Harry Potter and the Surprisingly Competent History of Magic Professor

Ch330- Crown



Ch330- Crown

Cassian and Bathsheda stepped through the gate only to see the temple in Greece had changed.The first thing that hit them was the pressure. It came down over the stones and over the people crossing onto them, and the whole place sagged under it. Coriolanus stopped half a stride in as if he'd walked into deep water. Sabine's shoulders dropped. Miranda's face went blank for a second from the sheer effort of holding her thoughts together.

Even Nicolas' breath caught.

The pressure sat on every mind in the ruin and then harder.

Cassian felt the shift in them. The lag. The drag. The way their bodies were still willing but their thoughts had started moving through mud. These were old monsters, old masters, people who had lived through wars  and things that never made it into books, and even they were straining under it already.

Ahead of them, the temple had split open further than it had before. The old stone rings lay broken around the chamber mouth. Dust hung over the steps in a faint haze, glowing where the light caught it. At the centre, on the highest surviving slab, stood the thing that had once been only half-awake.

Now it was whole.

The Crown had risen into a body that looked as though someone had taught a ruin how to stand.

It was too tall by a head and a half. Its limbs were wrong in the old, hateful way ancient things were wrong, not because they were misshapen, but because they seemed to have been built to a rule the rest of the world no longer followed. The frame was lean and long, wrapped in skin that looked like dark stone polished by centuries of prayer and blood. Gold fissures ran beneath it in shifting lines, cracks like veins, lighting and fading as though something vast and awake was moving under the surface. Its face looked worn by worship and hunger and rot, hollowed into something dreadful. The mouth was too still. The eyes were worse. Just black, and depthless, and alive with a kind of fury so old it had gone beyond rage.

Bits of ancient regalia still clung to it. A broken collar at one shoulder. Bands round the arms. Fragments of a crown fused into the skull rather than sitting on it. The metal had sunk into bone or become bone. One couldn't quite tell. Around its feet, old spellwork crawled through the stone in dim red threads, drinking from the temple and feeding it back.

And around the temple, in a wide ring, stood the Crawlers.

Night Crawlers, black and hungry-looking as ever, crouched in the broken stone. White Crawlers, must have arrived while they were gone, stood among them now, taller, pale as frost-burnt bone, their bodies carrying that same unnerving silence. Dark and light together, shoulder to shoulder, circling the temple not as hounds at the mouth of a den.

One of the white Crawlers turned its head.

Then another.

Then all of them looked toward Cassian.

His hand tightened round the staff, and he stepped forward.

The Crown's head lifted.

Its eyes found him straight away.

Bathsheda moved up beside him. Her fingers brushed his sleeve.

He drew a breath and cut his free hand through the air.

The world opened.

Slits of silver-white light tore themselves into being all around the temple, widening into tall standing cuts that showed glimpses of other places. A cliff under rain. A burned plain. Snow and black rock. Deep jungle. The edge of a ruin under a bright foreign sky. Corridors. Towers. Buried chambers. Warded compounds. Old shrines hidden under newer faiths. As Keepers looked up, startled, from whatever they had been doing when the slit split open before them.

Their faces turned.

They saw Cassian.

Then they saw what stood on the temple behind him.

"Move," Cassian said. "Now."

One by one they came through.

Keepers from every corner of the world stepped onto the broken ground and immediately felt the weight of the place. It caught them as soon as their boots crossed the threshold. Shoulders dipped. Breathing shortened. A few staggered. One man dropped to a knee and swore in a language Cassian didn't know but felt in the tone well enough. Another woman came through with a blade already in hand and nearly lost the thought of why she'd drawn it before she saw the thing on the temple and remembered all over again.

The air around the ruins filled quickly with old power and old fear.

The sight of the creature hit harder than the pressure. Nicolas stopped where he stood. Perenelle's hand caught his sleeve, but not before he rocked back a half-step, breath snagging in his throat. Whatever they had forgotten in Greece came back all at once. The chamber below. The slab. The thing straining against its bonds. The old fear. The choice to tear the knowledge out before it could spread. Years of silence split open in a heartbeat, and the memory came rushing back through the gap.

Bathsheda went pale beside Cassian. Dumbledore's face changed too. Through the slits of light, Master Ji stepped into the ruin, saw the figure on the temple, and stopped dead. Edevane came through after him and went still under her veil. Ayda made it two strides before the same recognition caught him and held him there.

They all remembered. They remembered what had nearly woken in Greece, and why Nicolas had ripped the knowledge from their minds. They remembered the terror of standing near it. They remembered how close the world had come to disaster before they had buried the whole thing in forgetting.

