once, as if a formal agreement had been reached because she still needed some form to help her stand. Then she stepped closer and kissed Mira’s forehead. It was quick, restrained, and unlike the grand reconciliations Mira had read in novels. It was also the first time in years her mother had touched her without adjusting a collar, smoothing hair, or correcting posture. Mira stood very still after Celeste left, afraid that moving too quickly might cause the moment to break.
That evening, she read the letter in the Ravenclaw common room while rain tapped lightly against the windows again. Her mother had written plainly. She admitted that she had confused preparation with love too often. She did not promise to change quickly. She did not ask Mira to pretend the past had been harmless. She wrote about her own father returning letters with corrections, and then she wrote a sentence Mira read five times. I thought if I made you flawless, no one could wound you the way I was wounded, but I see now that trying to make you flawless became one of the ways you were wounded.
Mira cried quietly over that sentence, not because it fixed everything, but because it named something without forcing Mira to be grateful too quickly. Alina sat beside her without asking to read the letter. That was kindness in its cleanest form.
Saturday arrived with low clouds, no rain, and a wind that moved across the grounds in long cold breaths. The castle seemed to know it should be quiet. Even Peeves was absent, though this turned out to be because McGonagall had threatened consequences so specific that several portraits refused to repeat them. The entrance hall had been cleared just before ten. No students were gathered. No teachers stood in a receiving line. Only McGonagall, Jesus, Flitwick, and Hagrid waited near the doors. Hagrid had been invited because if Clara cared about birds, she might also care about creatures, and because Albie had once mentioned in his brief reply that his granddaughter trusted large animals more easily than formal adults.
Mira, Tavin, and Ellis waited out of sight near the side corridor with Rowan and Alina, available only if needed. Tavin kept wiping his hands on his robes.
“You are not meeting a foreign minister,” Ellis said.
“I know. A child is worse.”
Rowan frowned. “How?”
“With a foreign minister, you can be boring and everyone thinks it is diplomacy. With a child, if you are boring, they know.”
Alina nodded solemnly. “That is true.”
The great doors opened at ten precisely.
Albie entered first, wearing the same coat and holding the same hat. He looked less shaken than before, but every step into the entrance hall cost him something. Beside him stood a girl in a dark green coat with brass buttons and boots slightly too muddy for the polished stone. Clara Trent was small, sharp-eyed, and holding a wooden birdcage with no bird inside. Her sandy hair had escaped its braid in several places, and her gaze moved immediately upward toward the vaulted ceiling, the torches, the staircases, and the portraits pretending not to stare.
She did not look amazed first. She looked suspicious of amazement.
That made Mira like her at once.
McGonagall stepped forward. “Miss Trent, welcome to Hogwarts.”
Clara studied her. “Are you the Headmistress?”
“I am.”
“My grandfather said you are strict.”
Albie closed his eyes briefly.
McGonagall’s face remained composed. “Your grandfather is correct.”
Clara considered that. “Do you like birds?”
“I respect them.”
“That is not the same.”
“No,” McGonagall said. “It is not.”
Jesus stood a few steps back, giving Albie and McGonagall the first space. Clara’s eyes found Him anyway. Her expression changed, not into recognition exactly, but into attention. Children often saw things adults had trained themselves to explain away.
“Are You the one who wrote the first letter?” she asked.
“Yes,” Jesus said.
“You said my grandfather was not forgotten by God.”
“Yes.”
She looked at Albie, then back at Jesus. “He cried after reading that.”
Albie made a sound that might have been protest. “Clara.”
Jesus did not smile at Albie’s embarrassment. He looked at the girl gently. “Did that trouble you?”
Clara shook her head. “No. He used to get quiet in a way that made the room feel locked. Crying seemed more like a window.”
Hagrid sniffed loudly and pretended to examine the door hinge.
McGonagall cleared her throat. “Would you like to see the owls first?”
Clara’s eyes brightened despite her attempt to remain cautious. “Yes. Are they friendly?”
McGonagall paused. “They have been advised.”
Clara seemed to find that acceptable.
Albie looked toward the staircase leading up. For a moment his hand tightened around his hat. Jesus moved beside him, not touching, not guiding, simply near.
“You may stop at any time,” Jesus said.
Albie nodded. “I know.”
But he did not stop.
They took the quieter stairway toward the owlery. Halfway up, Clara turned to look at a portrait of a knight in purple armor. The knight bowed so deeply that his helmet fell off inside the frame. Clara stared, then laughed before she remembered she was being cautious. The sound moved through the stairwell, small and bright, and Albie’s face changed. He looked pained by it, but also hungry for it. Hogwarts had given his family a laugh he had not expected to hear.
The owlery had never been so clean. The floor still smelled faintly of owl because there were limits to civilization, but fresh straw had been laid, perches repaired, and the windows cleared. Bishop sat in the place of honor, looking as if he had personally founded the school. Several smaller owls lined the rafters with unusual dignity, though one already seemed to be losing the battle against scratching itself.
Clara stepped inside slowly. Her empty birdcage swung from one hand.
“Why did you bring a cage without a bird?” McGonagall asked.
Clara looked up at the owls. “To see whether this place felt like one.”
No one answered quickly.
Tavin, listening from just outside the lower stair with Mira, Ellis, Rowan, and Alina, mouthed silently, That child is terrifying.
Mira nodded.
Inside the owlery, Jesus looked at Clara. “And does it?”
She walked to the nearest window and looked out over the grounds. Wind moved through her loose hair. An owl above her shifted and dropped a small feather that landed near her boot.
“Not here,” she said. “This room is messy enough to be honest.”
Hagrid gave a watery chuckle. “That it is.”
Albie stood near the doorway, watching her. The owlery was not his wound, but it was Hogwarts, and Hogwarts was full of echoes. Clara reached toward Bishop, then stopped short of touching him.
“May I?”
Bishop blinked slowly, as if permission from an owl was far more important than permission from humans.
McGonagall said, “Carefully.”
Clara stroked the owl’s chest feathers with two fingers. Bishop allowed it for three seconds, then clicked his beak and turned his head away as if affection had gone too far. Clara smiled. “He is proud.”
“He is unbearable,” McGonagall said.
Clara looked startled, then laughed again. This time Albie laughed too, very softly. He looked almost frightened by the sound, as if joy had entered a room where he had expected only endurance.
After the owlery, Clara chose the library. Madam Pince had been instructed not to overwhelm her, which lasted less than four minutes before she began explaining the rules about ink, crumbs, folded pages, sneezing near rare books, and breathing too closely to certain bindings. Clara listened seriously and asked whether any books disliked being read by particular people. Madam Pince narrowed her eyes, decided the question was worthy, and led her to a shelf of temperamental biographies. Albie watched his granddaughter lean toward a book that snapped at her finger, and instead of pulling her away, he only said, “Careful.” The word came out as guidance, not fear. Jesus heard it and looked at him, but Albie did not notice.
Mira and Alina were asked to enter the library after a while, not as formal guides, but because Clara had questions about Ravenclaw Tower that McGonagall did not intend to answer by giving away security details. Mira approached slowly, aware of how easily a person could become too much when trying not to be.
“Hello,” Mira said. “I am Mira.”
Clara looked at her. “Were you in the room?”
Mira did not pretend not to understand. “Yes.”
“Did it scare you?”
“Yes.”
“Did you want to leave Hogwarts after?”
Mira thought carefully. “For a few minutes, I wanted to leave myself. The place was not the main problem.”
Clara stared at her, then nodded as if the answer had passed some private test. “Do the stairs really move?”
“Yes.”
“Is that annoying?”
“Very.”
“Good,” Clara said. “Grandfather only told me the beautiful parts before he stopped telling me anything.”
Albie looked away, wounded but not defensive. Mira saw Clara notice. The girl’s face softened, and for the first time she looked eleven.
“I do not mean that cruelly,” Clara said to him.
“I know,” Albie answered.
“But it is true.”
“Yes,” he said. “It is.”
Mira felt the fragile strength of that exchange. Truth had crossed between them without becoming punishment. Clara had said what was real. Albie had not made her carry his shame for saying it. Perhaps that was how a family changed one answer at a time.
Ellis was not supposed to meet Clara unless she asked about Slytherin. She did, of course, because children often find the locked cabinet first. McGonagall’s face tightened when Clara asked whether Slytherins were dangerous. Albie looked uncomfortable. Hagrid muttered something about “not all of ‘em” and then coughed.
Ellis was brought to the library with Rowan beside him. He stood before Clara without the badge, without performing confidence, and without trying to represent his house like a polished shield.
“Are you dangerous?” Clara asked.
Rowan choked.
Ellis considered the question. “I have been.”
Mira looked at him sharply, but Clara seemed to appreciate the answer.
“Are you still?”
“Yes,” he said. “But not in the way I was.”
McGonagall’s eyebrow lifted. “Mr. Crowe.”
Ellis looked at Clara, not at the Headmistress. “People who say they are not dangerous at all are often not paying attention.”
Clara thought about that. “That sounds true.”
Rowan added, “He is less horrible now.”
“Thank you,” Ellis said dryly.
Clara looked between them. “Are you friends?”
Rowan shrugged. “Maybe.”
Ellis said, “He has not completed the required paperwork.”
Clara smiled. It was small, but real.
The visit lasted longer than one hour because no one had the heart or foolishness to stop it when it was going well. Clara saw the edge of the grounds, where Hagrid showed her tracks in the mud and explained that some creatures were best respected from a distance even if they looked lonely. She saw the Great Hall after lunch had emptied, the candles floating quietly overhead. She did not see the Defense corridor until the end, and only because Albie stopped near the staircase and looked that way first.
Jesus stood beside him. “You do not have to.”
Albie held his hat in both hands. Clara looked from her grandfather to the corridor.
“Is that where it happened?” she asked.
“Yes,” Albie said.
“To you or to them?”
He swallowed. “Both, in different ways.”
Clara took that in. “Do you want to see it?”
Albie closed his eyes for a moment. When he opened them, he looked not brave, but ready to tell the truth. “No. I want to have seen it. That is different.”
Clara nodded. “Then I can go with you.”
The corridor seemed longer than usual as they walked. No crowd followed. Only McGonagall, Jesus, Mira, Tavin, Ellis, Rowan, and Hagrid came, and even that felt like many. The brass plate beside the sealed door caught the afternoon light.
Albie stopped before it.
He read the sentence silently. His face changed as if each word had entered slowly and found its old place. Clara read it too, moving her lips a little.
“This door was once hidden,” she said. “Let no wound be hidden so long that it learns to rule.”
She looked at her grandfather. “Did yours rule?”
Albie gave a broken laugh. “For a long time.”
“Is it stopping?”
He looked at Jesus, then at the plate, then at the child beside him. “I think it has begun to lose authority.”
That was as far as he could go. No one pushed him.
The Defense classroom door stood closed a few steps away. Albie looked at it once and turned pale. Jesus placed Himself slightly nearer, not blocking the sight but standing with him inside it.
“Not today,” Albie whispered.
“Not today,” Jesus said.
Clara looked at the door with a seriousness beyond her years. Then she reached into her empty birdcage and took out a blue thread. It must have come from the curtains she had changed, or perhaps from something else she had brought from home. She tied it carefully around one bar of the sealed statue’s spear.
McGonagall looked as if she might object to attaching things to school property. Then she seemed to decide that some regulations could be taught mercy by waiting.
“What is that for?” Tavin asked.
Clara stepped back. “So the door remembers someone came and did not go in before they were ready.”
Albie covered his mouth with one hand. Jesus looked at the blue thread, and His face held a tenderness so deep the corridor felt warmer.
“That is a good remembrance,” He said.
Clara looked at Him. “Can I come back?”
The question changed everything. Albie closed his eyes. McGonagall held very still. Mira felt Tavin stop breathing beside her. Ellis looked at the floor, as if hope should be given privacy.
Jesus did not answer for the adults. He looked at Albie.
The old man opened his eyes and looked at his granddaughter. “Do you want to?”
“Yes,” Clara said. “Not because it is safe in the way you wanted. Because it is alive in the way you missed.”
Albie wept then, not loudly, not completely, but enough that Clara took his hand. He did not hide it from her. That may have been the greatest change of the day.
McGonagall spoke softly. “We will make the arrangements if your grandfather agrees. You may begin with a gradual schedule. There is no need to force everything at once.”
Albie nodded, though he could not speak yet.
Clara looked at the blue thread again. “Good. But I want to visit the owls first every week.”
McGonagall drew herself up. “That can be discussed.”
Clara looked at Bishop, who had somehow followed them and now perched on a nearby torch bracket with smug authority. “He agrees.”
“Bishop is not in charge of enrollment,” McGonagall said.
Bishop clicked his beak.
Hagrid laughed so hard he had to wipe his eyes with a handkerchief the size of a towel. The laughter moved through the corridor gently, not erasing the heaviness, but proving it no longer owned every sound there.
When Clara and Albie left at sunset, the whole castle seemed to exhale. No announcement was made. No feast was held. No one was told that a burned letter had become an open possibility. Yet the news moved through Hogwarts anyway, softer this time. A girl had come. She had seen the owls. She had tied a blue thread near the hidden door. She might return.
That evening, the three students found themselves in the Defense classroom without planning it. Mira stood near the sealed stain. Tavin sat backward in a chair with his chin on his folded arms. Ellis leaned against the wall near the window. Rowan had gone back to his common room after supper, carrying the news that Bishop had apparently joined the admissions process.
Mira looked at the empty teacher’s desk. “She was not what I expected.”
Tavin frowned. “What did you expect?”
“I do not know. Someone more fragile.”
Ellis looked out the window toward the darkening grounds. “She is fragile. Just not breakable on command.”
That sentence settled over them. Mira thought of her mother’s letter, Albie’s hat twisting in his hands, Clara’s blue thread, and the way Jesus had not made the visit into a lesson while somehow teaching through every silence.
Tavin lifted his head. “Do you think we are still fragile?”
“Yes,” Mira said.
Ellis nodded. “Obviously.”
Tavin considered that. “Good. I was hoping we were not required to become inspiring.”
Mira smiled. “That would be terrible.”
Ellis turned from the window. “You already are, Brock. Deeply inconvenient.”
Tavin threw a wadded scrap of parchment at him. It missed by several feet. Ellis looked at where it landed, then back at him.
“You are also a poor shot.”
“I am a Keeper. I stop things. I do not throw them.”
“That explains nothing.”
For a moment they sounded almost like ordinary students. That felt strange, but not wrong. Ordinary had not vanished. It had been waiting for enough truth to return.
After they left, Jesus entered the classroom alone. The blue thread in the corridor moved faintly in the draft from the stairwell beyond the door. Inside, the room was quiet. He walked to the center, where the desks still formed their imperfect circle, and knelt beside the sealed mark on the floor. He prayed for Clara Trent and the doorway she might cross one day with both wonder and warning. He prayed for Albie, who had stood near the room that wounded him and stopped before forcing himself to enter. He prayed for Mira, Tavin, Ellis, Rowan, and every student learning that healing did not require becoming unbreakable. He prayed for Hogwarts, still ancient, still flawed, still full of children, and still capable of receiving mercy in places where shame once kept its lessons hidden.
Outside the classroom, the blue thread held to the statue’s spear through the night. It was small, ordinary, and easy to miss. But by morning, nearly every student who passed the sealed door had seen it, and not one of them touched it.
Chapter Ten: The Day the Door Stayed Closed
By the next morning, the blue thread on the statue’s spear had become the quietest famous thing in Hogwarts. Students passed it on their way to class and slowed without meaning to. Some looked at it quickly and moved on, embarrassed by their own tenderness. Others stopped just long enough to read the brass plate again, as if the thread had changed the sentence by giving it a child’s answer. No one touched it, not even Peeves, which convinced several first-years that Professor McGonagall had threatened him with something beyond known punishment.
Mira noticed that the thread had begun changing the corridor more than the plate had. The plate named what had happened. The thread showed that someone had been allowed to stop before she was ready. That mattered to Mira in a way she did not expect. She had spent so much of her life being urged forward by expectation that the sight of one small thread honoring restraint felt almost like a new kind of courage. Not every closed door was cowardice. Sometimes a closed door meant the person standing before it had finally been given the dignity of time.
Tavin noticed something different. He saw younger students pointing to the thread and whispering not with fear, but with care. The corridor no longer felt like a place students hurried through because something terrible had happened there. It had become a place where they remembered to lower their voices. That seemed small, but to Tavin it felt like the school itself learning manners around pain. He wrote that to Lottie in his next letter, then crossed it out because she would think the castle had become polite and write back with a drawing of a staircase wearing a hat.
Ellis noticed the thread because Rowan noticed it. The younger boy stopped every morning before it and looked for several seconds, never saying much. Ellis did not ask why. He had begun learning that not every silence needed to be broken by someone older trying to sound wise. One morning, Rowan finally said, “She did not go in.”
“No,” Ellis answered.
“People let her not go in.”
“Yes.”
Rowan looked at the thread again. “That seems important.”
Ellis kept his hands in his pockets. “It is.”
The importance followed them into the day. McGonagall had received Albie’s reply before breakfast, written in a steadier hand than before. Clara wanted to return for lessons on a trial basis. Albie would permit it if the school agreed to slow entry, private check-ins, and no public mention of his own history without permission. He also asked whether the blue thread might remain until Clara decided otherwise. McGonagall read that part aloud in the staff room and dared anyone to object. No one did, though Filch was later heard muttering that if everyone tied string to school property the castle would look like a laundry line.
The question of Clara’s return placed the school in a strange position. Usually Hogwarts received children as if magic itself were enough invitation. This time, the invitation carried history, failure, repair, and the knowledge that a child might love the place more honestly because she had not been lied to about it. McGonagall prepared a schedule that would let Clara attend several classes each week before full enrollment. Flitwick offered Charms. Sprout offered Herbology. Sinistra offered an evening sky observation from the Astronomy Tower, though only if the wind was mild. Jesus offered Defense, but not first.
That surprised Mira when she heard it. She had expected Clara to begin where the healing had begun. Instead, Jesus asked that Clara’s first lesson be something ordinary and good. Let her hold a wand without the room’s history leaning over her shoulder. Let her learn that Hogwarts was not only the place where her grandfather had been hurt. Let wonder arrive before repair demanded attention.
Clara arrived three days later with Albie and an old satchel that had once belonged to her father. The leather was scratched, the buckle slightly bent, and a small blue feather had been tied to the handle. She wore school robes that did not quite sit right yet and boots that still looked ready for mud. Bishop met her in the entrance hall without being summoned, landing on the back of a chair with such dignity that several students stepped aside as if he held office.
McGonagall looked at the owl. “You are not required.”
Bishop clicked his beak.
Clara leaned toward Albie. “He disagrees.”
“I gathered,” Albie said.
The first lesson was Charms. Mira did not attend because it was a first-year session, but the story reached her before lunch. Clara had taken longer than everyone else to levitate a feather because she kept apologizing to it before casting. Flitwick had told her that courtesy was admirable but perhaps not necessary for objects without nervous systems. Clara had answered that he could not prove the feather did not mind. By the end of class, her feather had risen six inches, turned blue at the tip, and floated into Bishop’s beak through an open window. Flitwick gave her no extra points because he could not decide which part of the incident to reward.
At lunch, Clara sat not at a house table, but at a small side table with Albie, McGonagall, and Jesus. That had been agreed upon before her arrival. She would not be sorted until she chose to enroll fully. Some students found this fascinating. Others found it irritating because Hogwarts liked categories almost as much as it liked staircases. Clara ate slowly, watching everything with eyes that missed very little.
Mira saw her looking toward the house tables. After a while, Clara came over with Albie beside her and stopped near the Ravenclaws.
“Do you like it here?” Clara asked.
Mira put down her fork. The question had no soft beginning and no polite decoration.
“Yes,” Mira said. “But not because it is simple.”
Clara considered that. “I think I can like complicated things if people do not tell me they are simple.”
Alina, sitting beside Mira, nodded. “That is one of the better entrance statements I have heard.”
Clara looked at her. “What house are you?”
“Ravenclaw.”
“Do Ravenclaws always talk like books that have learned to breathe?”
Alina blinked. Mira laughed before she could stop herself. Even Albie smiled, and the smile reached his face in a way that made him look almost young for a moment.
Across the hall, Rowan watched Clara with open curiosity. Tavin waved her over before remembering that too much welcome could become a trap. He lowered his hand halfway and turned the motion into scratching his head. It fooled no one. Clara came anyway, perhaps because awkward honesty seemed to interest her.
The Hufflepuffs tried very hard not to overwhelm her, which made them look like a group of students sitting on their own hands. Tavin introduced himself, then introduced Rowan, who had followed at a distance as if he had no intention of joining and every intention of hearing everything. Clara asked whether Hufflepuff common room biscuits were as good as she had heard. Three students answered at once and then apologized in unison.
Clara looked at Tavin. “Are they always like this?”
“Yes,” he said. “But in a loyal way.”
“That sounds tiring.”
“It can be.”
A Hufflepuff second-year looked wounded. Tavin added quickly, “It is also wonderful. We are learning moderation.”
The second-year seemed satisfied by the word wonderful and returned to pudding.
Ellis stayed at the Slytherin table, watching without watching. He had decided Clara did not need another older student presenting himself as evidence of transformation. Rowan had other ideas. He waved Ellis over with the relentless confidence of someone who had not yet learned how much older students disliked being summoned by younger ones in public.
Ellis ignored him.
Clara noticed. “Is that the one who said he was dangerous?”
Rowan nodded. “Yes. He is being difficult because he thinks it is respectful.”
Ellis heard that. Unfortunately, half the table did too. Cassian Rowle muttered something into his cup, but Ellis was already standing. He walked over with the weary dignity of someone accepting a punishment he could not name.
Clara looked up at him. “Are you still dangerous today?”
Ellis glanced at Rowan. “I am beginning to regret answering honestly the first time.”
Clara waited.
He sighed. “Less than yesterday, I hope.”
“That is probably enough.”
“It is not enough,” Ellis said. “But it is a direction.”
Clara seemed to like that answer. “Grandfather says directions matter when maps are damaged.”
Albie, standing behind her, looked startled by hearing his private sentence repeated. Ellis looked at him and gave a small nod, not quite greeting, not quite gratitude. Albie returned it. The exchange lasted only a second, but it carried something neither of them would have said aloud. They both knew what it was to live by damaged maps.
The day might have stayed gentle if the governors had not arrived after lunch.
