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"Well," Nick Fury said, finally recovering from his momentary stupor, the word sounding a bit strained. "I suppose… I am a good person." He said it with the conviction of a man trying to convince himself as much as anyone else. Even he could feel the goosebumps rising on his arms.
He quickly steered the conversation away from the treacherous territory of his own morality and onto the far more pressing matter at hand. He leaned forward, his one good eye fixing Hermione with an intense, penetrating stare. This was the reason he had brought her here. This was the question that had been keeping him up at night.
"Miss Granger," he began, his voice dropping to a low, serious tone. "This 'wizarding world' you speak of. How many wizards like you are there?"
This was it. The opening move. Hermione had been waiting for it. She put on a thoughtful expression, tapping a finger to her chin as if genuinely trying to calculate an impossible number.
"Oh, I'm not really sure," she said, her voice laced with the perfect amount of childish uncertainty. "Hogwarts—that's my school in Britain—has about a thousand students, I think. Then there's Durmstrang in the north of Europe, and Beauxbatons in France… and of course, you have Ilvermorny here in America…" She trailed off, letting the names hang in the air like bombshells. "Oh, there are so many more all over the world. How could I possibly know how many? That question is much too difficult!" She finished with a pout, looking genuinely hurt that she couldn't provide a more precise answer.
The effect was exactly what she had intended. She saw Coulson and Natasha exchange a look of pure, unadulterated shock. But Fury's reaction was more profound. He went completely still, his expression unreadable, but Hermione could almost hear the gears of his strategic mind grinding as he processed the sheer scale of what she had just revealed. It wasn't just one hidden society. It was a global, clandestine civilization.
And one of their schools is on my turf. The thought was a cold knot of dread in Fury's stomach. A magic school, operating on American soil, and we never even knew.
Forcing his emotions down, he pressed on, his voice dangerously calm. "And the Ministry of Magic? What can you tell me about their organizational structure?"
Natasha shot a worried glance at her boss. He was pushing too hard, too fast. Their entire strategy was supposed to be based on building trust, not conducting a high-pressure interrogation. But she also understood his urgency. After she'd left the cafe, Hermione had vanished from the face of the earth. For two long weeks, every resource S.H.I.E.L.D. possessed had been dedicated to finding her, and they had come up with absolutely nothing. She was a ghost who could appear and disappear at will. This was their one chance, and Fury wasn't going to waste it.
"The Ministry of Magic?" Hermione replied, a confused frown on her face. "Well, I suppose they're like your Muggle government. They maintain order, make sure no one breaks the International Statute of Secrecy. Each country has its own. The one here in America is called the Magical Congress of the United States. As for their structure… I don't know. I'm just a student." She shrugged. "You'd have to ask someone important, like Professor Dumbledore, about things like that. How would I know?"
Her performance was flawless. She was a knowledgeable insider on things a child would know (schools, basic rules), and plausibly ignorant on things they wouldn't (geopolitics, governmental structure). Every word was a carefully chosen breadcrumb, leading them down a path she had constructed.
"You said, 'you America'," Natasha interjected smoothly. "You're not American, are you?"
Hermione looked at her as if she'd just grown a second head. "I'm a student at Hogwarts. Of course I'm British," she said, her genuine London accent suddenly more pronounced.
Natasha smiled awkwardly. In the whirlwind of magic and mystery, she had completely overlooked the most obvious clue.
For the next hour, Hermione patiently answered their questions, painting a picture of a vast, ancient, and deeply hidden world. She explained that "Muggles" was the term for non-magical people. She explained that wizards required wands to focus their power, and that their society had existed for thousands of years, cloaked by powerful enchantments that made it undetectable to both ordinary people and advanced technology. When faced with a question she couldn't answer, she would simply shrug and say, "It's magic," a frustrating but oddly consistent explanation that left Fury grinding his teeth.
When he asked how they could enter this world, her answer was simple and absolute. "You can't." She explained that even if a Muggle knew the exact location of Diagon Alley or Platform Nine and Three-Quarters, the enchantments would simply make them forget why they were there and wander off.
"If you are a student at Hogwarts in Britain," Fury asked, his one eye narrowing, "then why do you spend so much time here, in New York?"
Hermione's cheerful expression suddenly vanished. She looked down at her hands, her posture becoming small and withdrawn. "The British Ministry… they put me under some personal restrictions," she said, her voice barely a whisper. "They won't let me leave Hogwarts. But… this place, America, is under the jurisdiction of the Magical Congress. The Ministry's rules don't apply here. Professor Dumbledore… he secretly opened a magical back door for me. So when I leave school, I'm teleported directly to New York. It's the only place I can be free."
Fury already knew that Dumbledore was the Headmaster of Hogwarts, but this new information was… intriguing. "Why?" he asked, his voice softer now. "Why would they restrict a child's freedom?" He remembered her first question to Natasha: Were you sent by the Ministry to monitor me? There was a deep, secret history here.
"Because…" Hermione began, then fell silent. A long, heavy pause filled the room. When she finally looked up, her expression was flat, her eyes cold and empty. "I don't want to talk about it."
The refusal was so abrupt, so absolute, that it was more revealing than any answer could have been. The three S.H.I.E.L.D. agents were now certain: this girl, despite being a mere student, was an extraordinarily important figure in the wizarding world, with a secret so profound it required her to flee across an ocean to escape it.
Fury, a master of interrogation, knew when to back off. He had gained a treasure trove of intelligence today. Pushing further would only breed resentment. He smiled, a rare, almost paternal expression. "I understand. In that case, let's change the subject. The reason I asked you here today wasn't just to talk. I wanted to ask for your help."
"My help?" This was the one thing Hermione hadn't expected.
Fury waved a hand. The massive panoramic window behind him transformed into a high-definition screen. A familiar, handsome face with a cocky grin and a perfectly sculpted goatee appeared.
"This man is Tony Stark, the head of Stark Industries," Fury said, his voice all business now. "Two months ago, he was in Afghanistan demonstrating a new weapon. His convoy was attacked. All of his escorts were killed, and Mr. Stark has been missing ever since. We suspect he was kidnapped by a terrorist organization known as the Ten Rings. We have no leads, no demands, nothing."
He turned to face Hermione, his expression grim. "So, Miss Wizard, I was hoping you might have a magical solution. Is there a way for you to find him?"
Hermione stared at the photo, her mind racing. Find Tony Stark? How in the world would I do that? I'm a wizard, not a psychic GPS. It was an absurd request.
But then, the second, third, and fourth layers of Fury's gambit became crystal clear. He didn't actually expect her to find him. This was a test. A shot in the dark. If she failed, he lost nothing and learned something about the limits of her magic. If, by some miracle, she succeeded, he would recover America's most valuable weapons designer and gain a powerful new asset. It was a loyalty test and a power-level scan, all disguised as a desperate plea for help.
She looked from Stark's smiling face on the screen to Fury's one, calculating eye, and a slow, grudging smile spread across her own face.
You sly, magnificent, one-eyed bastard, she thought with a newfound respect. You're good. You're really good.
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