Rowan woke before dawn, though he'd barely slept. The letter lay beneath his pillow where he'd put it the night before. He'd pulled it out twice in the darkness, rereading by the thin strip of gaslight above the door, though he could have recited every word from memory.
The other boys were still sleeping when he heard the knock at the dormitory door. Soft but authoritative, the sound cutting through the early morning quiet.
Mrs. Patterson's voice came from the hallway, sharp with suspicion. "This is highly irregular. The boys are still—"
"I assure you, Mrs. Patterson, it is quite necessary." A woman's voice, crisp and commanding. "I'll only be a moment."
The door opened.
The woman who entered was like nothing Rowan had ever seen at the Foundling Hospital.
She was tall, perhaps fifty, with iron-gray hair pulled back severely. It was her clothes that struck him first. She wore robes, actual robes, deep burgundy trimmed with gold, the kind of garment you might see in a painting of a Tudor court. The authority in her bearing reduced Mrs. Patterson, hovering in the doorway behind her, to irrelevance.
Her eyes swept across the dormitory, sharp and intelligent, and when they found Rowan they stopped. Fixed on him with unmistakable purpose.
"You boys," the woman said. "Leave."
It wasn't a request.
The air pressure changed. Rowan felt it like a physical wave, a force pressing against his awareness from every direction. The other boys stood as one. Sam, Alfie, Peter, all of them walking out in perfect silence, their movements synchronized, mechanical, as though someone had reached into their heads and pulled them forward by the will. The door closed behind them with a soft click.
Rowan was alone with the impossible woman in the impossible robes, his pulse climbing.
"No need for alarm, Mr. Ashcroft." The woman moved closer, each step deliberate. She sat on Sam's bed across from him, arranging her robes with practiced precision. "I merely wished to speak with you privately. My name is Matilda Weasley, and I am the Deputy Headmistress of Hogwarts School."
Rowan's hand went to his pillow. "You sent the letter."
"Very much so." Professor Weasley's expression softened slightly. "I see you received it. Good. The owl found you, then."
"An owl delivered it through my window last night." He drew the letter out, the parchment creased from the repeated reading he'd put it through. "I've been turning it over in my head since. The letter, and everything that came before it."
"A reasonable reaction, given your circumstances." Professor Weasley folded her hands in her lap. "Tell me, Mr. Ashcroft, what did you think when you read it?"
Rowan chose his words with care. He couldn't say what he was actually thinking, that he'd been reborn into a world he recognized from stories that wouldn't be written for another century. That names were already arranging themselves in the back of his mind: Dumbledore, Grindelwald, wars and prejudice stretching decades into a future only he could see. That the letter hadn't shocked him so much as completed a picture he'd been assembling since the first time his dormitory corner stayed warm while every other bed was cold.
He couldn't say any of that. So he said the parts that were also true.
"I thought it was impossible," he said slowly. "Magic doesn't exist. Except strange things have happened around me, things I couldn't explain. I've been cataloguing them for years. Telling myself they were coincidences." He met her eyes steadily. "They weren't coincidences, were they?"
Professor Weasley leaned forward slightly. "Tell me about them."
"Mr. Hargreave, one of the overseers at the mill, was about to hit me with his strap. It snapped in his hand just before it connected. I was frightened." He paused. "My section of the dormitory is always warmer in winter than the rest. And once, Mrs. Patterson's teacup cracked clean in half when she was screaming at a boy for wetting his bed. I was angry."
Professor Weasley nodded. "Accidental magic. Quite common in young wizards and witches, particularly when experiencing strong emotions. Fear, anger, distress. These can trigger involuntary magical responses."
"And this week, at the mill, I stopped a cotton bale from falling on another boy. It hung in the air for a full second. I didn't touch it. I just wanted it to stop, and it stopped."
Something kindled behind Weasley's eyes. Interest, perhaps, or reassessment. "You stopped a falling object through force of will alone? At your age, without training, that's remarkably controlled accidental magic."
"So I am a wizard."
He said it without the hesitation he might have performed for a stranger. Weasley had just made twenty-three boys walk out of a room against their will with nothing more than her presence. Rowan had stopped a cotton bale with his mind. The evidence was sufficient. What remained was understanding what to do with it.
