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Chapter 12: The Forging of a New Dawn

  Discimer: I don't own Harry Potter or Hellsing

  A year to the day after the Wizengamot delivered its quiet rebuke to Albus Dumbledore, a February wind howled around the dark spires of Hellsing Manor. It was the tenth of the month in 1991, and though the moon lit the snow-dusted grounds with a pale brilliance, the manor itself seemed to brood in silence, windows shuttered against the gusts like half-lidded eyes. Within those walls, candles burned low in mp sconces, their fmes a soft glow against old stone. These corridors had witnessed so much in recent months—deliberations, alliances, private confessions—and still the hush clung to them, as if wary of disturbing the unstoppable momentum of events.

  At the far end of a corridor, beyond a pair of imposing doors, Crystal sat cross-legged on the plush carpet of her private study. Flickers of magic still crackled in the air around her, signs of recent spellwork that left the room feeling faintly charged, as though thunderclouds had rolled past mere moments ago. She exhaled, aware of the quiet that enveloped her. The hush was neither menacing nor calm, simply the aftermath of high-level spellcasting. She had been pushing her boundaries again, testing illusions that wove her vampiric grace together with an extraordinary magical affinity.

  A swirl of faintly glowing runes drifted a foot above the carpet, their edges rippling with each slow breath she took. They vanished when her concentration wavered, leaving behind a faint tingle of heat in the air. Her arms felt heavy from the repeated incantations, each muscle quivering with that addictive blend of fatigue and exhiration. Her hair, bck and shining in the mplight, clung to her damp forehead where sweat beaded, testimony to the strain of conjuring advanced illusions for hours on end.

  She lifted her gaze to the grimoire id open before her, studying how the inked diagrams on the parchment still pulsed with leftover energies. No illusions stunted her power now; no subtle wards from Dumbledore disguised or hobbled her. Every incantation sizzled with an honest intensity that matched her desire to master it. This was what it felt like to wield magic unchained, with purpose and a sense of identity. No longer that boy locked in illusions, but a being who had stepped into her rightful self. She was Crystal Hellsing, and with each successful spell, each new threshold crossed, she owned that name more firmly.

  She felt a presence behind her—Integra, standing at the threshold of the study, arms folded as she leaned against the doorframe. The faint whiff of gunpowder and old cigars clung to Integra's clothing, along with the subtler fragrance of library dust and polished oak. When Crystal turned to look, she noticed the flicker of pride in Integra's eyes, tempered by concern in the rigid set of her jaw.

  "You're pushing yourself hard," Integra said, her voice carrying that calm authority Crystal had come to respect. She didn't move from her vantage, but the faint tap of her index finger against her upper arm betrayed her quiet disapproval. "Even a gifted witch or wizard paces themselves before a confrontation, and you've been at this for hours."

  Drawing in a careful breath, Crystal rose to her feet. Her knees threatened to wobble, and she locked them, determined not to reveal the exhaustion that prickled in her muscles. She pressed her arms across her chest, trying not to grin too widely. "I know," she said. "But it's intoxicating. It's like the spells listen to me more easily than they ever did before. I can push illusions further, shape them more intricately... I can feel the raw power swirling in me, almost like it's been waiting for me all my life."

  Integra nodded. Her gaze lingered on the dissipating motes of conjured light that still flickered near the corner of the room. "And you'll need every ounce of that skill if we're right about what's coming," she said softly. "Still, your father would caution you about overextending too soon."

  A curling shadow near the far wall shifted, and from it emerged Alucard in that smooth, disconcerting manner he favored. He let out a low, rumbling chuckle. "Do not invoke me as a voice of caution, Integra," he teased, the corners of his mouth curling in a zy grin. "But she's correct in one thing, fledgling—potential alone is meaningless if you tear yourself apart chasing it. War demands more than raw magic."

  Crystal snorted softly, pivoting to face him. The residual tension in the study seemed to ripple in response to his presence, the air turning fractionally colder. She felt her heightened senses react—he always did that to her, stirring an instinctive awareness that was half vampiric, half respectful wariness. She half-smiled. "I almost believed you actually cared if I overexerted myself," she said.

  Alucard's grin widened, eyes glinting red in the low light. "I hate wasted potential," he replied, voice carrying an amused undertone. "You burn out now, and the next months will be terribly dull." He gave a mocking bow, acknowledging the quiet ugh Integra stifled.

