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Chapter 10: Foundations of a New Order

  Discimer: I don't Own Harry Potter or Hellsing

  A hush fell upon Hellsing Manor te on July 9, 1990, when the moon's silver glow draped the estate in pale light. Inside, the corridors breathed a faint sense of relief mingled with anticipation, as though the very stones remembered the whirlwind of events that had culminated mere hours earlier. A door in the east wing clicked shut, and Crystal—her new existence confirmed not long ago—allowed her gaze to settle on the quiet darkness beyond the windows. Though the manor's wards shimmered, invisible and unyielding, the night still held a promise of change. In the library, a clock chimed a low note, marking a turning point rather than just the passage of time. She exhaled softly, the final echoes of her own transformation still stirring in her bones.

  She stood in the study, fingertips lightly touching the cool gss of the window. It was the same window she had gazed through as "Harry" months prior, though it felt like a memory from another life. The city's distant glow y across the horizon, muted and unthreatening behind Hellsing's formidable protections. She recalled how just weeks earlier, she had stood on the manor's balcony, forging illusions with an eager spark in her eyes. Now, everything was different. She was different. The wizarding world was also different, caught in the undertow of Marvolo's sweeping reforms. And that difference pulled at her heart like a tide. She could sense it, a restless energy outside the estate's gates: a swirl of hopes, fears, and soon-to-be-upheavals.

  Behind her, faint but steady footfalls announced Integra's arrival. Crystal didn't turn immediately. Instead, she let her heightened hearing pick up the rhythmic rustle of Integra's suit jacket, the controlled inhations that spoke of a mind always calmly assessing. The subtle aroma of aged paper, old leather, and a trace of tobacco lingered about Integra, who often indulged in a te-night cigar. Tonight, however, the tang of smoke was softer, overshadowed by the hush enveloping the entire household.

  A low, warm glow from a nearby mp carved out the pnes of Integra's face, revealing a contemptive air that nearly matched Crystal's own. For a moment, neither spoke. They simply shared the stillness that stretched between them, like an unspoken pact formed in the aftermath of all they had accomplished. On the vast walnut desk, letters and memos y scattered: evidence of Marvolo's ascendant influence in the Wizengamot, the quiet approval from once-neutral wizarding families, the covert communications from those who feared Dumbledore's wrath yet believed in change. Each piece of parchment seemed to bear a heartbeat of its own, a testament to a world on the edge of revolution.

  "It feels like the calm before a storm," Crystal murmured, turning to meet Integra's gaze. Her new, ice-blue eyes glinted in the mp's half-light—a reflection of the vampiric essence coiled within her, tempered by Hellsing discipline. Though her voice no longer bore Harry's timbre, it carried a quiet resoluteness that felt entirely her own. "Marvolo's proposals aren't just theories anymore. They're... ws on the brink of passing. And people are afraid." She paused, swallowing an unspoken concern. "They'll fight him, won't they?"

  "They will," Integra agreed softly, drifting toward the desk where an antique candebra stood, its thin tapers just beginning to burn low. "But then, real progress is never birthed without confrontation. People cling to old orders because it's all they know." She lifted a single letter from the pile, scanning it before pcing it aside. "I suspect we'll see more than simple resistance. Dumbledore built his empire on maniputive goodwill—unraveling that demands something more forceful than words."

  A slight stir from the far wall made them both gnce up. Alucard emerged from the shadows like a wraith, his fedora in one hand, an almost pyful glint in his crimson eyes. The tall vampire exuded a nguid grace, yet the tension in his frame implied readiness to spring at any moment. He gave a small half-bow, a faint grin tugging at his lips. "You speak of storms," he purred, settling his hat upon a coat rack with an exaggerated flourish. "I do love a good storm. Perhaps this is a tempest long overdue."

  Crystal found herself nodding before she fully realized it. She had come to trust Alucard's instincts, predatory as they were, because they seldom erred in matters of conflict. He studied her face with a mixture of fatherly pride and detached amusement, as though still marveling at the metamorphosis she had undergone. It was a look that made her stand straighter, returning his gaze with calm steadiness.

  "I won't hide anymore," she said, echoing a promise she'd made to herself months prior. "If they want to come after Marvolo, after us, I'd rather stand in the open than skulk in shadows. We're shaping the wizarding world for the better, and I want to be part of that—fully, not in secret."