"You are, Mr. Ashcroft. And you have been accepted to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry to learn how to control it. Term begins September first."
Rowan let the weight of the words settle. The shock had come last night, alone with the letter and the long dark hours of ceiling-staring. What he felt now was something colder, more focused. The recognition that every plan he'd been building, every careful scheme for clawing his way out of poverty through writing and saving and sheer force of will, had just been redrawn on a vastly larger canvas.
"The letter mentioned supplies. Books, a wand, robes. How does this work? The Hospital isn't going to simply let me leave, and I assume this isn't free."
A small smile crossed Professor Weasley's face. "You're practical. Good. The Hospital will be managed. We have ways of handling Muggle institutions. Your acceptance is being processed as a scholarship to a prestigious boarding school in Scotland. They'll receive official documentation within the week."
"And the cost?"
"Hogwarts provides a stipend for Muggleborn students. Twelve Galleons, which should cover your basic necessities. Wand, textbooks, robes." She paused. "We'll stop at Gringotts, the wizarding bank, to have it collected."
Rowan's mind was already running the calculations. "When?"
"Now, if you're amenable. I came this morning to take you to Diagon Alley, our shopping district. We'll purchase everything you need for school."
"Now?" Rowan looked around the dormitory. "But I need to—"
"Pack?" Professor Weasley flicked her wand, and Rowan's battered trunk slid out from beneath his bed, opened itself, and his few possessions began floating into it with precise, efficient movements. His spare clothes, his journal, the money from the false bottom lifting out through felt and board as though neither existed. All arranging themselves neatly inside.
Rowan stared. Real magic, performed in front of him, casual as breathing. The trunk held ninety-three pounds that he'd nearly lost and fought to recover, and she'd summoned it from a hidden compartment without even knowing it was there. The power in that single act, the sheer scale of what a trained witch could do without apparent effort, landed harder than the letter had.
"Your life is about to change considerably, Mr. Ashcroft," Professor Weasley said, standing. The trunk closed itself and floated to her side. "Are you ready?"
He'd been working in mills since he was six years old. He'd been saving every penny, writing by candlelight, crawling beneath machines that could kill him, all of it aimed at building a life worth living through sheer will and intelligence. And now someone was offering him something that made all of it look like scratching at a locked door when the key had been in his pocket the whole time.
"Yes," Rowan said. "I'm ready."
A black carriage waited at the curb. It looked ordinary at first. Polished wood, brass fittings, two bay horses stamping impatiently. But something was wrong with it. The proportions weren't quite right. The windows reflected light strangely. And the horses, beautiful as they were, stood impossibly still between movements.
"In you get," Professor Weasley said. The trunk floated through the door and settled itself neatly on one of the seats. "We'll be taking the long route to London proper. Can't risk Apparating with a Muggleborn on your first day. You'd likely splinch yourself, and explaining that to the Hospital would be tedious."
Rowan climbed inside and stopped.
The interior was enormous. Far larger than the exterior could possibly contain, with plush velvet seats and room for at least six people to sit comfortably. Brass lamps hung from the ceiling, unlit but gleaming. The walls were lined with dark wood paneling that smelled faintly of polish and old magic.
Professor Weasley followed him in, closing the door with a snap. The carriage lurched into motion. There was no driver.
"Now then." Professor Weasley arranged her robes around her, settling into the seat across from him. "I expect you have questions. Most Muggleborn students do. Ask them, though I can't promise to answer everything. Some things are better learned through experience."
Rowan had a thousand questions. He forced himself to focus on the practical ones.
"You mentioned a stipend. Twelve Galleons. How much is that in pounds sterling?"
Professor Weasley's lips twitched. "Practical first, as I suspected. The exchange rate fluctuates, but at present, one Galleon is worth approximately twelve shillings. A bit over half a pound. Your stipend equals about seven pounds."
Seven pounds. Rowan did the mathematics quickly. That would keep a working-class family fed for months, but given what he'd need for an entire year of magical education, it might prove tight. His ninety-three pounds, though, would convert to roughly a hundred and fifty Galleons.
