XaiJu
Writer of the Aether
Writer of the Aether

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To Be Seen - Chapter 06: They Came Through the Fog

The sun had already sunk behind the mountains by the time the students were called to the front steps. What little light remained was diffused through a layer of mist that had settled low over the grounds, softening the edges of the Forbidden Forest and turning the lake into a mirror of quiet steel. The wind carried a sharpness that didn’t belong to autumn anymore—it had the bite of something older, something that arrived without invitation and planned to stay. Cloaks were pulled tighter, gloved hands rubbed together for warmth, and the usual playful jostling of students gave way to a more reverent hush. Everyone knew what was coming. They just didn’t know what it would look like.

McGonagall and Flitwick stood at the front, joined now by Hagrid—who looked entirely too pleased with himself—and a few other staff members Harry didn’t recognize. The crowd thickened behind them, students shifting restlessly in clumps by house: Gryffindor and Hufflepuff near the west columns, Ravenclaw and Slytherin farther off to the right. Harry stood somewhere in the middle, just behind Hermione and Ron, though he’d long stopped listening to whatever they were whispering about. His hands were deep in his pockets, and his eyes were in the sky.

The wind changed direction without warning, and a murmur rippled through the crowd.

Up in the clouds, something moved.

At first, it was just a darker blur in the already dark sky—massive, slow, too controlled to be natural. Then, as it descended, detail began to emerge: pale blue panels, gilded trim, enormous wheels that glinted faintly in the fading light. The Beauxbatons carriage did not drop like a bird or swoop like a broom. It descended, steadily and deliberately, as though gravity itself had agreed not to interfere. Eight winged horses, enormous and dappled with silver, beat the air with slow, muscular grace. The sound of their flight was not thunderous, but rhythmic, like the deep, measured breath of something ancient and disciplined.

The carriage touched down on the grass with a whisper, barely disturbing the mist that curled around its wheels. For a long moment, nothing happened.

Then the door opened.

Madame Maxime stepped down first, her figure towering even at a distance, her cloak billowing behind her like a sail pulled taut by invisible ropes. She held herself with a regal composure that made every glance feel like permission. Behind her, the Beauxbatons students descended in pairs—girls and boys both, all dressed in uniforms of soft blue trimmed in ivory, their movements graceful and efficient, their posture impossibly perfect. They did not look around. They did not wave. They moved as if their arrival had been rehearsed a hundred times and deviation was not allowed.

A few students gasped. Someone muttered something about enchantments.

Ron let out a low “Bloody hell.”

Hermione elbowed him sharply.

But Harry was silent. He wasn’t watching the horses, or the headmistress, or even the carriage itself. His eyes had fixed on one figure near the center of the procession—a girl with pale gold hair pulled back in a tight twist, not elaborate, not casual, just… deliberate. She moved like someone aware of every limb and every eye, not with pride, but with precision. She wasn’t the tallest, or the first to step down, or the one who smiled most at the crowd. In fact, she didn’t smile at all.

She didn’t look nervous.

She didn’t look bored.

She looked like she was measuring something.

And then, for one moment—just one—her gaze swept the crowd, paused, and landed on Harry.

It didn’t linger.

It didn’t search.

But it registered.

And when it moved on, he felt something tighten behind his ribs, like a string being pulled that he hadn’t noticed was there.

Then came the sound of water shifting.

Every head turned toward the lake.

The Durmstrang ship broke the surface without a splash. One moment the water was still, the next, a tall black mast pierced the mist like a knife drawn from flesh. The vessel rose slowly, wood slick with condensation, its sails furled but heavy with damp air. It looked nothing like the Beauxbatons carriage—where the French school had descended like a dream, Durmstrang emerged like a weapon, all shadows and hard lines. Steam hissed from its hull. Metal chimed somewhere deep within its frame.

From the deck, a staircase unfurled to the ground with mechanical precision.

Karkaroff led the way—smiling, too widely—and behind him came his students, clad in thick, dark red robes, boots echoing on the stone as they crossed onto the grass. Their expressions were blank, but not bored. Watchful. Controlled. A few older girls giggled. One Slytherin elbowed another. There was muttering about “wand duels” and “battle magic.”

But Harry wasn’t listening anymore.

The girl in blue had not looked back.

And still, somehow, he had the sense that he hadn’t quite been dismissed.

~HP~

Inside the castle, the torchlight flickered higher than usual, as though the sconces themselves were trying to reach above the cold. The air still held the damp of the mist outside, curling into corners and clinging faintly to the flagstones, and the students' footsteps echoed harder than they should have against the old stone. The crowd moved with a strange kind of energy now—half reverent, half thrilled, like pilgrims entering a cathedral and finding that the gods were real, foreign, and more beautiful than expected.

Beauxbatons had been assigned to the Ravenclaw table, where space had been magicked into existence by the staff, the bench stretched impossibly wide without ever seeming to curve. The delegation sat close together, bodies composed in perfect posture, their uniforms unwrinkled despite the wind, their faces unreadable. They spoke quietly among themselves in French, but not the fluid, lyrical French Harry had heard in old films Dudley used to mock—this was clipped, clean, and sharpened like the edge of a charm that had been cast too many times and no longer needed the incantation.

The girl—the girl—sat third from the end, her head tilted ever so slightly as she listened to something a boy beside her was murmuring. She nodded once but didn’t reply. Her expression didn’t change. She did not glance at the other students, didn’t respond to the eyes trying to sneak looks from across the Hall. She folded her hands together on the table in a way that suggested she’d been trained to never fidget. She looked, Harry thought, less like a student and more like someone waiting to be misjudged.