Then, almost together, they looked at Cassian. Because he had known. Because he had carried the memory when the rest of them could not. Because every warning, every hard stop, every time he had gone cold at the sight of some ancient site had not been instinct or paranoia or one more bit of Cassian madness. It had been this. It had always been this.

And now the thing they had once chosen to forget was standing whole before them, and the full weight of that truth settled over the ruin like another kind of dread.

The Crown watched them gather.

Its face didn't change, still fixed at Cassian. The pressure rolling off it thickened by the second, as if it found the sight of more witnesses deeply agreeable.

Cassian's eyes narrowed.

, he thought.

Not stirring at all. Fully awake.

He shifted the staff in his hand. White light poured out of him and took shape above the broken stones. The tree rose in silver-white brilliance, trunk smooth and pale, branches flinging themselves wide overhead in a crown of light. Roots spread through the shattered floor without breaking it, threading between bodies, stones, blood, and dust, and wherever the light reached, the pressure eased.

People straightened. Breath came easier. The drag on thought lifted like a hand being pulled off the mind.

Crown's black eyes widened in recognition. Fury. Hunger. Something in the gold lines under its skin flared hot enough to hurt to look at. If it had looked ancient before, it now looked personal.

The thing knew what it was seeing. And it hated it.

A sound came out of it then, rough and scraping.

The nearest Night Crawlers responded, circling tighter.

Cassian felt the spirit of the temple shift around him. The old stone, the old seals, the old wounds in the place itself. Everything had gone taut. Even the air seemed to wait.

Bathsheda took one look at the creature's face and went cold.

"It knows you."

Cassian didn't take his eyes off it. "Wish it didn't."

The Crown stepped down from the slab.

The movement was smooth and horrible. No weakness left in it. Every place it touched darkened as if the temple couldn't decide whether to obey it or recoil from it.

Several Keepers raised wands.

"Hold," Cassian said.

The tree shone above them and the Crown stood below its glow staring up as if it had found, after eons of hunger, the one thing in creation it could neither ignore nor forgive.

, Cassian thought. In the proper, ruinous sense. A mind bent so far round one desire that everything else had been ground down into fuel for it.

Its gaze slid from the Patronus to him again.

The hatred there was so absolute.

Bathsheda's hand lifted, and silver-white runes began to spiral into being around her fingers.

More Keepers were still coming through the slits. One of the American Keepers swore when he saw the Crawlers ringed round the temple.

No one attacked.

The Crown took another step.

The Night Crawlers moved with it.

The white Crawlers followed.

The Crown's mouth opened.

At first Cassian thought it was trying to speak to the tree.

Then he realised it was speaking to him.

The sound scraped. A few of the Keepers flinched.

Cassian, as always, understood every word of it.

Cassian deadpanned. "Seriously?"

Bathsheda turned to him. "What happened?"

Cassian didn't answer. Still dumbfounded.

Bathsheda's eyes narrowed. "Cass."

He blinked, dragged a hand over his face, and muttered, "It's speaking to me."

Her stare sharpened. "It's what?"

"The sounds. It kinda makes sense to me."

The Crown tilted its head.

Cassian let out a snort through his nose. "Oh, brilliant."

Coriolanus frowned. "What is it doing?"

"Chatting," Cassian said.

"To us?" Master Ji called.

"No." His eyes stayed on the Crown. "Looks like I've won some deeply unwanted exclusive rights."

"Why you?" A keeper asked.

Cassian laughed coldly. "Take a wild guess."

The Crown's black gaze remained fixed on him, though Cassian had the nasty feeling it was looking through him as much as at him. At the tree above. At the staff in his hand. At whatever it recognised and hated in equal measure.

It spoke again. The sound of it made several of the Crawlers tense.

Cassian's grip tightened on the staff.

Bathsheda heard only noise, but she read his face well enough. "What did it say?"

He kept watching the thing. "That it's a rude bastard."

"That narrows it down remarkably little."

"It doesn't like my current presentation."

That earned him incredulous looks. Bathsheda let it pass. Fair enough. They were a bit short on time for unpacking whatever personal insult an ancient world-ending horror had decided to open with.

The pressure in the ruin climbed. The tree above the stones brightened, and the roots spread wider. That helped a bit.

The Crown's mouth twitched. It might once have been a smile. Time and malice had not improved it.

Cassian shrugged.

"No," he said aloud, "and I'd rather keep it that way for at least five more minutes."

Ayda called, hiding behind Dumbledore, "What's it saying, lad?"

"It asked whether you lot know what I am."

Sabine made a tired sound. "Frankly, no one's had a stable answer to that for years."

"Comforting."

The Crown added, almost thoughtful this time.

