She was walking away from the Medical College, her face pale and calm. Accompanying her, one on each side, were Izzy and Lucy. Both younger girls looked around at the parting throng, their eyes bright in the darkness.

       James broke away from his friends and moved down the footpath of Victory Hill, meeting Petra as she emerged from the crowd. No one had tried to stop her or even to question her. Perfect silence hung over the scene as everyone watched, inexplicably breathless.

       Petra met James' eyes. She looked tired and drawn but otherwise perfectly normal. She was holding Lucy's right hand and Izzy's left. Slowly, she glanced aside at the broken statue where it lay nearby, glinting in the moonlight.

       'Congratulations, James,' she said weakly, and offered him a small affectionate smile. 'You won.'

       A ripple of commotion moved over the crowd as realization dawned on those closest to the front: this was Petra Morganstern, the one who had attacked the Hall of Archives and cursed Mr. Henredon, the one who had been escorted to the Medical College unconscious, in preparation for her imprisonment.

       'But they gave her the poison apple!' someone whispered harshly. 'How'd she wake up?'

       'She's a criminal,' another rasped. 'She's dangerous!'

       And another: 'Look what she did to the Medical College!'

       A low clamor arose from the crowd, spreading to a rabble. Then, louder voices called out in commanding tones. James looked up and didn't know whether to be relieved or dismayed to see Chancellor Franklyn approaching, shouldering through the throng. Professor Jackson and Mother Newt were close behind, their faces grim. Inexplicably, Albus seemed to be following along in Professor Jackson's wake, his eyes shining with the excitement of it all.

       'Ms. Morganstern,' Franklyn announced as he broke through the crowd. 'What are you doing? Return to the Medical College at once! Where are your guards?'

       'I'm sorry, Chancellor,' Petra said, and James heard in her voice that she truly was. 'I'm sorry for everything that's happened. But I won't be going back. Perhaps I will be able to repair everything. But not now. There are more pressing matters.'

       'There are no more pressing matters, miss,' Jackson proclaimed grimly. James saw that the professor had his wand in his hand, at the ready. Albus peered avidly around Jackson's elbow as he went on. 'You are a convicted criminal. You understand that we cannot allow you to leave this campus.'

       'And you understand, I think, that there is no way you can stop me,' Petra replied, almost apologetically.

       Jackson raised his wand. Franklyn saw this and raised his as well, his face strained. He opened his mouth to speak, but Mother Newt interrupted him.

       'What is it you need to do, my dear?' she asked, moving ahead of the two men and smiling curiously at Petra.

       Petra looked aside, at James. 'We have a journey to make,' she answered. 'Not far and yet, I think, very far indeed. Are you still with me, James?'

James nodded. 'But how do you know about that? I never got a chance to tell you…?'

       'I know because you know,' she said, and James understood: the silver thread. It ran both ways. She may not have understood the plan before her arrest, but she did now. James could see it in her eyes as she looked at him.

       'And what, if I may be so bold,' Mother Newt asked, still smiling faintly, 'is the purpose of this journey?'

       James answered this time. 'To find out the truth, ma'am.'

Franklyn shook his head firmly. 'No. I cannot allow this. Professor Newton, you do not understand what it is they intend to do. They mean to open the Nexus Curtain. You see that Apollo Mansion once again stands atop Victory Hill. Given the proper key, they may succeed in passing through into another dimension. The young lady means to escape into a realm where none will be able to follow her!'

       'That's not true,' James called out, moving to get in front of Petra. 'Petra doesn't need to escape because she's not guilty!' He stopped and then glanced back over his shoulder, his brow knitted. 'Er… are you?'

       Petra met his gaze but didn't respond. At least, not with words.

       'Chancellor,' Mother Newt said, 'as a matter of fact, I am inclined to disagree with you. I do not believe that Ms. Morganstern means to escape. I believe that she is telling us the truth. About everything.'

       'All evidence to the contrary, Professor,' Jackson said, his wand still raised and pointed at Petra, 'how could you possibly know this?'

       Mother Newt's smile broadened as she continued to stare at Petra. 'Call it woman's intuition,' she said with low emphasis. 'Besides, I suspect that she is right about one more thing: I don't believe we can stop her even if we wished to. She is…,' Mother Newt paused and narrowed her eyes, '… unique.'

       'Professor Newton,' Franklyn said, shaking his head again, making his square spectacles flash in the moonlight, 'we cannot simply allow this woman to leave. She is a convicted prisoner of the Wizarding Court of the United States.'

       'But she isn't leaving, not technically,' Mother Newt replied lightly. 'If you are right, Chancellor, then Ms. Morganstern will simply be entering Apollo Mansion. She can still be said to be confined to the campus. None would deny that fact. Thus, I believe, we can be honestly said to have performed our duties as well as could be expected under the circumstances.'

       'Madam,' Jackson began, but Mother Newt stopped him with a quick backward glare.

       'Put down your wand, Theodore,' she said, her voice suddenly steely. 'Don't be a fool. We are teachers. This is, as they say, well above our pay grade.'

       'She is a prisoner of the Wizarding Courts,' Franklyn insisted urgently, lowering his own wand.

       'And we are not arbiters,' Mother Newt answered, sighing. 'Let the young lady do what she means to do. She will return. Won't you, dear?' she asked, addressing this last to Petra.

       'If I can,' Petra answered. 'And I will submit to whatever consequences there are when I do. I am hoping that things will look a bit different by then. To all of us.'

       Franklyn's face was red with tension. Jackson appeared to be balanced precariously between raising his wand again and submitting to Mother Newt's suggestion.

       'Thank you, Professor,' Petra said to the older woman across from her.

       'Please,' Newt said, smiling in a grandmotherly fashion, 'call me Mother Newt.'

Petra turned to James again and then glanced aside toward Ralph and Zane, who had also approached, their eyes wide and grave.

       'I guess I'll go get the unicorn horseshoe,' Zane suggested in a hushed voice. 'It's still buried under the Warping Willow…'

       'No need,' Petra said. She let go of Lucy's hand and reached into a pocket on the front of her drab dress. James would have sworn that the pocket was too small to contain anything so large, but when Petra withdrew her hand, she was holding the silvery horseshoe. It glowed faintly and a low murmur of awe and fear thrummed through the crowd.

       'Dear God,' a voice said faintly. James glanced back and saw Chancellor Franklyn staring up at the

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