  Integra's eyes flicked between them. A fleeting glimmer of concern crossed her features, but she masked it with unwavering resolve. "Then you'll stand," she answered. "But understand: stepping out onto that stage means making yourself a target. Dumbledore's supporters might do anything to keep the status quo."

  Alucard's grin widened. "Targets that shoot back are so much more entertaining." Then, in a softer tone, he added, "The wizarding world thrives on illusions—present them with a reality they can't ignore, and watch them fumble." The subtle friction in his voice hinted at an eagerness for confrontation, a vampire's delight in the disruption of stagnant power structures.

  With that, the hush in the study seemed to solidify. Letters rustled faintly on the desk, as though stirred by an invisible draft. Crystal sank into one of the leather armchairs, letting the soft cushions cradle her newly honed body, half expecting it to feel foreign but instead finding a comforting sense of belonging. She gnced at the scattered documents Integra had been reviewing: details of the upcoming Wizengamot session, intelligence on Dumbledore's known associates, coded messages from wizarding families who had quietly allied with Marvolo's cause. It dawned on her that each slip of parchment represented a thread in a vast tapestry—one that was about to be tugged from every direction.

  She lifted her gaze to Integra. "What do we do next?"

  "We prepare," Integra replied succinctly, folding a letter with careful precision. "Marvolo is leading the charge in the Wizengamot, consolidating his power. We'll support from the shadows until we choose to step out of them. And once we do, we'll do so on our terms."

  Crystal nodded, the gravity of those words settling in. With that, Alucard eased away from the desk, crossing the study to vanish through the wall, his voice echoing in the quiet. "I'll handle the wards tonight," he said softly, "just in case our dear Headmaster decides to be uncommonly bold." And then he was gone, leaving only a faint swirl of shadow in his wake.

  Late that night, the estate's hush became a comforting lulby. Outside, a slight breeze stirred the manor's wns, rustling the hedgerows. Crystal remained in the study, reading a few of the notes Integra allowed her to see: summaries of new ws Marvolo was championing, accounts of minor wizarding officials who, faced with corruption, now sought redemption in forging alliances with Marvolo's faction. A flicker of pride touched her heart each time she recognized how many had mustered the courage to break from Dumbledore's paternalistic hold. Yet she also felt a pang—underneath every story of defiance y the bitterness of betrayal, the sense of illusions shattered. She had known that bitterness firsthand. To break free was never easy.

  When she finally withdrew to her room, dawn's first glow graced the horizon. The house fell into a brief half-sleep, with staff rotating shifts, Walter methodically checking wards, and Alucard prowling the perimeter like a watchful sentinel. Crystal closed her eyes, letting the hush cradle her. She found herself drifting into a doze, her dreams ced with images of Wizengamot chambers, flickering illusions of Dumbledore's calm, maniputive smile, and the faint, reassuring silhouette of Marvolo standing like a rock in churning waters.

  Over the next weeks, the wizarding world's political climate intensified as July melted into August. Inside the Wizengamot, Marvolo's presence was no longer subtle. His every speech echoed through the vaulted halls, carrying promises of modernization, equality for magical creatures, and an end to institutional maniputions. Opponents who once scoffed now whispered anxiously in the corridors, unsure how to counter this figure who exuded both an ancient lineage and a vision for the future. Even the staid, old families that once aligned themselves with tradition found themselves swayed by the undeniable logic of Marvolo's proposals. Muggle-born witches and wizards, for too long neglected or exploited, watched from the sidelines with cautious hope. Could it be that after centuries, wizarding Britain stood on the brink of real reform?

  In that luminous hall of debate, the tension crackled. Marble floors reflected the swirl of robes, and candlelit sconces painted dancing shadows on murals depicting wizarding triumphs of ages past. As Marvolo rose to the center dais for one more session, the hush fell so solidly that the scratch of a single quill in the onlookers' stands could be heard. He spoke not with thunderous rhetoric but with a measured calm that carried conviction in every sylble. He outlined the Magical Children Protection Act, detailing the moral imperative of guiding Muggle-borns into the magical community safely and knowledgeably. He expined the need for accountability in sentencing, so tragedies like Azkaban's harshness and the endless cycle of wrongful imprisonment might be reformed. Each w resonated with an undercurrent of unstoppable progress.

