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High above a green and lush manicured lawn, a young witch with flaming red hair danced on a flying broomstick like a lithe ballerina, or, more accurately for those with such knowledge, a pole dancer.

The broom had become an extension of her body – as much a part of her being as her arms or legs, or tail, whenever she had one.

Seemingly from out of nowhere, a bludger whizzed past her head, barely an inch away.

Ginny Weasley blew an errant strand of hair out of her face.

Suddenly, the air was full of bludgers. Not just two, but four, six, eight, ten of the magical cannon balls, all at once shot at her from every direction.

The air became a maelstrom of leather, iron, wood, and broom-dancing witch. Then she shot out of the bludger cloud as though shot from the barrel of a gun.

A twinkle of a fluttering gold near the ground went from zero to one hundred kilometers an hour in less than the blink of an eye.

It wasn’t nearly quick enough.

A small hand plucked the snitch clean out the air just before yet another zooming bludger would have removed it, had it had been any slower.

Ginny popped the snitch into a bag already half-full of the things, tied to the floating ring at the base of her Nimbus 2001 before soaring high back up into the sky.

She leaned forward on her broom like a cat lounging in a tree. Her feet tangled themselves up on the bristles. Her arms became a pillow. Once more, Ginny extended her senses.

On the edge of the Potter Manor Quidditch Pitch, Lord James Potter, sitting in a garden chair facing what, theoretically, was supposed to be ‘training’, shook his head in incredulity. “If I didn’t find the very idea utterly ridiculous, I’d say she looks bored.”

On the other side of the table filled with scones, cakes, and tiny egg and cress sandwiches with the crusts cut off, all piled on a multi-story edifice of silver and lace, Arthur Weasley chuckled. “I guess after facing down a one-thousand-year-old magically perfect killing machine, even something as exciting as Quidditch might seem tame.”

“I suppose,” James said grudgingly. Lord Slytherin’s words at their last meeting were still fresh in his thoughts. Why not betroth Ginny to Harry? The Weasleys were Light leaning, as he’d said. Arthur was one of the more respected civil servants within the ministry, even if he lacked the desire for a Humble Hag position. And he needed to do something to bring Harry back in the fold. The consequences of failing didn’t bear thinking about.

Except...

Except that he was still pretty sure that Slytherin was Remus Lupin, with all the powers that entailed. The Lupins were plotters and schemers, the lot of them. One didn’t just befriend a Lupin and not expect to eventually get screwed over. The Marauders had learned that the hard way.

They were worse than Dumbledore.

Still...

“I don’t think getting a special exemption from the Wizengamot to have her play at the National level will be too hard,” James said, watching the young witch now playing chicken with a veritable conga line of bludgers. “There aren’t many things we agree on, but Quidditch is definitely one of them. But I’m still not comfortable with the idea of a betrothal between Harry and Ginny...” he trailed off. “Not because of you or Ginny,” he quickly added, “Or your house. I’ve nothing but respect for you and your work. But I can’t help but worry that there’s some kind of ‘plot’ going on here that I’m not party to.”

Arthur put his teacup down with a little clink sound. “If there is a plot, I’m unaware of it. All I see are two children who are as alike as two peas in a pod.”

“Yessss...” James said slowly. “That’s another thing I’m worried about.”

“In any case, I do think something will have to be done.”

“Oh, why?”

Arthur took another sip and gave him a look he recognized. The look of a worried parent. “If Ginny is going to go all in on Quidditch, I’d be worried for her future if she didn’t have a husband lined up capable of supporting her. Several teams have been experimenting with the idea of professional sports, taken from the Muggle world, but the hard truth is that our population simply isn’t large enough to support it. I know Molly would put her foot down if nothing could be arranged.”

James gave the man sitting next to him a slightly alarmed look. “Are you saying that if your daughter doesn’t have a betrothal arranged, then you wouldn’t allow Ginny to play at all?!”

Arthur gave him a placating hand wave. “Not for myself, you have to understand. I want my little girl to follow her heart in all things. But Molly is less sanguine in her outlook.”

“And you’d listen to her.”

“Always.”

James sighed. “Well, at least she’s not part of the animagus clusterfuck coming up. That’s one blessing. You were wise to register her when you did.”

Arthur just smiled.

