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The world turned white. The roar of the explosion was a physical, crushing force, a deafening wave of sound that overloaded the suit's every sensor. Tony was thrown through the sky like a discarded toy, his armor tumbling end over end in a dizzying, uncontrolled spin.
"Structural integrity at seventy percent! Aft stabilizers offline! Warning! Warning!" Jarvis's voice was a frantic, distorted scream in his ear amidst a cacophony of alarms.
Tony fought the G-forces, firing his repulsors in short, desperate bursts to arrest the spin. When he finally stabilized, the sky was empty. The lingering smoke of the explosion was already dissipating on the wind. The F-22s were banking in the distance, their deadly work done.
But the girl was gone.
"Jarvis, scan for her," he ordered, his voice tight. "Life signs. Heat signature. Anything."
"Scanning, sir…" The silence that followed was heavy, absolute. "Nothing. No life signs detected in the blast radius."
A cold, heavy dread, thick as lead, settled in Tony's gut. He stared at the empty patch of sky where she had been just seconds before. Gone. Vaporized. A child. A strange, impossible, and deeply annoying child, but a child nonetheless. And she was dead because of him. He had paraded his new suit through the sky, drawing the attention of the military, and he had dragged her into his mess. First Yinsen, now this kid. The weight of it was crushing.
A hot, unfamiliar rage surged through him, directed at the jets, at Rhodey, at the whole stupid, trigger-happy world. But mostly, it was directed at himself.
"Oh, for heaven's sake, that was terrifying! I nearly dropped my wand…"
A familiar, cheerful voice sounded from directly behind him.
Tony's head whipped around, his movements stiff with disbelief. And there she was. Floating on her ridiculous broomstick, looking slightly disheveled and deeply annoyed, but very much alive. She was patting her black robes down, a faint shimmer of residual energy from her broken shield still clinging to her like dust motes.
His mind struggled to process the relief, the confusion, the sheer impossibility of it. "You're… you're not dead?" he blurted out.
Hermione glared at him, her eyes flashing with genuine anger. "You're the one who's dead! What on earth were you thinking, flying back towards a missile? It wasn't even locked on to me! If I hadn't been there to protect you, you'd be a cloud of very expensive confetti right now!"
She had a point. He also saw, in that moment, the genuine fear that had been hiding beneath her annoyance. The shield had held, but barely. He had almost gotten them both killed. The last of his anger evaporated, replaced by a strange, new respect.
"Rhodey!" he barked into his comms. "It's me! That's me in the sky, I'm in the suit! Call them off! Now! And there's a civilian child up here with me!"
Rhodey's voice came back, a mix of shock and fury. "Tony?! A suit? What the hell are you… Wait, a child? My pilots see one bogey, you! Radar is clean otherwise!"
"I know, just… It's complicated!" Tony turned, intending to point at Hermione, but the space beside him was empty again. He felt a light tap on his shoulder plate and sighed. This again.
From the empty air beside him, he heard three sharp, angry whispers. "Diffindo! Diffindo! Diffindo!"
He looked over just in time to see one of the billion-dollar F-22 Raptors, flying in a smooth, graceful arc, suddenly and silently come apart at the seams. It didn't explode. It was deconstructed. A wing sheared off, then the other. The cockpit separated cleanly from the fuselage. The pieces tumbled through the air in a slow, impossible ballet of destruction. A moment later, a parachute blossomed against the blue sky as the terrified pilot ejected from the wreckage.
"TONY, WHAT DID YOU DO?!" Rhodey screamed in his ear. "That's a twenty-first-century fighter jet! You can't just blow it up!"
Tony, who had been wrongfully blamed for many things in his life, knew when to cut his losses. "I'll pay for it!" he yelled, and cut the connection.
He hovered in the sudden silence, the remaining F-22 circling at a safe distance before turning tail and fleeing. "Hermione?" he called out tentatively to the empty sky.
"I'm here," her voice replied, and she shimmered back into existence beside him.
Tony stared at the empty space where the jet had been. "Okay," he said, his voice dangerously calm. "I need a scientific explanation. Now. The energy shield, the invisibility, and the spontaneous, catastrophic structural failure of that aircraft. Give me the data."
Hermione rolled her eyes with a long-suffering sigh. "For the last time," she said, her voice dripping with exasperation, "it's magic! M-A-G-I-C! How are you not getting this?" She pointed her wand at his chest plate, where a long, ugly gash from the shockwave had torn through the metal.
"Reparo!"
Tony heard a faint, grinding sound, and watched in utter disbelief as the gash in his armor began to knit itself back together. The torn metal flowed like liquid, the seams fusing, the paint reappearing until the suit was as pristine and perfect as it had been when he'd first put it on.
"Sir," Jarvis's voice said, sounding as stunned as an AI could, "all damage to the suit has been, for unknown reasons, completely repaired. Structural integrity is back at one hundred percent."
That was it. That was the last straw. The final, irrefutable piece of data that sent his entire, science-based worldview crashing down in flames.
"Magic… is real," he muttered to himself, the words feeling alien and absurd on his tongue. "How can magic be real…"
"What's so strange about it?" Hermione said, shaking her head. "The universe is full of things you don't understand. You haven't even learned all of your own sciences, and yet you presume to know everything about mystery. Sister Pepper was right. You are incredibly arrogant."
Tony was quiet for a long time, just floating there, high above the world. Finally, he let out a long, slow breath. "Okay," he said. "Okay. I believe you." He turned to her. "You're not S.H.I.E.L.D. They really couldn't afford you."
"My name is Hermione Granger," she said, as if reintroducing herself to this new, humbled version of him.
He nodded. "Tony Stark." He paused, his old habits dying hard. A smirk crept onto his face. "Genius, billionaire, playboy, philanthropist…"
"And a narcissist," Hermione added calmly, without missing a beat.
Tony's smirk vanished. He, Tony Stark, the man who could captivate any room, was being completely and utterly owned by a twelve-year-old witch. He felt a strange, unfamiliar sensation: the feeling of being genuinely impressed and deeply, deeply irritated at the same time.
They began the flight back to Malibu in a new, slightly awkward silence. Then, Tony noticed something. The girl's broom, while fast, was struggling to keep up with his suit's casual cruising speed.
An idea, the first truly Tony Stark idea he'd had since this whole insane encounter began, sparked in his mind. He couldn't out-magic her, he couldn't out-wit her, but he could sure as hell out-fly her. A sly, competitive grin spread across his face.
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