Governor Cresswell returned with two others, both older, both dressed in formal robes that made the wet stone floors seem improperly casual. They came for the preliminary hearing regarding Wren, the hidden archive, and the school’s proposed changes. McGonagall had known they were coming. So had the teachers. The students were not meant to know the details, but the atmosphere changed the moment the governors entered. Hogwarts could feel authority that cared more about control than children. The castle had lived with that kind of authority before.
The hearing was held in a chamber near the staff wing. Students were not invited except for Mira, Tavin, Ellis, and Rowan, who were asked to speak only if called upon. Clara was not invited and was not told more than necessary. Albie stayed with her in the library, where Madam Pince guarded them from gossip with the ferocity of a nesting dragon.
Wren sat at the far end of the hearing table, pale and upright. He looked cleaner now, but not stronger. The ledger lay sealed in front of McGonagall, along with copied records, staff statements, and the first response from Albie Trent. Jesus sat beside the students rather than at the head of the table. That choice irritated Cresswell, who kept glancing at Him as if trying to decide whether humility could be considered procedural interference.
The oldest governor, a witch named Portia Nettleburn, opened the hearing with a voice like dry parchment. “We are gathered to determine the immediate handling of Professor Calder Wren, the recovered records, and the public exposure risk attached to recent events.”
Jesus looked at McGonagall. She noticed, then spoke before the hearing could travel farther down that road.
“We are gathered,” she said, “to determine what truth, justice, and protection require after harm was done to children and hidden by magical and institutional failure.”
Nettleburn pursed her lips. “That is one framing.”
“It is the correct one,” McGonagall said.
Ellis looked down quickly to hide the faint movement of his mouth. Mira saw it anyway.
The hearing began with Wren’s confession. He did not read from prepared parchment. McGonagall had allowed him notes, but Jesus had told him that notes could support truth or hide him from it. Wren chose to speak plainly. He stated that as a young teacher he had created unauthorized mirror exercises to expose students to shame and fear under the claim of strengthening their defenses. He stated that he continued after students showed distress. He stated that he altered records, interfered with memory, and used the archive’s own habits of concealment to bury what he had done. He stated that his own childhood humiliation explained part of his descent but excused none of it.
No one interrupted him. That made the confession harder to hear. There was no argument to distract from it, no shouting to reduce the room to sides. Wren’s voice shook, but he did not stop until he had named Albie Trent, the ledger, the Mirror Room, the cursed book, and the harm to current students. When he finished, he folded his hands and looked at the table.
Nettleburn looked over her spectacles. “You understand that this statement places you in grave legal and professional danger.”
Wren gave a faint, broken smile. “Madam, I have not been professional for decades.”
No one laughed. It was not funny, but it was true in a way that made the room shift.
Cresswell leaned forward. “Professor Wren, were you under any external curse or possession when these acts occurred?”
Wren closed his eyes briefly. “No.”
“Were you influenced by the cursed object later known to students as the book?”
“I created the conditions by which the book formed. I will not blame it for what I fed.”
The governor frowned. “That is not a precise answer.”
Jesus spoke quietly. “It is more precise than blame.”
Cresswell stiffened but did not answer.
Another governor, a heavyset wizard with a silver beard, reviewed the archive notes. “Headmistress, you propose that copies of all restored records remain at Hogwarts under a new classification. Truth Kept for Healing.”
“Yes,” McGonagall said.
“That title is unusual.”
“So was the failure.”
The wizard sighed. “My concern is that emotionally charged classifications may invite interpretive disputes.”
Mira felt the sentence crawl under her skin. Emotionally charged classifications. Interpretive disputes. It sounded like the sort of language that could move Albie Trent back under Broken Equipment without ever intending cruelty. The words were clean, and that was the danger.
McGonagall answered, “The former classifications invited concealment. I will take the risk of clarity.”
Nettleburn turned a page. “You also propose curriculum revision in Defense Against the Dark Arts to include coercive shame magic, grief imitation, memory manipulation through emotional attachment, and truth without mercy as a dark pattern.”
“As part of a broader defense framework,” McGonagall said.
Cresswell looked toward Jesus. “At the apparent recommendation of the new instructor.”
Jesus met his gaze. “Yes.”
“Your teaching status remains irregular.”
McGonagall’s voice sharpened. “His teaching has done more to defend the students in one week than our regulations did in years.”
The room went still.
Nettleburn looked at Jesus. “And what precisely qualifies you to instruct children in defense?”
Jesus did not answer as the room expected. He looked at Mira, Tavin, Ellis, Rowan, then at Wren. “They were being called by shame. I knew the voice was not their shepherd.”
The answer did not satisfy the governors in any official sense. It satisfied something else in the room. Mira felt it. Tavin’s shoulders loosened. Rowan looked down at his green thread. Ellis stared at the table with a face full of things he would not say.
Cresswell tapped his quill. “That is not a credential.”
Jesus looked at him. “No. It is a witness.”
The hearing moved on because the governors did not know what else to do with Him. Questions turned toward consequences. Wren would be removed permanently from any contact with students, placed under monitored magical restriction, required to assist in record restoration, and submitted to Ministry review. He would not be imprisoned immediately because his cooperation was needed to recover remaining hidden material, but McGonagall insisted that this need could not become comfort. He would live under consequence, not courtesy.
Wren accepted each condition. When asked whether he objected, he said, “I object only to being useful if usefulness lets me forget guilt.” McGonagall wrote that down herself.
Then came the hardest part for the students. The governors asked whether Mira, Tavin, and Ellis should face disciplinary action for entering the hidden chamber and concealing it. Rowan was not part of that first choice, but he sat close beside Ellis with his hands clenched. The question had been waiting since the first meeting, and now it stood formally in the room.
Cresswell spoke first. “While the students were harmed, it remains true that they entered a forbidden hidden space, failed to report it, and therefore contributed to escalation. Without discipline, the school risks implying that victimization removes responsibility.”
Mira hated that the sentence held a piece of truth. She had said as much in the Ravenclaw common room. Responsibility mattered. But the way he spoke made it sound like responsibility could be measured without tenderness and applied without discernment.
McGonagall looked at the three of them. “I have considered this carefully.”
Jesus did not interrupt. That made Mira nervous. She knew He would not protect them from every consequence. He had never promised that.
The Headmistress continued, “Miss Vale, Mr. Brock, and Mr. Crowe will each receive a formal mark in the private school record for entering and concealing a restricted magical space.”
Tavin’s face fell. Mira swallowed. Ellis looked unsurprised, which made the sadness in his eyes harder to see.
McGonagall lifted one hand slightly. “However, the record will also state the complete context. They were targeted by an enchantment designed to exploit shame and fear. They later told the truth, entered the Mirror Room under direct protection, helped break the enchantment, and assisted in the protection and restoration of other students. No public disciplinary notice will be posted. No house points will be removed. No punitive detention will be assigned.”
Cresswell frowned. “Then what is the consequence?”
McGonagall looked at the students. “Restorative service.”
Tavin blinked. “What kind?”
“You will assist with the supervised rebuilding of this part of the Defense curriculum, not as examples to be displayed, but as student witnesses to what helped and what harmed. You will also help Professor Flitwick and Professor Sinistra review student safety reports from the affected night to ensure no concern is mislabeled.”
Ellis’s face changed. “You want us in the records?”
“I want your eyes on language that adults may soften too much.”
Mira felt the weight of that. It was not a punishment in the ordinary sense. It was a trust, but not a flattering one. It required them to stand near the truth of what they had done and what had been done to them without being reduced to either.
Jesus looked at them. “Can you receive that?”
Not accept. Not endure. Receive. Mira understood the difference. Receiving meant not turning consequence into self-hatred or praise. She nodded first.
“Yes,” she said.
Tavin nodded too. “Yes.”
Ellis took longer. “Will my misuse of the badge be part of that record?”
McGonagall looked at him. “In your private record, yes. Not as part of the Mirror Room incident, but as part of the review you requested.”
Cresswell looked surprised. “You requested?”
Ellis held his gaze. “Yes.”
The governor seemed unsure what to do with a student who had placed himself under review. He turned back to his papers.
McGonagall continued, more gently now. “Mr. Crowe, your badge will not be returned this term.”
Ellis nodded once, but the loss still struck. Mira saw it.
“You may be considered again next year,” McGonagall said. “Not if you perform reform well enough, but if trust has had time to grow honestly around your conduct.”
Ellis’s mouth tightened. “That is fair.”
It sounded like it hurt. It also sounded like he meant it.
Rowan leaned over and whispered something too low for anyone else to hear. Ellis gave him a look, then almost smiled. Later, Mira found out Rowan had said, “Good. Badges make people shiny and annoying.”
The hearing ended with no clean victory. The governors left with records to review and objections to write. Wren was escorted back under supervision. McGonagall remained in the chamber after everyone else stood, looking at the piles of parchment as if every sheet had become another child she was responsible to protect. Jesus stayed with her while the students waited near the door.
Mira heard McGonagall speak softly. “I keep thinking how easily the school might have chosen quiet again.”
Jesus answered, “You did not.”
“This time.”
“This time matters.”
She looked at Him, and for once she did not hide the grief in her face. “It does not undo the other times.”
“No,” He said. “But repentance begins in the time that is still yours.”
McGonagall looked down at the ledger copy. Then she gathered the papers into her arms and stood straighter. “Then we had better use it properly.”
The next few days were filled with the kind of work that makes a story less exciting and more real. Mira, Tavin, and Ellis met with Flitwick and Sinistra in the archive to review reports from the night of the borrowed voices. They read descriptions of students found near walls, staircases, portraits, and windows. They marked places where language had softened fear into confusion, grief into disruption, or shame into misbehavior. Each correction took time. Each name had to remain guarded. Each sentence had to become honest without becoming exposure.
Mira proved especially good at seeing when a sentence was hiding behind elegance. Tavin noticed when reports forgot to mention who helped the frightened student afterward, which he insisted mattered because rescue was part of the truth too. Ellis caught words that placed too much blame on younger students for responding to voices designed to sound like love. He did not speak often, but when he did, the room listened. He knew the difference between accountability and accusation because he had lived too long under one pretending to be the other.
Clara attended two more lessons that week. She did not enter Defense yet. She visited the blue thread each time, said nothing, and moved on when ready. Albie walked with her farther down the Defense corridor on the third visit than he had on the first. He still did not enter the classroom. Jesus never asked him to. That restraint became a lesson without being called one.
On Friday afternoon, Clara joined Mira, Tavin, Ellis, Rowan, and Alina in the library for what was supposed to be quiet study. It became quiet study for exactly seven minutes before Clara asked why everyone treated houses as if they were weather that happened to a person instead of communities people had to help shape. Alina closed her book and said that was a dangerous question. Rowan said he liked dangerous questions better when they did not involve homework. Ellis said the houses were useful but often became excuses. Tavin said Hufflepuff was obviously the best but he was prepared to be humble about it.
“You are not being humble,” Mira said.
“I said prepared. I have not begun.”
Clara listened to all of them with serious attention. Then she said, “I think I want to come here.”
No one moved.
Albie, who sat at a nearby table pretending to read a book he had not turned a page of in twenty minutes, looked up slowly.
Clara looked at him. “Not because I am unafraid.”
He swallowed. “I know.”
“And not because I forgive the school for you.”
His eyes filled at once. “I know that too.”
She looked down at her hands. “I want to come because when the room was too much, no one made you enter. I think a place that can stop at a closed door might be safer than a place that only brags about open ones.”
Mira felt tears rise and looked down quickly. Tavin rubbed his eyes and pretended to be tired. Rowan stared at Clara like she had just performed advanced magic without a wand. Ellis looked toward Albie because he understood that the answer belonged first to him.
Albie closed his book. He stood and came to Clara’s table. For a moment he only looked at her, this child who carried his son’s satchel, spoke to owls, and had seen the ruined edge of a family story without letting it become her whole map.
“I am afraid,” he said.
“I know,” she answered.
“I may be afraid every time I leave you here.”
“I know.”
He nodded slowly. “Then I will have to learn what to do with that fear.”
Clara reached for his hand. “I can write. Not every day. That would be too much.”
A laugh broke from him through tears. “No. Not every day.”
“Twice a week.”
“We will negotiate.”
“Three times.”
“Your opening position is moving the wrong direction.”
For the first time, Albie laughed in the library without looking ashamed of the sound. Madam Pince looked over sharply, then saw his face and returned to her desk without comment. That may have been her form of mercy.
That evening, McGonagall prepared Clara’s enrollment papers. Nothing ceremonial. Nothing grand. Just parchment, signatures, and the beginning of a place being trusted again by one family in one careful way. Clara would begin gradually, stay with a temporary guardian arrangement near the school during the first weeks, and be sorted only when she began full attendance. She insisted Bishop should be present. McGonagall refused. Bishop arrived anyway and sat on the windowsill through the entire signing.
After the papers were done, Clara asked to walk once more to the blue thread. Albie went with her. Jesus followed several steps behind. Mira, Tavin, Ellis, Rowan, and Alina stayed at the far end of the corridor, near enough to witness, far enough not to crowd. Clara stood before the sealed door, touched the blue thread lightly, and then turned toward the Defense classroom door.
Albie’s hand tightened.
Clara looked up at him. “Not today.”
He breathed out, and the sound held relief so deep it nearly became sorrow. “Not today.”
She nodded. “But someday maybe.”
Jesus stood beside them now. “Someday will be given its own grace.”
Clara seemed to accept that. Albie looked at Jesus with the weary gratitude of a man who had spent years thinking courage meant forcing himself through every door and had finally been told that stopping could be holy too.
Later, when the corridor emptied, Ellis remained by the brass plate. Mira found him there after returning a book to the library. He was looking at the blue thread, though his face was far away.
“You all right?” she asked.
He glanced at her. “That question is becoming popular.”
“It is a useful question.”
“Sometimes.”
She stood beside him. “What are you thinking?”
He tapped one finger lightly against his robe where the badge had once been. “That I wanted the badge back because I thought losing it meant I had become less. Now I think losing it may be the first honest thing I have worn here.”
Mira looked at the empty place on his robe. “That sounds painful.”
“It is.”
“Also true?”
He gave a small nod. “Also true.”
Tavin arrived with Rowan a moment later, both carrying books from the library. Rowan had three. Tavin had seven because he had allowed a Hufflepuff study group to convince him that carrying things was a form of kindness, and he had not yet fully learned his own lesson.
Ellis looked at the stack. “You are aware that love and book transport are not the same thing.”
Tavin shifted the books. “I am learning gradually.”
Rowan took two from the top. “Give me those before you turn helpfulness into injury.”
Tavin surrendered them with dignity.
The four of them stood near the sealed door as evening settled outside the windows. The blue thread moved slightly in a draft. The brass plate held its sentence. The Defense classroom door remained closed, not because fear ruled it, but because not every person who needed healing had to enter on the same day.
Mira thought of her mother’s letter folded safely in her trunk. Tavin thought of Lottie’s drawings and the way worry could loosen without love leaving. Ellis thought of his badge in Slughorn’s drawer and the strange relief of not shining falsely. Rowan thought of his mother’s voice, the false one and the real one, and the difference he was learning to hear. Clara, somewhere down the hall with Albie and McGonagall, was beginning to belong without being swallowed by the place.
Jesus watched from the classroom doorway for a moment before the students noticed Him. He did not call them into a lesson. He did not turn the corridor into a speech. He only looked at the thread, the plate, the closed door, and the children gathered near it with their unfinished lives.
Then He said, “Come to supper.”
They followed Him because hunger was still real, because the Great Hall was warm, because ordinary life had become precious, and because healing needed meals as much as moments. The corridor stayed behind them, quiet and marked. The door remained closed. For that day, closed was not failure. It was mercy keeping watch until the next right step was given.Chapter Ten: The Day the Door Stayed Closed
By the next morning, the blue thread on the statue’s spear had become the quietest famous thing in Hogwarts. Students passed it on their way to class and slowed without meaning to. Some looked at it quickly and moved on, embarrassed by their own tenderness. Others stopped just long enough to read the brass plate again, as if the thread had changed the sentence by giving it a child’s answer. No one touched it, not even Peeves, which convinced several first-years that Professor McGonagall had threatened him with something beyond known punishment.
Mira noticed that the thread had begun changing the corridor more than the plate had. The plate named what had happened. The thread showed that someone had been allowed to stop before she was ready. That mattered to Mira in a way she did not expect. She had spent so much of her life being urged forward by expectation that the sight of one small thread honoring restraint felt almost like a new kind of courage. Not every closed door was cowardice. Sometimes a closed door meant the person standing before it had finally been given the dignity of time.
Tavin noticed something different. He saw younger students pointing to the thread and whispering not with fear, but with care. The corridor no longer felt like a place students hurried through because something terrible had happened there. It had become a place where they remembered to lower their voices. That seemed small, but to Tavin it felt like the school itself learning manners around pain. He wrote that to Lottie in his next letter, then crossed it out because she would think the castle had become polite and write back with a drawing of a staircase wearing a hat.
Ellis noticed the thread because Rowan noticed it. The younger boy stopped every morning before it and looked for several seconds, never saying much. Ellis did not ask why. He had begun learning that not every silence needed to be broken by someone older trying to sound wise. One morning, Rowan finally said, “She did not go in.”
“No,” Ellis answered.
“People let her not go in.”
“Yes.”
Rowan looked at the thread again. “That seems important.”
Ellis kept his hands in his pockets. “It is.”
The importance followed them into the day. McGonagall had received Albie’s reply before breakfast, written in a steadier hand than before. Clara wanted to return for lessons on a trial basis. Albie would permit it if the school agreed to slow entry, private check-ins, and no public mention of his own history without permission. He also asked whether the blue thread might remain until Clara decided otherwise. McGonagall read that part aloud in the staff room and dared anyone to object. No one did, though Filch was later heard muttering that if everyone tied string to school property the castle would look like a laundry line.
The question of Clara’s return placed the school in a strange position. Usually Hogwarts received children as if magic itself were enough invitation. This time, the invitation carried history, failure, repair, and the knowledge that a child might love the place more honestly because she had not been lied to about it. McGonagall prepared a schedule that would let Clara attend several classes each week before full enrollment. Flitwick offered Charms. Sprout offered Herbology. Sinistra offered an evening sky observation from the Astronomy Tower, though only if the wind was mild. Jesus offered Defense, but not first.
That surprised Mira when she heard it. She had expected Clara to begin where the healing had begun. Instead, Jesus asked that Clara’s first lesson be something ordinary and good. Let her hold a wand without the room’s history leaning over her shoulder. Let her learn that Hogwarts was not only the place where her grandfather had been hurt. Let wonder arrive before repair demanded attention.
Clara arrived three days later with Albie and an old satchel that had once belonged to her father. The leather was scratched, the buckle slightly bent, and a small blue feather had been tied to the handle. She wore school robes that did not quite sit right yet and boots that still looked ready for mud. Bishop met her in the entrance hall without being summoned, landing on the back of a chair with such dignity that several students stepped aside as if he held office.
McGonagall looked at the owl. “You are not required.”
Bishop clicked his beak.
Clara leaned toward Albie. “He disagrees.”
“I gathered,” Albie said.
The first lesson was Charms. Mira did not attend because it was a first-year session, but the story reached her before lunch. Clara had taken longer than everyone else to levitate a feather because she kept apologizing to it before casting. Flitwick had told her that courtesy was admirable but perhaps not necessary for objects without nervous systems. Clara had answered that he could not prove the feather did not mind. By the end of class, her feather had risen six inches, turned blue at the tip, and floated into Bishop’s beak through an open window. Flitwick gave her no extra points because he could not decide which part of the incident to reward.
At lunch, Clara sat not at a house table, but at a small side table with Albie, McGonagall, and Jesus. That had been agreed upon before her arrival. She would not be sorted until she chose to enroll fully. Some students found this fascinating. Others found it irritating because Hogwarts liked categories almost as much as it liked staircases. Clara ate slowly, watching everything with eyes that missed very little.
Mira saw her looking toward the house tables. After a while, Clara came over with Albie beside her and stopped near the Ravenclaws.
“Do you like it here?” Clara asked.
Mira put down her fork. The question had no soft beginning and no polite decoration.
“Yes,” Mira said. “But not because it is simple.”
Clara considered that. “I think I can like complicated things if people do not tell me they are simple.”
Alina, sitting beside Mira, nodded. “That is one of the better entrance statements I have heard.”
Clara looked at her. “What house are you?”
“Ravenclaw.”
“Do Ravenclaws always talk like books that have learned to breathe?”
Alina blinked. Mira laughed before she could stop herself. Even Albie smiled, and the smile reached his face in a way that made him look almost young for a moment.
Across the hall, Rowan watched Clara with open curiosity. Tavin waved her over before remembering that too much welcome could become a trap. He lowered his hand halfway and turned the motion into scratching his head. It fooled no one. Clara came anyway, perhaps because awkward honesty seemed to interest her.
The Hufflepuffs tried very hard not to overwhelm her, which made them look like a group of students sitting on their own hands. Tavin introduced himself, then introduced Rowan, who had followed at a distance as if he had no intention of joining and every intention of hearing everything. Clara asked whether Hufflepuff common room biscuits were as good as she had heard. Three students answered at once and then apologized in unison.
Clara looked at Tavin. “Are they always like this?”
“Yes,” he said. “But in a loyal way.”
“That sounds tiring.”
“It can be.”
A Hufflepuff second-year looked wounded. Tavin added quickly, “It is also wonderful. We are learning moderation.”
The second-year seemed satisfied by the word wonderful and returned to pudding.
Ellis stayed at the Slytherin table, watching without watching. He had decided Clara did not need another older student presenting himself as evidence of transformation. Rowan had other ideas. He waved Ellis over with the relentless confidence of someone who had not yet learned how much older students disliked being summoned by younger ones in public.
Ellis ignored him.
Clara noticed. “Is that the one who said he was dangerous?”
Rowan nodded. “Yes. He is being difficult because he thinks it is respectful.”
Ellis heard that. Unfortunately, half the table did too. Cassian Rowle muttered something into his cup, but Ellis was already standing. He walked over with the weary dignity of someone accepting a punishment he could not name.
Clara looked up at him. “Are you still dangerous today?”
Ellis glanced at Rowan. “I am beginning to regret answering honestly the first time.”
Clara waited.
He sighed. “Less than yesterday, I hope.”
“That is probably enough.”
“It is not enough,” Ellis said. “But it is a direction.”
Clara seemed to like that answer. “Grandfather says directions matter when maps are damaged.”
Albie, standing behind her, looked startled by hearing his private sentence repeated. Ellis looked at him and gave a small nod, not quite greeting, not quite gratitude. Albie returned it. The exchange lasted only a second, but it carried something neither of them would have said aloud. They both knew what it was to live by damaged maps.
