Gwen had taken the job for her own reasons. She hadn't counted on there not being a full staff when she came. However, the school had brought with her position a number of its own problems, not the least of which was a shortage of staff. She had allowed Hogwarts professors here because it was good for the exchange program, and because they were useful. However, now they were starting to get in the way. And for some godforsaken reason, she had even more students on the grounds. She didn't need them mucking up her plans any further. She actually hadn't been the one who had invited this bunch here, but nevertheless here they were. Nor had she designed the wards to keep them out, but outside they were.
She had summoned Julian. She remembered her last instruction to him as being, "Well, teach them something then! You're the Deputy Headmaster, Teach something. Anything. Teach them lifeskills or something. You're creative. Use some of it." Had he done something to be a part of this?
She was more uncomfortable than she had been before she took this job. She'd used her locket to summon some additional help. It wasn't advisable to use that locket unwisely, but she had used it now. He didn't like being interrupted, she well knew.
She watched a curl of black smoke start to flow downward, out of the chimney, out of the fireplace and into the center of the tower office. The smoke seemed black and impregnable. She waited and watched it slowly take come together and take shape.
"Have a thing against sunlight, do you, Fawcett?" his tone was clipped and short. He closed his fist and opened it again, causing the leaded glass windows to fly open. He was rewarded with unhindered brilliant sunshine. "I like it. What do you need me for?"
"I have all these new..."
"Ah yes. The ickles. They've arrived. Good," he said, with a smirk on his face.
"Students," she said, not particularly liking his diminishment of them. "And why can't I let them into the whole castle?"
"Are you daft?" he whirled on her. "They've been well schooled on all sorts of snobbery and nosiness. The last thing you need is them snooping through every tunnel and room and hallway and behind every stinking potted plant they can find. They get into what I let them into, nothing more."
"Then why did you bring them here?" she demanded.
"Because," he said simply, "I wanted them here. Is that all you needed?"
"No!" she was irked now. "There's already been a shift in energies. Someone's taken the ferry. Someone's coming."
"Good," his smile grew wider. "As I hoped."
"What do you mean, 'good'? What's good about it?"
"Where's your toady?" he asked, frowning, looking around the tower office and not seeing him.
"He'll be along in a moment," Gwen said. "What did you set me up for?"
"Dear Lady, you do worry about trifles," he sighed. "I suppose I'll have to handle this for you. Of course they sent the ferry. They don't have their bloody train anymore. They had to send the boat. They had nothing else. It was the obvious choice. I was counting on it. They'll make a little rescue attempt, and we'll let them. If I'm feeling generous, I might let them survive themselves."
"What?" she was horrified. "You baited them!" He turned on her, and then she saw, for the first time, what a snake he really was and how she'd fallen right into something bigger than she'd envisioned and someone far more dark than she could begin to control. She was horrified. She hadn't wanted anyone innocent harmed in this, and now these children, all these children, were merely pawns. And the irony of it was that she was just as much his toady as Julian was hers. She was trapped, and she knew it.
"Don't look so surprised," he laughed, amused at her horror. "You couldn't possibly think that I would do this because I was so generous as to take up your cause without wanting something for myself." He sat down behind her desk as if he owned it himself. "So, what do you plan to do when the ferry comes?"
"I'll try to protect the students, that's what I'll do," she said defiantly.
"Oh, come now. You're not so good hearted that you're innocent in all this. Losing your nerve now, are we? Your wards here were pitiful, so I added my own. The little rescue party will have sufficient troubles of its own, but since I'm bored, I might as well stick around and toy with them. After all, they are intruders, are they not? Surely they had to expect the school would defend itself from attack." He laughed, amused at the thought of a bit of a game.
"So what are you going to do? Hold them hostage? Kill them? What will you do when you're done with them.? And what about the people on the ferry?"
"Why are you so concerned? They're all expendable. There are always more Brits where those came from. Human life is cheap, Fawcett. You obviously haven't played the game enough to know that."
"You're intolerable," she huffed.
"And you're a spineless old maid," he retorted, glaring at her. "Do you want this, or do you not? Frankly, it matters not because what matters now is what I want. Are we quite clear?"
@ julian milton