Chapter 47: “No More Cages”
Added 2025-09-01 15:43:37 +0000 UTCFor the first time in years—perhaps in their entire lives—the children stepped into a world free.
The night sky stretched above them, vast and infinite, a black velvet sea littered with a thousand points of silver fire. They froze at the threshold, huddled together in uncertain clusters, the sheer size of it pressing down on them.
Some shrank back instinctively, as though the sky itself might collapse and crush them. Others clutched at each other’s sleeves, searching for the familiar weight of a hand, an anchor to hold them steady in the face of so much… bigness.
The air hit them next—cold and sharp in their lungs, tasting of grass and smoke and freedom.
It made their chests ache to breathe it in, as though their bodies weren’t quite sure this wasn’t another trick of their captors.
A stray gust rippled through the group, tugging at their thin shirts and tangled hair. A few whimpered and pressed closer together, their minds conditioned to associate every unknown with danger.
Then the silence settled.
It wasn’t the smothering, calculated silence of the cells, heavy with fear and whispered sobs. This silence was different: open, endless, alive. Too alive. A small boy clapped his hands over his ears and screwed his eyes shut, as if the absence of screaming, clanging doors, and barking orders was louder than any noise he had ever known.
Near him, a girl tilted her chin up, lips parted. Her eyes widened until they seemed too large for her face. She pointed a trembling finger at the scatter of stars overhead.
“Is that… all ours?” she whispered, awe trembling in every syllable.
No one answered her—not because they doubted, but because they, too, were spellbound.
For children who had lived their whole lives in cages, the night was a cathedral. The stars, the wind, the very stretch of darkness—each a hymn of freedom. And though fear lingered, it began to unravel thread by fragile thread, replaced by something unfamiliar, something almost dangerous in its fragility.
Hope.
Evan’s POV
Evan tilted his head back so far it almost hurt, his small chest rising and falling with shallow, startled breaths. The stars were endless — so many, so sharp against the black, scattered like jewels he could never count.
He whispered, almost afraid the sound would shatter them.
“I didn’t know the world was this big.”
The words trembled out of him, half awe, half fear. He had been so little when the walls closed in, too little to remember more than stone, iron, and shadows. His world had been narrow corridors and the press of bars. Now there was no ceiling, no end. Just air — sharp and cold in his lungs — and a sky so vast it made him feel both tiny and untethered.
For the first time, Evan felt something he couldn’t name, something larger than safety. It felt vast. It felt terrifying. It felt free.
He stepped closer to the warden, boots grinding against broken stone. The man tried to square his shoulders, but the chains made every twitch look pitiful.
The rescuer squinted, trying to place him. He had seen the name somewhere — in one of the files, scrawled across ledgers that reeked of cruelty. Something starting with a D. Why was he wasting brainpower on this? It didn’t matter. He could just ask.
His voice was low, flat, carrying none of the mercy the mediwitches had shown the children.
“What is your name?”
The warden’s lips trembled before the sound came, weak and fearful.
“Vernon… Vernon Dursley.”
Lila’s POV
Beside him, Lila’s hand tightened around his until it hurt, until her knuckles went white. Tears blurred the stars above, but she wouldn’t let them fall. If she cried too hard, she might wake up back in the cell — and this fragile miracle would vanish.
She wanted to drift into that endless darkness, let it carry her away from the stink of cages and the echo of screams. To be weightless. To be nothing but free. But Evan’s small, trembling hand anchored her, kept her tethered to the earth.
“Don’t let go,” she whispered fiercely, voice cracking under the weight of the moment. “If you let go, I’ll wake up.”
Her heart pounded against her ribs as though it too wanted to break free into the sky. She held on tighter. For him. For both of them.
The courtyard filled with strange symmetry — carriers lined in perfect rows, steel doors yawning open like patient mouths. Their sleek, military precision stood in jarring contrast to the stumbling children herded toward them: bare feet dragging, heads craning back toward the sky they had only just discovered. Discipline met fragility, and for a moment, the world looked split between order and chaos.
A uniformed figure approached Sarah, voice brisk but not unkind.
“Let’s begin embarkation,” the officer said, brisk but not unkind. “The sooner the transports lift, the smoother it’ll be at Hogwarts.”
Sarah gave a single nod. Her face was steady, but her hands betrayed her — fingers flexing as if they ached to hold on to every child who passed her by.
“Good,” the officer said, already moving toward the first group.
Sarah drew in a breath. She knew this was right — organization was survival now. And yet, as the children filed past her in careful groups, the weight of it pressed against her chest.