The day might have stayed gentle if the governors had not arrived after lunch.
Governor Cresswell returned with two others, both older, both dressed in formal robes that made the wet stone floors seem improperly casual. They came for the preliminary hearing regarding Wren, the hidden archive, and the school’s proposed changes. McGonagall had known they were coming. So had the teachers. The students were not meant to know the details, but the atmosphere changed the moment the governors entered. Hogwarts could feel authority that cared more about control than children. The castle had lived with that kind of authority before.
The hearing was held in a chamber near the staff wing. Students were not invited except for Mira, Tavin, Ellis, and Rowan, who were asked to speak only if called upon. Clara was not invited and was not told more than necessary. Albie stayed with her in the library, where Madam Pince guarded them from gossip with the ferocity of a nesting dragon.
Wren sat at the far end of the hearing table, pale and upright. He looked cleaner now, but not stronger. The ledger lay sealed in front of McGonagall, along with copied records, staff statements, and the first response from Albie Trent. Jesus sat beside the students rather than at the head of the table. That choice irritated Cresswell, who kept glancing at Him as if trying to decide whether humility could be considered procedural interference.
The oldest governor, a witch named Portia Nettleburn, opened the hearing with a voice like dry parchment. “We are gathered to determine the immediate handling of Professor Calder Wren, the recovered records, and the public exposure risk attached to recent events.”
Jesus looked at McGonagall. She noticed, then spoke before the hearing could travel farther down that road.
“We are gathered,” she said, “to determine what truth, justice, and protection require after harm was done to children and hidden by magical and institutional failure.”
Nettleburn pursed her lips. “That is one framing.”
“It is the correct one,” McGonagall said.
Ellis looked down quickly to hide the faint movement of his mouth. Mira saw it anyway.
The hearing began with Wren’s confession. He did not read from prepared parchment. McGonagall had allowed him notes, but Jesus had told him that notes could support truth or hide him from it. Wren chose to speak plainly. He stated that as a young teacher he had created unauthorized mirror exercises to expose students to shame and fear under the claim of strengthening their defenses. He stated that he continued after students showed distress. He stated that he altered records, interfered with memory, and used the archive’s own habits of concealment to bury what he had done. He stated that his own childhood humiliation explained part of his descent but excused none of it.
No one interrupted him. That made the confession harder to hear. There was no argument to distract from it, no shouting to reduce the room to sides. Wren’s voice shook, but he did not stop until he had named Albie Trent, the ledger, the Mirror Room, the cursed book, and the harm to current students. When he finished, he folded his hands and looked at the table.
Nettleburn looked over her spectacles. “You understand that this statement places you in grave legal and professional danger.”
Wren gave a faint, broken smile. “Madam, I have not been professional for decades.”
No one laughed. It was not funny, but it was true in a way that made the room shift.
Cresswell leaned forward. “Professor Wren, were you under any external curse or possession when these acts occurred?”
Wren closed his eyes briefly. “No.”
“Were you influenced by the cursed object later known to students as the book?”
“I created the conditions by which the book formed. I will not blame it for what I fed.”
The governor frowned. “That is not a precise answer.”
Jesus spoke quietly. “It is more precise than blame.”
Cresswell stiffened but did not answer.
Another governor, a heavyset wizard with a silver beard, reviewed the archive notes. “Headmistress, you propose that copies of all restored records remain at Hogwarts under a new classification. Truth Kept for Healing.”
“Yes,” McGonagall said.
“That title is unusual.”
“So was the failure.”
The wizard sighed. “My concern is that emotionally charged classifications may invite interpretive disputes.”
Mira felt the sentence crawl under her skin. Emotionally charged classifications. Interpretive disputes. It sounded like the sort of language that could move Albie Trent back under Broken Equipment without ever intending cruelty. The words were clean, and that was the danger.
McGonagall answered, “The former classifications invited concealment. I will take the risk of clarity.”
Nettleburn turned a page. “You also propose curriculum revision in Defense Against the Dark Arts to include coercive shame magic, grief imitation, memory manipulation through emotional attachment, and truth without mercy as a dark pattern.”
“As part of a broader defense framework,” McGonagall said.
Cresswell looked toward Jesus. “At the apparent recommendation of the new instructor.”
Jesus met his gaze. “Yes.”
“Your teaching status remains irregular.”
McGonagall’s voice sharpened. “His teaching has done more to defend the students in one week than our regulations did in years.”
The room went still.
Nettleburn looked at Jesus. “And what precisely qualifies you to instruct children in defense?”
Jesus did not answer as the room expected. He looked at Mira, Tavin, Ellis, Rowan, then at Wren. “They were being called by shame. I knew the voice was not their shepherd.”
The answer did not satisfy the governors in any official sense. It satisfied something else in the room. Mira felt it. Tavin’s shoulders loosened. Rowan looked down at his green thread. Ellis stared at the table with a face full of things he would not say.
Cresswell tapped his quill. “That is not a credential.”
Jesus looked at him. “No. It is a witness.”
The hearing moved on because the governors did not know what else to do with Him. Questions turned toward consequences. Wren would be removed permanently from any contact with students, placed under monitored magical restriction, required to assist in record restoration, and submitted to Ministry review. He would not be imprisoned immediately because his cooperation was needed to recover remaining hidden material, but McGonagall insisted that this need could not become comfort. He would live under consequence, not courtesy.
Wren accepted each condition. When asked whether he objected, he said, “I object only to being useful if usefulness lets me forget guilt.” McGonagall wrote that down herself.
Then came the hardest part for the students. The governors asked whether Mira, Tavin, and Ellis should face disciplinary action for entering the hidden chamber and concealing it. Rowan was not part of that first choice, but he sat close beside Ellis with his hands clenched. The question had been waiting since the first meeting, and now it stood formally in the room.
Cresswell spoke first. “While the students were harmed, it remains true that they entered a forbidden hidden space, failed to report it, and therefore contributed to escalation. Without discipline, the school risks implying that victimization removes responsibility.”
Mira hated that the sentence held a piece of truth. She had said as much in the Ravenclaw common room. Responsibility mattered. But the way he spoke made it sound like responsibility could be measured without tenderness and applied without discernment.
McGonagall looked at the three of them. “I have considered this carefully.”
Jesus did not interrupt. That made Mira nervous. She knew He would not protect them from every consequence. He had never promised that.
The Headmistress continued, “Miss Vale, Mr. Brock, and Mr. Crowe will each receive a formal mark in the private school record for entering and concealing a restricted magical space.”
Tavin’s face fell. Mira swallowed. Ellis looked unsurprised, which made the sadness in his eyes harder to see.
McGonagall lifted one hand slightly. “However, the record will also state the complete context. They were targeted by an enchantment designed to exploit shame and fear. They later told the truth, entered the Mirror Room under direct protection, helped break the enchantment, and assisted in the protection and restoration of other students. No public disciplinary notice will be posted. No house points will be removed. No punitive detention will be assigned.”
Cresswell frowned. “Then what is the consequence?”
McGonagall looked at the students. “Restorative service.”
Tavin blinked. “What kind?”
“You will assist with the supervised rebuilding of this part of the Defense curriculum, not as examples to be displayed, but as student witnesses to what helped and what harmed. You will also help Professor Flitwick and Professor Sinistra review student safety reports from the affected night to ensure no concern is mislabeled.”
Ellis’s face changed. “You want us in the records?”
“I want your eyes on language that adults may soften too much.”
Mira felt the weight of that. It was not a punishment in the ordinary sense. It was a trust, but not a flattering one. It required them to stand near the truth of what they had done and what had been done to them without being reduced to either.
Jesus looked at them. “Can you receive that?”
Not accept. Not endure. Receive. Mira understood the difference. Receiving meant not turning consequence into self-hatred or praise. She nodded first.
“Yes,” she said.
Tavin nodded too. “Yes.”
Ellis took longer. “Will my misuse of the badge be part of that record?”
McGonagall looked at him. “In your private record, yes. Not as part of the Mirror Room incident, but as part of the review you requested.”
Cresswell looked surprised. “You requested?”
Ellis held his gaze. “Yes.”
The governor seemed unsure what to do with a student who had placed himself under review. He turned back to his papers.
McGonagall continued, more gently now. “Mr. Crowe, your badge will not be returned this term.”
Ellis nodded once, but the loss still struck. Mira saw it.
“You may be considered again next year,” McGonagall said. “Not if you perform reform well enough, but if trust has had time to grow honestly around your conduct.”
Ellis’s mouth tightened. “That is fair.”
It sounded like it hurt. It also sounded like he meant it.
Rowan leaned over and whispered something too low for anyone else to hear. Ellis gave him a look, then almost smiled. Later, Mira found out Rowan had said, “Good. Badges make people shiny and annoying.”
The hearing ended with no clean victory. The governors left with records to review and objections to write. Wren was escorted back under supervision. McGonagall remained in the chamber after everyone else stood, looking at the piles of parchment as if every sheet had become another child she was responsible to protect. Jesus stayed with her while the students waited near the door.
Mira heard McGonagall speak softly. “I keep thinking how easily the school might have chosen quiet again.”
Jesus answered, “You did not.”
“This time.”
“This time matters.”
She looked at Him, and for once she did not hide the grief in her face. “It does not undo the other times.”
“No,” He said. “But repentance begins in the time that is still yours.”
McGonagall looked down at the ledger copy. Then she gathered the papers into her arms and stood straighter. “Then we had better use it properly.”
The next few days were filled with the kind of work that makes a story less exciting and more real. Mira, Tavin, and Ellis met with Flitwick and Sinistra in the archive to review reports from the night of the borrowed voices. They read descriptions of students found near walls, staircases, portraits, and windows. They marked places where language had softened fear into confusion, grief into disruption, or shame into misbehavior. Each correction took time. Each name had to remain guarded. Each sentence had to become honest without becoming exposure.
Mira proved especially good at seeing when a sentence was hiding behind elegance. Tavin noticed when reports forgot to mention who helped the frightened student afterward, which he insisted mattered because rescue was part of the truth too. Ellis caught words that placed too much blame on younger students for responding to voices designed to sound like love. He did not speak often, but when he did, the room listened. He knew the difference between accountability and accusation because he had lived too long under one pretending to be the other.
Clara attended two more lessons that week. She did not enter Defense yet. She visited the blue thread each time, said nothing, and moved on when ready. Albie walked with her farther down the Defense corridor on the third visit than he had on the first. He still did not enter the classroom. Jesus never asked him to. That restraint became a lesson without being called one.
On Friday afternoon, Clara joined Mira, Tavin, Ellis, Rowan, and Alina in the library for what was supposed to be quiet study. It became quiet study for exactly seven minutes before Clara asked why everyone treated houses as if they were weather that happened to a person instead of communities people had to help shape. Alina closed her book and said that was a dangerous question. Rowan said he liked dangerous questions better when they did not involve homework. Ellis said the houses were useful but often became excuses. Tavin said Hufflepuff was obviously the best but he was prepared to be humble about it.
“You are not being humble,” Mira said.
“I said prepared. I have not begun.”
Clara listened to all of them with serious attention. Then she said, “I think I want to come here.”
No one moved.
Albie, who sat at a nearby table pretending to read a book he had not turned a page of in twenty minutes, looked up slowly.
Clara looked at him. “Not because I am unafraid.”
He swallowed. “I know.”
“And not because I forgive the school for you.”
His eyes filled at once. “I know that too.”
She looked down at her hands. “I want to come because when the room was too much, no one made you enter. I think a place that can stop at a closed door might be safer than a place that only brags about open ones.”
Mira felt tears rise and looked down quickly. Tavin rubbed his eyes and pretended to be tired. Rowan stared at Clara like she had just performed advanced magic without a wand. Ellis looked toward Albie because he understood that the answer belonged first to him.
Albie closed his book. He stood and came to Clara’s table. For a moment he only looked at her, this child who carried his son’s satchel, spoke to owls, and had seen the ruined edge of a family story without letting it become her whole map.
“I am afraid,” he said.
“I know,” she answered.
“I may be afraid every time I leave you here.”
“I know.”
He nodded slowly. “Then I will have to learn what to do with that fear.”
Clara reached for his hand. “I can write. Not every day. That would be too much.”
A laugh broke from him through tears. “No. Not every day.”
“Twice a week.”
“We will negotiate.”
“Three times.”
“Your opening position is moving the wrong direction.”
For the first time, Albie laughed in the library without looking ashamed of the sound. Madam Pince looked over sharply, then saw his face and returned to her desk without comment. That may have been her form of mercy.
That evening, McGonagall prepared Clara’s enrollment papers. Nothing ceremonial. Nothing grand. Just parchment, signatures, and the beginning of a place being trusted again by one family in one careful way. Clara would begin gradually, stay with a temporary guardian arrangement near the school during the first weeks, and be sorted only when she began full attendance. She insisted Bishop should be present. McGonagall refused. Bishop arrived anyway and sat on the windowsill through the entire signing.
After the papers were done, Clara asked to walk once more to the blue thread. Albie went with her. Jesus followed several steps behind. Mira, Tavin, Ellis, Rowan, and Alina stayed at the far end of the corridor, near enough to witness, far enough not to crowd. Clara stood before the sealed door, touched the blue thread lightly, and then turned toward the Defense classroom door.
Albie’s hand tightened.
Clara looked up at him. “Not today.”
He breathed out, and the sound held relief so deep it nearly became sorrow. “Not today.”
She nodded. “But someday maybe.”
Jesus stood beside them now. “Someday will be given its own grace.”
Clara seemed to accept that. Albie looked at Jesus with the weary gratitude of a man who had spent years thinking courage meant forcing himself through every door and had finally been told that stopping could be holy too.
Later, when the corridor emptied, Ellis remained by the brass plate. Mira found him there after returning a book to the library. He was looking at the blue thread, though his face was far away.
“You all right?” she asked.
He glanced at her. “That question is becoming popular.”
“It is a useful question.”
“Sometimes.”
She stood beside him. “What are you thinking?”
He tapped one finger lightly against his robe where the badge had once been. “That I wanted the badge back because I thought losing it meant I had become less. Now I think losing it may be the first honest thing I have worn here.”
Mira looked at the empty place on his robe. “That sounds painful.”
“It is.”
“Also true?”
He gave a small nod. “Also true.”
Tavin arrived with Rowan a moment later, both carrying books from the library. Rowan had three. Tavin had seven because he had allowed a Hufflepuff study group to convince him that carrying things was a form of kindness, and he had not yet fully learned his own lesson.
Ellis looked at the stack. “You are aware that love and book transport are not the same thing.”
Tavin shifted the books. “I am learning gradually.”
Rowan took two from the top. “Give me those before you turn helpfulness into injury.”
Tavin surrendered them with dignity.
The four of them stood near the sealed door as evening settled outside the windows. The blue thread moved slightly in a draft. The brass plate held its sentence. The Defense classroom door remained closed, not because fear ruled it, but because not every person who needed healing had to enter on the same day.
Mira thought of her mother’s letter folded safely in her trunk. Tavin thought of Lottie’s drawings and the way worry could loosen without love leaving. Ellis thought of his badge in Slughorn’s drawer and the strange relief of not shining falsely. Rowan thought of his mother’s voice, the false one and the real one, and the difference he was learning to hear. Clara, somewhere down the hall with Albie and McGonagall, was beginning to belong without being swallowed by the place.
Jesus watched from the classroom doorway for a moment before the students noticed Him. He did not call them into a lesson. He did not turn the corridor into a speech. He only looked at the thread, the plate, the closed door, and the children gathered near it with their unfinished lives.
Then He said, “Come to supper.”
They followed Him because hunger was still real, because the Great Hall was warm, because ordinary life had become precious, and because healing needed meals as much as moments. The corridor stayed behind them, quiet and marked. The door remained closed. For that day, closed was not failure. It was mercy keeping watch until the next right step was given.
Chapter Eleven: The Thread That Would Not Stay Broken
Clara’s first Defense lesson was scheduled for the following Tuesday, which gave everyone far too much time to behave strangely about it. No one called it Clara’s first Defense lesson in any official way, but the phrase moved through the school anyway, soft in some mouths and careless in others. The younger students treated it like the next chapter of a mystery they were not supposed to read. The older students understood enough to lower their voices when they said her name. Hogwarts had always known how to turn danger into legend, and now the harder work was teaching it how to let a child enter a classroom without making her carry the whole legend on her back.
Mira noticed the pressure building before Clara did, or at least before Clara admitted it. In the Ravenclaw common room, two students debated whether Professor Jesus would alter the lesson for her. One said He would have to because of Albie. Another said Clara should learn the same as everyone else if she wanted to belong. Mira closed her book and looked at them until the debate withered. She did not have to speak. Her face had become more useful lately, mostly because she no longer smiled politely when people dressed gossip in concern.
Tavin saw the same pressure in Hufflepuff, where kindness had again begun organizing itself into too many helpful shapes. Someone wanted to save Clara a seat. Someone else wanted to write her a welcome note. A third suggested asking the kitchen for blue biscuits to match her thread, which made Tavin put his head in his hands and ask whether they heard themselves before speaking. The second-year who had suggested the biscuits looked hurt, so Tavin explained that turning a child’s private thread into themed baked goods might be less comforting than intended. The room absorbed this with the solemn grief of people abandoning a project they had already emotionally decorated.
Ellis saw the pressure in Slytherin as contempt. Cassian Rowle had not stopped talking about the thread, though he never did it where teachers could hear. He called it sentimental string, then a shrine, then proof that Hogwarts had gone soft enough to let feelings mark the walls. A few students laughed because Cassian was older, sharp, and still powerful in the old way. Others did not laugh because the old way had started to feel less safe. That uncertainty irritated Cassian more than open disagreement would have.
On Monday evening, the blue thread disappeared.
Rowan noticed first. He was passing the sealed door after supper, carrying two books and a half-finished essay, when he stopped so suddenly that the student behind him walked into his back. The brass plate remained. The statue still held its lowered spear. The Defense classroom door stood closed in the warm torchlight. But the small blue thread Clara had tied around the spear was gone.
The corridor felt immediately wrong.
Rowan did not shout. He set his books on the floor with careful precision, the way a child might set something down before deciding whether to cry or fight. Then he ran to find Ellis. By the time Ellis reached the corridor, Mira and Tavin had already arrived because Rowan, in his urgency, had told three people at once and Hogwarts had done the rest. Several students stood nearby pretending they had simply chosen that part of the wall for reflection.
Ellis looked at the bare spear. His face went cold, but not in the old way. The old coldness had been armor. This was restraint trying to keep anger from choosing the next sentence.
“Who saw it last?” Mira asked.
A third-year Ravenclaw lifted her hand timidly. “It was there before supper.”
Tavin looked down the hall. “Maybe it fell.”
“It was tied well,” Rowan said.
Ellis crouched near the base of the statue. A few faint fibers clung to a rough place in the stone. The thread had not fallen. It had been pulled or cut. He stood slowly and looked toward the dungeon stairs.
Mira saw the direction of his gaze. “You think it was Cassian.”
“I think several people are foolish,” Ellis said. “He is the one most committed to making foolishness sound clever.”
Tavin winced. “That is probably accurate, but we should not start there with a wand.”
“I was not planning to start with a wand.”
Rowan looked at him. “What were you planning?”
Ellis did not answer quickly enough.
Mira stepped closer. “Ellis.”
He looked at her, and the name did what she intended. It called him back before anger could turn into purpose. He looked again at the bare spear, then at Rowan, whose face had gone pale with something deeper than annoyance. Rowan had not tied the thread, but it had meant something to him. It meant someone had been allowed to stop before being ready. It meant the false voice of his mother had not been the last memory attached to that corridor. Removing it felt like dragging a frightened child toward a door after she had been told she could wait.
“We tell Jesus,” Ellis said.
Tavin let out a breath. “Good.”
Rowan looked disappointed and relieved at the same time. “That is all?”
“For now.”
They found Jesus in the Defense classroom with Professor McGonagall, who was reviewing a stack of parchment with the expression of a woman deciding which bureaucratic sentence deserved to be turned into ash. Jesus looked up before anyone knocked. McGonagall followed His gaze and saw enough in the students’ faces to stand at once.
“What happened?” she asked.
Mira answered. “The blue thread is gone.”
McGonagall closed her eyes briefly. It was not the largest problem the school had faced. It was not cursed, violent, or legally complex. Yet her face showed that she understood the weight of it.
“Was it removed by accident?” she asked.
Ellis shook his head. “There are fibers on the stone. It looks cut or pulled.”
McGonagall’s mouth tightened. “I see.”
Jesus stood and walked with them to the corridor. The small group around the statue parted as He approached. No one spoke. He looked at the bare spear, then at the fibers clinging to the stone. He did not touch them. He looked instead at the students gathered nearby, one face at a time, as if the missing thread had become a question each person had to answer inside themselves.
McGonagall turned to the crowd. “Anyone with knowledge of this will speak now.”
No one answered.
That silence had a familiar shape. Not the silence of peace. Not the silence of reverence. The silence of people waiting to see whether truth would become inconvenient enough to avoid. Mira hated how quickly it returned. A book could die, mirrors could shatter, records could be corrected, and still a corridor full of students could choose the old safety of saying nothing.
Jesus looked at the brass plate. “This door was once hidden.”
The students shifted. He did not raise His voice.
“Now a small sign of mercy has been hidden from it.”
A second-year looked down. A Slytherin girl near the wall crossed her arms, then uncrossed them. Rowan’s eyes filled, and he looked angry about it.
Jesus turned toward the gathered students. “Whoever removed it may bring it back without being hunted by shame.”
Cassian’s voice came from the back. “Perhaps someone thought school property should not become a place for personal decorations.”
The crowd parted enough for him to be seen. He leaned against the wall with practiced ease, his robes neat, his face arranged in mild boredom. Ellis went still beside Mira.
McGonagall’s eyes sharpened. “Mr. Rowle, do you have information?”
Cassian shrugged. “Only a respect for order.”
Professor McGonagall stepped toward him. “Order does not require cowardice dressed as commentary.”
A few students inhaled. Cassian’s face flushed slightly, but he recovered.
“With respect, Headmistress, everyone is thinking it. The corridor has turned into a memorial for every feeling anyone has ever had. Some of us still came here to learn magic.”
Tavin looked genuinely confused. “You think feelings are not involved in magic?”
Cassian’s eyes cut toward him. “I think some students enjoy being important through injury.”