  From the front row of the public gallery, Minerva McGonagall observed silently. She clutched the wooden railing, her heart torn between the loyalty she felt toward Dumbledore and the inescapable fact that Marvolo's points were valid. She had read testimonies from Muggle-borns who suffered under the old system, felt the pang of recognition in her chest at how easily tragedies like Harry Potter's upbringing might have been prevented had the wizarding world not turned a blind eye. Her gaze flicked to a side bench where Astor Moody hunched, expression guarded, listening to Marvolo with a scowl that might have been worry or grudging admiration. The entire chamber pulsed with the sense that something irreversible was unfolding.

  Meanwhile, at Hogwarts, Dumbledore's calm facade finally began to crack. In te August, he convened a secret meeting in his office, summoning those he deemed his staunchest allies: Severus Snape, Minerva McGonagall, Astor Moody, and a select few Order members. The Headmaster's domain, once a pce of whimsical trinkets and comforting eccentricities, now felt oppressive. The silver instruments that dotted the shelves seemed tarnished by tension. The musty scent of old parchment grew stale, overshadowed by the heavy aura of desperation swirling around Dumbledore's presence.

  The group assembled around his grand desk. Dumbledore sat, hands steepled, glint of steel in his otherwise mild eyes. "We face a crisis," he began, voice low but resonating with a brittle edge. "Lord Marvolo Slytherin's influence grows unchallenged. He twists the Wizengamot to his will, undoing the safeguards we've established."

  He paused, scanning each face. Snape's bck eyes were unreadable, arms folded across his chest. Moody, grizzled and scowling, gave a grunt that could have meant anything. Minerva's lips pressed tight, a conflict raging in her expression. A few other Order members shuffled uncomfortably, uncertain how to respond.

  "Our priority," Dumbledore continued, "is the boy who lived—Harry Potter. We must find him, secure him. He is key to containing Marvolo if—indeed—Marvolo is the threat we suspect he is." The Headmaster's tone hardened at the st part, as though spitting out the name 'Marvolo Slytherin.' "Without Harry, we can't ensure this new regime doesn't lead to the darkest era we've known."

  Minerva sighed. "But if... if Harry were truly out there, would he not have surfaced by now? The boy is no longer a child. We have no leads, no sightings."

  Snape's lip curled. "Perhaps the ck of leads is the lead. If—like some rumors suggest—Harry has been hidden or transformed, we might be chasing a phantom. Even if we do find him, we have no guarantee he'll cooperate."

  Dumbledore leaned forward, voice dangerously quiet. "Then we must persuade him, as we have always pnned. For the greater good."

  A subtle tremor in Snape's posture implied a protest he didn't voice. Moody let out another grunt. The assembled group exchanged gnces, each weighed down by the moral gravity of what Dumbledore hinted at: Harry might need shaping, forcibly if necessary. The meeting ended with no clear pn but a growing sense of dread. A crack had formed in the once unshakable unity that bound them, a crack that deepened each time Dumbledore insisted upon controlling a boy who had not even been seen in years.

  Throughout August and into September, whispers of Dumbledore's desperation filtered into Hellsing's network of informants. Integra read the coded messages in her study, her cool eyes narrowing as she gleaned the Headmaster's moves. One evening, while the mplight glimmered on the polished desk, she handed a note to Crystal, who accepted it with a quiet nod. The message succinctly recounted Dumbledore's meeting, the tension among the Order members, the intensifying push to locate "Harry Potter."

  Crystal's hand tightened around the parchment, the faint crinkle reflecting the tension in her knuckles. "He still hunts me," she murmured, voice tinged with a defiance that set her new identity in stone. "He won't accept that I'm gone."

  Integra tapped a finger on the desk. "No, he won't," she agreed. "But we can use that. So long as he's fixated on a Harry Potter who no longer exists, it distracts him from noticing the new forces gathering against him."

  Marvolo's arrival interrupted them, his dark robes swirling as he stepped in, a swirl of intangible power preceding him. "We must be careful," he said, depositing a fresh letter from the Wizengamot on the desk. "Dumbledore's illusions run deep. The public might still be swayed if he cims Marvolo is some dark revival. We need more than ws to secure the future. We need a symbol that challenges Dumbledore's narrative—someone to stand beside me openly." His gaze slid meaningfully toward Crystal.

