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you had me at "let's burn down wizarding britain"
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"You are a continual delight."

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She wiggles, kissing her Lady.

"So you're also after the wand and cloak, then?"

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"Yes. The cloak I believe to be in the possession of one of the Noble Families of this country."

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"Huh. What about the wand?"

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"Its last known possessor," she says, "was Albus Dumbledore, who claimed it from Gellert Grindelwald."

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"Ooo," she says. "How does one claim it, then? The myth claims murder, but Grindelwald isn't dead..."

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"Murder is sufficient, but not necessary. The key is defeat, a defeat of consequence, one that proves you have been overmastered."

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"So destroying Dumbledore kills two birds with one stone."

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"Ideally. He may have lost the wand already."

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"He'd have had to keep whatever defeat very quiet..."

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"Unlikely, yes, but still possible."

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"So just something to keep an eye out for."

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She nods.

"The Elder Wand has a distinctive appearance. If we can see what his current wand looks like, we will know one way or the other."

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"Fay's more likely to see it if she's working at Hogwarts, too... Though asking her for memories would involve telling her about it."

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"This is something I would prefer to keep to you and your demonstrated loyalty only, for now."

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She nods. "I understand."

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Kiss.

"Thank you, Bella dear."

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Kiss! "You're welcome, my Lady."

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The legal fall out from Percival Dumbledore hits fast and hard - especially since Albus Dumbledore apparently strongly refused the Ministry's request to hand over his father to be returned to Azkaban. The papers are in a tizzy, unsure whether to criticize the Ministry for demanding such a ridiculous sentence continue for a senile old man at death's door already or to criticize Dumbledore for flouting the law. The tilt of public opinion seems to be in Dumbledore's favor, though.

In amidst the furor, barely remarked upon with something more entertaining and tabloid-worthy happening -

A few Wizengamot members change their minds. Quieter folk, mostly, isolated, older, with no one they really often network with. One woman, a widow with no living children to pass her seat onto, takes the floor and gives a passionate speech about how she's watched as her country falls apart, slides into a dark era - and how she's realized as she looks down the years that it has always been in a dark era, she's simply now seen it.

She doesn't agree with the tides of revolution, she says, but it is shameful that it has come so far the people feel they have no other choice. It is shameful that the children of the Isles can no longer call this place home. That magical children come to them with wonder in their eyes - and have that joy ground out of them far more thoroughly than any fearful muggle could. It is shameful that they do not look after their most vulnerable. It is shameful that they tolerate Azkaban on their shores.

Her speech is the only change of heart - or at least of inclination to speak up - that makes it into the papers, but a few key votes shift on this or that legislation, especially in the small subcommittees that decide the fate of many bills - a budget resolution comes before the Ministry, and an unprecedented amount of money gets allocated towards zeroing out medical debts for the most impoverished - non-humans foremost among them - and towards subsidizing medicine, housing assistance for new graduates from Hogwarts, and a generous scholarship grant for any child of the Isles who struggles to or cannot currently attend Hogwarts due to inherent need (worded so it clearly refers most centrally to disabled students and near-human students).

There is absolutely no indication of foul play in any of it. None of the people were threatened by the Final Dawn.

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If one were not already aware of a plan to take over the government via slow mind control, the incidents might pass one by. It seems Fay is putting her words into action.


Two of the more incendiary tabloids get copies of letters sent by an Albus Dumbledore to one Gellert Grindelwald, dating from shortly before the death of his sister. She wants to stir the pot a little.

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That stirs the pot enough some of it threatens to spill into the fire!

About a week later, Greyback and his two most vicious lieutenants turn up dead. They have what might be a sighting of the perpetrators - two wizards, both adults, disguised, but from a brief voice, possibly one male, one female.

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Hmm, interesting. (She doesn't mourn Greyback's death; he was always too much of a wildcard.)

This certainly can't go unanswered.

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A review of the informant's memory doesn't provide a ton of clues, especially not to the woman's identity - she seems to have been concealing herself from every angle, though there's something about her build and gait...

The man though is - plausibly a specific member of a family of mixed purebloods and halfbloods known to be friendly to Dumbledore.

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She does a bit more digging to identify the male target-

-then alerts what left of Greyback's pack as to where they can find him alone. Blood for blood, is the official statement. Werewolves are not beasts, and a return to the days when they were hunted for sport will not be tolerated.

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He goes down fighting - but does die.

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