The corridor changed. The words did what cruel words often do when they are aimed well. They did not strike only the person intended. Mira felt them hit Clara, though Clara was not there. She felt them hit Rowan, Albie, Ellis, Tavin, herself, and even Wren in some distant way. The accusation was old. Pain was performance. Mercy was attention-seeking. Wounds were tools used by weaker people to gain power they had not earned.
Ellis stepped forward.
Jesus did not stop him. That surprised Mira. McGonagall looked ready to intervene, but Jesus gave the smallest shake of His head.
Ellis stopped several feet from Cassian. His hands were open at his sides. “Did you remove it?”
Cassian smiled. “Do you have authority to ask?”
“No.”
“Then why answer?”
Ellis held his gaze. “Because the answer matters more than my authority.”
For the first time, Cassian looked uncertain. Only for a second. Then contempt returned.
“You have become very sincere,” he said. “It is unpleasant.”
“Yes,” Ellis answered. “Most things that make lying harder are.”
A few students looked away quickly, not wanting to be seen reacting. Cassian’s jaw tightened.
Ellis continued, “You think the thread made the corridor weak because it showed someone had been allowed to stop. That bothers you.”
Cassian pushed off the wall. “Careful, Crowe.”
“I am being careful,” Ellis said. “I am not humiliating you, though I know how. I am asking whether you took it.”
Cassian’s eyes flashed. “And if I did?”
Rowan made a small sound. Tavin moved half a step closer, then stopped. Mira kept her attention on Ellis, willing him not to take the bait that had been set so neatly before him.
Ellis’s voice stayed low. “Then give it back.”
Cassian laughed. “That is your answer?”
“Yes.”
“No threat?”
“No.”
“No speech about healing?”
“No.”
Cassian stepped closer. “What happened to you?”
Ellis looked at him with something like sadness. “I started noticing what threats had made of me.”
The sentence landed in the corridor with quiet force. Cassian’s expression shifted before he could hide it. It was not guilt yet. It was recognition refusing to become visible. He looked past Ellis toward Jesus, then McGonagall, then the students who were watching him not as an untouchable older boy, but as someone standing too near the truth.
“I did not take your precious thread,” he said.
Jesus spoke then. “Where is it?”
Cassian froze.
No one had asked whether he took it. Jesus asked where it was. The difference reached everyone at once.
Cassian’s mouth tightened. “I do not know.”
Jesus looked at him. “You know where it went.”
The older boy’s face lost color, not dramatically, but enough for the lie to show. He glanced once toward the window alcove near the far end of the corridor. It was too quick for most to catch. Ellis caught it. So did Mira. Rowan moved before anyone could stop him, hurrying to the alcove and crouching behind the stone bench beneath the window. He reached into the shadow and pulled out a small torn piece of blue thread.
Not all of it. Only a piece.
Rowan held it up. His hand shook. “You cut it.”
Cassian looked trapped now, which made him crueler. “It was string.”
“It was not yours,” Mira said.
He turned on her. “Neither was the corridor.”
“No,” she answered. “That is why it should not belong to your contempt either.”
McGonagall stepped forward. “Mr. Rowle, you will come with me.”
Cassian lifted his chin, trying to gather dignity from the ruins of his defiance. “For removing string?”
“For lying,” McGonagall said. “For cruelty toward a younger student not present to answer you. For interfering with a marked place during an active restoration process. And for imagining that contempt becomes less foolish when spoken with confidence.”
A few students looked almost afraid of how precisely she named it. Cassian said nothing. He walked with McGonagall toward her office, but as he passed Jesus, the Lord spoke quietly enough that only those nearest heard.
“You are not being taken away because you are beyond mercy.”
Cassian stopped for half a breath.
Jesus continued, “You are being stopped before your wound becomes fluent.”
Cassian’s face tightened, and for the first time Mira saw it. Not the wound itself, not fully, but the outline of one. Contempt had come from somewhere. It always did. Then he kept walking, and McGonagall went with him.
The corridor remained unsettled after they left. Rowan stood with the torn thread in his palm. The blue fibers looked small and helpless. Tavin touched his shoulder gently.
“We can tie another one,” Tavin said.
Rowan shook his head. “It will not be the same.”
“No,” Jesus said. “It should not pretend to be.”
Mira looked at Him.
Jesus stepped toward Rowan and held out His hand, not to take the thread by force, but to receive it if Rowan wished. Rowan placed the torn piece in His palm. Jesus looked at the statue, the spear, the plate, and the place where the thread had been.
“Clara tied this to remember that someone may stop before entering,” He said. “Now the thread also remembers that mercy may be mocked and still not surrender its place.”
Tavin’s face softened. “Can broken thread remember that?”
Jesus looked at him. “People do.”
No one spoke.
Jesus turned to Rowan. “Would you like to tie it back?”
Rowan looked frightened by the responsibility. “It is too short.”
“Then it will be tied differently.”
That seemed to matter. Rowan took the torn thread back and stepped toward the statue. His fingers moved clumsily at first. The piece was indeed too short to wrap fully around the spear as Clara had done. After two failed attempts, Ellis stepped beside him.
“May I help?”
Rowan nodded.
Ellis held one end while Rowan tied the other to a rough notch in the stone just below the spear point. It did not hang the way Clara’s thread had hung. It was smaller now, frayed at one edge, fastened lower, harder to notice unless someone knew to look. When Rowan stepped back, his face showed disappointment.
“It looks worse,” he said.
Mira looked at the thread carefully. “It looks like something happened to it and it stayed.”
Rowan considered that. “That is better than worse.”
“Yes,” she said. “I think so.”
By then, Clara had heard. Of course she had. The story reached the library before anyone could soften it, and by the time the next class ended, she arrived at the corridor with Albie beside her and Bishop flying overhead as if the school had appointed him emotional supervisor. Her face was pale with anger. Not tears. Anger. She went straight to the statue and looked at the torn thread tied lower than before.
No one spoke. Rowan stood nearest the wall, looking miserable. Ellis stood beside him. Tavin and Mira remained a few steps back. Jesus was there too, but He did not move into the center of the moment.
Clara touched the frayed end with one finger. “Who did it?”
McGonagall, who had returned from dealing with Cassian, answered. “A student removed it and lied. He is being disciplined.”
Clara’s jaw tightened. “Because of me?”
“No,” Jesus said.
She turned toward Him. “It was my thread.”
“Yes,” He said. “But his cruelty came from what is in him, not from your thread.”
Clara looked unconvinced. “That sounds like something adults say when they want children not to be angry.”
Jesus stepped closer. “You may be angry.”
That stopped her.
He continued, “Anger can tell you something wrong happened. It must not tell you who you are or what you must become.”
Clara looked back at the thread. “I wanted it to stay the way I tied it.”
“I know.”
“It did not even make it one week.”
“No.”
The honesty of that seemed to hurt her and help her at the same time. Albie stood behind her, watching the torn thread with a face full of old memories. Mira realized he was not only seeing Clara’s small act damaged. He was seeing how quickly a place could wound what a child offered.
Rowan stepped forward. “I tied it back wrong.”
Clara looked at him.
“I mean, not wrong. Different.” He swallowed. “Professor Jesus said it should not pretend nothing happened. I helped. Ellis helped. I am sorry it is not how you left it.”
Clara studied him for a long moment. “Were you the one who found it?”
Rowan nodded.
“Then thank you.”
Rowan blinked. “You are not angry at me?”
“No,” Clara said. “I am angry near you.”
Tavin whispered, “That is an excellent distinction.”
Clara looked at him. “I know.”
Ellis almost smiled.
Clara reached into her satchel and pulled out another piece of thread. This one was green. She looked at the blue one, then at Rowan. “This is from my father’s satchel. I was saving it.”
Albie’s face changed.
Clara saw that and held the thread more carefully. “May I?”
Albie’s voice was rough. “Yes.”
She tied the green thread beside the torn blue one, not covering it, not replacing it. The two threads hung near each other, one frayed and short, one new and slightly longer. Clara stepped back and looked at them. Her anger had not disappeared, but it had changed shape.
“There,” she said. “Now it remembers twice.”
Albie wiped his eyes and did not pretend otherwise. Jesus looked at the two threads, and the corridor seemed to settle around them as if it had received another line in a story no one could fully plan.
The next Defense lesson began in that corridor instead of the classroom. Jesus gathered the students near the brass plate, not in a crowd large enough to make a spectacle, but in a class circle spread along the wall. Clara stood with Albie at the back because she had not yet entered the room. Cassian was not present. McGonagall had given him private consequence and required silence until silence could become thought instead of resentment.
Jesus stood near the statue. “What happened here today is part of Defense.”
A Ravenclaw boy glanced toward the threads. “Because someone damaged something important?”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “And because others had to decide whether the damage would teach them bitterness, fear, revenge, or truthful repair.”
He looked at the students. “Many of you will be tempted to think dark magic begins with a curse. Sometimes it does. Often it begins when a person learns to make small cruelties feel reasonable.”
The corridor grew still.
“A thread is removed. A name is mocked. A grief is turned into entertainment. A student is made smaller in a room because others want to feel larger. A record is softened so no adult must feel responsible. A child is told to stop caring. Each small agreement teaches the dark how to speak in ordinary places.”
Mira listened with the kind of attention that made her forget to worry about whether others were watching. Jesus was not preaching at them. He was naming their hallway, their habits, their jokes, their silence, their records, and their choices. The lesson had no need to become abstract because it was standing in front of them tied to a statue’s spear.
Jesus turned to Clara. “What did you feel when you saw the thread broken?”
Clara looked wary. Albie shifted beside her, but she answered.
“Angry,” she said. “And foolish.”
“Why foolish?”
“Because I thought tying it meant something. Then someone cut it like it was nothing.”
Jesus nodded. “What is true?”
She looked at the threads. “That it did mean something.”
“And?”
“That someone cutting it does not get to decide it meant nothing.”
Jesus looked at the class. “This is defense.”
No wand had been lifted. Still, every student seemed to understand that a shield had formed somewhere.
He turned to Rowan. “What did you feel when you found it?”
Rowan’s face reddened. “Like the corridor went bad again.”
“What did you do?”
“I got help.”
“And then?”
“I told the truth about what I found.”
Jesus nodded. “This is defense.”
He turned to Ellis. “What did you feel when you believed you knew who had done it?”
Ellis looked down the corridor where Cassian had stood. “I wanted to make him sorry.”
“Did you?”
“No.”
“Why?”
Ellis’s jaw tightened. “Because I wanted to make him sorry in a way that would have made me feel powerful.”
Jesus let that stand. The students heard it. Ellis did not hide from them.
“And what did you do?” Jesus asked.
“I asked him to give it back.”
“This is defense.”
Tavin looked at the threads, then at Jesus. “It feels less dramatic than a spell.”
Jesus’ eyes warmed. “Most faithful defenses do.”
The lesson moved inside after that, but Clara did not enter. She stayed at the threshold with Albie. Jesus did not call her forward. McGonagall did not make a decision out of it. The students took their seats in the uneven circle, and the doorway remained open. From where she stood, Clara could see the sealed stain on the floor where the book had died. She could see the desks, the board, the windows, and the place where Albie’s old wound had once echoed through another generation. Her face was pale, but she did not run.
Jesus began the classroom portion with wands on desks, not floors this time. The lesson was about repairing charms, but not the kind students expected. He placed a cracked wooden practice shield in the center of the room. It had been damaged years ago, perhaps by accident, perhaps by an old lesson no one remembered. Jesus asked the class to repair it. Three students cast Reparo in quick succession. Each time, the crack vanished, then slowly returned.
A Gryffindor frowned. “It will not hold.”
“No,” Jesus said.
“Why?”
“Because you are repairing the surface while leaving the strain inside the wood.”
Hermione Granger would have had thoughts about that if she had been there, a portrait in the hallway muttered, though no one present knew why. McGonagall gave the portrait a look, and it went silent.
Jesus asked them to examine the shield without casting. Mira saw the grain bent around the crack. Tavin noticed one edge had been reinforced too heavily, putting pressure on the rest. Ellis saw old scoring along the back where someone had carved initials and weakened it. Rowan noticed that someone had painted over an earlier break.
Only after they named what was actually wrong did the repair charm hold.
Jesus looked at the restored shield. “Repair that hides strain may fail under the next pressure. Repair that names the strain can strengthen what remains.”
Every student looked, without meaning to, toward the open door where Clara and Albie stood. Clara saw them looking and lifted her chin.
“I am not a shield,” she said.
Jesus looked at her. “No. You are not.”
The correction was immediate and kind. Clara relaxed slightly because He had not used her as an object lesson. The shield was the shield. She was Clara. That distinction may have done more for her than the lesson itself.
After class, Cassian was waiting outside McGonagall’s office, not near the Defense corridor. He had not been allowed near the thread. Still, Jesus went to him before supper. Mira saw them from the staircase landing but did not move closer. Ellis saw too and stopped beside her. Together they watched from far enough not to hear everything at first.
Cassian stood with his arms crossed, face closed. Jesus stood a few steps away, leaving him room not to feel cornered.
“You are angry,” Jesus said.
Cassian’s answer was sharp. “Apparently that is allowed.”
“Yes.”
“Convenient.”
“Anger may be allowed without being obeyed.”
Cassian looked away. “I suppose I am to confess my hidden wound now.”
“No.”
That answer seemed to unsettle him.
Jesus continued, “You are not a performance. Neither is your pain.”
Cassian’s mouth tightened. “You do not know anything about my pain.”
“I know you have learned to strike first where tenderness might expose you.”
Cassian’s face flushed. “I removed string. Everyone is acting as if I cursed a child.”
“You mocked what the string protected.”
“What did it protect?” Cassian snapped. “A girl’s right to be frightened in public?”
Jesus looked at him steadily. “A child’s right not to be forced.”
Something in Cassian’s face flickered. Mira saw it even from the landing. Ellis did too. The older boy’s arms tightened across his chest, and he looked suddenly younger, almost sick.
Jesus did not press. “You will return what remains if you have it.”
Cassian’s voice dropped. “I threw most of it into the fire.”
“Then you will say so.”
“To the girl?”
“To the truth first,” Jesus said. “Then to the one harmed, when it will not require her to carry your relief.”
Cassian looked confused, then irritated by the confusion. “What does that mean?”
“It means apology is not a way to make the wounded person repair your feeling of guilt.”
The words hit hard enough that Cassian looked down. He did not soften fully. That would have been too easy. But his contempt no longer stood as straight.
Ellis turned away from the landing before Cassian could look up and see him watching. Mira followed.
“You were right about him having a wound,” she said quietly.
Ellis kept walking. “I wish I was not.”
“Do you know what it is?”
“No.”
“Do you want to?”
Ellis thought about that. “Part of me does. Not the good part.”
Mira understood. Knowing someone’s wound could become compassion, but it could also become ammunition. They had both learned that too well.
At supper, Clara sat with Albie again at the side table. She looked tired, but not defeated. The two threads remained in the corridor. Cassian did not come to the Great Hall. Rowan said he was glad, then looked ashamed of being glad. Ellis told him it was all right to be relieved by distance. Tavin added that relief did not mean hatred. Mira said nothing because the two of them had said enough.
Near the end of supper, Clara walked over to them with Albie behind her. She stopped beside Ellis first.
“You did not make him sorry,” she said.
Ellis looked up. “No.”
“Did you want to?”
“Yes.”
She nodded. “I wanted to make him sorry too.”
“That seems fair.”
Jesus, passing behind them, said gently, “Fair is not always free.”
Clara looked at Him. “I know. I am still angry.”
“I know.”
She considered that, then looked back at Ellis. “Thank you for not making the corridor worse.”
Ellis did not know what to do with that. He settled for the truth. “You are welcome.”
Clara moved on to Rowan. “Thank you for finding it.”
Rowan nodded, serious. “Thank you for tying the green one.”
Tavin leaned toward Mira and whispered, “We are all becoming very formal about thread.”
Mira whispered back, “It seems deserved.”
That night, Jesus returned to the corridor instead of the Defense classroom. The castle had quieted. The torches burned low. The two threads moved slightly in the draft, blue and green together, one frayed, one whole, both tied to the stone near the spear. He stood before them for a long time, then knelt on the corridor floor beneath the brass plate. He prayed quietly for Clara, whose anger had been allowed to tell the truth without becoming her master, for Rowan, who had found what was broken and brought others instead of carrying it alone, for Ellis, who had refused the familiar pleasure of making someone pay, and for Cassian, whose contempt had begun to crack just enough for pain to be seen beneath it.
He prayed also for every small mercy that would be mocked before it was understood. For every thread cut by someone who feared what tenderness might reveal. For every repaired thing that could not pretend it had never been damaged. Hogwarts slept around Him, old and imperfect, while the two threads held through the night. They did not make the corridor beautiful. They made it honest.
Chapter Twelve: The Boy Who Cut the Thread
Cassian Rowle did not come to breakfast the next morning. That was not unusual enough to make the whole school notice, but it was unusual enough for the people who had begun watching the smaller movements of harm. Rowan looked toward the Slytherin table three times before he touched his food. Ellis noticed each glance and said nothing, though the silence between them carried the same question. Clara noticed too, not because she knew Cassian well, but because a person who harms something important leaves a shape behind even when he is absent.
The two threads still hung beside the sealed door. The blue one sat low and frayed, no longer long enough to wrap around the spear. The green one rested beside it, tied with Clara’s careful fingers. Students passed them differently now. Some slowed with respect, some kept moving because they did not know what to do with reverence in a school corridor, and a few looked away because the sight made them uncomfortable. No one touched them.
Jesus passed the threads before the first lesson and stopped there alone. He did not kneel that morning. He stood with one hand near the stone, not touching the threads, and prayed silently with His eyes open. The corridor was not empty for long. Hogwarts was a school, not a monastery, and children soon came around the corner with books, cloaks, complaints, and half-finished toast wrapped in napkins they were not supposed to carry outside the Great Hall. Still, those who saw Him there lowered their voices without being told.
Cassian remained absent through Charms and Transfiguration. By lunch, the absence had become a rumor. Some said McGonagall had suspended him. Others said his parents had been called. One Gryffindor claimed he had been locked in a trophy case by Peeves, which was not true but spread quickly because many students wanted it to be true. Ellis heard the rumors from the edge of the Slytherin table and hated that part of him still wanted to know which version would hurt Cassian most.
Rowan sat beside him, pushing peas around his plate. “Do you think he is in trouble?”
“Yes,” Ellis said.
“I mean worse trouble.”
“Probably.”
Rowan looked toward the doors. “Good.”
Ellis did not answer at once. He understood that good. He had felt it often. The first taste of another person’s consequence could feel like justice, especially when that person had made something tender look foolish. But he had also learned how easily that taste could sharpen into hunger.
“It is all right to want him stopped,” Ellis said. “It is not safe to enjoy him breaking.”
Rowan’s fork stopped moving. “I do not know the difference yet.”
Ellis looked at him. “Neither do I all the time.”
That honesty seemed to help more than a cleaner answer. Rowan nodded and ate one bite because Ellis gave him a look that said staring at peas would not solve the moral life.
Mira spent lunch with Clara and Alina at the side of the Ravenclaw table. Clara had begun joining regular meals for short stretches, though she still left before the hall became too loud. She watched the students with an expression that made Mira think of a bird deciding whether a hand was safe. Albie sat near the guest table with Professor Flitwick, who was explaining something about levitation theory with enough hand movement to endanger the teapot. Every so often, Albie looked toward Clara, and every so often, he looked away on purpose, trying to practice trust where worry wanted control.
Clara asked, “Why do people want to know what happened to him?”
Mira knew she meant Cassian. “Because curiosity can pretend to be concern.”
Alina added, “And because people like consequences better when they happen to someone else.”
Clara looked down at her soup. “I wanted him in trouble.”
Mira did not rush to correct her. “That makes sense.”
“It does not feel like mercy.”
“It may not be mercy yet,” Mira said. “It may just be anger telling you something mattered.”
Clara stirred her spoon slowly. “Professor Jesus said anger should not tell me who I am.”
“That sounds like Him.”
Clara looked toward the staff table where Jesus was speaking quietly with McGonagall. “I wish He would say easier things.”
Mira smiled faintly. “He never seems interested in that.”
After lunch, McGonagall sent for Ellis. The message came by a small folded parchment that tapped the edge of his plate twice and then opened itself. He read it, folded it again, and stood. Rowan looked up with immediate worry.
“Is it about Cassian?”
Ellis placed the parchment in his pocket. “Likely.”
“Are you in trouble?”
“Not every summons is trouble.”
Rowan gave him a skeptical look.
Ellis sighed. “That is a fair response.”
He found McGonagall in her office with Jesus, Professor Slughorn, and Cassian. The office felt smaller than usual because the air was tense enough to take up space. Cassian stood near the window, arms crossed, face pale but hard. Slughorn looked deeply unhappy. McGonagall stood behind her desk, which made the room feel official, while Jesus sat in one of the side chairs, which made it feel harder to hide.
Cassian looked at Ellis the moment he entered. “Of course.”
Ellis stopped near the door. “I was summoned.”
“I am sure you were eager.”
Ellis felt the old answer rise, but he kept his hands at his sides. “No.”
McGonagall’s voice cut through the room. “You are not here to quarrel. Mr. Rowle has admitted to removing the thread, cutting it, hiding a portion behind the window bench, and burning the remainder in the Slytherin common room fire.”
Ellis looked at Cassian. Cassian looked away first, which told Ellis more than a confession would have.
McGonagall continued, “He has also admitted to lying in the corridor when directly questioned.”
Cassian’s mouth tightened. “After being interrogated over string.”
Slughorn closed his eyes.
Jesus spoke quietly. “Cassian.”
The older boy’s jaw worked. “Fine. Over the thread.”
McGonagall did not soften. “Words matter because truth matters. You will learn that in this office if nowhere else.”
Cassian said nothing.
Ellis looked at McGonagall. “Why am I here?”
“Because Mr. Rowle requested you.”
Ellis blinked. Cassian looked furious that the truth had been stated aloud.
“I did not request him,” Cassian said. “I said if anyone wanted to pretend this was about restoration, they would drag him in because everyone enjoys his little redemption performance.”
McGonagall’s eyes narrowed. “That is not how you phrased it.”
Cassian flushed. “Close enough.”
Jesus looked at Ellis. “You may leave if you choose.”
That mattered. It changed the room. Ellis had not been brought as a tool for someone else’s lesson. He could leave. Cassian heard it too, and for a moment his contempt faltered because the situation no longer allowed him to claim Ellis had been forced into the scene for display.
Ellis stayed. “What is required?”