  Crystal ran a hand through her hair, picking up the faint tang of ozone from where magical arcs had crackled. The hush in the study bore a new sense of reflection. She let her gaze travel across the shelves of books bound in leather—grimoires, theoretical texts, treatises on vampiric synergy with wizarding magic. They had all become her daily companions. "I'm fine," she said at st. "Just hungry and... tired. But it's a good tired."

  Integra gestured with a tilt of her head toward the door. "We'll talk in the morning about next steps. Rest, eat, clear your mind. Then we decide how to handle the next wave of political shifts. The world isn't stopping because we're exhausted."

  That final remark lingered. Crystal nodded and flicked her wrist, banishing the st of the intangible runes that glowed over the carpet. The colorless motes winked out with a sound like distant chimes, leaving behind the faint scent of scorched linen. She closed her grimoire with a careful press of her hand on its embossed cover, feeling the hum of stored magic within the pages. Then she followed Integra out, Alucard drifting behind them like a living shadow. The manor's corridors felt cold underfoot, the stone floors radiating the chill of a February night, but she relished the crity it gave her thoughts.

  She passed a tall window on the way to her quarters. The gss revealed the courtyard below, cloaked in silent snow, frost shimmering in the moonlight. The hush pressed against the walls like a living thing. A year ago, that hush might have unnerved her, bringing memories of uncertain nights in a cupboard or the quiet maniputions of a bearded Headmaster. Now, the hush felt protective—like a shield about to be tested. She inhaled and pressed a palm to the cold window, letting the stillness reassure her.

  When the morning arrived, bright but icy, Crystal awoke with mild aches in her shoulders, a reminder of her te-night practice. She sat up in bed, blinking at the sunlight that streamed through the parted curtains. The interior of her room was warm enough, thanks to the wards, but outside, the manor grounds glowed white with fresh snowfall. She could smell coffee from somewhere in the corridor—likely Walter ensuring everyone rose to a calm, orderly routine. She swung her legs out, letting her feet touch the thick rug, and stretched her arms overhead, savoring the small twinges of muscle that signaled real progress. Another day of training, strategy, and quiet anticipation awaited her. War might not have erupted openly, but each piece on the board advanced daily, inch by inch.

  The household had changed in the past year. The staff's routine carried a subdued seriousness. Each meal was a moment to exchange coded news from the wizarding realm, each night watch a demonstration of heightened vigince. Alucard prowled the halls in the te hours, ensuring no infiltration risk, while Walter directed a near-military discipline among the guards. Integra juggled an endless stream of letters, alliances, and scheduling for Marvolo's political maneuvers. The hush of the corridors concealed a hum of readiness: they all expected something to snap soon—likely from Dumbledore.

  Over that breakfast, in a small dining room off the main hall, Crystal sipped bck tea and listened as Integra summarized the test intelligence from wizarding contacts. The air smelled faintly of the eggs and toast on her pte, but her appetite was overshadowed by the conversation. Marvolo had sent word that major families in the wizarding aristocracy were nearing a tipping point, uncertain whether to align with him fully or cling to the vestiges of Dumbledore's moral authority. Some families who had once sworn never to trust "Dark Lord ambitions" now found themselves attracted to the stable social reforms Marvolo offered. Meanwhile, Dumbledore's presence at Hogwarts seemed to teeter on desperation, with rumors swirling that entire sections of the staff questioned him behind closed doors.

  "When the illusions shatter, there's no going back," Integra observed, swirling her tea absently. "We've come this far. Dumbledore's illusions about the prophecy, about you, are in tatters. He's losing his foothold, but I suspect he's not the type to accept that gracefully."

  Crystal pushed her half-eaten toast aside, meeting Integra's gaze. "He'll sh out, won't he? Perhaps attempt something drastic to recapture the narrative." She paused, remembering the old man's relentless search for "Harry Potter," how he refused to see the child as anything but an instrument. "He might try forcibly to retake me, or orchestrate chaos to bme on Marvolo."

  Integra inclined her head, eyes cool with the same steely resolve that had guided Hellsing for generations. "Precisely. That's why we remain vigint. The political side has advanced well, but the personal side—Dumbledore's fixation on you—poses the greatest threat. If we're unprepared, he might exploit an opening."

  Alucard, seated at the far end of the table, drummed his gloved fingers on the table's surface. "Let him come," he said lightly. "We have wards, cunning, and enough firepower to reduce him to cinders. It might even be entertaining." His grin showed a faint fsh of fang, but the lethal sincerity behind it was unmistakable.