Cassian's eyes narrowed.

The Crown lifted one hand. Dark lines in the broken temple floor lit beneath its feet.

Bathsheda's fingers brushed Cassian's sleeve.

"Right," he said softly. "That's not ideal."

Coriolanus called over, "Would this be a marvellous time to ask what it's saying, or should I wait until the apocalypse becomes less theatrical?"

"It understands more than I'd like," Cassian said.

"Marvelous. Hate that."

The Crown's gaze slid briefly to Bathsheda. The runes around her fingers brightened in answer.

Bathsheda didn't need translation for the way Cassian's shoulders stiffened.

"It mentioned me," she said.

"It thinks Norway should've finished the job."

Her mouth tightened. "Pity."

Cassian chuckled.

The Crown's eyes returned to his.

"Cass?"

"It's just yapping."

The Crown halted.

Cassian had the vile sense that the thing was deciding what to do with them. Whether to kill or play.

Then it spoke again, and this time the mockery fell away.

Cassian went still.

The Crown's black gaze didn't move.

Cassian stared back.

"You arrogant prick."

Bathsheda glanced at him. "Threat?"

"Yes."

"Useful one?"

"No."

Bathsheda lifted her hand. "Are we still talking, then, or would now be the part where I start drawing things in the air until it regrets being born?"

Cassian's eyes stayed on the Crown. "Give me thirty seconds."

He took a step forward. The Crown watched him come and didn't move.

Cassian could feel the others behind him, waiting for some signal. Some plan. Some sign he hadn't completely lost his head now that the ancient horror had apparently decided to single him out for a private conversation.

Truthfully, he wasn't certain the distinction between private conversation and attempted cosmic humiliation had held for the last five minutes.

Still.

If the thing wanted to talk, he could use that.

"Right," he called. "You opened with melodrama and moved on to insults. Is there a third act, or are you stalling because having a body again hasn't improved your confidence?"

The Crown's mouth twitched.

Cassian nodded slowly. "Fair enough. I've had staff meetings like that."

Perenelle muttered, "Cassian."

"I'm buying time."

"You're being annoying." Bathsheda said, rolling her eyes.

"That too."

The Crown's gaze sharpened. For the first time since it had started speaking, the mockery in it was gone.

it said.

Its eyes shifted to Bathsheda.

.

Cassian didn't move.

The Crown kept looking at him.

Its mouth curved, though there was nothing human in the expression.

Cassian clicked his tongue at that, turning to Bathsheda. "It says I'm not the original. Says you're a vessel. Says we're late, incomplete, and already beaten."

Bathsheda's jaw tightened. "Charming."

"Mm."

The Crown watched them with that same black, depthless stare.

Not the original.

Late.

Incomplete.

He knew that already. He wasn't Bathael, whatever Bathael had been in full. He wasn't the Lord reborn. He was himself. A teacher from another world in borrowed flesh, carrying too much memory and not enough explanation. Bathsheda wasn't some neat return of a dead queen either. She was Bathsheda. Herself, stubborn and brilliant and carrying marks older than memory through a life that had once been perfectly ordinary.

The Crown was wrong if it thought that made them lesser.

But it wasn't guessing wildly either.

It had seen enough.

it said.

Its gaze moved over the roots of light, then returned to him.

Bathsheda squeezed his hand.

"Cass."

"I know."

The Crown's attention snapped to the touch.

Its stare lingered on her hand, on the runes spiralling round her knuckles, on the line of her shoulders as she stepped into place beside him instead of behind.

Cassian almost laughed at that, though there wasn't much humour in it.

"Bit rich," he said aloud. "Coming from a thing that had to stitch its soul back into its own carcass before it could stand upright."

The Crown's head tilted. It spoke again, and this time the words came colder.

Cassian's eyes narrowed.

The pressure round the temple increased again. More Keepers were still stepping through the slits he had opened, though those arrivals slowed now, each of them pausing at the edge of the roots of light and taking in the thing on the high stone with faces that all found, in different languages, the same conclusion.

This was bad.

Very bad.

The Crown had noticed them too, though it gave them little more than a glance.

Cassian's expression flattened.

"Funny thing about historians," he said. "We get quite stubborn when ruins start talking down to us."

A few of the nearer Keepers let out breaths that might've been laughter. 

The Crown didn't laugh. Its eyes fixed on him.

"Yes," Cassian said. "I am buying time. I'm also taking inventory, annoying you, and waiting for the rest of the world to stop arriving one crisis behind. It's called multitasking."

The Crown's face didn't change, but the temple stones under its feet darkened.

it said.

Cassian stared at it for a second.