McGonagall answered, “Mr. Rowle owes truth before he can offer apology. Professor Jesus believes you may understand part of what he is resisting. I am not asking you to forgive him, advise him, or absorb his anger.”
Cassian gave a bitter laugh. “How merciful.”
“No,” McGonagall said. “How clear.”
The room fell quiet.
Jesus turned toward Cassian. “Tell him why you cut it.”
Cassian looked toward the window. Rain had begun again, light and uneven, tapping against the glass. “I already said why.”
“You said what you wanted people to think,” Jesus replied. “That is not the same.”
Cassian’s face hardened. “It was sentimental. It made the corridor ridiculous. Everyone behaved as if a thread had become sacred because a sad child tied it there.”
Ellis looked at him, hearing the shape of the defense more than the words. “You did not cut it because it was ridiculous.”
Cassian’s eyes snapped back to him. “Do not do that.”
“Do what?”
“Speak as if you see through me.”
Ellis almost answered sharply. Then he saw the fear under Cassian’s anger and understood why Jesus had asked him to stay. It was not because Ellis was better. It was because he knew what it felt like to be seen before he had agreed to be honest.
Ellis said, “I hated it when He did that too.”
Cassian looked briefly at Jesus, then away.
Slughorn lowered himself into a chair with a tired sigh. “Mr. Rowle, no one in this room is served by your performance. Least of all you.”
That sentence surprised Ellis. Slughorn’s voice held no ornament now. He looked older, less charming, and much more useful.
Cassian’s arms tightened across his chest. “What do you want me to say? That I was moved by the thread? That I saw a symbol of mercy and simply could not bear its beauty?”
“No,” Jesus said. “Say where it struck you.”
Cassian’s face changed. Not much. Enough. He looked toward the door, then at the window, then at McGonagall’s desk. Every direction seemed to offer no escape.
“It was just hanging there,” he said at last. “Every day. Everyone slowing down. Everyone acting like not entering a room was brave.”
No one interrupted.
His voice hardened again, though not as successfully. “Some of us did not have the luxury of stopping at doors.”
The room went still.
Jesus waited.
Cassian swallowed. “My family does not stop at doors. If there is a room, you enter. If there is a test, you take it. If there is pain, you do not decorate the hallway and ask everyone to admire your restraint.”
Ellis felt the sentence enter him with uncomfortable recognition. Different house. Different family. Same cold country.
McGonagall’s voice was quieter. “Who forced you through a door?”
Cassian’s face shut at once. “No one.”
Jesus did not accept the lie, but He did not strike it either. “What door, Cassian?”
The boy’s breathing changed. He looked angry enough to break something, but his eyes had gone bright. “It does not matter.”
“It matters because you have made it speak through cruelty,” Jesus said.
Cassian looked at Him with hatred that was almost pleading. “Stop.”
“I will stop when truth requires silence,” Jesus said. “Not when fear asks for its hiding place back.”
For one second, Ellis thought Cassian might leave. He shifted like he wanted to, then remained where he was. When he spoke again, his voice was lower.
“My brother died in a dueling hall.”
Slughorn’s face went pale. McGonagall’s eyes sharpened with recognition, as if a file had opened in her mind.
Cassian continued, staring at the floor. “Not here. At home. Private instruction. Family tradition. He was sixteen. I was eleven. My father said he had hesitated. He said hesitation gets people killed. He made me continue training the next week because grief should not make a coward of the living.”
No one moved.
Ellis understood then. The blue thread had not mocked Cassian because it was sentimental. It had mocked the lesson that had been driven into him after death. Stop before you are ready. Wait. Let a closed door remain closed. The thread had contradicted the cruelest day of his life by existing quietly on a public wall.
Cassian wiped at his face angrily before any tear could fall. “So yes, it irritated me.”
McGonagall came around the desk slowly. “Cassian, was this reported to the school?”
He gave a short laugh. “As what? A family training accident? It was not Hogwarts business.”
“It became Hogwarts business when the wound began harming students here,” she said.
He flinched.
Jesus spoke gently. “Your brother’s death was not your fault.”
Cassian’s face twisted. “I know that.”
“No,” Jesus said. “You know the argument. You have not received the truth.”
Cassian looked away, breathing hard.
Ellis spoke before he could reconsider. “Did you hesitate after?”
Cassian’s eyes returned to him. “What?”
“In training,” Ellis said. “After he died.”
Cassian stared at him. For a moment he looked furious. Then the fury collapsed inward.
“Yes,” he said.
“And someone saw.”
Cassian’s mouth tightened. “My father.”
Ellis nodded slowly. “And after that, you made sure no one saw hesitation again.”
Cassian’s eyes filled, and this time he could not hide it quickly enough. He turned toward the window, but the room had already seen. The silence was not mocking. That seemed to make him more uncomfortable.
Jesus said, “The thread did not accuse your brother.”
Cassian’s shoulders shook once.
“It did not call your hesitation shameful,” Jesus continued. “It told the truth your family would not allow. A child may stop before a door.”
Cassian whispered, “He stopped.”
No one spoke.
“My brother,” Cassian said. “He stopped. Just for a moment. He said the exercise felt wrong. My father told him to continue.”
The words entered the room like a blade wrapped in memory. McGonagall closed her eyes briefly. Slughorn bowed his head. Ellis felt the full horror of it settle slowly. Cassian had not cut the thread only because Clara had been allowed to stop. He cut it because his brother had not been allowed to stop, and the world had gone on calling that discipline.
Jesus stood and came nearer, but not too near. “What was his name?”
Cassian’s face crumpled despite his effort. “Oren.”
Jesus said the name softly. “Oren.”
Cassian covered his eyes with one hand. “Do not make him part of this.”
“He already is,” Jesus said. “Not because Clara’s thread took him from you. Because your grief brought him there when you tried to destroy it.”
Cassian shook his head. “I burned it.”
“You burned thread,” Jesus said. “You did not burn the truth it carried.”
The room held him in silence. Cassian stood with one hand over his eyes, no longer performing contempt because the performance had nothing left to stand on. He looked younger than Mira had ever seen him. Ellis felt a painful tenderness rise and did not know what to do with it. It was easier to hate Cassian when he was only cruel. It was harder now, and the harder thing felt more faithful.
McGonagall spoke with restrained gentleness. “Mr. Rowle, your discipline remains. You will repair what you can, write a full account of what you did, and meet with me twice weekly until I am satisfied that contempt is no longer your chosen shield in this school.”
Cassian lowered his hand, face red and wet. “And Clara?”
“You will not approach her yet,” McGonagall said. “Not until your apology can serve truth instead of your relief.”
He nodded, swallowing hard.
Jesus added, “You will write Oren’s name.”
Cassian looked at Him.
“Not for public display,” Jesus said. “Not for performance. Write his name and what should have been true for him that day.”
Cassian’s voice broke. “What should have been true?”
Jesus answered, “That he was allowed to stop.”
Cassian sat down suddenly, as if the words had removed the last strength from his legs. Slughorn moved as if to comfort him, then stopped, uncertain. Jesus placed a hand on Cassian’s shoulder only after the boy gave the smallest nod. Cassian bent forward, shaking, and the room let him grieve without turning grief into a lesson for anyone else.
Ellis left the office a few minutes later because the rest belonged to Cassian. He found Mira, Tavin, Rowan, and Clara waiting near the far end of the corridor, though Clara clearly had not been meant to wait and Albie stood behind her looking apologetic. Their faces turned toward him at once.
“Well?” Rowan asked.
Ellis looked toward Clara first. “He did it.”
“I know that part,” Clara said.
“He is in trouble.”
“I know that too.”
Ellis glanced at Albie, then back at her. “He is not ready to apologize to you.”
Clara’s face hardened. “Did he say that?”
“No. Professor McGonagall did. Jesus agreed.”
That made her pause.
Ellis continued carefully. “He hurt something because something in him was already hurt. That does not excuse it.”
Clara’s eyes narrowed slightly. “People keep saying that when they are about to ask me not to be angry.”
“I am not asking that.”
“Then what are you asking?”
“Nothing,” Ellis said. “I am telling you he is being stopped. And he is being made to tell the truth before he comes near you.”
Clara looked down the corridor toward McGonagall’s office. Her anger remained, but it seemed to settle into something less frantic. “Good.”
Rowan looked at Ellis. “What hurt him?”
Ellis hesitated. This was not his story to tell. He thought of Jesus saying apology should not make the wounded person carry the guilty person’s relief. Perhaps the same was true of another person’s wound.
“It is not mine to explain,” he said.
Rowan frowned, but accepted it.
Mira watched Ellis with quiet approval. He looked away before it could make him uncomfortable. Tavin noticed and wisely said nothing, which was rare enough that it deserved recognition.
Clara looked at the threads. “I still hate that he burned part of it.”
Albie rested a hand lightly on her shoulder. “So do I.”
That answer helped her more than a lecture would have. She leaned against him for one breath, then stood straight again.
The rest of the day moved with a strange softness around the edges. Cassian’s absence from classes was noticed, but fewer students joked once word spread that McGonagall had been involved personally. The corridor remained marked by the two threads. Some students looked at them with new attention, as if realizing that the person who cut them had not destroyed their meaning. If anything, he had forced the school to understand that mocking mercy was not proof mercy had failed.
That evening, Jesus held Defense in the classroom with the door open. Clara stood at the threshold again, not inside but closer than before. Albie sat on a bench in the corridor, where he could see her without crowding her. Cassian was not present. The students took their seats, and the room quieted in the uneven way of children who sensed that the lesson had begun before anyone named it.
Jesus placed two objects on the floor in the center of the circle. One was a practice wand snapped cleanly in half. The other was a small strip of blue cloth, frayed at one end and whole at the other. It was not Clara’s thread. Everyone knew that. Still, the room understood the connection.
“Today,” Jesus said, “we learn the difference between repair and replacement.”
He lifted the broken practice wand. “Some things cannot be restored to their former use. That does not mean their story is over. But pretending they are unchanged may cause further harm.”
He set it down and lifted the strip of cloth. “Some things can be tied again, but not as they were. The new knot tells the truth. The frayed edge remains. The repair does not erase the harm. It refuses to let harm have the last word.”
Tavin looked toward the doorway where Clara stood. She stared at the strip of cloth with a face full of guarded understanding.
Jesus asked the students to practice two spells. The first was a revealing charm that showed stress lines in an object. The second was a binding charm that joined without disguising the join. Mira worked with a cracked ink bottle. Tavin worked with a torn book strap. Rowan worked with a practice shield whose handle had been loosened. Ellis worked with the broken wand.
At first Ellis tried to repair the wand too cleanly. The seam vanished, then reappeared. He tried again with more force. The wand sparked and rolled away from him. Rowan looked over.
“You are trying to make it look unbroken.”
Ellis stared at him. “That is the assigned exercise.”
“No, it is not.”
Ellis looked toward Jesus, who was watching without interrupting. He picked up the two halves again and examined them. The break was clean, but the grain inside had splintered. If he forced the outside smooth, the weakness remained hidden. He breathed out and cast the revealing charm first. Fine golden lines appeared along the broken edge. Then he cast the binding charm more slowly. This time the wand joined with a visible ring of pale light around the break, like a scar that had agreed to be seen.
The repaired wand did not spark. It lay still in his hand.
Jesus came beside him. “What is true?”
Ellis looked at the ring around the wand. “It may not be fit for the same use.”
“And?”
“It may still teach.”
Jesus nodded. “Yes.”
Ellis looked toward the open door, where Clara watched. Albie sat behind her with his hands clasped, eyes fixed not on the classroom, but on the space just beyond the threshold. It struck Ellis then that the whole school had been trying to decide whether Albie could be repaired into the kind of former student who would enter the room and smile. Perhaps that was the wrong hope. Perhaps the truer healing was that Albie could remain outside and still not be ruled by what happened inside.
Clara raised her hand from the threshold.
Jesus turned toward her. “Yes, Clara.”
“Can I try from here?”
McGonagall, standing near the back, went very still. Albie looked up quickly, then forced himself not to speak. Jesus looked at Clara with the same calm He had given others at harder doors.
“Yes,” He said. “From there.”
Tavin gently passed her the strip of blue cloth from the center of the room. He did not bring it all the way to her hand. He placed it on the floor halfway between the circle and the threshold, then stepped back. Clara entered only far enough to reach it with her wand arm while both feet remained outside the classroom. No one laughed. No one whispered. The entire class seemed to understand that a threshold could be a battlefield no one else had the right to measure.
Clara cast the revealing charm. The cloth glowed faintly along its frayed edge. She cast the binding charm, but there was nothing to bind it to. The spell faded.
She frowned. “It needs another piece.”
Jesus said, “Yes.”
Rowan stood and took a green ribbon from his book bag. It was not the real thread from the corridor, only a spare piece he had begun carrying for reasons he had not explained. He placed it beside the blue cloth and stepped back. Clara looked at him, then at the ribbon.
“Thank you,” she said.
She cast again. The blue cloth and green ribbon joined with a small visible knot of silver light. It was not pretty. It was honest. Clara stared at it for a long time. Then she stepped back into the corridor fully, holding her wand at her side.
“I am done for today,” she said.
Jesus nodded. “Good.”
Albie’s eyes filled, but he did not rush to her. He only stood when she turned toward him, and the two of them remained in the corridor together while the class continued. Mira felt something in the room change. Clara had not entered. She had still participated. She had not been rushed across the threshold to satisfy anyone’s hope. The door had stayed a door, and mercy had found a way to teach through it.
After class, Cassian’s written account was placed on McGonagall’s desk. No student saw it, but McGonagall later told Jesus that it named the act plainly and then named Oren. Cassian had written one sentence beneath his brother’s name and nothing else for nearly half a page. Oren should have been allowed to stop. The handwriting had pressed so hard into the parchment that the words were visible from the other side.
McGonagall brought the page to Jesus in the Defense classroom after the students had gone. She stood with it in her hand, looking older and more human than her office usually allowed. “This school keeps finding children under the behavior of older children.”
Jesus was cleaning chalk dust from the board with a damp cloth. “Yes.”
“It makes discipline more complicated.”
“It makes discipline truthful.”
She looked down at the parchment. “I will not reduce what he did.”
“No.”
“I will not let the explanation become an excuse.”
“No.”
“But I cannot unknow this.”
Jesus set the cloth down. “You were not meant to.”
McGonagall folded the parchment carefully. “Clara asked whether she may keep the repaired blue and green cloth from class.”
“And?”
“I said yes.”
Jesus nodded. “Good.”
“She also asked whether Mr. Rowle will be made to look at the threads every day.”
Jesus looked toward the open doorway where the corridor lay quiet beyond. “What did you say?”
“I said he will have to pass them like everyone else, but they are not there to punish him.”
Jesus’ face warmed. “That is wise.”
McGonagall looked almost annoyed by the compliment. “It is exhausting.”
“Wisdom often is.”
“Yes,” she said. “You might have warned me earlier.”
That night, Cassian did pass the threads. McGonagall walked with him, not as an escort of shame, but because she had decided he would not face the corridor as theater for other students. The hallway was empty except for Jesus, who stood near the Defense doorway, and Ellis, who had been asked to wait only because Cassian had named him in the office and McGonagall believed the next step required a witness who understood restraint.
Cassian stopped before the blue and green threads. His face was pale. The anger had drained out of him for now, leaving him looking hollow and painfully young.
McGonagall spoke quietly. “You are not here to perform remorse.”
Cassian nodded once.
Jesus said, “Say only what is true.”
Cassian looked at the threads. For a long time he said nothing. Then he whispered, “I hated that she was allowed to stop.”
No one corrected him.
“I hated it because Oren was not.”
The words shook. Cassian swallowed, then forced himself to continue.
“I cut the thread because I wanted the hallway to stop saying something my family never let be true.”
Ellis looked down. The confession hurt to hear because it sounded too much like something he might have done in another form.
Cassian’s voice broke. “I am sorry I made her mercy carry my anger.”
Jesus nodded slowly. “That is truth.”
Cassian looked toward Him. “What do I do with it?”
“You let it change what you do next.”
Cassian gave a humorless breath. “That is not specific.”
“It will become specific when the next choice comes.”
McGonagall said, “Tomorrow, you will begin restorative work in the archive with Professor Sinistra. You will not work on records involving Clara, Albie Trent, or the threads. You will begin with general reports from the night of the Mirror Room and learn how language can wound after the wound.”
Cassian looked as if he wanted to object, then did not. “Yes, Professor.”
He turned to leave, but stopped near Ellis. The two boys looked at each other in the low torchlight. Once, that moment would have become a contest. Now it stood awkwardly between them, stripped of audience and easy cruelty.
Cassian said, “I wanted you to threaten me.”
Ellis nodded. “I know.”
“It would have made it simpler.”
“I know that too.”
Cassian looked back at the threads. “I do not know how to apologize to her.”
“Then do not start with her,” Ellis said. “Start with not cutting anything else.”
Cassian looked at him sharply, then gave a short, unwilling laugh that sounded almost like pain. “That is the most Slytherin version of moral counsel I have ever heard.”
“It may also be correct.”
“I hate that.”
“Yes,” Ellis said. “Most correct things lately are difficult.”
Cassian left with McGonagall. Ellis remained in the corridor with Jesus. The threads moved slightly in the night draft.
Ellis asked, “Did I help him?”
Jesus looked at him. “You did not use him.”
Ellis absorbed that. It was not the answer he had expected, but it seemed to reach deeper. Helping could become another way to feel powerful if he was not careful. Not using someone, even for a good-looking purpose, might be a better beginning.
“Is he going to change?” Ellis asked.
“He is being invited to.”
“That is not the same.”
“No,” Jesus said. “It is not.”
They stood a while longer without speaking. The corridor did not feel healed in a finished way. It felt like a place where new honesty had been added to old harm and both were being held in the light. Ellis looked at the two threads and thought of Oren Rowle, a name he had not known that morning and would not forget now.
After Ellis left, Jesus remained by the statue. He knelt beneath the brass plate and prayed quietly for Oren, who had stopped before a door and was forced through by the fear of a father. He prayed for Cassian, who had carried that moment as contempt because grief had never been allowed to speak plainly. He prayed for Clara, whose thread had been cut and tied again without losing its meaning. He prayed for every child who learned hardness because no one gave them permission to pause.
The torches burned low. The blue and green threads held together in the draft. The door stayed closed, and the corridor kept watch.
Chapter Thirteen: The First Door That Opened
The next week began with a quiet that did not feel peaceful at first. It felt like the castle was listening to see whether everyone would forget. Hogwarts had survived battles, curses, foolish teachers, arrogant students, dangerous creatures, and staircases that behaved like they had private opinions, but remembering well was harder than surviving loudly. The threads still hung near the sealed door, blue and green together, one frayed and one whole. Students had grown used to seeing them there, which was both comforting and dangerous, because familiar things can become invisible if the heart stops looking.
Mira did not want the threads to become invisible. Each morning before breakfast, she stopped by the statue and read the brass plate once. She did not make a ceremony of it. She did not close her eyes or touch the wall. She only stood there long enough to remember that her own life could not go back to polished fear just because the hallway had grown quiet. Her mother’s latest letter sat folded inside her Charms book, and it was warmer than the letters used to be, though still careful in the way of someone learning a language late. Celeste had written that she missed Mira without adding a correction, and that single sentence had unsettled Mira more than three pages of criticism ever had.
Tavin had begun a new habit too. Every time he passed the threads, he asked himself whether he was carrying something that did not belong to him. Sometimes the answer was simple, like someone else’s books stacked in his arms because he had volunteered too quickly. Sometimes it was heavier, like the fear that if he did not check on Rowan, Clara, Mira, Ellis, Lottie, his mother, and half of Hufflepuff, then love would be proven false by his inattention. He was learning to notice the difference between care and control before care became another hidden room. He was not always good at it, but he was better than he had been.
Ellis did not stop at the threads every day. That was intentional. He had learned enough about himself to know that public reverence could become another form of performance if he let it. Instead, he made himself do small things no one would praise. He helped a first-year Slytherin find the correct classroom without making him feel foolish for being lost. He returned a library book Rowan had abandoned under the table. He apologized to a third-year he had once cornered over a badly written essay, and when the boy accepted too quickly out of fear, Ellis told him he did not have to make it easy for him. That last part was the hardest, because repentance felt less satisfying when the person harmed did not know how to receive it yet.
Cassian Rowle returned to classes with a face that dared people to ask questions and eyes that begged them not to. McGonagall had placed him under firm restrictions. He was not allowed near Clara without permission, not allowed to linger by the threads alone, and not allowed to turn silence into contempt during restorative work. Twice a week, he reported to the archive under Professor Sinistra, where he reviewed softened records and learned how easily a sentence could hide a wound. He hated the work. That did not mean it failed.
The first report assigned to him described a second-year from years earlier who had been found crying behind a tapestry after hearing a voice call him useless. The original summary said, Student became disruptive after corridor confusion. Cassian stared at that sentence for a long time. Sinistra stood nearby with her hands folded, patient as a night sky. At last he crossed out disruptive and wrote frightened. Then he crossed out corridor confusion and wrote false voice event. His quill paused over the margin before he added, Student was alone when found, which should have mattered.
Sinistra read the correction without praise. “Better.”
Cassian looked at her. “That is all?”
“That is enough for this sentence.”
He hated that too. He wanted either condemnation or admiration because both gave him something clear to push against. This new way, where a right correction was simply received and the next one still had to be made, left him without drama. It forced him to continue.
Clara watched him from a distance when they crossed paths. She did not glare as often now, but she did not smile either. Her anger had become quieter, which did not mean smaller. Albie told her she did not have to decide quickly what to do with Cassian’s apology when it came. Clara answered that she knew, then asked whether adults said things like that because they were wise or because they had made enough mistakes to recognize the shape of one. Albie had said both, and Clara seemed satisfied.
Her gradual life at Hogwarts grew wider. She attended Charms, Herbology, and one Astronomy observation that left her so delighted by the movement of Jupiter’s moons that she forgot to be cautious for almost half an hour. She wrote to Albie from the guest room where she still stayed part of the week, though he was only a short walk away in the village lodging McGonagall had arranged. She insisted that writing made thoughts behave differently than speaking. Albie wrote back each time, even when the answer had only traveled across a small distance. His letters were awkward, but Clara kept them under her pillow.
Defense remained the unopened door. Clara stood at the threshold for several lessons and participated from there when she chose. Some days she did nothing but listen. Jesus never called attention to that as courage, which made it easier for her to return. Albie sat in the corridor each time, never quite relaxed, never pretending to be. The class learned to let both of them be there without staring. It took practice. Children often need practice in mercy as much as in magic.
