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The Mirror of Erised.
The name floated up from the depths of her past life's memory. Hermione stared at the magnificent, ornate mirror, a silent sentinel in the dusty, forgotten chamber. She knew what it was, and she knew what it was destined for. Dumbledore was going to use this very mirror as the final, ingenious hiding place for the Philosopher's Stone.
She traced the cryptic inscription at the top of the frame with her eyes, the strange, archaic words that, when read backward, became a stark and lonely warning: I show not your face, but your heart's desire.
She stepped in front of it, her small form reflected in the ancient, flawless glass. For a long moment, she just stared. The reflection wavered, shifted, and then solidified into an image that made her breath catch in her throat. It was not a vision of her parents, nor of some grand, ultimate power. It was the face of a handsome, confident young man with her own intelligent eyes, smiling back at her. It was him. The person she used to be. The life she had lost.
A sudden, sharp pang of a grief she had long thought buried shot through her. She immediately slammed her mental shields down, the image shattering, replaced once more by the face of a twelve-year-old girl.
She was turning to leave when a soft, calm voice spoke from the shadows behind her.
"I imagine that a mind as sharp as yours has already deciphered its purpose."
Hermione's entire body went rigid. She hadn't heard him, hadn't sensed him. Her every nerve screamed with alarm, but her face remained a placid mask as she slowly turned. Albus Dumbledore stood there, his twinkling blue eyes full of a gentle, knowing light.
"Headmaster," she said, her voice perfectly even. She gave a slight, respectful bow. "A remarkable piece of magic. A mirror that shows not what is, but what could be. What we want most."
"Indeed," Dumbledore said with a sad smile. "And for that reason, it is a dangerous thing. Men have wasted away before it, lost in dreams and forgetting to live. So, my dear child, may I be so bold as to ask? What did you see?"
Hermione met his gaze, her mind a fortress. "I saw myself at home, Headmaster," she lied smoothly. "I suppose I've been away for too long."
Dumbledore looked at her, his ancient eyes seeming to see far more than she was showing. "Hogwarts has rather flexible school rules for its more… exceptional students," he said, his voice full of a meaning that went far beyond mere truancy. "London is not so very far away, should you ever feel the need to visit."
He was letting her know that he knew. Not everything, perhaps, but he knew she was more than she seemed. He knew she had another life, another home, across the ocean.
"And you, Headmaster?" she asked, skillfully deflecting. "What do you see when you look in the mirror?"
"Me?" Dumbledore's eyes twinkled. "I see myself holding a pair of thick, woolen socks."
Hermione nodded, playing along with the old man's game of secrets and half-truths. "A practical desire. The nights are getting colder."
His smile faltered for just a fraction of a second. He changed the subject. "You know, if you wish to read the books in the Restricted Section, you need only ask a professor for a note. You don't have to sneak in using Mr. Potter's Invisibility Cloak." He said it so casually, so gently, that it took her a moment to process the depth of his knowledge. He knew everything. "The restrictions are there to protect those who cannot resist the temptation of certain kinds of knowledge. I trust," he added, his gaze becoming serious, "that you can."
"And you believe I can resist temptation, Headmaster?" she asked, genuinely surprised.
"I do."
"I see," Hermione said. "That is a shame. I find that giving in to temptation is often far more interesting."
Dumbledore's eyebrow raised a fraction of an inch. Before he could respond, she pressed her advantage. "Harry asked me about Nicolas Flamel," she said, her tone conversational. "He seems to believe Professor Snape is trying to steal something Flamel created."
"It seems you have pieced it together as well," Dumbledore said, not at all surprised.
"Simple logic," Hermione shrugged.
"Then if he asks you again," Dumbledore said, turning to leave, "I believe you can feel free to tell him the truth." He paused at the doorway, a mischievous twinkle returning to his eyes. "Oh, and Miss Granger? Do try to attend a few more of your classes. It is terribly difficult for me to justify awarding Gryffindor end-of-term points when one of my star students has an attendance record of thirty percent."
And with that, he was gone.
"The Philosopher's Stone!" Harry exclaimed, holding up the heavy, ancient book he'd found. "It's real! And Hagrid moved it from Gringotts to the third-floor corridor!"