  Walter cleared his throat discreetly, stepping forward to top off Integra's tea. "We also have to consider the rest of wizarding Britain," he said. "Killing Dumbledore outright, while effective, could spark unpredictable backsh. Many still see him as a benevolent figure, even if they doubt him now."

  Crystal nodded slowly. She felt a pang of sympathy for those who still believed Dumbledore's benevolence to be absolute. It wasn't easy to unlearn illusions, especially illusions that had comforted entire generations. But illusions had to fall eventually. "So we keep building our alliances, keep exposing his maniputions, until no one can cim ignorance," she murmured, almost to herself.

  The hush that followed her words told her they agreed.

  Time rolled forward, day by day. Reports from wizarding encves filtered in, small notes of families disciming old loyalties, individuals stepping out of their comfort zones to sign on to new ws championed by Marvolo. The Wizengamot sessions throughout te February and early March continued codifying the reforms, whittling away at the power structures that once upheld Dumbledore's quiet reign. Each vote hammered home the sense that the Headmaster's moral high ground was gone.

  Hogwarts itself churned in an undercurrent of student rumors. Harry Potter—some insisted—had been ensved by dark forces, while others argued he never existed in the form they knew. A rumor that "Harry was now a girl named Crystal, allied with some new order" circuted among upper years, but few believed it wholeheartedly. Most only sensed that some fundamental shift loomed, leaving them uneasy and uncertain. Professors like Flitwick and Sprout taught their csses with a veneer of normalcy, but behind closed doors, they shared perplexed conversations. Minerva found herself drawn into hush-voiced talks with a few staff about the future of Hogwarts. The old illusions that Dumbledore's leadership was unassaible grew increasingly frail.

  And Dumbledore, in turn, withdrew further into his tower office. Some nights, he roamed the corridors, white beard brushing his robes, hand clutched tight around the Elder Wand. Students who encountered him in the gloom reported the flicker of something haunted in his blue eyes. If he saw them, he offered no kindly greeting, only a tight-lipped nod, mind evidently spinning with strategies no one else could grasp. The hush in that ancient castle's halls told a story of a man nearing the end of a rope he had woven himself.

  Around mid-March, Marvolo visited Hellsing Manor in person, arriving in the early evening. The sun sank behind the orchard trees as he passed through the wrought-iron gates, accompanied by half a dozen confidants. Crystal and Integra met them in the grand foyer, the hush of the manor overshadowed by the swirl of cloaks and the crisp steps of Marvolo's entourage. They brought news—some of it sobering, some hopeful. A cluster of old families had broken ties with Dumbledore, siding openly with Marvolo. Meanwhile, an ill-advised infiltration attempt by one of Dumbledore's st loyal Aurors had been thwarted near a wizarding hamlet. No bloodshed, but it signaled the Headmaster's desperation.

  They settled in the manor's library, a hush enveloping them as letters were read, intelligence cross-checked, wards updated. Candlelight danced on polished tabletops, revealing the set lines of Marvolo's face, the tension in every gnce Integra cast around the room. Crystal listened with unwavering focus, gleaning the shifts in wizarding society. A year earlier, Marvolo's influence had been an unstoppable tide. Now, the tide had nearly swept the old order away. All that remained was the final confrontation.

  Marvolo paused while reading a letter from a minor official in the Department of Magical Law Enforcement. He set it aside, folding his hands on the desk. His dark eyes flicked to Crystal. "We're closing in on the st pockets of Dumbledore's authority," he said softly. "But cornered men sometimes bite hardest. I suspect we'll see him attempt something drastic soon—some final measure to discredit us or force a direct csh."

  Crystal's heart pounded, but she kept her expression composed, ignoring the coil of tension in her gut. "I'm ready," she replied. "If he tries to recim me, I won't be a passive target. And if he tries to call for a final confrontation, we'll meet him on our terms."

  Alucard offered a predatory grin from where he lounged near the firepce. "I do hope he chooses the direct route," he murmured, voice tinged with anticipation. "All these illusions taste stale. It's time for a real conflict."

  Integra shot him a brief, cool gre. "We don't want a sughter. We want an end to illusions, yes—but the wizarding world has seen enough blood. We do this precisely and systematically. Dumbledore must be removed in a way that leaves no room for him to be martyred."

  "Of course," Alucard drawled, feigning disappointment. He turned, swirling a wine gss in one hand, the liquid inside dark as ink. "Precision can be quite entertaining too, I suppose."