  She inhaled. This was the moment that had hovered on the horizon for weeks: a choice to step from the shadows, to show the wizarding world that "Harry Potter" was not the weapon Dumbledore had orchestrated but a living testament to Hellsing's cause. The very thought made her pulse quicken. She gnced at Integra, who gave a subtle nod, trusting her decision. Alucard's distant presence lurked beyond the half-open door, a silent watchful figure. She closed her eyes, remembering all the steps that led her here: the maniputions, the transformations, the quiet vow never to be used again. She opened them, meeting Marvolo's intense gaze.

  "I'll do it," she said, her voice calm, though a tremor of excitement flickered in her veins. "I'm tired of letting Dumbledore hold onto a ghost. If we reveal who I really am, we can break his final hold."

  Thus, September turned to October in a rush of preparations. A pn emerged for Crystal to appear publicly at a grand function—one that Marvolo would host, calling together key members of wizarding high society and moderate voices from the Ministry. The letter of invitation was couched in proper courtesy, describing a gathering to discuss the future of magical Britain under new legistion. No one suspecting anything beyond a typical political ga.

  When the evening arrived, an unmistakable energy pulsed through the air outside the chosen venue: a stately wizarding manor that Marvolo had temporarily acquired. Torches lined the walkway, casting dancing fmes on stone arches. Witches and wizards in elegant robes stepped from carriages, greeted by staff with polite bows. Inside, the candlelit hall sparkled with a subdued opulence, string music drifting from an unseen ensemble. Clusters of guests formed, sipping wine from crystal goblets, swirling in pockets of hushed conversation. Some talked of the improbable changes Marvolo had brought to the Wizengamot. Others gossiped about Dumbledore's silence since the st legistive session. The mood was tense but disguised under a veneer of social niceties.

  Marvolo entered first, his arrival turning heads. He cut a figure of quiet authority in bck robes embroidered with subtle silver serpents—an homage to Slytherin's line. At once, the susurrus of conversation hushed, repced by bows of courtesy or murmured greetings. He responded with a mild smile, as though entirely at ease. Yet the tension in his posture suggested he was braced for possible confrontation or sabotage. He glided across the hall, exchanging pleasantries with old pureblood families and newly influential Muggle-born wizards alike. The entire ga felt like a staging ground for something monumental.

  Outside, cloaked in the darkness of a side courtyard, Crystal steeled herself. She wore an outfit reminiscent of her Hellsing heritage: bck form-fitting garments with silver accents, a subtle crest near her colr. The dagger Alucard had given her, etched with ancient runes, was strapped discreetly at her side. Her heart pounded in her chest, not with fear, but with a thrilling sense of purpose. This moment would define her role in the wizarding world, rewriting the illusions Dumbledore had woven around the name Harry Potter. She gnced at a reflection in a small, watery patch of starlight near the courtyard fountain. The young woman who stared back was neither frightened nor unsure. She was a predator of illusions, ready to tear down the final scraps of Dumbledore's false narrative.

  Alucard lingered behind her, in the deeper shadows, an amused half-smile on his pale features. "Give them a show," he murmured, voice low. "They've grown stagnant on illusions. A little truth might taste like fire." His tone carried paternal pride, his presence reassuring. She nodded, inhaled, and stepped forward.

  Entering the hall was surreal. The vish decorations, the swirl of music, the hush as her presence captured attention—no illusions. She had only to walk, eyes alert, posture confident. In that moment, she felt every stolen piece of identity Dumbledore had tried to suppress fre into crity. She crossed the threshold, stepping onto the polished marble floor. Guests turned, first noticing her fluid movement, then the slope of her shoulders, the piercing color of her eyes, the faint suggestion of vampiric grace in each stride. A hush rippled outward from her like concentric rings in still water. Goblets paused midway to lips, conversation died mid-sentence.

  Beside Marvolo, a flicker of triumph lit his gaze as she approached. He gently tapped his gss, calling for attention that he already had. One or two older wizards in opulent robes frowned, uncertain, while others leaned closer to see. "Good evening," Marvolo began, voice calm but carrying the weight of a well-anticipated announcement. "I appreciate your attendance tonight, at this gathering meant to unify wizarding Britain under a fairer, more enlightened system." He gestured to Crystal with a measured flourish. "Allow me to introduce you to someone who has every reason to see our society progress beyond old maniputions. This is Crystal Hellsing."