Then he barked a laugh.

"Right," he said. "There it is."

Bathsheda smiled with him. "What now?"

"It's started negotiating."

"With us?"

"With itself, mostly."

The Crown took another step.

Cassian moved first. He hurled the staff straight at the base of the silver tree blazing above the ruin.

For the first time, the Crown lost that cold, hateful stillness. It lunged.

Not graceful now. Nowhere regal. Hungry. Desperate. Its arm shot out toward the staff as if snatching it back would undo whatever Cassian had just set in motion.

It never reached. The Crawlers hit it from both sides. Black bodies crashed into its legs and waist, claws digging into stone, dragging and pulling it off line. A white Crawler slammed into its shoulder a heartbeat later with enough force to twist the whole upper half of its body sideways. The Crown snarled, a sound so vicious half the nearest Keepers flinched, but the ring had already broken inward. 

The staff struck the ground. It drove itself into the broken earth beneath the Patronus with a crack.

Then another crack followed.

And another.

Thin fractures raced through the white wood.

Miranda took a step forward before Sabine's hand shot out and caught her sleeve. Nicolas had gone utterly still. Perenelle's face had tightened.

The staff was breaking.

The cracks spread fast. Pale light bled through them in bright veins.

For a second, dread rolled through them. They'd come this far, bled this much, and now the one object in Cassian's hand that seemed able to answer the thing on the temple was tearing itself apart in front of them.

Nicolas actually whispered, "No."

Then the wind changed. A light breeze, soft as breath. It moved across the shattered stones and over the roots of the Patronus, through broken columns and blood and dust. It brushed the Keepers where they stood, slid through the ruin, and carried a scent so clean and impossible that the whole opening seemed to stop and listen.

Green things after rain.

Sun-warmed bark.

Blossom.

Fresh water over stone.

The smell of something living so completely it made the ruin around it feel embarrassed.

The weight that had been pressing on every thought began to lift. The fear still existed, the danger still stood there clawing at Crawlers and trying to wrench itself free, but the old choking drag of it started to thin. Breathing came easier. Light brightened. Colours deepened. The grey dust hanging over the temple vanished.

Someone behind them laughed, startled by the sound of it coming out of his own mouth.

Bathsheda stared at the staff. Light poured out, white at first, then richer than white, fuller than anything a wand usually made. It spilled upward and outward, wrapping round the silver tree above them.

The nearest roots changed first. They stopped looking like light shaped into roots and became roots that happened to shine. Bark gathered over them in pale ridges. Texture followed. Grain. Real depth. The thick trunk of the Patronus began to clothe itself in substance, the silver-white outline filling, hardening, taking on the smooth, luminous body of something that had once lived at the start of the world and never truly stopped.

A murmur went through the gathered Keepers. Leaves spread above them, countless pale leaves, each one holding a sheen like sunlight caught on water. Branches thickened and stretched wider. The roots ran deeper through the broken temple floor, and wherever they passed, the cracked stone stopped looking dead. Dust stirred off it. Old carved lines brightened. The very air felt younger.

Coriolanus lowered his wand, others following.

Bagshot had one hand over her mouth. Even Nicolas had no words. He was staring like a man who'd chased rumours for so long he no longer trusted his eyes when they finally found the thing itself.

The Crown threw one of the Crawlers off its arm and nearly tore free. A white Crawler leapt straight at its chest and drove it back a step.

The thing hissed, black gaze ripping away from Cassian at last and fixing on the tree now rising over the temple. For the first time since it had stood whole, its face didn't look superior. It looked rattled. Almost afraid.

The staff was gone now. 

What remained of the white wood had split open completely and spread itself along the trunk like veins of light under living bark. It had never been a separate thing, not really. Not a weapon in the way Marauder thought of weapons. Or some prize to steal and swing about like a clever bastard in an old tomb.

A key, perhaps. Or a memory returning to the place it had always belonged.

The Crown slammed a hand through the shoulder of one black Crawler and flung the body aside, but two more were on it at once. Pale claws locked round its arm. Dark bodies dragged at its legs. The ring had become a pack now, and the pack had finally remembered what it had been made to hunt.

Above them, the tree kept forming. The leaves stirred in the new wind.

Cassian looked at it and grinned.

Not because they were safe. They weren't. The Crown was still there, whole and furious and very much interested in making all of their lives shorter and much worse.

Then he looked back at the Crown.

His grin sharpened.

"Welcome back to the Valley...

Bastard."

Not a Spoiler, Just an image! ↓

Spoiler

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Author Rant ↓ 

Spoiler

Excellent. Another successful lesson delivered to an audience apparently protected by the Fidelius Charm.

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