A soldier’s voice rang out, clipped and practical. “No more than eight per carrier.” The words were simple, logistical, but to the children it might as well have been a spell. It sounded like the start of a school trip for those lucky ones who went before this, a line for a ride—except the weight in the voice carried survival, not games. The instruction turned surreal when paired with the shuffling line of bruised wrists, threadbare clothes, and eyes too wide to blink.
Sarah lingered near the back, her stillness drawing Lila’s attention. When asked if she would board, Sarah’s calm response came soft, measured:
“No. You will be perfectly safe.”
But her hand trembled, just once, betraying the steel in her words. The faintest crack in her tone carried enough to fracture Lila’s composure.
“Why not you?” Lila whispered, voice small but sharp with fear.
Sarah managed a smile that did not reach her eyes. “Because I have work yet to do. But you — you will be safe. Safer than I’ve ever seen you.”
Lila clutched Evan tighter, swallowing a sob. She wanted to believe, needed to believe, but the idea of stepping into that metal vessel without Sarah made her chest ache.
The rescuers moved with purpose, guiding the children gently but firmly, every hand signal and every motion a rhythm of practised calm. But the children themselves moved hesitantly, breaking the cadence — some pressing fingers to the carrier doors as if testing their reality, others glancing back at the night sky as though afraid it would vanish the moment they turned away.
Rescuer POV:
He had trained himself, over years of battle, to keep his eyes scanning for threats — the flicker of movement, the flash of a weapon, the wrong sound in the wrong place. But tonight his gaze kept straying back to the two children.
The girl —Lila, he’d heard someone call her — stood with her shoulders squared as though she could shield her little brother from the whole world. Her hand never left his, not even when the officer called them forward toward the carrier. And the boy—Evan—clung to her. There was something else in his eyes…: wonder and confusion, the fragile courage of a child who had not yet been broken, no matter what had been done to him.
That, the rescuer thought, is why we fight. Not the orders. Not the strategy. But so that children like these could look at the stars without flinching, could breathe air that did not stink of iron and chains.
When the first carrier sealed its door and lifted off, he felt the knot in his chest loosen for the first time all night. The weight shifted. He had gotten some of them out. He had bought them a chance. For one fleeting heartbeat, the relief was almost overwhelming.
But then his gaze slid back to the courtyard.
The line of children still streaming from the shadows seemed endless. Some limped, some were half-carried by their cellmate, some were so weak they had to be borne on stretchers by healers who whispered spells under their breath, hands glowing with steadying light. Every new face was another name he would be accountable for.
And still his eyes returned, again and again, to Lila and Evan. He anchored himself in them, in the small brother and the fierce sister who had held out long enough to see freedom. If they could stand in this moment, then so could he. He would not allow the world to fail them again.
The flow of children did not stop—but with each group, the burden grew heavier.
As they pushed deeper, they cleared the lower level. They were not cells so much as oubliettes. And the children who staggered out of them bore the proof.
The mediwitches worked in a blur, sleeves rolled to the elbows, their robes already smeared with blood, soot, and grime. Hands shook as they cast stabilizing charms, mixed draughts, or pressed cloth against wounds—but they never slowed.
One paused only to push her hair back with a wrist before leaning down again, her voice fierce and gentle all at once: “Stay with me. You’re not alone anymore.”
Exhaustion trembled in their bones, but every heartbeat counted, and each child mattered more than pain. Other mediwitch wiped her eyes with a dirt-smeared wrist, smearing her cheek with blood before bending back over the next stretcher without hesitation.
Amid the movement, two children from the upper cells clung together at the edge of the line.
Jonas, older by only a year, tightened his grip on his sister’s wrist as his eyes fixed on a stretcher being wheeled past — a boy no older than him, his face pale as wax, lips tinged blue. Behind him, a girl was carried between two rescuer /jaffa, her head lolling weakly against her shoulder.
Jonas’s voice cracked as though the words themselves burned.
“Never thought I’d say we were lucky.”
Beside him, little Mira shook her head fiercely, her curls falling into her wet eyes. “But they were not. It’s not fair.” Her small voice wavered between fury and grief.
Jonas bowed his head, pressing his forehead to her tangled hair as though trying to hide from the truth that survival could feel like betrayal. He whispered again, almost to himself:
“Hope those guards and wardens burn in hell.”
Mira’s fingers knotted into his sleeve. She wanted to tell him that they had to stay strong, that maybe the others needed their hope — but the words never came. All she could do was cling tighter, as if the act of holding on could shoulder the weight of the children too weak to walk.