  The hush deepened. She surveyed the crowd, making eye contact with a few who seemed at a loss. She could sense the swirl of curiosity, could practically smell the adrenaline in the air. Her heartbeat drummed steadily, not from nerves but from a fiery purpose. "Many of you have heard rumors of... a certain child. The so-called boy-who-lived, a prophecy. The entire narrative shaped by one man." Her voice remained steady, her breath even. "I'm not here to discuss prophecies. I'm here to say that I am not the child Dumbledore once arranged to be used. And I will not abide any illusions that keep our world shackled to fear."

  She paused, letting the weight of those words sink. Whispers broke out among the crowd, some guests stepping forward with arm or fascination. "You... you're Harry Potter," a trembling voice whispered from the back. The quiet question ricocheted through the hall, echoing. "We thought you were a boy..."

  Crystal offered a tight, knowing smile, letting the hush devour that question. "I was forced into a role, forced into illusions," she said. "But illusions can break. I stand before you as Crystal Hellsing, heir to the Hellsing line, shaped by none other than Integra Fairbrook Wingates Hellsing and her allies. Dumbledore's maniputions can't hold me anymore."

  A ripple of shock spread across the faces of those assembled. Some flicked their gaze to Marvolo in disbelief, others to the handful of Hellsing staff who had accompanied them. The hush was so profound that the faint violin music from a distant corner stuttered into silence. Then, in the breath of that stunned quiet, a wave of whispers and excmations exploded. People murmured her name, half-formed questions about the forced illusions, about how Dumbledore had hidden truths. The old pureblood lords and dies who clung to rumor found their stances destabilized in an instant. Meanwhile, wizards at the edges of the crowd, many Muggle-born or half-blood, exchanged gnces of wonder or cautious optimism. The legend of the boy-who-lived unraveling so completely was a jolt to their sense of normalcy.

  At Marvolo's side, no outward expression of gloating betrayed him, though a flicker of satisfaction danced behind his eyes. He raised his goblet again, commanding a fragile silence once more. "Change is upon us," he announced with quiet authority. "Let the illusions fade. We cannot allow the maniputions of the past—no matter how well-intended they once seemed—to define who we are or how we govern ourselves. We stand on the brink of forging a new wizarding Britain, free from tyranny cloaked in paternal smiles."

  Crystal heard a low murmur of agreement from a few corners, saw how some older wizards nodded slowly, as though grappling with the enormity of that statement. Her chest felt tight with exhiration. The st shred of secrecy about her identity had been torn away in a single moment, repced by the open truth. Dumbledore's narrative cracked like gss under a mallet. She didn't flinch from the weight of the crowd's stares. She was a catalyst—neither a sacrificial mb nor a hidden pawn, but someone forging her path with a crity she had discovered only in the halls of Hellsing Manor.

  The night wore on with a swirl of questions. Some demanded proof or demanded details about what truly happened to the boy named Harry. Others simply stared, unsure whether to fear her transformation or celebrate the potential liberation from Dumbledore's maniputions. In each conversation, Marvolo, Integra, or Hellsing representatives answered carefully, weaving a story that banced truth and strategic nuance. They detailed how illusions had locked the child in a false shape, how Hellsing's combined wizarding and vampiric approach had freed her from that captivity, and how the moment demanded an unflinching confrontation with Dumbledore's paternal tyranny.

  Word spread like wildfire. By midnight, the ga's energy was electric. Owls soared from the estate, carrying hurried messages to all corners of wizarding Britain. The name "Crystal Hellsing" lodged itself in whispered dialogues across the country before dawn. Journalists from wizarding publications, who had arrived expecting a dry political function, now scribbled feverishly, capturing every glimmer of scandal, hope, or suspicion. Meanwhile, under the watchful eye of Alucard, no infiltration or sabotage marred the event, though a few suspicious wizards were quietly escorted from the premises when they tried to pry into restricted areas.

  The aftermath was immediate. Within hours of the ga ending, the revetion reached Hogwarts. Dumbledore, roused from uneasy slumber by a frantic Floo call, stood in his office with an expression that spelled pure incredulity. The news battered him like a gale: Harry Potter is not a boy, has allied with Marvolo Slytherin, cims the name Crystal Hellsing, and decries Dumbledore's maniputions. He crumpled the letter in one trembling hand, swirling in confusion and fury. This was impossible. Or so he had believed. The entire foundation of his prophecy-den pn cracked open like a dry husk. If Harry was truly gone—physically, mentally, spiritually—then his st route to controlling the Horcrux and vanquishing Voldemort might be lost. He felt the edges of a panic creeping up. In the hush of his office, only the soft whir of old silver contraptions accompanied the thick pounding of his heart.