A fortune.
"And my own money? Can it be converted?"
"Of course. Gringotts Bank handles such transactions. There's a fee, naturally, but it's manageable." Professor Weasley studied him with those sharp eyes. "You've saved money, then? That's unusual for a child in your circumstances."
"I've worked since I was six. First as a scavenger in the mills, then I began writing. The Times pays well for good copy."
This time Professor Weasley did smile. Genuine approval. "Enterprising. Ravenclaw, I suspect, though the Hat will make the final determination. You'll do well at Hogwarts, Mr. Ashcroft, provided you can navigate the social complexities."
"You mean there's prejudice against Muggleborns?"
The question hung in the air. Professor Weasley's expression grew somber.
"You're direct. Yes, that's precisely what I mean." She leaned forward slightly. "The magical world is not so different from the Muggle one in that regard. Those with old family names and inherited wealth often look down upon those without. As a Muggleborn, you'll face skepticism, suspicion, and in some cases outright hostility."
She paused, making sure he was listening.
"But you should know that Hogwarts does not tolerate discrimination based on blood status. Headmistress Mole is quite firm on that point. As am I."
"What about outside Hogwarts?"
"Outside Hogwarts, the world is more complicated." Professor Weasley sighed. "I won't lie to you, Mr. Ashcroft. Muggleborns must work twice as hard to earn half the respect. But it can be done. I've seen many students of Muggle parentage go on to remarkable careers. Your blood doesn't determine your worth, regardless of what certain pure-blood families might claim."
Rowan absorbed this, cataloging it alongside what he remembered from his previous life. The prejudice against Muggleborns. "Mudbloods," the worst would call them. It was endemic to magical society. It wouldn't change easily.
But he'd faced hardship before. Survived the orphanage, the mills, the grinding poverty of Victorian London. He could survive magical Britain's class system too.
The carriage rattled through the streets. Rowan watched through the window as the buildings changed from cramped tenements to elegant townhouses, as crowds shifted from factory workers to well-dressed ladies and gentlemen. London was a city of stark contrasts. Unimaginable wealth existing mere streets away from desperate poverty.
"Tell me," Professor Weasley said, "what do you know of magic? Have you read anything? Heard stories?"
Rowan considered his answer carefully. He couldn't reveal too much.
"Folk tales, mostly. Stories of witches and wizards, magical creatures, enchanted objects. I always thought them fantasies." He met her eyes. "Are they real? All of them?"
"Some are. Others are exaggerations or complete fabrications. Dragons are quite real, for instance, as are unicorns and phoenixes. But you won't find witches riding broomsticks to steal children."
"Can wizards turn people into toads?"
"With sufficient skill and the proper incantation, yes. But it's not casual, and it's certainly not legal." Professor Weasley's expression turned stern. "Magic is a tool, Mr. Ashcroft. Like any tool, it can be used for good or ill. At Hogwarts, you'll learn to use it responsibly."
She began listing subjects. Transfiguration, Charms, Potions, Defense Against the Dark Arts, Herbology, Astronomy, History of Magic. Each one sounded fascinating. Each one represented knowledge Rowan desperately wanted.
"How does it work?" he asked. "Magic, I mean. Is it something inside us, or something we draw from the world?"
"Both, in a way." Professor Weasley settled back in her seat, clearly pleased by the question. "Magic is an inherent ability, yes. Something you're born with. But it's also a skill that must be trained and refined. Raw magical power without knowledge is useless at best, dangerous at worst. That's why we have Hogwarts."
The carriage turned onto a street Rowan didn't recognize. The buildings here looked older, more cramped together. Professor Weasley pulled out her wand again.
"We're nearly there. Diagon Alley lies just beyond that pub, the Leaky Cauldron. Can you see it?"
Rowan peered through the window. There was a dingy-looking pub sandwiched between a bookshop and a haberdashery, so thoroughly unremarkable that his eyes seemed to slide right past it.
"Barely," he admitted.
"That's the magic at work. Most Muggles can't see it at all." The carriage stopped, and Professor Weasley opened the door. "Come along. We have considerable shopping to accomplish."
