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The two teams hovered in the center of the vast aerial stadium, two islands of color in the crisp autumn air. The roar of a hundred thousand screaming students was a physical pressure, a wave of sound that vibrated in their bones. Below them, Marcus Flint, the hulking, buck-toothed captain of the Slytherin team, sneered across the gap at Oliver Wood.
"What's the matter, Wood?" he taunted, his voice a low, brutish drawl. "Finally run out of actual players? Had to recruit a couple of babies to fill out your roster?"
Wood's hands tightened on his broomstick, his jaw clenched. "They're twice the player you'll ever be, Flint," he shot back, though his voice lacked conviction. He knew the odds were against them. Gryffindor's losing streak was the stuff of Hogwarts legend.
"Is that so?" Flint laughed, a ugly, grating sound. "Tell me, when was the last time Gryffindor even saw the Quidditch Cup? Not since Charlie Weasley was here, and he's been off chasing dragons for years. You're a joke."
Wood turned to his own team, his face a mask of strained optimism. "Alright, team," he said, trying to project a confidence he didn't feel. "Don't listen to him. Just play your game. Remember, it's about sportsmanship. Friendship first, competition second."
Flint let out another roar of laughter. "Friendship first? That's what losers say to make themselves feel better. The whole point of a competition is to win. To crush your opponent. To stand on their broken bodies and lift the trophy."
"He's right, you know."
The voice was quiet, cold, and came from Wood's own side. Every player, Gryffindor and Slytherin alike, turned to look at Hermione.
"What?" Wood stammered.
The buck-toothed Slytherin captain looked genuinely surprised. "You think so too?"
"Of course," Hermione said, her voice devoid of emotion. "Playing a game without the intent to win is a meaningless exercise. Why would you ever choose to lose when you can win?" She looked at Flint, a slow, cold smile spreading across her face. "But you're wrong about one thing."
"And what's that?" he asked, intrigued.
"It's not 'competition first, friendship second'," she said, her smile widening into something predatory and deeply unsettling. Her voice dropped to a low, menacing whisper. "It's competition first… and your opponent's utter annihilation second."
Before anyone could process the sheer, un-Gryffindor-like ruthlessness of that statement, a loud, shrill whistle blast ripped through the air. Madam Hooch tossed the Quaffle, and the game began.
Stark Tower, New York.
"Look, Tony! There she is!" Pepper exclaimed, pointing at the massive, high-definition screen that dominated one wall of the workshop.
The image was crystal clear, a perfect, magical live-feed of the Quidditch match. After a few days of intense, collaborative work, Tony's engineering and Hermione's enchanting had successfully created a quantum-entangled scrying device. It wasn't transmitting a signal; it was showing them a direct, real-time window into another dimension.
Nick Fury stood behind them, his arms crossed, his one good eye taking in every detail. This wasn't just a game to him; it was a priceless intelligence opportunity. The sight of hundreds of witches and wizards, of a fully realized magical culture, was the final, irrefutable proof his analytical mind had needed. The wizarding world was real.
"The famous 'Library Witch,' Hermione Granger!" Lee Jordan's magically-amplified voice boomed from the screen's speakers.
"Library Witch?" Tony snorted. "They call her that? The kid I know is more of a pint-sized agent of chaos. A wild girl."
They all realized, in that moment, how little they truly knew about the small, enigmatic girl who had so violently and completely upended their lives.
"Well," Pepper said with a warm smile, as a massive cheer of "HERMIONE! HERMIONE!" went up from the crowd on screen, "she's certainly popular." She had been worried the girl was an outcast at her strange, secret school. It was a relief to see she had friends.
The whistle blew, and the world exploded into motion. Fourteen players shot off in fourteen different directions, a chaotic swarm of red and green against the bright blue sky.
Angelina Johnson, one of Gryffindor's star Chasers, snatched the Quaffle out of the air and tucked it under her arm, banking hard toward the Slytherin hoops. But a green-robed Chaser, Bletchley, was on her in an instant. He didn't go for the ball; he flew straight into her, a clear case of Blatching that was too fast and too brutal for the referee to call.
Angelina grunted, losing her balance and nearly falling from her broom as the Quaffle tumbled from her grasp. Alicia Spinnet, her teammate, was there to catch it, expertly weaving through the chaos. But then Marcus Flint shot out from below her, his shoulder slamming hard into her side. It was another blatant, illegal move, and Alicia cried out in pain as the Quaffle fell once more.
A wave of boos and hisses came from the stands. On the sidelines, Professor McGonagall was on her feet, her fists clenched, her face a mask of cold fury.
Flint just laughed, proud of his dirty work. In his mind, rules were for the weak. All that mattered was winning.
The good news for Gryffindor was that there was someone else on the pitch who wholeheartedly agreed with that philosophy. The bad news for Flint was that her name was Hermione Granger.
From her position high above the action, she had seen it all. A cold, dangerous smile touched her lips. "Alright then," she murmured to herself. "So that's how we're playing today. Violent. I can do violent."
She urged her Nimbus forward, accelerating with breathtaking speed. She flew directly at a Slytherin player who was about to intercept Alicia. Then, she did something no one in the history of Quidditch had ever done. She jumped.
She launched herself off her own broom, her body a blur of scarlet and gold. In mid-air, she performed a perfect, spinning kick, a move straight out of a martial arts movie from her past life.
The Slytherin player didn't even have time to scream. He just looked up, his eyes wide with disbelief, as Hermione's foot connected squarely with his face.
There was a sickening CRUNCH of breaking bone and cartilage that was audible even over the roar of the crowd. The player was launched from his broom as if he'd been hit by a cannonball, pinwheeling unconscious into the safety nets below.
Hermione, meanwhile, landed gracefully back on her broom, which had been hovering dutifully beneath her.
The entire stadium was plunged into a moment of pure, stunned silence.
The next second, the Gryffindor stands erupted in a disbelieving, ecstatic roar of laughter and applause. The Slytherins were on their feet, screaming for a foul, their faces purple with rage.
Lee Jordan's commentary was a masterpiece of confusion. "Well… I… I'm not sure what the call is on that one, folks. It seems Slytherin's illegal Blatching has been answered by… a beautiful, if brutally effective, flying side-kick from Gryffindor's new Beater, Hermione Granger."
Hermione just cracked her knuckles, a cold, satisfied look on her face. She had been tasked with protecting her team. She had just eliminated a threat. In her mind, she was just doing her job.
She turned her gaze to the next green-robed player, her intent clear. The game had just changed.