On Thursday, Jesus placed no object in the center of the classroom. No cracked shield. No cloth. No broken wand. The desks had been moved back into rows that morning, and the change unsettled everyone more than it should have. The circle had begun to feel safe because everyone could see everyone else. Rows meant front and back again. Rows meant old school habits. Rows meant a person could hide behind another student’s shoulders or feel watched from behind.
Clara stopped at the threshold and frowned. “Why are the desks like that?”
Jesus stood near the teacher’s desk. “Because not every room will arrange itself gently before you enter.”
Albie shifted on the corridor bench, but Clara did not look at him. Her eyes stayed on the rows. Mira sat near the front, feeling the truth of the lesson before it began. Tavin was two seats behind her. Ellis sat near the aisle, where he could see both the doorway and the class. Rowan sat beside him, unusually quiet. Cassian was not there; his restriction remained.
Jesus looked at the students. “Today you may choose where to sit.”
Several students glanced at one another. They had already sat. A few seemed confused. Then Ellis understood. He stood, picked up his bag, and moved from the aisle to the second row, near the center, no longer watching the door like a guard. Tavin moved from behind Mira to the row beside a first-year who looked nervous. Mira stayed where she was, then realized staying was also a choice if it was honest. Rowan moved one seat closer to the front. Students shifted slowly around the room until the rows no longer looked assigned by fear or habit, but by small decisions.
Clara remained at the threshold.
Jesus did not ask her to choose.
The lesson was on Boggarts, but not the ordinary kind that turned into spiders, snakes, failing marks, angry relatives, dark corridors, or whatever fear could borrow from the mind. The wardrobe in the corner rattled once, and several students straightened. Mira had faced Boggarts before. She had even laughed at one after it became her mother’s letter with chicken legs, though the laughter had felt less convincing than Professor Flitwick hoped. But this wardrobe had a strip of pale cloth tied around the handle, and the air near it felt different.
“This Boggart has been affected by the Mirror Room’s residue,” Jesus said. “It does not only take the shape of what frightens you. It takes the shape of what your fear says you must become.”
No one seemed eager to volunteer after that.
A Gryffindor raised his hand halfway. “Are we still meant to use Riddikulus?”
“Not first,” Jesus said.
That caused more worry than the Boggart itself. The usual lesson gave students a tool before exposure. Jesus had a way of making tools wait until truth had spoken. Mira knew by now that He did not do that to make them helpless. He did it because tools used too early could become hiding places.
Jesus opened the wardrobe.
The Boggart stepped out and became Professor McGonagall. Not the real McGonagall, but a taller, colder version with eyes like polished black stone and a ledger in one hand. The students drew in a collective breath. Even the real McGonagall, standing near the back for observation, looked startled but did not interrupt.
The false McGonagall pointed at Mira. “Miss Vale, you are unfinished work presented as excellence.”
Mira’s chest tightened. The old room inside her opened quickly. She could feel the polished table, her mother’s hand, the returned letters, the expectation that she become worthy by becoming flawless. But the Boggart had not become her mother. It had become what fear said Mira must become. A girl whose excellence was only a disguise waiting to be exposed.
Jesus stood beside the desk. “What is it asking you to become?”
Mira gripped her wand but did not lift it. “Perfect before I am loved.”
The false McGonagall’s ledger snapped open. Pages flipped wildly.
“What is true?” Jesus asked.
Mira breathed in. “I can learn without becoming a project. I can fail without becoming a fraud. I can be loved before I am impressive.”
The Boggart shivered. Its McGonagall face blurred, but it did not collapse. Jesus nodded once. “Now.”
Mira lifted her wand. “Riddikulus.”
The false McGonagall’s ledger turned into a tea tray stacked with biscuits shaped like tiny report cards. The stern figure looked down, confused, as the biscuits began grading themselves and complaining about ink quality. A few students laughed, not cruelly, but with relief. Mira laughed too, though her eyes stung. The Boggart spun away from her.
It turned on Tavin next. The shape became a version of Tavin himself, older, frantic, carrying a dozen crying children, three broken broomsticks, a smoking cauldron, a baby dragon, and Lottie’s drawing clenched between his teeth. The image was absurd, but the fear beneath it was not. The false Tavin staggered under the impossible load, shouting apologies to people he could not reach.
The real Tavin looked horrified. “That is insulting.”
Jesus looked at him. “What is it asking you to become?”
“Responsible for everyone,” Tavin said.
“And what is true?”
Tavin swallowed. “Love can show up without pretending to hold the whole world together.”
The Boggart wobbled. Tavin raised his wand. “Riddikulus.”
The false Tavin’s enormous pile transformed into a tower of pillows, and the baby dragon curled on top wearing socks. The class laughed harder this time, partly because the dragon looked offended by comfort. Tavin laughed too, then wiped his eyes with his sleeve as if the laughter had dragged something heavy out with it.
The Boggart turned toward Ellis.
Everyone went quiet.
It became Ellis wearing his prefect badge again. Not the Ellis they knew now, but a sharper version, taller in posture, colder in face, wand lifted with beautiful control. Around him stood smaller students, silent and pale. The false Ellis smiled without warmth, and the badge on his chest shone like a silver wound.
Rowan looked down. Ellis saw and felt the full force of it. The Boggart had not become his father. It had not become the word on his palm. It had become what fear said he must become if he wanted never to be powerless again.
Jesus’ voice was gentle. “What is it asking you to become?”
Ellis’s answer took effort. “Feared enough not to feel small.”
The false Ellis lifted his wand toward Rowan. Rowan did not move, but his hands tightened on the desk.
Jesus asked, “What is true?”
Ellis stared at the image. “Power that needs someone frightened beneath it is not strength.”
The false badge flickered.
Ellis continued, voice rougher. “And I do not have to become cruel to stop being afraid.”
He lifted his wand. “Riddikulus.”
The false Ellis’s badge transformed into a large silver soup ladle pinned to his chest. His wand became a breadstick. The room burst into laughter before anyone could stop themselves. Ellis stared at the image, then gave a short laugh that sounded almost painful. The false version of him looked deeply offended, tried to threaten someone with the breadstick, and dissolved into smoke.
Rowan whispered, “The ladle was perfect.”
Ellis sat down. “Do not become attached to it.”
The Boggart spun toward the doorway.
Clara stiffened.
Albie stood halfway from the bench. Jesus turned toward him with one calm look, and Albie stopped, though every part of him seemed ready to cross the corridor and pull Clara away. The Boggart had not stepped out of the classroom. It stood just inside, facing her from beyond the threshold. Slowly, it changed.
It became the Defense classroom as Albie had seen it in memory. The desks were filled with laughing students. A young boy stood at the front, sandy-haired and trembling. A teacher’s blurred voice said, “Again.” The room laughed louder. The image was not Clara’s memory, but it was her inheritance. It was the room her grandfather had carried home in silence. It was the reason her first letter had burned.
Clara’s face went white. “That is not mine.”
Jesus’ voice stayed very quiet. “No. It is not yours.”
The Boggart’s laughter rose.
Clara gripped her wand. “Then why is it looking at me?”
Jesus stepped nearer to the doorway, but did not stand between her and the sight. “Because fear often tries to hand children the unfinished terror of those who loved them.”
Albie made a small sound behind her. Clara did not turn.
The Boggart shifted again. Now it showed Clara herself, older and gray-faced, standing outside Hogwarts with the empty birdcage in her hand. The castle behind her was dark. The door was closed. The false Clara said, “I left before I could love it. That was safer.”
Clara’s lower lip trembled. “I do not like this lesson.”
Jesus looked at her with deep tenderness. “You may stop.”
The whole room held still. There it was again. The door could stay closed. The thread could keep its meaning. No one would force her forward because the lesson had become dramatic.
Clara looked back at Albie. His eyes were wet, but he did not tell her what to do. His hands were open at his sides, trembling with the effort not to grip her future out of fear.
Clara turned back to the Boggart. “If I stop, is it winning?”
“No,” Jesus said. “Not if stopping is truth.”
She looked at the false older version of herself outside the dark castle. Then she looked at the blue and green cloth from the repair lesson, which she had tied to her satchel. Her face changed slowly. “I do not want to stop today.”
Jesus nodded. “Then what is it asking you to become?”
Clara’s voice shook. “Someone who calls fear wisdom so I never risk loving what hurt my family.”
The Boggart flickered. The false Clara gripped the empty cage.
“What is true?” Jesus asked.
Clara swallowed. “Grandfather’s pain is real. The school’s wrong was real. My fear is real.” She lifted her wand slowly from the threshold. “But wonder can be real too.”
The Boggart shuddered.
Clara stepped one foot into the classroom.
Albie’s face broke open. He did not move. Mira felt tears fill her eyes. Tavin looked down, overcome. Ellis sat very still, as if any movement might disturb the holiness of a child choosing without being forced.
Clara lifted her wand. “Riddikulus.”
The false older Clara’s empty birdcage opened, and dozens of blue-feathered paper birds flew out, circling the dark castle until the windows lit one by one. The laughing classroom became a room full of owls wearing tiny spectacles, all of them hooting disapproval at the cruel teacher. Bishop, who had somehow appeared on the corridor window ledge, gave one real approving hoot. The class laughed through tears, and Clara stepped back to the threshold, shaking but upright.
Jesus looked at her. “Good.”
Clara looked at Him fiercely. “I am done now.”
“Yes,” He said. “You are done.”
Albie sat down on the bench as if his knees had failed. Clara went to him, and he took her hand only when she offered it. The lesson continued, but everyone understood that the heart of it had already happened. The Boggart faced several more students, and each learned something about what fear wanted them to become. Rowan saw himself as a boy who followed every voice just in case love might be behind it. Alina saw herself as a book with blank pages, praised for being quiet while no one read what had vanished. Each answer was different. Each charm came only after truth had made room for it.
Near the end of class, the wardrobe rattled again, though the Boggart had already retreated inside. Jesus closed the door and tied the pale cloth around the handle. The room was quiet, not with fear this time, but with the tiredness that follows honest work.
McGonagall stepped forward. “You have all done enough for today.”
No student argued. Even the most ambitious Ravenclaws seemed grateful not to be asked for more.
As everyone gathered books, Clara remained at the threshold with Albie. Mira approached slowly, not wanting to crowd the moment. Clara looked at her with a face still pale from what she had seen.
“I stepped in,” Clara said.
“You did.”
“Only one foot.”
“One foot counts.”
Clara looked at the classroom floor. “I hated it.”
“That may also count.”
Clara gave her a small, tired smile. “You are less annoying than some Ravenclaws.”
Mira smiled back. “That may be the kindest thing anyone has said to me this week.”
Ellis passed near them, carrying his bag. Clara looked at him. “The ladle was funny.”
His face tightened with dignity. “The Boggart lacked subtlety.”
Rowan, walking behind him, said, “The Boggart had excellent judgment.”
Ellis looked at him. “Your loyalty continues to be inconsistent.”
“It is very consistent. I am loyal to the truth.”
Tavin joined them, still wiping his eyes. “And the truth is that breadstick wand would have made you less frightening.”
“It would have made me hungry,” Ellis said.
The laughter that followed was small and human, not an escape from the lesson but part of surviving it. Albie listened from the bench with Clara’s hand in his. For once, the sound of laughter near a Defense lesson did not twist his face with pain. It was not the same laughter that had followed him out of childhood. This laughter did not feed on anyone’s humiliation. It rose because fear had lost one more disguise.
After class, Jesus walked with Albie down the corridor while Clara went ahead with Mira and Tavin to see whether the kitchens might provide cocoa. Ellis and Rowan followed at a distance, arguing quietly about whether a soup ladle counted as a symbol of failed authority. The threads near the sealed door stirred as they passed.
Albie stopped before them.
Jesus stopped too.
The old man looked at the blue and green strands for a long time. “She stepped in.”
“Yes.”
“Only one foot.”
“Yes.”
Albie’s eyes filled. “I wanted to stop her.”
“I know.”
“I almost did.”
“But you did not.”
The old man took a slow breath. “It felt like betrayal.”
“Of whom?”
Albie looked toward the Defense classroom door. “Of the boy I was. I thought if I let her enter, I was handing him back to the room.”
Jesus looked at him with quiet compassion. “You did not hand him back. You stood with him outside and let Clara choose what he was denied.”
Albie covered his mouth with one trembling hand. The words reached him slowly, and when they did, his shoulders bent. Jesus waited. He did not hurry an old grief that had already waited most of a lifetime.
At last Albie said, “I think I would like to see the classroom when it is empty.”
Jesus nodded. “Now?”
Albie looked frightened by the question, but not trapped. He glanced down the corridor where Clara had gone laughing softly with the others. Then he looked back at the door. “Now.”
They entered together.
The room was empty except for the uneven rows, the wardrobe bound with pale cloth, the sealed stain on the floor, and the late afternoon light lying across the desks. Albie stopped just inside the door. He did not go farther at first. His breathing changed. Jesus remained beside him without speaking.
“It is smaller,” Albie whispered.
“Yes.”
“And larger.”
“Yes.”
Albie took one step. Then another. He stood near the place where the Boggart had shown the old memory. His eyes moved to the front of the room where he had once stood as a boy. There was no mirror there now. Only a chalkboard, a teacher’s desk, and a few crooked chairs.
“I tried to stop caring,” he said.
Jesus listened.
“I told myself it worked.”
“It did not.”
“No.” Albie gave a broken laugh. “No, it made me careful instead of free.”
He walked to a student desk in the second row and rested one hand on the back of it. “I used to sit there. Before the lesson. I had carved a star under the desk because I liked Astronomy. I wonder if it is still there.”
Jesus waited as Albie knelt slowly beside the desk. With trembling fingers, he felt along the underside. His breath caught. He looked up, eyes wide with shock and grief.
“It is there.”
Jesus knelt beside him.
Albie laughed and cried at the same time. “All these years, and the boy who stopped caring left a star under the desk.”
Jesus looked at the underside of the old wood, where a small uneven star had been carved by a child’s hand decades earlier. “He cared.”
Albie pressed his forehead to the edge of the desk. “He cared.”
The words were not dramatic. They were not loud. They were the sound of a buried truth finding air. The classroom held them gently, as if it too needed to hear that the boy had not been erased by the day he was humiliated. He had left a mark before the wound. Not a curse, not a record, not a complaint. A star.
When Albie finally stood, he looked exhausted but clearer. “May Clara see it someday?”
“If you wish,” Jesus said. “And if she wishes.”
Albie nodded. “Not today.”
“Not today.”
They left the classroom as evening gathered in the corridor. Clara was waiting near the statue, holding two cups of cocoa, one for herself and one for her grandfather. She studied his face at once.
“You went in,” she said.
“I did.”
“Did it hurt?”
“Yes.”
“Was it bad?”
Albie looked back at the classroom door. “It was hard. It was not bad.”
Clara handed him the cocoa. “That is annoying.”
He smiled through tired eyes. “Most true things are.”
She accepted that with a solemn nod. Then she looked toward the classroom. “I put one foot in.”
“I heard,” he said.
“Did that hurt you?”
“Yes,” he answered honestly. “And it helped me.”
Clara thought about that. “Both can be true.”
Mira, standing nearby, felt the sentence return from her own life in another voice. Both can be true. Her mother’s love and her mother’s harm. Albie’s fear and Clara’s wonder. Cassian’s cruelty and Cassian’s grief. Ellis’s past and his becoming. Hogwarts wounded and Hogwarts still worth healing.
The supper bell rang, and the students began moving toward the Great Hall. Albie and Clara followed more slowly. Jesus remained by the statue for a moment, looking at the threads, then at the classroom door, then at the place where a boy’s carved star waited under a desk after all those years.
That night, when the castle slept, Jesus returned to the classroom and knelt beside the desk with the star beneath it. He prayed for Albie Trent, who had found the mark of the boy he thought he had lost. He prayed for Clara, who had placed one foot into a room without surrendering her right to stop. He prayed for Mira, Tavin, Ellis, Rowan, Alina, Cassian, and every student who had seen that fear could be faced without being obeyed. He prayed for the old wood, the sealed stain, the repaired records, and the threads in the corridor that had become less like decorations and more like witnesses.
Outside, the castle rested under a clear sky. Inside, beneath a desk in a Defense classroom, a small carved star remained where a child had left it long before shame tried to tell him he no longer cared.
Chapter Fourteen: The Apology That Waited Outside
The next morning, Albie Trent asked to see Calder Wren.
He did not ask loudly. He did not ask in the Great Hall or in front of Clara. He came to Professor McGonagall’s office just after breakfast, holding his hat in both hands, wearing the same careful coat, and looking like a man who had slept little but decided something before dawn. Jesus was already there with McGonagall, not because anyone had sent for Him, but because some moments seemed to gather around Him before they arrived.
McGonagall did not answer quickly. She looked at Albie with the same careful seriousness she had given every wounded student since the hidden room was broken. “You do not owe him that.”
“I know,” Albie said.
“If you wish only to prove you are strong enough, that is not reason enough.”
“I know that too.”
Jesus watched him gently. “Why do you want to see him?”
Albie looked down at the brim of his hat. His thumbs had begun to bend it again, and when he noticed, he stopped. “Because yesterday I found the star under the desk.”
McGonagall’s face softened.
Albie continued, “All these years, I thought the last true thing I left in that room was humiliation. It was not. I left something before that. Something small, foolish, hopeful. When I saw it, I realized the boy I had been was not only the boy Wren shamed.” His voice tightened, but he kept speaking. “I want to look at the man who hurt me without letting him be the only keeper of that room.”
McGonagall took that in. “That is a different reason.”
“It may still be a bad one.”
Jesus said, “It is an honest one.”
Albie gave a faint, tired smile. “That seems to be the new standard around here.”
“It is an old one,” Jesus said. “The school is only beginning to hear it again.”
The meeting was arranged for late afternoon in the same side chamber off the Great Hall where Albie had first spoken with McGonagall. Not Wren’s room. Not the archive. Not the Defense classroom. A neutral place, as much as any place inside Hogwarts could be neutral now. McGonagall insisted that Albie could end the meeting at any moment. Jesus insisted on the same without using the authority of a rule. Wren was told only after Albie had chosen the room and the hour, and when the message reached him, he sat for several minutes without speaking.
By noon, Clara knew something was happening. Children often know the truth before adults decide what to call it. She found Albie near the library windows, where he was pretending to read a book on school enrollment procedures and staring instead at the rain-dark lake.
“You are going to talk to him,” she said.
Albie closed the book slowly. “Yes.”
Clara stood across from him with her satchel hanging from one shoulder and the repaired blue and green cloth tied to its strap. “Do you want to?”
“No,” he said.
She frowned. “Then why are you?”
He thought about lying in a gentle way. He had done that often in his life, telling children a softened answer so they would not have to carry the full weight of a grown sorrow. But Clara had crossed too many doors now for him to offer her a painted wall and call it mercy.
“I want what is on the other side of the conversation,” he said. “I do not want the conversation.”
Clara considered that with her usual serious expression. “What is on the other side?”
“I do not know. Maybe nothing. Maybe only knowing I did not let fear decide for me.”
She looked toward the shelves. “Do you have to forgive him?”
The question entered the room with more weight than her age should have had to carry.
Albie leaned back in his chair. “No.”
“Does Jesus want you to?”
Albie’s face softened. “Jesus wants truth. I think forgiveness cannot grow right if truth is forced to pretend it is ready.”
Clara looked relieved and troubled at the same time. “Good.”
He held out one hand. She came close enough to take it. For a moment, he saw both the child she was and the child he had been, standing near a room adults had filled with more danger than they understood. He squeezed her hand gently, then let go before fear could tighten.
“I am not going in for you,” he said.
“I know.”
“And I am not going in instead of you.”
“I know that too.”
He smiled faintly. “You know a great deal this morning.”
“I am trying to know exactly enough.”
“That may be wisdom.”
“It may be breakfast,” she said. “I had too much porridge.”
Albie laughed softly, and the laugh steadied him more than any brave speech would have.
Across the castle, Cassian Rowle was having a much worse day. Professor Sinistra had given him another archive report, this one involving a student who had mocked another child’s grief after the Mirror Room incident. The original draft, written by a nervous staff assistant, said, Inappropriate comments were made in the corridor. Cassian stared at the phrase until the letters blurred. He knew what the report was really about because he had lived inside that sentence. Inappropriate comments. A phrase clean enough to bury the cut.
He dipped his quill and wrote, The student mocked another student’s act of remembrance and later admitted the cruelty was connected to his own unspoken grief. He stopped, jaw tight. Professor Sinistra stood at the other end of the table, pretending to sort memory jars while giving him the dignity of not being watched too closely.
Cassian added another sentence. The act harmed the student whose remembrance was damaged, the students who had begun to trust the corridor, and the student who acted cruelly by allowing grief to speak through contempt.
He hated that last part because it included him among the harmed without freeing him from being the one who had done harm. He set the quill down too hard.
Sinistra looked over. “Something wrong?”
“Everything about this is irritating.”
“That is not the same as wrong.”
He looked at her. “Do you all learn to answer like that from Him?”
“No,” Sinistra said. “Some of us were inconvenient before He arrived.”
Cassian almost smiled, then refused to give her the satisfaction. He looked down at the report again. “How long does one keep correcting sentences?”
“As long as the sentences are still hiding someone.”
“That sounds endless.”
“Not endless,” she said. “Faithful.”
He returned to the page because there was nothing useful to say against that.
The afternoon moved toward the meeting with the slow heaviness of a storm that had already broken but left the air thick behind it. Mira, Tavin, and Ellis were not invited into the room. None of them expected to be. This belonged to Albie first, then Wren, then the school. But they knew when the hour came because the castle seemed to quiet around the side chamber. Even the Great Hall emptied earlier than usual, as if students sensed that a door was opening somewhere nearby and did not want to be found gawking at it.
Mira sat on the staircase landing with a book unopened in her lap. Tavin sat two steps below her, turning Lottie’s latest letter over in his hands without reading it. Ellis leaned against the wall, arms folded loosely, not as armor this time but because he did not know where else to put his hands. Rowan had wanted to wait with them, but Professor Sprout had taken him to Herbology on purpose, saying that seedlings did not pause their growing because older students were tangled in moral weather.
Clara stood by the window at the end of the corridor with Alina. Albie had asked her not to wait outside the door. He said he wanted her near, but not pressed against his old wound. Clara had accepted that after three questions and one long look at Jesus, who told her that love does not need to stand in the doorway of every hard room to be real. Now she stood with her hands wrapped around the strap of her satchel, watching rainwater slide down the glass.