  Late that night, Marvolo and his confidants departed, the hush returning to the manor as though exhaling after a flurry of activity. Crystal found herself alone in the corridor outside the library, leaning against a pilr, eyes closed to the flicker of a single wall sconce. The quiet roared in her ears, letting her mind repy Marvolo's words. She recalled the swirl of illusions she had once conjured to defend herself. Now, illusions were the st thing she sought. Everything needed crity—a final confrontation with Dumbledore, a stripping away of the maniputions that had defined so many lives, a forging of a new dawn.

  Days bled into weeks, and the hush of preparation across wizarding Britain grew more pronounced. By te March, the final legistive measures that had once been unimaginable were nearing official ratification. Even some who opposed the new order recognized it as unstoppable. Dumbledore's name cropped up in fewer official discussions—he had receded too far, forced into the background by the unstoppable momentum of the Wizengamot's new majority. But among the general public, a question lingered: Where was the wise, paternal figure so many had revered? Had he lost faith, or had the world turned traitor to him? No illusions could fully expin his withdrawal, leaving rumor to fester.

  Inside Hogwarts, the hush of a thousand small tensions remained. Students felt it in each quiet meal at the Great Hall, each guarded expression from faculty. Some whispered that the Headmaster had gone mad. Others insisted he was on the brink of unveiling a grand pn to restore "Harry Potter" and quell the chaos. But each day that passed without action made those illusions harder to sustain.

  On April 4, 1991, an early spring sun rose over Hellsing Manor, melting the st patches of snow into rivulets that trickled through the orchard. The morning light warmed the old stones, revealing flecks of quartz in the mortar, as though the manor itself glimmered with cautious optimism. From the orchard's vantage, one might have mistaken the day for any other: birds singing in budding branches, sunlight dancing across dew-den wns. But the hush in the corridors inside told a different story—an undercurrent of readiness that vibrated through the staff and the household.

  Crystal woke with a jolt, sensing the wards fre. She sat up in bed, heart thudding, scanning the room for any sign of intrusion. Nothing. Just a subtle pulse of arm that quickly ebbed. She exhaled, wiping sleep from her eyes, and rose to investigate. Her door opened onto the corridor, where Walter already strode with purposeful steps, bck uniform immacute. He carried a silver tray with sealed letters, the official kind used for high-level wizarding communications.

  Integra waited in the entrance hall, footsteps echoing as she paced in front of a tall window that overlooked the orchard. Alucard stood near the shadows of a marble column, arms folded, expression unreadable. The hush felt thick as Crystal approached. She could almost taste the tension.

  Walter handed Integra one of the sealed envelopes. "From the Ministry, delivered by special courier," he said softly. "Moments ago."

  Integra nodded, brow furrowed, and broke the seal with a swift motion. Her eyes skimmed the contents, lips set in a grim line. Then she extended the parchment so Crystal could see. It bore the stamp of the Wizengamot's official crest. A few lines in crisp script indicated that a formal hearing and confrontation had been scheduled—one st attempt by certain old-guard members to challenge Marvolo's authority. The date was set armingly close.

  Crystal read the words, her chest clenching. She recognized the subtext: a carefully orchestrated meeting, possibly a trap. A hush hung over them. She tilted her head, meeting Integra's gaze. "They're cornering him. Trying to push for a final stand before everything is irrevocably altered." The dryness in her mouth felt like the prelude to a battlefield's hush.

  Integra folded the parchment, sliding it into her jacket pocket. "Yes. And from the tone, Dumbledore's supporters had a hand in arranging this. They're calling it a hearing, but it's really a challenge. A test of Marvolo's legitimacy. They want to force the matter—either break his hold on the Wizengamot or break themselves in the process."

  Alucard shifted, the corners of his mouth lifting in that signature half-grin. "A final gambit, then. This could be interesting."

  Crystal's mind whirled. She recalled the quiet vow she had made, to stand openly with Marvolo, to see illusions destroyed once and for all. This hearing might be the moment. The hush around them carried the weight of a thousand unspoken implications: if Dumbledore or his proxies truly intended to spring a final trap, they would do it here. And if Marvolo succeeded, the old order's illusions would crumble beyond repair. The entire wizarding world would witness it.

  A short time ter, they gathered in Integra's office, a pce that smelled faintly of old books, gun oil, and the unstoppable discipline she exuded. She paced behind her desk, while Alucard lounged in an armchair, tapping his gloved fingers against the leather armrest. Walter stood by the door, shoulders squared, ready for instructions. Crystal remained near a tall window that overlooked the orchard's new green shoots. In that hush, she felt each of them preparing for a final shift.