  In the following weeks, the wizarding press erupted with debate, specution, and confusion. Some denounced the revetion as a cunning hoax orchestrated by Marvolo and Hellsing. Others uded it as the long-overdue truth behind Dumbledore's questionable guardianship of the supposed savior. A swirl of public discourse overshadowed even the hotly contested legistive sessions, with many calling on Dumbledore to respond, to crify, or to refute. But as August gave way to September, the Headmaster rgely retreated from public statements, focusing instead on rebuilding alliances behind closed doors. He probed every lead, every ally, seeking an angle to discredit Marvolo or brand Crystal as a deluded puppet. Yet for every rumor he tried to spark, Hellsing's intelligence neutralized it in the hush of backchannel negotiations. The wizarding popuce, having grown weary of illusions, found themselves unexpectedly receptive to Marvolo's transparency.

  Caught in that swirling maelstrom, Crystal stepped into her new role with a calm that surprised even herself. She joined Marvolo at smaller gatherings, listening intently as he fielded questions from anxious families. She learned to address concerns about her identity with measured honesty, gleaned from hours spent with Integra coaching her on how to handle the press. She refined illusions not for subterfuge but for gentle demonstration—levitating tea sets with a wave of her hand, conjuring protective wards around children at open-air gatherings. Each dispy chipped away at the fear that the wizarding world might be descending into chaos under Marvolo's leadership. Instead, people saw unity between old and new, mortal and immortal, wizard and Hellsing.

  In private, she struggled with nightmares about Dumbledore, about the cupboard she once nguished in, about the fleeting memory of Lily and James Potter that she could barely recall. Alucard's presence helped quell the dark thoughts, his ancient perspective offering a sense of scale. "Men like Dumbledore have risen and fallen across centuries," he told her one te evening, each word dripping with cold assurance. "They cling to illusions because illusions grant them a veneer of moral high ground. Shatter that veneer, and watch them scramble." His smirk promised that he would relish seeing Dumbledore's illusions crumble.

  Her vantage point continued to expand. She sat in on strategic sessions with Integra, Marvolo, and carefully selected wizarding officials. She gleaned how legistive momentum worked, how a single well-timed statement could tip the scales, how forging alliances required empathy, cunning, and an unyielding moral backbone. Each lesson teased out the intellectual curiosity she had never fully explored before, suppressed by the Dursleys' cruelty and Dumbledore's manufactured ignorance. Now, free to be herself, she devoured knowledge of wizarding w, drawn maps of the Ministry's byrinthine structure, learned how the older pureblood families maintained influence through marriages and ancient contracts. She found that the illusions she once used as a shield in the library now found new purpose: conjuring visual aids to highlight political complexities or illustrate how Dumbledore's influence twisted certain branches of the Ministry.

  By early October, the impetus for confrontation grew unstoppable. Marvolo's reforms proceeded through the Wizengamot, each successful vote fueling the sense that the old world was being dismantled from within. Dumbledore's allies fought back fiercely, but they lost ground daily as each scandal or half-truth came to light. Those who once revered the Headmaster began to question whether his paternal oversight had indeed become tyranny. Meanwhile, the name "Crystal Hellsing" sprang up in more and more conversations, not just as a symbol of lost illusions, but as a beacon of a new generation. Her presence at public events, side by side with Marvolo, hammered home the notion that the boy-who-lived had chosen a path that repudiated Dumbledore's maniputions. Perhaps the prophecy was undone. Perhaps wizarding Britain's salvation y not in the old prophecy but in forging a just society through tangible reform.

  At Hogwarts, a hush enveloped staff meetings. Severus Snape, in particur, found the Headmaster's unwavering obsession with finding Harry—now, Crystal—utterly disquieting. He kept his expression neutral, but inside he fumed at the length Dumbledore was willing to go. The illusions that once pinned Snape's loyalty wavered, frayed by the sense that Dumbledore had used Lily's memory as well, twisting her son's life. Sometimes, te at night, Snape stared at his quarters' candlelit walls, wracked by the guilt that he had aided in these maniputions by omission. He wrote private letters—none of which he dared send—to see if perhaps forging a quiet channel to Marvolo or Integra might help him atone. Eventually, the sense of moral conflict spurred him to a silent conclusion: if the Headmaster continued to pursue the child's subjugation, Snape would not stand idly by.