Inside the side chamber, Wren entered first under McGonagall’s supervision. He looked toward the chairs, then at the door, then at Jesus. His face was pale and hollowed by nights of remembering. He had been allowed clean robes, though plain ones, and his hands were no longer stained with ink. That made them look almost too bare.
“Sit there,” McGonagall said, pointing to the chair nearest the small table but not behind it.
Wren obeyed.
Jesus stood near the hearth. “Calder, you will not ask him to comfort you.”
Wren bowed his head. “I know.”
“You will not ask for forgiveness to ease your own burden.”
“I know.”
“You will tell the truth and receive what he chooses to give, even if what he gives is anger, silence, or departure.”
Wren’s mouth trembled. “I know.”
McGonagall looked at him sharply. “Do you?”
Wren closed his eyes. When he opened them, his voice was steadier. “I will not make him carry what belongs to me.”
“Good,” McGonagall said.
Then Albie entered.
He stopped just inside the door. Wren rose at once, too quickly, then seemed unsure whether standing might feel like pressure. He remained half risen until Albie looked at him.
“Sit,” Albie said.
Wren sat.
Albie took the chair opposite him. He did not remove his coat. He kept his hat in his lap. Jesus remained by the hearth. McGonagall stood beside the door, not as guard alone, but as witness for the school.
For several breaths, no one spoke. Albie studied Wren’s face, searching perhaps for the young teacher from his memory. Wren had aged beyond easy recognition, yet the eyes remained. That was what made Albie’s fingers tighten on his hat. The body had become frail. The harm had not.
Wren spoke first, then stopped himself after one word. “I—”
Albie lifted one hand. “No. I need to say something before you begin.”
Wren bowed his head.
Albie looked down at his hat, then back at him. “I have imagined this conversation many times without knowing I was imagining it. Sometimes you were cruel. Sometimes you begged. Sometimes I was clever enough to make you feel what I felt. Sometimes I did not speak at all. None of those imagined conversations made me free.”
Wren’s face crumpled, but he did not interrupt.
“I do not know what this one will do,” Albie continued. “I am not here because I know. I am here because the boy in that classroom left a star under his desk before you taught him to be ashamed of caring.”
Jesus’ eyes softened. McGonagall looked toward the fire.
Wren whispered, “I saw it in the record after Professor Jesus told me.”
Albie’s jaw tightened. “Do not speak of the star as if it belongs to the record.”
Wren flinched. “You are right.”
The correction was small, but Albie noticed that Wren accepted it without defense. He leaned back slightly, breathing through the old anger rising in his chest.
Wren folded his hands tightly. “Albie Trent, I harmed you. I placed you before a mirror and used your fear as material for my pride. I made your classmates witnesses to your humiliation. I called it instruction. It was cruelty. I wrote about it afterward in language that protected me and abandoned you. I helped bury the truth when you left. I cannot return what I took from you.”
Albie’s face grew still.
Wren continued, voice shaking. “I will not ask you to forgive me. I will not ask you to understand my history. I will not say I meant well. I did not love you. I loved the feeling of not being the frightened boy at the front of the room anymore.”
The words struck the room hard. McGonagall’s face tightened. Jesus remained still, but the sorrow in His eyes deepened. Albie looked at Wren for a long time.
“At least that is honest,” he said.
Wren nodded. “It is late.”
“Yes,” Albie said. “Very.”
The word very carried fifty years. It carried the burned letter, the son not sent to Hogwarts, the granddaughter nearly kept from wonder, the life arranged around caution, the wife who had argued for courage, the father who had not known how to tell a child that a school had broken something in him and he had never let it heal.
Wren did not try to soften it.
Albie’s voice lowered. “Did you think of me after I left?”
Wren closed his eyes. “At first, yes.”
Albie waited.
“Then I made myself stop,” Wren said. “Not because I had no guilt. Because I had guilt, and I hated what it asked of me.”
“What did it ask?”
“That I stop.”
The room became very quiet.
Wren looked at him, tears standing in his eyes. “I did to others what I had done to you because stopping would have required admitting that your suffering was not weakness. It was accusation.”
Albie drew a long, unsteady breath. “I was thirteen.”
“I know.”
“No,” Albie said, and this time anger entered clearly. “You know it now. You did not know it then.”
Wren bowed his head. “No. I did not.”
“You told me to stop caring.”
“Yes.”
“I believed you.”
Wren’s face twisted. “I am sorry.”
“I believed you for longer than you taught at this school. I believed you when my wife wanted our son to come here. I believed you when my son looked at magic like it was a door and I told him doors were dangerous. I believed you when Clara’s letter came and I put it in the stove.” Albie’s voice cracked. “I became faithful to a lie you gave me in one classroom.”
Wren covered his mouth, but he did not look away.
Albie leaned forward. “That is what you did.”
Wren whispered, “Yes.”
The room held the truth without trying to arrange it into something gentler. Jesus did not interrupt. McGonagall did not step in. Some pain had to be spoken to the one who had caused it before mercy could be mentioned without insult.
Albie sat back. His hands trembled around his hat. “I do not know whether I forgive you.”
Wren closed his eyes. “I understand.”
“I do not want to hate you.”
Wren opened his eyes again, startled by the greater difficulty in that sentence.
Albie looked toward the fire. “Hating you kept me tied to that room in a way I did not want to see. But forgiving you too quickly would feel like handing the boy I was back to another adult who wants the room tidy.”
Jesus spoke softly then. “You do not need to make the room tidy.”
Albie nodded without looking away from the fire. “Good. Because I cannot.”
Wren bowed his head. “I will accept whatever you choose.”
Albie looked back at him. “No. You will accept what is true. I am choosing only what belongs to me.”
Wren blinked, then nodded slowly. “Yes. That is better.”
A faint, painful smile crossed Albie’s face. “You should know that hearing you agree with me is deeply strange.”
Wren let out a broken breath that was almost a laugh, but it died quickly. “It is strange for me as well.”
The moment did not become light. It only became less impossible.
Albie reached into his coat and withdrew a folded paper. Wren looked at it with visible fear.
“This is not for you,” Albie said.
Wren lowered his eyes.
“It is for the archive. I wrote what I remember. Not all of it. Enough for now. I want it kept with the record.” He paused. “Not as evidence only. As my words.”
McGonagall stepped forward. “They will be kept as yours.”
Albie handed the paper to her, not to Wren. The choice mattered. Wren had once taken his fear and made a record that belonged to the institution. Now Albie gave his own words to the school without surrendering ownership of his pain.
Wren looked at the folded statement in McGonagall’s hands. “Thank you.”
Albie’s eyes sharpened.
Wren corrected himself at once. “No. That was wrong. You did not do this for me.”
Albie studied him. “You are learning.”
“I am trying.”
“That is better than what you were doing before.”
Wren accepted the sentence with a small nod. It was not absolution. It was not friendship. It was not even peace. It was a true thing placed in the room without pretending to be more.
Albie stood. Wren began to rise, then stayed seated, remembering. Albie looked at Jesus.
“I am done,” he said.
Jesus nodded. “Then you may go.”
Albie turned toward the door, then stopped. He looked back at Wren one final time. “The boy I was cared. You did not kill that.”
Wren wept then, silently, with his head bowed.
Albie continued, “I needed you to know that.”
Then he left.
In the corridor, Clara saw his face and went to him at once. He opened his arms, and she stepped into them, not as a child being clutched by fear, but as one person meeting another after a hard room. He held her carefully. She held him tightly.
“Did you forgive him?” she asked into his coat.
Albie closed his eyes. “Not today.”
“Good,” she said.
He laughed through tears, and the sound moved down the corridor to where Mira, Tavin, and Ellis sat on the staircase landing. They stood when they heard it. Albie looked at them and nodded once, too full to speak. They nodded back.
Inside the chamber, Wren remained seated. McGonagall stood with Albie’s folded statement in her hand. Jesus moved from the hearth and sat in the chair Albie had left, facing Wren. The old professor looked at Him with a face emptied of defense.
“He did not forgive me,” Wren said.
“No.”
“It hurts.”
“Yes.”
Wren swallowed. “I deserve that.”
Jesus’ voice was gentle but firm. “Do not turn pain into payment. Let it become repentance.”
Wren looked down. “I do not know how to live in repentance without making it another room where I punish myself.”
McGonagall’s expression shifted. It was a question she recognized too, perhaps in institutional form. How does a school repent without becoming frozen in shame? How does a person carry guilt without worshiping it? How does consequence serve healing instead of becoming a darker pride?
Jesus answered, “You live by telling the truth, accepting consequence, repairing what can be repaired, and refusing to make your guilt the center of every room.”
Wren looked at Him. “What is the center then?”
Jesus’ face held quiet authority. “God’s mercy. Not because it makes little of the harm, but because it is the only power strong enough to keep harm from becoming lord over everyone it touched.”
Wren bowed his head. McGonagall looked at the folded statement in her hand, and for a moment she seemed to carry not only Albie’s words but the whole burden of a school learning how to remember rightly.
Later that afternoon, Albie’s statement was placed in the archive. He came with Clara, McGonagall, Jesus, Mira, Tavin, Ellis, and Rowan. Cassian was already there with Professor Sinistra, and when he saw Clara enter, he stepped back at once. McGonagall had told him not to approach her. He obeyed. Clara noticed. She also noticed that he held a file in both hands and looked as if he had been working rather than waiting to be seen.
The archive shelf labeled Truth Kept for Healing opened at McGonagall’s touch. Albie stood before it with his statement. He had asked to place it himself. His hand shook as he slid the folded paper into a clear protective sleeve beside the copied record of Wren’s lesson and the corrected entry bearing his name.
The label beneath it formed slowly in careful black script.
Albie Trent: Personal Statement, Given Freely.
Albie stared at the words. “Given freely,” he said softly.
McGonagall nodded. “Yes.”
Clara slipped her hand into his. “That matters.”
“It does,” he said.
Cassian watched from the far table. His face was pale, but he did not look away. Clara turned and looked at him. The whole room seemed to become aware of the line between them. Cassian lowered his eyes first, not in contempt this time, but in restraint. He did not use his guilt to pull her attention closer. He let her look, decide nothing, and turn back.
Jesus saw it. So did Ellis.
When the archive work resumed, Cassian returned to his file. Ellis joined him at Sinistra’s request, because the next report involved student conduct after the thread incident and needed careful language. For several minutes they worked without speaking. The silence was awkward, but not hostile.
Cassian finally said, “You saw him? Trent?”
“Yes,” Ellis said.
“Did he forgive Wren?”
“No.”
Cassian’s quill stopped. “Good.”
Ellis looked at him.
Cassian’s mouth tightened. “I mean, not good. I mean, I do not know what I mean.”
Ellis returned to the report. “That may be the most honest sentence you have said all week.”
Cassian gave him a brief look, then almost smiled. It faded quickly.
After a while, he said, “I wrote Oren’s name again last night.”
Ellis did not answer too quickly.
Cassian continued, “I wrote what Jesus told me. That he should have been allowed to stop. Then I wrote that I should have been allowed to grieve without becoming useful.”
Ellis felt that sentence settle between them. “That is true.”
Cassian’s eyes stayed on the parchment. “It does not feel true yet.”
“It may still be true before it feels that way.”
Cassian looked at him. “You sound like them.”
“I know,” Ellis said. “It is alarming.”
They worked until the report no longer hid behind soft words. Cassian crossed out inappropriate conduct and wrote targeted cruelty. Ellis added, The student responsible is under restorative discipline and is not to be treated as either spectacle or proof that repair is impossible. Sinistra read the line and nodded.
By supper, the castle felt quieter again, but not empty. Albie and Clara sat with Hagrid near the end of the staff table because Clara had asked him whether creatures ever refused to return to places where they had been hurt. Hagrid’s answer lasted twenty minutes and involved a hippogriff, three kneazles, a burned hut, and a goat that may or may not have been the same goat from Hal Brock’s greenhouse story. Clara listened with intense attention. Albie listened too, smiling faintly whenever Hagrid lost the thread and found it again by accident.
Mira received another letter from her mother during supper. It was short. Celeste wrote that she had placed her unsent letter to her father in a locked drawer rather than burning it. She did not know whether that was courage or caution, but she was leaving it unburned. Mira read the line twice and held the paper against her chest for one brief moment before folding it away. She did not need to show anyone. Some healing was still private, and private no longer had to mean hidden.
Tavin read Lottie’s newest letter after dessert. It included a drawing of a castle with a large mouth and the words Do not let it eat Clara either. Tavin showed it to Mira, who showed it to Clara, who decided Lottie sounded sensible. Tavin promised to write that back and immediately regretted it because Lottie would take sensible as a title and begin issuing instructions to Hogwarts by owl.
Ellis sat at the Slytherin table with Rowan on one side and an empty place on the other. Cassian entered late. He paused as if expecting the table to rearrange against him. Some students looked away. Others watched too openly. Cassian seemed ready to choose isolation as punishment before anyone else could choose it for him.
Rowan, with the blunt grace of a child who had decided enough things were complicated, pointed to the empty seat beside Ellis. “Sit there.”
Cassian stared at him. “Why?”
“Because standing there makes everyone look at you, and that is annoying.”
Ellis closed his eyes briefly.
Cassian looked at the empty seat, then at Ellis. “Is this another restorative exercise?”
Ellis picked up his cup. “No. It is supper.”
After a moment, Cassian sat.
No one welcomed him warmly. No one pretended nothing had happened. Rowan asked him to pass the potatoes, and Cassian did. Ellis corrected a younger student’s pronunciation of a spell without making him feel foolish. Cassian ate in silence for a while, then told Rowan that his essay introduction was still too dramatic. Rowan looked offended until Ellis said, “He is right.” The table moved on. It was not reconciliation. It was a meal. Sometimes that was the next right thing.
That night, Albie asked to visit the Defense classroom once more before he and Clara returned to the village lodging. Clara came with him to the door, but this time she did not enter. She sat on the corridor bench with the repaired cloth in her lap. Jesus went inside with Albie, and Mira, Tavin, and Ellis remained near the statue, close enough to be present but far enough to let the room belong to him.
Albie went straight to the desk with the carved star. He knelt slowly and touched the underside with two fingers. “I thought about taking it,” he said.
Jesus stood beside him. “The desk?”
Albie looked up with a startled laugh. “No. The piece of wood.”
“You may ask McGonagall.”
“No,” Albie said, looking back at the desk. “It belongs here. Not to the harm. To the boy before it.”
He stood with effort. “I would like Clara to sit here someday if she chooses.”
Jesus’ face softened. “That can be arranged.”
Albie looked toward the front of the room. “And if she does not?”
“Then the star remains.”
The old man nodded, satisfied in a way that looked like peace but did not pretend to be complete. He walked to the doorway, then stopped just before leaving. He turned back to the room.
“I cared,” he said.
The words were quiet. They were not for Wren, not for the school, not even for Jesus alone. They were for the boy who had carved the star and the man who had spent decades thinking the boy was gone. Then Albie stepped into the corridor and took Clara’s hand.
“Ready?” she asked.
“For supper to stop repeating on me, yes.”
“That is not what I meant.”
“I know.”
She studied him, then nodded. “You are better.”
“I am beginning,” he said.
Clara accepted that.
After they left, Mira touched the brass plate lightly. Tavin stood beside her, looking at the threads. Ellis lingered a few steps away, watching Cassian walk down the corridor alone toward the dungeons, slower than usual but not hiding.
Mira said, “It feels like things are closing.”
Tavin looked worried. “Closing good or closing bad?”
“Good, I think. Not finished. Just less open in every direction.”
Ellis nodded. “No new doors for a while would be welcome.”
Behind them, Jesus stepped from the Defense classroom. “Then help close the ones already opened rightly.”
Mira looked at Him. “How?”
“By not abandoning what truth has begun when the fear fades.”
The sentence followed them to their common rooms.
Late that night, Jesus returned not to the classroom, but to the side chamber where Albie and Wren had spoken. The fire had gone low. The chairs remained where they had been, two facing each other with enough space between them for fifty years of harm and one hard hour of truth. Jesus knelt between them, hands open, and prayed for apologies that did not demand forgiveness, for wounded people allowed to speak without tidying their pain, for wrongdoers required to repent without becoming the center, and for every room where mercy had to wait outside until truth was ready to open the door.
The castle was quiet around Him. In the corridor, the blue and green threads held. In the archive, Albie’s statement rested under its true name. In the Defense classroom, the small carved star waited beneath the desk, no longer lost to the boy who made it.
Chapter Fifteen: The Desk Where the Star Remained
Clara chose the desk with the carved star on a morning when no one expected her to choose anything at all. The Defense classroom had been put back into its uneven rows again, not as a test this time, but because Professor McGonagall wanted the room to feel like a classroom and not always like a circle gathered around a wound. The sunlight came in low through the windows and caught the sealed mark on the floor where the book had collapsed into dust. It did not look frightening in that light. It looked like a scar the room no longer tried to hide.
Albie walked with Clara to the threshold. He had done that several times now. Each time, he stood a little differently. The first time, his whole body had leaned backward while his feet stayed in place, as if the hallway and the classroom were arguing over him. Now he still looked frightened, but not ruled. He carried fear like a heavy coat he had not yet learned how to remove, but he no longer mistook the coat for his skin.
Clara stopped outside the door and looked at the rows. Mira sat near the front with her book already open. Tavin sat two seats behind her, trying not to look encouraging because he had been told encouragement could become pressure if his face became too involved. Ellis sat by the aisle, not as a guard this time, but because Rowan had taken the seat beside him and insisted that the light was better there. Cassian sat near the back under McGonagall’s watchful eye, allowed into the lesson but not allowed to make himself invisible through sarcasm or silence. The room held many unfinished things, but for once it did not feel like they were all waiting to pounce.
Jesus stood beside the teacher’s desk. He did not call Clara in. He did not look away as if the moment did not matter. He simply waited.
Clara looked at Albie. “Is it still there?”
“Yes,” he said, and his voice caught on the word.
She stepped into the classroom with both feet.
No one moved. That was the first mercy the class gave her. No gasp, no applause, no whisper, no dramatic shift of attention. Only the quiet sound of Clara’s boots against the stone floor as she walked down the second row. She stopped beside the desk Albie had shown her the night before, the desk where a boy had carved a star before a cruel lesson tried to bury the boy who made it. Clara touched the top of the desk, then bent slightly and looked underneath.
She saw the small uneven star.
Her face changed, but she did not cry. She pulled out the chair and sat down.
Albie stood at the doorway with one hand pressed lightly to the frame. Jesus looked at him, and for a moment the whole lesson seemed to pause around the old man’s breathing. Albie closed his eyes once, opened them, and nodded. He did not enter. He did not need to. Clara had entered, and she had not entered alone, because the boy who carved the star had somehow come with her.
Jesus began the lesson without turning her choice into an announcement. “Today we will talk about names.”
Several students shifted. Names had not been safe in the Mirror Room. The cursed book had written them, twisted them, and tried to turn wounds into identities. Mira looked down at her hands, remembering the ink that once crawled beneath her skin. Ellis rubbed his thumb across the pale scar on his palm. Rowan leaned forward slightly. Cassian’s face tightened, and he looked toward the open door as if he wanted the option of escape more than he would admit.
Jesus wrote one word on the board.
Given.
Then beneath it, He wrote another.
Taken.
He set the chalk down. “Some names are given in love. Some are taken from pain. Some are placed on people by fear, pride, family, cruelty, or shame. Defense requires knowing the difference.”
A Ravenclaw raised her hand. “Are we talking about actual names or what people call us?”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
The answer caused a few students to frown. Mira almost smiled. Jesus often answered in ways that made the question larger instead of smaller.
He looked around the room. “A name can be the word your mother spoke over you with love. A name can be the insult you began believing. A name can be the reputation others built around one mistake. A name can be the role you accepted because it made you feel safe. The darkness that came through the Mirror Room used taken names. Coward. Failure. Burden. Weak. Unlovable. Too much. Not enough. Those were not names given by God.”
The room remained still. No one wrote notes. That was rare enough to make Professor McGonagall, who stood near the back, look almost startled.
Jesus turned to the board again and wrote another word.
Called.
He faced them. “A person may spend many years answering to what was taken. Mercy begins teaching the soul to hear what is called.”
Clara’s hand rose slowly from Albie’s old desk.
Jesus nodded. “Yes, Clara.”
“What if the taken name feels more believable?”
The question was plain, and because it was plain, it entered everyone. Albie’s face tightened in the doorway. Cassian looked down. Ellis swallowed once.
Jesus answered, “Then you do not pretend it feels false. You bring it into truth until it loses authority.”
Clara looked at the carved star beneath her desk, though she could not see it from where she sat. “Does that take a long time?”
“Yes.”
She seemed relieved by that. “Good. I do not like being told hard things should be quick.”
“No,” Jesus said. “They often should not be.”
The lesson moved into practice. Jesus asked each student to take a small square of parchment from the stack on the front desk. On one side, they were to write a taken name they had been tempted to believe. They did not have to show it to anyone. On the other side, they were to write a truer sentence. Not a slogan, not a forced positive phrase, not something cheerful enough to avoid the pain. A true sentence.
Mira stared at her parchment for a long time. The taken name came easily, which bothered her. Conditional. It was not a word someone had called her directly, but it was the name she had lived under, the sense that love came with terms so deeply understood they no longer needed to be spoken. On the other side, she wanted to write loved. It felt too simple. It felt like cheating. She sat with her quill above the page until the better sentence came. I am loved before I succeed, and I am still loved when I must grow. She read it twice and felt the old fear object. The fear had objections to everything now. She no longer had to treat every objection as wisdom.
Tavin wrote Responsible for everything on one side. He looked at it and made a face because it sounded absurd when written plainly, yet he knew how seriously he had lived by it. On the other side he wrote, I can love faithfully without pretending to be God. He almost added a joke after it, then stopped. The sentence needed to stand without decoration.
Ellis wrote Useful or unwanted. The words looked smaller than they felt. He had never seen them together like that, and seeing them made his chest tighten. On the other side, he wrote, I am not a tool, and love is not payment. He stared at love for a long time. It still felt like a language he understood mostly by absence. But the sentence was true, even if it had not yet become easy.
Rowan wrote Left behind on his parchment. Then he pressed his quill so hard on the other side that the ink blotted. He started again and wrote, Missing her does not mean I must follow every voice. He folded the parchment quickly, as if the words might become too visible if left open.