  "Marvolo must respond carefully," Integra said, flipping through the official text of the hearing notice. "If he acts with brute force, he risks proving Dumbledore's narrative that he's a tyrant. If he's too lenient, Dumbledore might slip away to conjure new illusions."

  Crystal nodded, shoulders tight. "Then precision. We use the hearing to let him dismantle their illusions with facts, with the unstoppable momentum of the ws already in pce. And if Dumbledore tries something... we neutralize it. Cleanly." A hint of steel ced her tone, a reflection of how far she had come from that uncertain child. She was prepared to stand in the open, side by side with Marvolo, ensuring no illusions overshadowed them again.

  Alucard's voice came low. "No illusions left for him to hide behind, no child to puppet, no prophecy he can brandish to force compliance. He's lost his story. He's dangerous in the corners, where illusions are easiest to spin."

  The hush that followed said they all agreed. War might come in a swirl of illusions or a burst of hexes. One way or another, the conflict that had simmered for over a year approached a decisive juncture.

  A knock at the door broke the silence. Another letter from the Ministry, delivered by one of Marvolo's personal messengers, confirming the hearing date. Time, the letter implied, was short. April 4—today—was a pivot, the final countdown. By midday, additional correspondences arrived from wizarding families, each referencing the swirl of rumors that "one final confrontation" was at hand. Hellsing Manor felt like the calm center of a storm, wards thrumming with quiet energy, staff methodically checking security.

  Late that afternoon, Crystal retreated to her private training space, a rectangur courtyard ringed with old stone buttresses that lent a cloistered air. Over the past year, Alucard had helped her refine illusions for tactical usage—defensive wards, illusions that could mislead an attacker, advanced conjurations that wove vampiric reflexes with spellcraft. Now, as dusk tinted the sky in pale oranges, she summoned illusions that flickered around the courtyard's perimeter: shimmering shapes designed to disorient, illusions of the orchard creeping closer, illusions of archways rising from the ground. She felt the magic course through her veins, responding to her will like a well-trained hound. Alucard, standing to one side, gave a slight nod of approval.

  She let the illusions fade, chest heaving with exertion. "I want to be certain that if Dumbledore tries anything at that hearing, I can neutralize it," she said softly, the hush of the courtyard amplifying her voice. "I might be the reason he calls for a final confrontation, after all. He still believes I'm... you know, his missing pawn."

  Alucard's grin was zy, yet his eyes held that predatory glint. "He'll likely attempt one st manipution. Perhaps illusions or curses designed to make you seem unstable. Or a direct strike. We can't predict. But you'll be ready, fledgling." His tone made it half praise, half challenge.

  She breathed in, letting the crisp air fill her lungs. The hush around them, broken only by a slight breeze rustling through the buttresses, resonated with the sense of fateful events looming. She nodded, steeling herself. "Yes. I'll be ready."

  When the sun dipped beyond the orchard, painting the sky in bruised purples, the hush of evening settled over the manor once more. Integra convened a final meeting. The library's mps glowed with a subdued warmth. Marvolo had returned from a st-minute session at the Wizengamot, bringing fresh confirmations: the old guard insisted on a formal hearing, scheduled to happen in days. They couched it in legalese, but it was pinly a trap—Dumbledore's loyalists wanted one chance to humiliate Marvolo, to cast doubt on his entire new order. Or, at the very least, to create a spectacle that might rally pockets of resistance. Hellsing's small group crowded around the library's main table, scanning updated documents and scrying reports. The hush thickened with determination.

  Marvolo's voice was calm but steely as he addressed them. "They aim to undermine the unstoppable wave of ws we've enacted by challenging the moral underpinnings. They'll cim I maniputed, used illusions, coerced the Wizengamot. They'll brand you, Crystal, as a victim or a puppet." His dark eyes shifted to her, something like fatherly concern mingling with unwavering purpose. "They can't cim you as 'Harry Potter' if you stand unwaveringly as Crystal, revealing what they did—how they locked you in illusions. But be prepared: illusions cut both ways. If they conjure a narrative fast enough, they might sow confusion."

  She dipped her head in acknowledgment, remembering the nightmares where Dumbledore recast her entire existence as a falsehood. "I won't let them spin illusions about me again," she said, voice quiet but resonant. "The more direct they are, the easier it is to show what they did."

