Part 2

Mad-Eye Moody was sure that Ginerva Weasley was charmed in some way. Fortune shined too brightly on such a devilishly evil young woman, and her luck was bound to run out eventually. She was sure to slip up at some point, be caught in the right place, at the right time, and have all the wrongs she committed against the Order of the Phoenix revealed.

As Moody considered this, it dawned on him how simple it would be to prove. His word alone still carried considerable weight, but to find her stock of poisons and her muggle revolver that were actually hidden in her room at Number 12 Grimmauld Place, or reveal her Dark Mark, artfully hidden by a complex, but breakable spell, was perfectly within his power to do.

Not for the first time he considered the possibility that in his steadily decreasing age, he had become unable to fight off the Imperius Curse and through that method she was able to control his actions and stop him from doing what was most obviously right. And, again not for the first time, he resolved to fight the curse and report her, but just before he was about to open his mouth and say something, he rationalized that if he was able to say anything, then he wasn't under the Imperius Curse to begin with. And, again, a few months later, even sometimes over a period of a year the process would repeat itself.

All that time, Voldemort and the Light, as the resistance had taken to calling themselves, were locked in a battle that swayed in advantage from side to side, but never fully crushed one side. The Order grew every day as more families suffered losses, but so did the number of Death Eaters. There were spies on both sides and they were mostly ignored. A few select people made the decisions on what to do and how to fight in dark and damp back rooms. In the meantime the fighting masses were sent out on what often turned out to be traps, or counter traps, and so forth due to the lack of loyalty to any one side.

But for any one side to have a spy in any sort of inner circle was remarkable. The Light had more, but Voldemort had the most dangerous. So secure was her place that Ginerva Weasley succeeded her older brothers, Hermione, and a number of other senior members in level and confidence. The death of a number of prominent Order members made her advancements inconspicuous.

That is why, when there actual was a battle that the inner circles of both sides considered to be deciding in nature, she was there for both sides. Moody remembered the time well. It seemed as though Ginerva had finally met her end as double-crosser, at the young age of 29.

The room she was standing in was full of dead bodies, mostly of the Light. When Moody, Neville Longbottom, and Remus Lupin burst into the room, answering a distress call from Ron Weasley, who Ginerva now stood over the dead body of, Ginerva was all too quick to break down into false tears. Moody looked on gravely, and then turned and left, knowing it would be unnatural for him to stay when it was clear there was nothing to be helped.

As he hurried away from the area, he almost fancied her heard the dull thump of a large body and the soft thump of a smaller one hit the floor. It wasn't until later when Neville and Remus appeared on the list of dead that Moody was sure she'd killed them.

Little evil, isn't she?