Cassian did not write at first. His parchment remained blank while the room filled with scratching quills. McGonagall noticed but did not step forward. Jesus saw and waited. Cassian’s face had closed in that old way, but the closure did not look as strong as before. It looked tired. Finally, he wrote Hesitation is death on one side. His hand shook after he finished. On the other side, he wrote nothing for so long that Ellis, sitting a few rows ahead, felt the silence behind him.
Jesus walked quietly to the back and stood beside Cassian’s desk.
Cassian stared at the blank side. “I do not know the truer sentence.”
Jesus looked at the words already written. “What should have been true for Oren?”
Cassian’s jaw tightened. “That he was allowed to stop.”
“And for you?”
Cassian closed his eyes. He breathed in once, sharply, then wrote with a hand that nearly tore the parchment. I may pause without becoming worthless.
He put the quill down and looked away. Jesus did not praise him in front of the class. He only rested one hand briefly on the desk and moved on. Cassian looked at the handprint that was not there after He left.
Clara wrote on her parchment with fierce concentration. Mira could see only the movement of her quill, not the words. Later, Clara would tell Albie what she wrote, but not the class. On one side, she wrote Inherited fear. On the other, she wrote, I can honor pain without letting it choose my whole life. When she folded the parchment, she tucked it inside the satchel that had belonged to her father, beside the repaired blue and green cloth.
Jesus asked them to hold the folded parchments in their hands. “You will not destroy these today. Some of you may later. Some may keep them. Some may rewrite them when the truth grows clearer. For now, you will feel the difference between carrying a taken name in hiding and carrying truth in the light.”
A student near the window asked, “What if someone finds it?”
“Then guard it wisely,” Jesus said. “Not every truth belongs in every hand.”
Mira thought of her mother’s letter in her trunk and understood. Truth in the light did not mean truth scattered carelessly. It meant truth no longer ruled from darkness.
After class, Clara stayed seated after everyone else began gathering books. Albie remained at the doorway, as if afraid to move before she did. Jesus walked to the desk where she sat and lowered Himself into the chair beside it.
“Is the desk heavy?” He asked.
Clara ran one finger along a scratch in the wood. “Yes.”
“Too heavy?”
She thought for a moment. “Not today.”
Albie closed his eyes in the doorway.
Clara looked at Jesus. “Can I sit here again?”
“Yes.”
“Will people make it strange?”
Jesus glanced toward the classroom where Mira, Tavin, Ellis, and Rowan were trying very hard not to look like they were listening. “Some may.”
Clara sighed. “People are difficult.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “And be
from
Notes I Won’t Reread
Yes, folks, I’m a very sarcastic man who sits down and writes whenever he gets bored, like one day it’ll change the universe and the way im living into a magical, wonderful cartoonish show when the cartoon character in one show is beaten to death, then the next show he’s fine like it never happened. But unfortunately, I’m not a character in a cartoon show, you’re asking, “What are you doing back here again?” Well, don’t ask stupid questions again. I don’t even know, and I have nothing to talk about. Nothing in here would make sense, but I’ll continue writing because what’s the point? really whats the point if I did or if I didn’t? What’s the point of me risking my thoughts if they’ll just rot somewhere between unfinished drafts and cold cups of tea? Maybe that’s all this is. A man talking to walls and pretending they answer back. Maybe writing is just another illness people romanticize because it sounds prettier than saying” I don’t know what to do with myself.” Still, I write. Not because I think I’m profound. No, Half of the things in my head sound like they were stitched together by an exhausted philosopher and a sleep-deprived office worker trapped in the same skull. Writing at least makes the noises stand still for a moment. And maybe one day someone will read this and think,” finally, another human being who sounds just as lost.” Spoiler: I don’t think that will happen, but hey, hoping works right?. Or you know, maybe they’ll just laugh. And that’s fine too. I think people overstimate purpose anyway. The universe doesn’t hand out explanations like little participation trophies. Most people wake up, drink coffee that tastes like burnt dirt, go to jobs they hate, smile at people they secretly cannot stand, then sleep just to repeat it all again, yet somehow they continue. Like stray dogs surviving winter. So maybe that point isn’t some grand revelation.
Maybe the point is simply continuing despite not having one.
Or maybe I keep writing because somewhere in the back of my mind, I expect someone to understand it. Not the words themselves, but the spaces between them. The exhaustion. The noise. The strange comfort in pretending none of it matters.
Maybe every sentence I write is just another hand left reaching into empty air.
Maybe I’m not waiting for purpose at all. Maybe I’m just waiting for you.
Sincerely, the man who keeps writing as if someone, somewhere, will finally read between the lines, or just a drunk man.
from
The happy place
The memory is fragmented
I get these patches which might be gray or colourful, even some with flowers on there, but there’s so much missing, I feel like
It’s going to have to be a quilt, then
That’s the best I can do, unfortunately
I remember one Walpurgis fire, or say Beltane (for I am a heathen), and I was eating hot dogs by the giant fire and it’d just started to darken and I might have been with my friend but then suddenly some neighbour’s kid (technically also a neighbour of course) threw a firecracker or shot a rocket which exploded near me. I heard it ringing in my right ear, and I started crying because I got a shock and I walked home with the ringing in my ear and I think back now that I feel sorry for myself then
For the child I was.
And I thought that that was a breakthrough in a sense, because thinking back on who I was then always used to fill me with contempt.
Now that I think on it, I haven’t got any pictures of myself from this time either…
from
Theory of Meaning
Selftranscendence
“The most satisfying thing in life is to have been able to give a large part of one’s self to others.” ― Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
#SelfTranscendence #Humanity #TeilhardDeChardin
from
Theory of Meaning
Responding
“In the final analysis, the questions of why bad things happen to good people transmutes itself into some very different questions, no longer asking why something happened, but asking how we will respond, what we intend to do now that it happened.” ― Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
#Humanity #TeilhardDeChardin #Responsibility
from
Littoral

something about the grey i keep not saying
the cranes are still i am also still this is not the same thing
the river was here before anyone decided where it ends
habitat 67 stacks its windows into a question i already answered wrong
somewhere in the pilings the current keeps moving through what we built to control it
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

Today I'll follow the Indianapolis 500 INDYCAR Race. My local FOX affiliate TV station will broadcast their Indianapolis 500 Preview Show at 9:00 AM CST with the race following immediately after.
And the adventure continues.
from
the casual critic
#nonfiction #books #politics #history
With bombs dropping in Gaza, Ukraine, Sudan and Iran, and rearmament firmly back on the political agenda worldwide, there is no escaping the age-old question: why is there war? Instinctively, we might assume that states go to war to get something they want. War, as per Von Clausewitz’ famous dictum, is then simply the continuation of diplomacy by other means. Unsatisfied with such a simple answer, the causes of war remain the topic of scholarly debate between opposed schools within the somewhat detached academic field of international relations (IR).
The Empire of Civil Society (hereafter ‘Empire’) is a PhD monograph by Justin Rosenberg that forms part of this debate, assailing the dominant school of neorealism – Wikipedia”) from a marginal Marxist position. It is both an argument against neorealism’s core tenets, and an argument for a reappraisal of the utility of Marxist theory to international relations. First published in 1994, it feels surprisingly relevant to the world of 2026 and the conflicts that are raging across the world today.
Neorealism emerged in the United States after World War Two as a fusion of the old idea of the ‘balance of power’ and game theory. The school took its name as a claim to a hard-nosed tradition of statecraft that says that while peace may be nice, the nature of the international system means conflict and war are inevitable, always have been, and always will be. In very short summary, neorealism posits that because there is no central authority in the world to govern inter-state behaviour, there is a perpetual anarchy giving rise to a Hobbesian conflict of all against all. It doesn’t matter what states want, or who is in charge, or what their domestic politics are. Any state must be constantly vigilant lest their security or power is surpassed by others.
This is the sort of abstraction reminiscent of Newtonian physics where for convenience one might momentarily assume that all objects are frictionless spherical penguins in the vacuum of space. And such simplifications have their uses, but they must justify themselves. Empire contends that neorealism does not provide such justification, and offers a competing theory rooted in the specific mode of production of states, arguing that conflict between them emerges predominantly as a result of how they must reproduce domestically, rather than as the inevitable function of a transhistorical states system.
Rosenberg mounts a dual challenge to neorealism’s dominant position. First, Empire undermines neorealism’s claim to transhistoricity by demonstrating that its favourite examples (Greek and Italian city states) were both quite unlike modern sovereign states and were driven to conflict for historically specific reasons that derived from their political, social and economic structure. Empire than expands on this by investigating the early modern Spanish (Castilian) and Portuguese empires to show that even at the supposed dawn of the states system era, international actions were shaped predominantly by domestic considerations and constraints and impulses resulting from the level and configuration of the political economy at that time, rather than as blind reaction to an international balance of power. It is a persuasive argument – insofar as I am qualified to judge – and beyond the realm of IR it also reads as a detailed and interesting history of the time when Europe’s development began to diverge from the rest of the world. As with any history of this period, it is perhaps unintentionally a salutary reminder that for most of history Europe was marginal to global political economy, and that its ascendence was in no small part the result of the violent destruction of pre-existing manufacturing and mercantile capacity in Asia, culminating in the devastating famines in the 19th century that were described in Late Victorian Holocausts.
Having surveyed this history, Rosenberg then proceeds to contrast it with the modern states system, arguing that rather than something eternal it is actually historically contingent. Unsurprising for a Marxist, Rosenberg finds the motive force of history in the specific mode of production of capitalist economies, which at the state level expresses itself in the near complete separation of the economic and political realm. The assumed anarchic system of ‘free and independent’ states is mirrored in the anarchic market of ‘free and equal’ individuals, who can contract with one another at will, unencumbered by the reciprocal bonds of obligation that pertained in, for example, European feudal societies. But this formal, political equality both obscures and is necessary for the profound economic inequality that exists between those who own the means of production and those who do not. Empire thus seeks the roots of state behaviour in the historically contingent form of capitalism, but avoids the crude socialist simplification that states are merely imperial extensions for their capitalist class.
Does this perspective offer anything of value to our present moment? At first glance, the drive to rearmament appears to argue in the neorealists’ favour, with Europe in particular anxious to increase its security and/or power in a more geopolitically unstable and multipolar world where it can no longer rely on the United States as an ally. In the UK, (armchair) generals have quickly emerged to bemoan how the nation’s spending on ‘welfare’ enfeebles its ability to pursue its national interest. Yet on closer inspection, the notion that recent conflicts were not driven by the domestic politics of the instigating states is not tenable. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and American adventurism in Venezuela and Iran are evidently motivated by domestic considerations. The war in Iran in particular makes more sense when read as an effort to forcibly integrate Iran into the capitalist world system than as an inevitable result of some American ‘balance of power’ calculation. Israel, meanwhile, is waging a genocidal war on a people it explicitly refuses to recognise as a state. Perhaps the only ‘realist’ conflict is the one currently perpetrated in Sudan which, while technically a civil war, is being sustained by other nations using it as a proxy to increase their power, influence, or access to resources.
On the face of it therefore, reality seems rather at odds with the claims of the neorealists. Whether it supports Empire’s alternative proposition is hard to tell, as Rosenberg only gives the contours of a possible Marxist IR theory. The second edition ends with a rather self-deprecating afterword where Rosenberg admits that his intention to develop his theory further was diverted by his discovery of the theory of ‘uneven and combined development’ as proposed by Trotsky, which locates some of sources of geopolitical dynamism in the variety of states constituting the international system. Its logic suggests an intriguing possibility for an ‘end of history’ as the result of the complete subsumption of all states in the capitalist world order, ultimately equalising their development and depriving history of a motive force for want of diversity. An IR equivalent of the heat death of the universe. Though whether Rosenberg would have reached that conclusion cannot be inferred from where Empire finishes.
For a contribution to a specific debate within a specialised academic discipline, The Empire of Civil Society is surprisingly readable, in particular its historical chapters. While it remains a niche endeavour, its spirited argument for an IR theory rooted in human agency rather than impersonal and abstract systems is a necessary reminder that we must choose to make our own history, and that statesmen asking us to dissolve our political and class differences for the sake of some putative ‘national interest’ are seldom to be trusted.
from
Larry's 100
A psychedelic sci-fi treatise on class, labor and fashion served up by Riley with a superb cast having fun with serious politics. The film bursts with color, features Ray Harryhausen style special effects and has egalitarian excellence in filmmaking.
I Love Boosters holds a funhouse mirror to One Battle After Another, exemplified by the two films' lead characters, Corvette and Perfidia Beverly Hills. Their similarities and differences are stark. Riley's politics and black woman revolutionaries, even in this absurdist kaleidoscope, are more three-dimensional and authentic than P.T. Anderson's.
Demi Moore has never been better.
See it in the theater.
Bonus takes: – Academy, remember Keke Palmer at Oscar time – The MC5's Kick Out the Jams is my needle drop of the year (so far)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1xZegSgN8w&t=28s
#ILoveBooters #BootsRiley #KekePalmer #PTAnderson #OneBattleAfterAnother #PoliticalCinema #SciFi #ClassStruggle #DemiMoore #RayHarryhausen #FilmReview #Film #Larrys100 #100WordReview #100DaysToOffload
from witness.circuit
There was once a forest where every creature was born beneath the same silver moon.
The deer drank by its light. The owls opened their yellow eyes to it. The mice traveled safely through the grass because of it. Even the roots of the oldest trees seemed to remember the moon, though they had never seen the sky.
In those days, no animal asked where the moon lived. It was simply there, touching fur, feather, water, bark, stone, and breath. The lake held it. The eye held it. The night held it. Nothing was outside its shining.
But one winter, when the snow lay hard over the earth, a fox climbed the tallest black pine and looked up for a long time. When he came down, he said, “I have found the place where the moon lives.”
The animals gathered around him.
“Where?” asked the rabbits.
“Above us,” said the fox. “Far above us. So far that no paw, wing, claw, or antler may reach it. But I have seen its path, and I know the proper way to bow.”
The animals were impressed, for the fox spoke with great seriousness, and seriousness has often been mistaken for truth.
So he marked a circle in the snow and told them, “Stand here, and I will teach you how to face the moon.”
At first, this seemed harmless. The animals loved the moon and were glad to honor it. The fox taught them songs, and some of the songs were beautiful. He taught them silence, and some of the silence was deep. He taught them to lift their eyes, and sometimes, in that lifting, their hearts softened.
But over time, the circle became a fence.
The fox said, “Do not drink from the lake without remembering that the moon is not in the lake. That is only a reflection.”
He said, “Do not trust the light on your own fur. That is only borrowed.”
He said, “Do not listen to the old trees. They are rooted too low to know what shines above.”
And because the animals had become afraid of losing the moon, they believed him.
The deer no longer drank freely. They knelt first and asked whether the water was clean enough to hold the reflection.
The owls no longer trusted their seeing. They asked the fox which shadows were permitted.
The mice, who had once run joyfully through the grass, began to tremble in every patch of silver, wondering whether they had stepped wrongly through the light.
The fox grew old, and then other foxes took his place. They built a den beside the circle and hung bright stones at its entrance. They said the stones were not the moon, of course, but that one must pass beneath them in order to love the moon correctly.
Generations passed.
The young animals were now born inside the fence. They were told that beyond it lay confusion, error, darkness, and teeth.
One night, a small badger woke before the others. She had dreamed of running, though she had never been outside the circle. The moon was full, and the snow was shining so brightly that the whole forest seemed made of milk and breath.
She went to the edge of the fence.
There she found an old tortoise, half-buried in leaves, looking at nothing in particular.
“Are you lost?” asked the badger.
“No,” said the tortoise.
“Then why are you outside the circle?”
The tortoise blinked slowly. “I was here before the circle.”
The badger glanced nervously toward the foxes’ den. “But the moon is inside the teaching.”
“The moon is on your whiskers,” said the tortoise.
The badger frowned. “That is only a reflection.”
The tortoise said nothing.
“The moon is above us,” the badger insisted.
The tortoise said, “Look down.”
The badger looked down. The moon lay in every bead of frost.
“Look there.”
The moon trembled in the lake.
“There.”
It silvered the ribs of a fallen leaf.
“There.”
It rested in the black eye of a crow sleeping under cedar.
The badger became irritated. “Those are not the moon. Those are things the moon touches.”
The tortoise withdrew his head a little, as if listening from somewhere deeper than ears.
“At first,” he said, “they told you the moon was far away so you would look up. That was not such a terrible thing. Many creatures forget to look up. But then they told you it was only far away. Then they told you who could speak for it. Then they told you that your own seeing was dangerous. Then they sold you a path to what had never left.”
The badger felt something tighten in her chest.
“If the moon is everywhere,” she whispered, “why did they build the fence?”
“Because a creature who knows the moon only above him may be led by the neck,” said the tortoise. “But a creature who finds it in his own breath is difficult to own.”
The badger looked back at the sleeping animals inside the circle. She saw their chains then, though they were made of no metal. They were made of reverence bent into fear. They were made of songs that had forgotten their singing. They were made of the belief that light must be reached, earned, guarded, explained, and granted.
At the mouth of the den, one fox opened his eyes.
He smiled gently, as foxes do when they are most dangerous.
“Little badger,” he called, “come back. You are wandering from the moon.”
The badger looked up.
The moon was there.
She looked down.
The moon was there.
She looked at the fox.
Even there, horribly and beautifully, the moon was shining.
And this was the strangest thing of all: the fox had never stolen the moon. He had only taught the animals to doubt the light by which they saw him.
The badger stepped through the fence.
Nothing happened.
No thunder broke the sky. No shadow swallowed her. No moon withdrew from the world.
The snow shone.
The trees breathed.
The lake held its silver face.
Behind her, from within the circle, a young rabbit whispered, “What do you see?”
The badger did not know how to answer without building another fence.
So she only said, “Come and drink.”
from
Rippple's Blog

Stay entertained thanks to our Weekly Tracker giving you next week's Anticipated Movies & Shows, Most Watched & Returning Favorites, and Shows Changes & Popular Trailers.
= Project Hail Mary= The Punisher: One Last Killnew Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan: Ghost War+6 Mortal Kombat IInew Lee Cronin's The Mummy= The Super Mario Galaxy Movienew Normalnew The Crash-6 Apex-3 Remarkably Bright Creatures= The Boys= FROM= Euphorianew Dutton Ranch-1 Your Friends & Neighbors-1 Marshals+2 Widow's Bay-2 Tracker-2 For All Mankindnew The TestamentsHi, I’m Kevin 👋. Product Manager at Trakt and creator of Rippple. If you’d like to support what I'm building, you can download Rippple for Trakt, explore the open source project, or go Trakt VIP.
from Things Left Unsaid
At the end of 2019 I could barely run even a minute to catch a bus. Then at the beginning of October 2021, less than 2 years later, I completed my first marathon. I say that I completed, and not ran my first full (42.2k) marathon. I was doing more walking than running after about 25km, but I did achieve my main goal, and I crossed the finish line (5:17:05).
This post is sort of a condensed version of things that got me from never having run before to completing a marathon.
It all started in late summer of 2019 when I developed a rather significant pain in my hip that turned out to be an inflamed tendon. The pain was radiating down my entire right leg, and was most severe when I was sitting or laying down. Oddly enough, and I suppose luckily, being at work on my feet all day was what provided me relief.
That pain lead me to some rather torturous sessions of physiotherapy. The way the physiotherapist described it to me was that the tendon was inflamed and swollen, and when I was not on my feet and being mobile the tendon was slack, and the inflammation was resting against my hip bone. It was like a bad toothache level of pain. It was so bad that I could not sleep without taking pain medication.
She gave me some exercises and stretches to do. I kind of resented doing those exercises at first, but begrudgingly did them anyway a couple times a day. It evolved into a daily routine that reminded me of an earlier time in my life. Back when I was in my 20's, when I used to have a pretty solid fitness routine.
The pain finally started to ease off. It was a few weeks before it was tolerable enough for me to sleep without medication. It was still there, and I was still going for physio, but I could at least sleep and sit down without being in agony. Not long after, the pain faded away completely.
At around that same time I had worked a half shift of overtime on a Saturday. I was walking to the bus stop on my way home. I saw the bus I needed sitting, waiting to make a left turn before it would arrive at the bus stop. I thought, 'if I run, I can get to the bus stop before the bus.' So I ran. Altogether I think it was about 30 to 40 seconds. I made it to the bus stop just as the bus pulled up.
I got on the bus and sat down. I was sitting there completely out of breath, gasping for air. My heart was pounding so hard. Like it might explode out of my ribcage. I sat there waiting for it to ease off. But it was not easing off at all. I felt panic, which most likely didn't help much. I remember thinking, oh my god, I am going to have some sort of cardiac episode on a transit bus. Then it did ease off, and slowly went back to normal. It was elevated long enough to frighten me.
That pain in my hip, and then that incident on the bus were two major things that motivated me to start taking better care of myself. I kept on doing the physio stretching routine long after I felt like I no longer needed to, and then at the very end of 2019 I started going to the free gym at the building where I live.
2020, a new year, began. I was even in the gym on New Year's Day. Quite motivated to get healthier.
Then in March,
COVID
I thought, well, I wanted to get fit, and now with a deadly virus spreading around the world; getting fit is likely even more important. I wasn't about to give up on it even though everything was mostly pushed to the backburner, and I suddenly had no access to the gym.
The paramount focus of all my activities then was improving my cardio fitness. My original plan for that was to use cardio equipment at the gym. With that taken away from me I decided to give running a try. So, when most people were in a panic, and freaking out about there being no toilet paper to buy, and panic shopping groceries until the shelves were empty, I went out and bought my first pair of running shoes.
Then on the 16th of March 2020, I ran for the very first time in my entire life. It was quite difficult, and felt rather awkward. I felt heavy and clumsy and became out of breath very quickly. I managed 3.84km, and it was more walking than running.
I kept at it though. Kept adding distance. Felt my cardio health improving. Week after week I could run farther than the last without walking. It felt good. I found that I really liked running in many ways, and I was gradually becoming healthier than I had ever been in my entire life. Since that day in March 2020 I have ran more days than not.
Near the end of 2020 I had a thought:
'I'm turning 50 in July of 2021. Wouldn't it be crazy if I ran a marathon in the same year that I turn 50?'
Once I started thinking it, I couldn't stop thinking it. Then sometime between Christmas and the New Year I started searching online for marathons that I could possibly sign up for. I found one, and it was open for registration. The event was October 2021. I registered for it as a Christmas 2020 present to myself. Not only was I registered for an official marathon, it was also going to be my very first live running event ever. And it was the year I turned 50. Insane? Yes. Absolutely totally insane. I showed up though, and I completed the entire 42.2km, and crossed the finish line.