By the time the last carrier’s engines thundered into the night, the numbers were undeniable: nearly five hundred children saved from this one place.
For a heartbeat, the rescuer let the relief touch him. Five hundred names that would live and not vanish into silence. Five hundred chances at life where there had been none.
But the number twisted in his chest.
Twenty-five sites like this in Britain alone. And Britain was just one island in a continent scarred in this war; it was a war. How many more across Europe? Across the world? The mind refused to tally it — the scope was too vast, too deliberate. Tonight’s miracle was immense, yet it was still only a single drop in a poisoned ocean.
He took some comfort in knowing other teams had struck their targets too, that across the night sky other carriers lifted with their own cargo of children. But even that certainty could not quiet the truth that the work was not done — could never be called done until every cage was broken, every child carried out into the air and shown that the world was bigger than walls.
Relief braided with horror inside him. He would carry both. He had to. Because it was the only way to remember that saving five hundred lives tonight mattered — and also that five thousand, perhaps fifty thousand, still waited in the dark.
He turned toward the prison. The noise outside had faded into something distant, but the building itself loomed heavier now, a carcass of concrete and steel. His jaw set hard, the fury in him sharpening into something colder.
“Now comes the reckoning.” The words left him like a blade unsheathed.
Desks sat littered with folders, drawers swollen with files, screens blinking in half-power cycles. He picked up one ledger, the leather stiff and stained, and felt the ragged weight of it in his hands. The pages were crowded with names, numbers, columns — children were reduced to inventory.
The ink felt like it was humming under his fingers, and each letter brought back memories of a stolen childhood. He slowly closed the book, like he was burying a body.
There was no paper here. It was proof. Bullets. Every piece of writing, every entry, was like a weapon sharp enough to kill the people who built these cages.
He looked at his team. Their armor was dull, and their faces were lined with fatigue, but they were still full of purpose. "Take it all," he said in a low voice that didn't change.
"All of the files. Every drive. Every record. They thought this would disappear in the dark. We'll pull it into the light."
The rescuers moved through the ruins like horror archivists, gathering not relics but charges. He stood in the doorway for a moment longer, looking at the piles of papers that spoke of cruelty and justice that was yet to come.
The kids were safe and sound.
Now it was time to pay the price.
—-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The prisoners were dragged out in a staggered line — guards first, then the warden. Shackles clinked, chains scraping across the scorched stone as they were shoved to their knees. Some were bleeding from the firefight, singed uniforms stuck to half-clotted wounds. But not a single medic moved to help them.
Not one.
The mediwitches who had just minutes before knelt in the mud to save half-dead children walked past them without so much as a glance. A few spared looks — hard, unblinking glares, like blades pressed to throats. Daring the prisoners to speak. Daring them to demand healing.
The rescuer watched them tremble, pale with blood loss, but alive. All of them alive. In his opinion, that was already far more than they had ever given their captives.
“Perfectly well,” he thought, jaw clenched. “Breathing and moving. That’s more mercy than they showed to the children in the cages.”
One of the guards coughed, clutching his side. His eyes flicked desperately toward the medics, but his lips pressed shut at the sight of their glares.
The warden sat ramrod stiff despite the dirt streaking his face, his fine jacket torn and smeared with blood. He still tried to arrange his features into command — but in the harsh floodlight, it only looked like fear painted over arrogance.
He stepped closer to the warden, boots grinding against broken stone. The man tried to square his shoulders, but the chains made every twitch look pitiful.
The rescuer squinted, trying to place him. He had seen the name somewhere — in one of the files, scrawled across ledgers . Something starting with a V. Why was he wasting brainpower on this? It didn’t matter. He could just ask.
His voice was low and flat, carrying none of the mercy the mediwitches had shown the children.
“What is your name?”
The warden’s lips trembled before the sound came, weak and fearful.
“Vernon… Vernon Dursley.”
He opened his mouth to ask more question— but the words never made it out.
A soldier burst into the hall, breath ragged, voice cutting through the tension.
“Sir! We found something. Lower levels. You need to see this.”
The rescuer’s gaze snapped away from Dursley, the name searing itself into his mind like a brand. Whatever waited below had just become more urgent than any answer Vernon could give.
“Keep him breathing,” he ordered, his tone like iron. “But not comfortable.”
Then he turned, striding toward the shadowed stairwell, the echo of the name following him down into the dark.
The rescuer stilled, fingers tightening on the ledger he still held. Something in the tone , kind of unease that came when hardened men had seen too much — coiled in the air.
He lifted his gaze to the soldier, his voice steady, dangerous.
“Show me.”
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