Though that didn’t apply to Virgo, James thought grumpily. He never imagined he’d be actively trying to hitch his eldest son’s wheel to a girl who could turn her bottom half into a snake. ...Red and gold snake though. And there was the phoenix patronus. And her friendship with both John and Susan…

Okay, so even considering where she came from, Virgo probably was a safer bet for John than Ginny was for Harry.

The sounds of two voices arguing drifted through from the attached greenhouse.

“Nope, I’m still not getting any of this.”

“But you could! And you agree that the Wizarding World needs to change. I could lend you a book.”

“I don’t have time to read some muggle book!”

And speaking of John, that gave him an idea…

James’ son and rightful heir exited from the large glass building followed close behind by Arthur’s eldest, Bill was his name. Worked for Gringotts. Head boy at Hogwarts. Very passionate about… whatever it was he was always going on about.

“John!” James called out, cheerfully. “Over here! You seeing this?” He gestured to where Ginny was now doing casual loop the loops while dodging a dozen bludgers.

“I see it, Dad,” John replied, sounding rather surly, arriving in front of where he and Arthur were sitting. “It’s not that impressive.”

James snorted. “John, you shouldn’t be jealous. Ginny could be playing for England soon.”

“What?!” John’s jaw dropped. “But she’s not even a second year!”

“Doesn’t matter when she’s that good. But, hey, Arthur, you said Ginny needed a husband to support her Quidditch. What about John?”

The moment the words came out of his mouth, James realised his mistake. He’d forgotten just how hard John had fallen for Ginny before he left for Hogwarts. The look of hope that blossomed over his son’s face was almost painful to watch. As was the collapse when Arthur immediately slapped the idea down.

“I’m sorry, Lord Potter, but I’m afraid that’s not going to happen. Not while Ginny is so against the idea. And persuading Molly would be difficult. I’ve heard you want John here to marry Malfoy’s girl.”

“If it’s a bride price you need, we can arrange that,” James said quickly.

“I’d take the best care of Ginny!” John declared, an edge of desperation in his voice. “I can handle two witches, I promise you, Mister Weasley!”

Bill Weasley exploded. “I can’t believe you’re all just sitting here talking about trading off my little sister like she’s a piece of property! Arranged marriages are the remnants of a corrupt, aristocratic Bourgeoisie who control capital through family and inheritance! Ginny shouldn’t be marrying a noble! She should marry a commoner! A muggleborn! Or maybe even a muggle! That would send a message to the magical proletariat that they have the freedom to change, to say NO, if only they threw off the archaic social rules foisted on them by—”

That was as far as he got before he briefly went from zero to sixty miles an hour as a broom-shaped missile zoomed alongside him, plucked him clean from the ground, and pitched him straight into a Rhododendron bush.

Ginny swung back around and landed lightly, the wand in her hand glowing from the residue of a Mobilicorpus charm. “I will marry who I want,” she said. “And who I want is Harry.”

“You heard her,” Arthur said, as though that closed matters.

James winced.

“Don’t give me that look,” Ginny said to John. “You go have fun with your own personal snake. A cheetah belongs to the one true king.”

And that statement reminded James why Harry wasn’t around for his own betrothal negotiations. Why he’d subtly stopped hunting his other son, which had once included contracting out a few well-known hit wizards, and instead started wracking his brain for other, less confrontational means of influencing him. Harry was a Merlin-damned Chimera. A legendary form, no less. One that had appeared only a few times throughout history. And the first wizard to ever have a chimera as an Animagus form. At age twelve. The Unspeakables had gone nuts. The Obliviators had gone nuts. The Union of African Ministries had gone nuts. Trying to force Harry to do anything would take far more power than was reasonable. It even made him question whether the path he and his wife had set themselves on was even the right one, but he quickly dismissed that thought.

That way lay madness.

As far as Harry went, Dumbledore could likely still take him down–likely with one hand tied behind his back— but Dumbledore was still being awfully cautious about anything to do with Lord Slytherin, even if he was one of only two other people in the whole world who understood why keeping Harry under control was so important in the first place.

James watched the bickering grow between Ginny and John, each one’s shouting getting louder and louder, and decided to step in. “John, please go and fish Master Weasley out from that bush and see that he’s not actually hurt.”