“Bet she’s part-Veela,” Ron whispered, voice nearly breathless.

Hermione snorted. “You’ve never even seen a Veela properly.”

“She’s got that—look, though,” he hissed, nudging Harry hard. “Hair like that doesn’t happen by accident.”

Harry didn’t answer. He wasn’t looking at her hair. Or her skin. Or her face, exactly. He was looking at the way she held still when everyone else shifted. The way she drank from her goblet without glancing down. The way her eyes moved when she wasn’t being watched, quick and calculating and never idle. She didn’t blink much. She didn’t slouch. Her presence didn’t draw attention. It pulled it. Like gravity. Like silence in a loud room.

Across the Hall, the Durmstrang delegation had settled in beside the Slytherins, and the contrast couldn’t have been sharper. Where the Beauxbatons students sat like brushstrokes painted into the scenery, the Durmstrang group filled their half of the table with deliberate space—spread out, relaxed, leaning in toward their new companions with half-smiles and low-voiced comments that already had the Slytherin seventh-years half in love. Karkaroff, seated near Snape, laughed too loudly at something that hadn’t been funny, while Maxime responded with a politely raised eyebrow and no other reaction.

Dumbledore stood to speak, but Harry barely registered the words. His gaze had flicked back to the girl again. This time, she was watching Dumbledore.

Not admiring him.

Not impressed.

Assessing.

When the applause began—some announcement about the Goblet being readied—she didn’t join in. She simply folded her hands again, the line of her shoulders unchanging, and her gaze swept the Hall one more time.

And then she looked at Harry.

It was not a long glance. Not a challenging one. Not warm. But it landed, and held, and then moved on as if it had confirmed something.

Harry shifted in his seat.

“She looked at you,” Ron muttered beside him, elbow jabbing again. “Did you see that? She looked right at you.”

“I’m sure it was nothing,” Hermione said before Harry could reply.

But Harry wasn’t sure.

She had looked at him the same way Moody looked at the back of a locked door.

Like she already knew something was behind it.

And was just waiting for the sound of the key.

~HP~

The Goblet had been placed in the Entrance Hall, where the arching stone ceilings seemed to narrow around it, casting flickering shadows up along the columns as though the fire itself were reaching outward. It stood atop a large, rough-hewn pedestal, its blackened surface cracked but strong, the wood scorched with years of ritual but unbowed. The flames that danced from its center were not orange or gold, but an unnatural, icy blue—pale and hungry, alive with motion but giving off no heat. Students formed a loose semi-circle around it, their faces bathed in flickering light, the chatter low and reverent.

There were no teachers here. No rules read aloud. Everyone already knew: by Sunday evening, the Goblet would choose. Names were being whispered like spells in corridors, scratched into folded parchments late at night, passed between friends with shaking hands and forced laughter. It didn’t matter that only seventeen-year-olds were eligible. It didn’t matter that the tournament was dangerous. That was the point. Every generation needed a stage to burn itself clean.

Fred and George stood off to one side, deep in conversation and half-concealing a bottle of what Harry was fairly sure was some sort of age-altering potion. Lee Jordan stood nearby, clearly playing lookout. Ron, grinning like he’d already won something, was dragging Seamus toward the front of the crowd, pointing to the flame as if it were a creature waiting to be tamed.

Harry hung back.

He wasn’t afraid of the Goblet. But he didn’t like the way it felt to be near it. The blue flame didn’t shimmer like other magical fires; it throbbed, almost pulsed, like something breathing beneath the surface of water. It didn’t illuminate the room — it carved into it, casting long shadows behind every student’s face, turning even laughter into something a little sharper than joy.

He stepped back further, closer to one of the columns near the entrance. From there, he could see the Goblet, the gathered crowd, the cracks in the floor beneath the pedestal.

And then, from the corner of his vision, she entered.

The blonde girl did not glide. She did not pause. She walked with the same steady, grounded step she had taken off the carriage, two other students flanking her — a dark-haired girl on one side, a taller boy on the other. The air around them did not change, but the attention in the room did. Conversations dipped. Eyes turned.

She didn’t acknowledge it. She didn’t look for it.

She approached the Goblet not as if it were a sacred object or a challenge to be overcome — but as if it were something already known. Already measured. Her eyes fixed on the flame as if confirming a fact. She said nothing.

The boy beside her reached into his robes and drew out a folded slip of parchment.

He stepped forward, shoulders bracing, and cast it into the blue.

There was a pause — a soundless moment in which nothing seemed to move.

Then the flame flared, brighter, higher, swallowing the name.

Whispers rose again.

The blonde girl said nothing. She didn’t smile. She didn’t nod.

She just looked into the flame — not lost in it, but through it.

And then she turned.

For one second, her gaze swept the room. It passed over dozens of faces, most too eager or too uncertain to meet her eyes.

It found Harry.

She did not look surprised to see him standing apart from the crowd. She did not seem impressed. Her expression did not change.

But she looked at him. Directly.

And in that glance, he felt the weight of something he could not name — not judgment, not curiosity, but something closer to confirmation. As if she had already made up her mind about him, and this was merely a final glance at a sealed envelope before handing it over.

Then she turned and walked away.

Ron elbowed Harry in the ribs. “I swear she looked at you again. You’ve got some sort of—magnetism.”

Hermione sighed audibly. “Honestly.”

But Harry wasn’t listening.

He watched the blue flame rise and fall.

It flickered like a pulse. Like a warning.

Like it already knew someone was lying.


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