  Through mid-October, the wizarding public braced for some final blow. Tensions soared. Dumbledore vanished from public debates, rumored to be holed up in Hogwarts, orchestrating a st gambit. The new ws Marvolo championed took form—an upcoming session in early November would see the final vote on some of the most sweeping reforms in living memory: the Magical Children Protection Act, the regution of Azkaban sentencing, expansions of house elf rights, and restructured Ministry oversight boards. The entire wizarding world held its breath.

  The decisive day arrived on a crisp morning in early November. Frost clung to the windows of the Wizengamot building, gilded in the sun's first golden rays. Wizards and witches flocked to the building in droves, many wearing expressions that mixed awe with anxiety. Journalists jostled for vantage points. Inside, the dais stood draped in solemn colors, reflecting the magnitude of the legistion. Marvolo, calm, stepped up to present the final arguments. Crystal watched from a vantage high in the gallery, wearing an understated but elegant bck robe that mirrored Hellsing's style. She sensed the tension in the air like a tangible force. The old guard sought to drown Marvolo's voice in procedural deys or emotional rhetoric. But with each passing minute, it became clear that the majority would vote with him.

  Then a hush that was almost supernatural fell across the chamber. Doors at the far end flew open. Dumbledore strode in, staff in hand, robes whispering like the hush of a grave. His presence alone demanded attention. Heads turned, some in relief, others in concern. The Headmaster cut a dignified figure, but his face wore lines deeper than before, as though carrying the weight of months of frustration. He surveyed the assembly with an air of finality. Time slowed in that breathless moment. Even Marvolo paused, lips parting in a subtle curve that could have been satisfaction or readiness for conflict.

  No one spoke as Dumbledore advanced to the center dais, the wand at his side—the Elder Wand, though few recognized it for what it was—exuding a faint aura of suppressed magic. "I come," he began, voice trembling with an intensity that belied his usual composure, "to warn you all. This Marvolo Slytherin deceives us. He is no champion of progress, but a cunning maniputor with unspeakable power. And the child you see at his side—this so-called Crystal Hellsing—remains the Key, the one fated to stand against Darkness. If they have turned from me, the prophecy may fall into the wrong hands."

  Marvolo's expression hardened. He inclined his head politely, but the set of his jaw suggested he had prepared for this confrontation. He responded with calm condemnation, enumerating Dumbledore's maniputions, revealing evidence of forced illusions pced on a child meant to die for a contrived prophecy. The tension soared. Some wizards gaped, uncertain how to reconcile the two extremes: a revered Headmaster ciming a moral crusade versus a charismatic lord unveiling documented proof of old crimes.

  Watching from above, Crystal felt her heart pound. The hush in the chamber crackled. She could see how certain pockets of the Wizengamot—those fiercely loyal to Dumbledore—stirred in agitation. Others gnced at each other in grim acknowledgment that they had suspected as much for some time. A few seats down, Minerva McGonagall clutched the edge of her bench, tears shining in her eyes as she witnessed the Headmaster's downfall. The silent hope she had harbored that these tensions might resolve peacefully shattered, repced by the knowledge that any illusions of the old wizarding order had come undone.

  The final vote commenced in a swirl of rising voices. Dumbledore's attempt to derail it failed under the weight of newly awakened consciences. In near silence, each seat cast a magical vote, glowing orbs drifting to an enchanted scale that weighed them. The scale tilted—rapidly and decisively—for Marvolo's reforms. The hush afterward spoke volumes. Dumbledore stood in the middle of it, a solitary figure trembling with anger, powerless to reverse the tide.

  When the scale's glow solidified, confirming the measures would pass, thunderous appuse broke out from many corners. The old guard reeled, some sinking into their seats, others walking out in shock. Dumbledore remained momentarily, jaw sck, meeting Marvolo's unflinching gaze. Then, with an abrupt swirl of his robe, he stormed from the chamber, vanishing into the corridors, a beaten king dethroned by unstoppable new forces.