After he’d left, grumbling, James turned to Ginny. “Miss Weasley, I’d be happy to have you as a daughter-in-law. I mean, Merlin, your flying alone is incredible. Simply mind-boggling. It’s just that Harry is…”

“Is what?”

“… he has a very complicated future ahead of him.”

“And I’ll be there with him.”

“It will likely be a very dangerous future.”

“And I’ll be there with him.”

“If Harry was in danger, would you try to protect him?”

“Of course.”

James paused before continuing. “If I asked you to work with me to protect Harry, what would you say?”

Ginny looked down at the ground for a moment. Then up at the sky. Then directly into his eyes. “I’d say yes. Then I’d take everything that you told me, take it to Harry, and change the plan as he saw fit. The best person to protect Harry, is Harry.”

James closed his eyes before opening them again. “Well, at least you're honest.” He cleared his throat. “Miss Weasley, I cannot accept a betrothal between you and my son so long as you do not accept the familial responsibility of obedience to your future lord. i.e. me.”

Ginny shrugged. “That’s fine.”

That threw him for a loop.

“It is?”

“It doesn’t matter what anyone else says. Harry said he’d arrange our betrothal. He’ll make it happen, even if he needs to break magic itself.”

That statement did not make James feel any better.

Not long after, he was seeing the party off back to the Burrow through the Potter Manor central floo. “I’m sure we’ll figure some way to come to terms on this,” Arthur said with a hand firmly on both Ginny’s shoulder and around Bill’s arm – the latter scowling at his little sister, while the former had her tongue stuck out at her big brother.

“No duelling,” James said. He wasn’t insane.

“No duelling,” Arthur repeated back. “The Muggle Protection Act is proof that we can all come together and put aside our differences for a common good. I look forward to seeing our work come to fruition at the Wizengamot Session.”

Lord Potter nodded. He watched the whirling colours carry his guests away.

“Lord Slytherin has a magic around him, don’t you think?”

James turned to find his ‘other’ guest standing at the entranceway to the smoking room, where, unbeknownst to Mister Weasley, he’d been making himself at home while Ginny put herself through her paces. The window offered a perfect view over the Quidditch Pitch and, as it happened, was just above where their little party had been sitting. It was also ajar.

“Magic?” James asked.

Lord Walter Slughorn, keystone of a major faction within the Gray, not to be confused with his Uncle, Horace Slughorn, the famous potion’s master, chuckled darkly. “He inspires great loyalty. Even between those below him. When was the last time you heard a young witch defend her paramour so fiercely? Course, they usually get that attitude beaten out of them, fast enough, but it’s still cute to see. Makes you feel young again.”

“Harry is not below Lord Slytherin.”

Lord Slughorn shrugged. “I’m just telling it how I see it.” His look turned serious. “Something is afoot in the Gray.”

“Yes, you said before. Still no idea what it is?”

Slughorn shook his head. “No, but I get the feeling that Lord Slytherin has a secret—an important one—and he’s letting people in on it. Many of my less immediate friends and acquaintances in the Gray have suddenly come over all coy.”

“The source of his wealth, maybe?”

“Maybe.” Slughorn looked pensive. “Whatever it is, the fact that he has not deemed fit to bring me in on it, whatever it is, is most vexing. This is just one of many insults the man has laid at my feet.”

James carefully kept his face blank. As a young lord who’d married his Hogwarts sweetheart, he had rather pointed opinions on young witches being married off to wizards thrice their age. He didn’t see eye-to-eye with Lord Slytherin on many things, but so long as he was as young as everyone supposed, snatching the former Greengrass Heiress away from Slughorn was a win for the light in his book. Daphne supposedly thought so as well, which certainly mattered, though it was difficult knowing for sure with that whole ice princess thing the girl had going on. “So, what are you going to do?” James asked.

Lord Slughorn chewed his lip. “Lord Slytherin is a powerful leader. Though sometimes a bit too sentimental for his own good. Staying with the Gray has been the best play for me and many of my friends. But if we don’t like whatever the ‘secret’ ends up being… well.” He smiled grimy at James. “We may have to re-align ourselves to our old friends again.”

James sucked in his breath. “That would give the Light a near total majority.”

“Indeed. And I believe that if we jumped ship, most of the Light-leaning rest would follow. The Gray could disintegrate overnight.” Slughorn smiled nastily. “It all depends on the secret.”

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