  Integra chimed in, posture rigid. "We'll attend the hearing. I've arranged measures so the press and a broad audience can witness, guaranteeing any illusions or maniputions are swiftly countered by evidence. Walter will handle security. If Dumbledore tries anything reckless, we'll have reinforcements in position." Her knuckles whitened on the table's edge. "We must avoid lethal force if possible. We can't have him die in a bze of perceived martyrdom."

  Alucard ughed softly. "You do love restraining me." Then, with a more serious tone, he added, "But so be it. If the old man tries to conjure illusions or curses in that hearing, I'll simply disrupt them. No kill, just break the illusions. It might be even more fun that way."

  Walter, standing with a note in hand, cleared his throat. "We have a timeframe. The hearing is set for exactly one week from now. That puts the date near the end of March. We must be in pce the night before to handle any sabotage attempts. The official location is the old council hall adjacent to the Wizengamot chamber—traditionally used for disputes between major houses."

  Marvolo let out a small exhale, as though weary from the endless tug-of-war with an obstinate past. "It fits. Dumbledore's allies are clinging to old traditions while trying to break the new order. We'll show them how illusions crumble under the weight of truth."

  Crystal felt a thrill of resolve course through her. "Then we do it. Let them brandish illusions—I'll stand up to them openly. If they still insist on calling me 'Harry Potter' or some puppet, I'll prove otherwise. And if they try to retake me forcibly..." She paused, inhaling. "They'll find out how far I've come."

  A hush greeted her words. Integra offered a subtle, approving nod, Alucard fshed that dangerous smile, and Walter bowed. Marvolo's expression reflected a simir conviction: time to forge the final blow. The hush that ended the meeting spoke volumes about the quiet strength each occupant carried, and the intense changes that had shaped them all since illusions fell away.

  The following days leading to April 4 soared by in a blur of final pnning. Crystal refined her illusions daily in that courtyard, repeatedly pushing her magic's synergy with vampiric reflexes. Alucard hovered, occasionally offering pointers or a sardonic tease. Integra hammered out logistical details with Walter: how best to position watchers at the council hall, how to ensure no infiltration compromised Marvolo's approach. Intelligence from wizarding encves trickled in, each snippet fueling the hush of readiness at Hellsing Manor.

  On April 3, the hush that settled over the estate was almost tangible, as though the wards themselves inhaled in anticipation. Crystal found herself in the manor's orchard at twilight, pacing between rows of budding apple trees. The ground was firm beneath her boots, the crisp air carrying the scent of damp earth. She paused to look back at the estate's silhouette, old stones bathed in moonlight. A gentle breeze sent a swirl of blossoming petals into the air, dancing around her. The hush felt full of unspoken vows. Tomorrow, the final piece of the puzzle would slide into pce, and illusions would either be dispelled forever or coalesce into one st attempt to control her fate.

  She closed her eyes, remembering the boy she once was, the illusions that had smothered her from infancy. That boy was a memory, overshadowed by the truth of who she had become. She felt no regret, only a fierce gratitude for the path that led her here. And she remembered the vow: never again would illusions define her, never again would an old man's prophecy chain her to a life not her own. If war was the cost, she stood ready to pay.

  Night deepened, the orchard's hush turning reverent. She returned indoors, greeted by Walter, who informed her that everything was set for the next day's hearing. She nodded, exchanging no more words, letting the hush speak for them both. She understood: by this time tomorrow, the wizarding world might be altered irreversibly.

  Finally, the dawn of April 4 broke crisp and golden over the orchard. Walter and several staff busied themselves with st-minute checks of travel arrangements. Integra, dressed in her immacute suit, stood in the main hall, quietly directing security. Alucard appeared from behind a swirl of shadows, coat trailing. Marvolo arrived by Floo not long after, expression resolute. The hush was electric with final readiness.

  Crystal emerged st, wearing a bck ensemble that banced the line between Muggle efficiency and wizarding formality, the Hellsing crest on one shoulder. She carried no illusions about the day's gravity—her illusions now served her will, not others'. She exhaled as Marvolo turned to address them all, voice calm yet thrumming with the intensity of a general on the eve of battle.

  "Today," he said, "we prove that illusions no longer bind wizardkind. Let Dumbledore attempt his final gambit. Let him conjure whatever narratives he wishes. We stand united."

  The hush that answered him was a silent promise of unwavering support. Integra offered a curt, confident nod. Alucard's grin gleamed. Walter bowed slightly. And Crystal, her heart beating with a steadiness that belied the tension in her limbs, simply said, "It's time."

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