  The weeks following that watershed moment saw a flurry of legistive confirmations. The wizarding press, once enthralled by Dumbledore's persona, swiftly pivoted to praising Marvolo's leadership. He took care to remain gracious in victory, urging caution, fostering colborations to ensure these reforms took root effectively. Meanwhile, public curiosity about Crystal soared. Articles debated her identity, her transformation, the Hellsing role in rescuing her from a false destiny. Some greeted her with suspicion, certain she was a creature of vampiric origin or that she might secretly be a puppet of a resurrected Dark Lord. Others revered her as an emblem of personal liberation, writing op-eds about how illusions had long shackled wizarding society.

  Through mid-November, Hellsing Manor became a hub of dignitaries, journalists, and envoys. Integra expertly managed the chaos, receiving them in carefully staged appointments, ensuring no prying outsiders threatened Crystal's safety or Alucard's temper. Beneath the polished hospitality, a keen vigince pervaded every corridor. More than once, a cloaked figure tried to infiltrate the estate; Alucard gleefully escorted them out, leaving them dazed and memory-charmed. The overarching sense was that a grand war had been won, but the final battles still loomed, lurking in the corners of what once was Dumbledore's dominion.

  On November 17, 1990, at twilight, Crystal stood upon the manor's highest balcony, the vantage offering an unbroken view of a ndscape tinted gold by a waning autumn sun. The crisp air carried the faint smell of fallen leaves. The orchard below glowed in warm oranges and browns, a reflection of the shifting season. She leaned on the balustrade, letting the hush of te evening seep into her spirit. She could still recall nights spent as an uncertain child, gazing out, feeling as though the entire world bore down on her destiny. Now, she felt the world had opened up, beckoning her to shape it. The hush was not oppressive but serene, filled with the echo of possibility.

  Integra appeared at her side, quiet footsteps on the balcony stones. She wore her signature suit, and the wind teased strands of her pale hair free. After a moment, she spoke, her tone low: "Dumbledore has retreated, but he's not done. He'll try something else. People like him don't yield easily."

  Crystal nodded, turning her head to the horizon. "I know," she said, voice calm. She felt that subtle vampiric hum in her veins, the disciplined might that was equal parts Hellsing legacy and her own fierce determination. "I'm ready. And I won't flinch when he comes."

  A quiet pride shone in Integra's eyes. Alucard, wordless, stood in the shadow of the balcony's arch behind them, arms folded, lips curved into a faint smirk. They formed a silent triad, watchers on the edge of a new era. The sky burned red and violet, a silent testament to how endings and beginnings often blurred. The hush carried the faint echo of wagons or cars in the distance, blending modern and magical realms as wizarding Britain reeled from the final blow to illusions that once held it captive.

  Crystal exhaled, the crisp air bracing against her lungs. She thought of Marvolo's unwavering stance in the Wizengamot, of the allied families who overcame fear to dethrone Dumbledore's quiet tyranny, of Minerva McGonagall's conflicted expression, and of the silent acceptance from many in the wizarding press that old illusions had to die. All of it coalesced into a single, simple realization: They had come too far to retreat.

  The hush of that November evening pressed around them, an unspoken invitation. She felt her heart steadied by the knowledge that no prophecy dictated her path. No illusions masked her figure. She was Crystal Hellsing, shaped by vampiric grace and Hellsing discipline, allied with a wizard once known as Voldemort yet determined to forge a better world. She pced a hand lightly on the hilt of the dagger at her belt, a tangible reminder of her vow. Let them brand her monstrous or miracle; she knew her own truth. A flicker of wind tugged at her hair, carrying a slight tang of winter's approach.

  A final hush. Integra's gloved hand settled on the balcony's edge, her posture unwavering. Alucard's presence shifted behind them, a silent sentinel. Beyond the manor's wards, the world moved, uncertain but inexorably changed. Dumbledore would not remain idle. She imagined him in Hogwarts, pacing that cluttered office, scheming in desperation. The metaphorical chessboard was set, pieces arrayed for a concluding match that neither side could avoid.

  She let a small, confident smile tug at her lips, feeling the echo of Alucard's grin. Her next breath was calm, measured, an oath of readiness. Turning to Integra, she said nothing, but the quiet bond between them spoke volumes: a mother figure's pride, a daughter's gratitude, both acknowledging the fight still to come. With one st gnce at the distant horizon, she let the hush envelop them. The orchard rustled softly, leaves dancing in the dying light.

  Then, in a voice edged with conviction, she spoke the words that had rippled in her thoughts for months, the vow that crystallized all they had fought for:

  "Let them come."

  AN:

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