So, possible Wild Guess, but has enough reinforcement that I’m going to throw it out there.
Right now, it seems like Eliezer is pushing to the trial. The chapter implies that Harry has done nothing else of note before Hermione’s trial, meaning he will have limited ability to defend her. Without any sort of evidence to raise reasonable doubt, he’d basically have to manipulate the Wizengamot.
… Which, while beyond Harry’s ability, is not beyond others. In particular: Quirrellmort.
If Quirrell manages to get Hermione acquitted...
1) Quirrell earns lots of Harry points. Regains trust after the Azkaban semi-fiasco.
2) Quirrell emphasizes his role as Harry’s mentor and protector when even Dumbledore is helpless.
3) Meanwhile, this whole fiasco has convinced Harry even more that the wizarding society has issues.
4) Hermione is reinstated as an ally of Harry. If Quirrellmort’s goal is to strengthen Harry, this is also a plus.
5) Draco is now a victim of a plan, and earns pity, not respect, destabilizing Lucius’ power base.
If, simultaneously, Quirrell were to keep Lucius from undoing Harry’s turning...
1) Again, adds another ally, Harry points, etc.
And if both… then we have two heroes of Slytherin and of Ravenclaw who survived an evil plot, and may well garner sympathy for that plot. And remember, Quirrell promised to make Slytherin and Ravenclaw simultaneously win the House Cup...
Quirrell storming into the trial when the majority of the audience believes him to be the one behind everything sounds quite like this story’s style.
The trouble with this theory is that the arc is confirmed to last until chapter 84, and Quirrell being suddenly released from custody would be far too short of a resolution.
I suspect Harry and Co will come up with some sort of last-ditch effort during the trial, leading to some sort of awesome event like the previously suggested Trial-By-Combat (though obviously not that). I suspect Quirrell will play some part in the end, though.
Oh, and I’d like to predict that we find out H&C’s identity during this arc.
It was mentioned that Fawkes was in the room. Maybe Harry threatens the chamber with having Fawkes teleport him to Azkaban and destroying all the dementors after demonstrating on the one in the room.
Quirrell storming into the trial when the majority of the audience believes him to be the one behind everything sounds quite like this story’s style.
The trouble with this theory is that the arc is confirmed to last until chapter 84, and Quirrell being suddenly released from custody would be far too short of a resolution.
It is surprising that Quirrell would accidentally reveal himself as an impostor during interrogation; so, perhaps the Quirrell currently in custody is an impostor—meaning that he is not the Quirrell currently teaching at Hogwarts. If so, the imposter is there to give Quirrell time to do something else. He may be attempting to prove Hermione’s innocence (even if he is to blame for the current situation), or he may also be after the Philosopher’s stone.
The “ending at 84” is actually another reason I thought this was likely, because frankly, there’s only so much Harry can do at the trial itself. I’m imagining the next four chapters or so being about the aftermath of the trial, seeing Hermione’s and Draco’s reactions and the ripple effects of the trial.
So, possible Wild Guess, but has enough reinforcement that I’m going to throw it out there.
Right now, it seems like Eliezer is pushing to the trial. The chapter implies that Harry has done nothing else of note before Hermione’s trial, meaning he will have limited ability to defend her. Without any sort of evidence to raise reasonable doubt, he’d basically have to manipulate the Wizengamot.
… Which, while beyond Harry’s ability, is not beyond others. In particular: Quirrellmort.
If Quirrell manages to get Hermione acquitted...
1) Quirrell earns lots of Harry points. Regains trust after the Azkaban semi-fiasco.
2) Quirrell emphasizes his role as Harry’s mentor and protector when even Dumbledore is helpless.
3) Meanwhile, this whole fiasco has convinced Harry even more that the wizarding society has issues.
4) Hermione is reinstated as an ally of Harry. If Quirrellmort’s goal is to strengthen Harry, this is also a plus.
5) Draco is now a victim of a plan, and earns pity, not respect, destabilizing Lucius’ power base.
If, simultaneously, Quirrell were to keep Lucius from undoing Harry’s turning...
1) Again, adds another ally, Harry points, etc.
And if both… then we have two heroes of Slytherin and of Ravenclaw who survived an evil plot, and may well garner sympathy for that plot. And remember, Quirrell promised to make Slytherin and Ravenclaw simultaneously win the House Cup...
Quirrell storming into the trial when the majority of the audience believes him to be the one behind everything sounds quite like this story’s style.
The trouble with this theory is that the arc is confirmed to last until chapter 84, and Quirrell being suddenly released from custody would be far too short of a resolution.
I suspect Harry and Co will come up with some sort of last-ditch effort during the trial, leading to some sort of awesome event like the previously suggested Trial-By-Combat (though obviously not that). I suspect Quirrell will play some part in the end, though.
Oh, and I’d like to predict that we find out H&C’s identity during this arc.
It was mentioned that Fawkes was in the room. Maybe Harry threatens the chamber with having Fawkes teleport him to Azkaban and destroying all the dementors after demonstrating on the one in the room.
It is surprising that Quirrell would accidentally reveal himself as an impostor during interrogation; so, perhaps the Quirrell currently in custody is an impostor—meaning that he is not the Quirrell currently teaching at Hogwarts. If so, the imposter is there to give Quirrell time to do something else. He may be attempting to prove Hermione’s innocence (even if he is to blame for the current situation), or he may also be after the Philosopher’s stone.
Highly unlikely unless there are two Quirrels running around in possession of powerful wandless magic (remember the ‘sneeze’?)
The “ending at 84” is actually another reason I thought this was likely, because frankly, there’s only so much Harry can do at the trial itself. I’m imagining the next four chapters or so being about the aftermath of the trial, seeing Hermione’s and Draco’s reactions and the ripple effects of the trial.