He and Ron were huddled in a corner of the Gryffindor common room, their faces flushed with the thrill of discovery. After Hermione's hint, they had finally found a reference to the legendary alchemist.
"So the thing that Snape's after, the thing that makes the Elixir of Life," Harry continued, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper, "is the very thing that someone who is half-dead would need to regain their strength. The one who was drinking the unicorn's blood in the forest… Ron, it's Voldemort! And Snape is trying to steal the Stone for him!"
The logic, while full of holes, was convincing enough for Ron. "We have to stop him!" he declared. Then he hesitated. "But… are we sure we can? I mean, we're just first-years. Shouldn't we… tell a teacher?" He had, after all, learned Hermione's most effective technique.
They tried. But Dumbledore had been called away to the Ministry, and Professor McGonagall, her patience worn thin, had dismissed their story about Snape as a childish fantasy.
"We have no choice," Harry said, his expression grim and determined. "Snape is going to make his move tonight. We have to go after the Stone ourselves."
Ron looked at him, then at the dying fire. "Just the two of us?" he asked, his voice weak.
Harry's brave expression faltered. Then, their eyes lit up at the exact same moment.
"Hermione!"
She listened to their breathless, flawed reasoning with an expression of polite boredom. You blame Voldemort for everything because you have Voldemort-related PTSD, she thought. And you're blaming the wrong professor entirely. But, she had to admit, they had arrived at the correct conclusion, even if their methods were absurd.
"So," she said, her voice dangerously calm, "you confronted Professor McGonagall, a known Animagus and one of the most powerful witches in this castle, with a half-baked conspiracy theory about her trusted colleague, and you're surprised she didn't believe you?"
Harry and Ron looked down at their shoes, suitably chastised.
"Fine," she sighed. "Let's go. This will be an excellent lesson in why you should never do anything without proper planning."
That night, the three of them, huddled under the magical protection of the Invisibility Cloak, snuck through the silent, moonlit corridors of the castle. They reached the forbidden door on the third floor.
"Alohomora," Hermione whispered, and the lock clicked open.
The first trial was Fluffy, the three-headed dog. It was already fast asleep, a large, enchanted harp in the corner strumming a gentle, lulling melody.
"Oh no, Snape's already been here!" Harry whispered urgently. "The music is how you get past it!"
"Right," Hermione said, unimpressed. As Harry and Ron were preparing to carefully sneak past the sleeping beast, she walked directly over to one of the slumbering heads, pulled out a small, enchanted dart, and jabbed it into the creature's thick neck. "A simple, concentrated dose of the Draught of Living Death should keep him quiet." She then lifted the massive trapdoor with a grunt. "Let's go."
The dog, however, chose that exact moment to stir, a low, rumbling growl starting deep in its three chests. Its six eyes began to flutter open.
"NOW!" Hermione yelled, and dove headfirst into the darkness below.
Terrified, Harry and Ron leaped in right after her, the sound of a monstrous, furious roar echoing from above as the trapdoor slammed shut.
The second trial, the Devil's Snare, was dispatched before they even landed. "Lumos Solem!" Hermione shouted mid-fall. A brilliant, sun-like ball of light erupted from her wand, causing the light-hating plant below to recoil violently, creating a safe, if rather hard, landing spot for them on the damp stone floor.
They continued into the next chamber, a vast, high-ceilinged room filled with what looked like a thousand glittering, jewel-winged keys, all fluttering near the ceiling. On the far side of the room was a locked door and a single, battered old broomstick.
"It's a test of flying skill," Harry said, his eyes gleaming. As the team's Seeker, this was his moment. "One of these keys must be the right one. I'll have to catch it."
He was about to get on the broom when a quiet voice said, "Accio, rusty key with the bent wing."
A single, battered-looking key detached itself from the glittering swarm and shot directly into Hermione's outstretched hand. She walked over to the door, inserted the key, and turned the lock. It clicked open.
She looked back at a stunned Harry and Ron. "What?" she asked, an eyebrow raised. "It was the only one that looked different. It was obviously the right one."
Three trials. Less than a minute. She strode through the open door, leaving the two boys standing in her wake, their heroic adventure turning into a comically efficient exercise in cheating.