Chapter 136: Chapter 136: Gathering Armies
The fortress of Nurmengard stood like a monument to failed ambition.
Its black towers clawed at the October sky, surrounded by wards that had held for fifty years—the prison built by Grindelwald to house his opponents during his war, now serving as his own cage.
The irony wasn’t lost on Voldemort.
“The wards are… formidable, my lord,” Bellatrix wheezed, still bearing the marks of Azkaban’s tender care. “Even weakened, they resist.”
“Futile resistance,” Voldemort replied, raising his wand.
The wards shattered like spun glass with a single spell from Voldemort.
His followers flinched at the casual display of power, but Voldemort paid them no mind.
He was here for a specific purpose—not to gain allegiance from another Dark Lord, but to acquire Grindelwald’s followers. With Arthur’s victory still fresh and the Ministry throwing roadblocks at every turn, deterring potential recruits, his forces remained weaker than he needed for comprehensive victory.
He had the dark creatures, yes, but lacked sufficient wizards of true power. This visit would remedy that deficiency.
The courtyard filled with shapes—wizards in traveling cloaks, their faces hard with anticipation. Grindelwald’s faithful, who had bargained with Voldemort: their aid in his war for their master’s freedom.
“He’s in the topmost cell,” their leader said, a scarred man with silver hair. “We’ve tried for years—”
“Spare me your failures,” Voldemort cut him off. “Lead the way.”
The tower’s interior reeked of dark magic and despair. Each step upward seemed to press against them, as if the very stones remembered what they contained.
They found the former Dark Lord in a cell that mocked its occupant—spacious, furnished, almost comfortable. A gilded cage for a fallen eagle.
Gellert Grindelwald didn’t turn when they entered. He sat by the window, watching clouds with the patience of a man who’d counted every stone in his prison many times.
“I expected Albus,” he said in accented English, still not looking. “Fifty years, and you send me Tom Riddle instead.”
“Dumbledore is dead,” Voldemort said flatly. “Killed by my design.”
Now Grindelwald turned, and Voldemort almost stepped back. Grindelwald looked nothing like he expected instead he looked like defeat given form. Thin to the point of frailty, hair gone white as bone. But his eyes… those mismatched eyes turned, focused, and Voldemort saw the ghost of what this man had been. What time and failure had ground to dust.
The sight reinforced his pursuit of immortality. If age could reduce Grindelwald to this, what might it have done to him?
“By your design,” Grindelwald said softly. “Not by your hand.”
“The method is irrelevant. He’s gone.”
“Nothing about Albus is irrelevant.” Grindelwald rose slowly, joints protesting. “Fifty years I waited. Not for rescue. For him. For one last conversation. Tell me, did he mention me? At the end?”
“No. I heard he was busy trying to turn one of my followers by offering second chances.”
Something flickered across the ancient face. Not surprise. Perhaps… acceptance.
“Of course he did. Always the next generation with Albus. Always looking forward, never back.” Grindelwald’s laugh sounded like autumn leaves being crushed. “Do you know what the cruelest thing about my imprisonment was, Tom?”
Voldemort remained silent.
“He never visited. Not once. Fifty years, and the man who put me here never came to gloat, to lecture, to even acknowledge what we’d been. I’ve had five decades to wonder if I meant so little that I wasn’t worth a conversation, or so much that he couldn’t bear to see what I’d become.”
His followers shifted uncomfortably. This wasn’t the reunion they’d imagined. This broken figure bore little resemblance to the lord they’d served.
“My lord,” the silver-haired man stepped forward. “We’ve kept your vision alive. Waited for this moment—”
“Have you?” Those strange eyes fixed on him. “Tell me, Klaus, what was my vision?”
“The Greater Good. Wizard supremacy. Our rightful place—”
Grindelwald’s laugh was dry as parchment. “Slogans. You kept slogans alive. The vision died in that final duel with Albus.”
“But with your return—”
“Look at me.” He spread arms that trembled with age. “What returns? An old man whose bones ache with winter. Whose greatest enemy is already beyond reach.”
“I have no time for theatrics,” Voldemort said, growing bored with the display. “I don’t need another Dark Lord, merely your believers.”
“Ah.” Grindelwald’s smile held bitter amusement. “You want my name, not my power. How practical. No competition.”
“Will you give it to me?”
The old man moved to the window again, looking toward Britain. “What did Albus do with my wand?”
The question seemed random, but Voldemort sensed its importance. “Your wand?”
“A very special wand, unlike any other. Albus won it from me in our duel. Where is it now?”
“You speak of Dumbledore’s wand from his later years?” Voldemort calculated quickly. “It would be in his tomb. But Hogwarts is heavily guarded. The Ministry—”
“Then your war serves two purposes.” Grindelwald turned fully, and for a moment, Voldemort glimpsed the man who’d terrorized Europe. “Win your battle. Take your Britain. But bring me that wand.”
“And your followers?”
“Will fight as they always have. For symbols and slogans and dreams of glory.” His smile turned cruel. “Use them well, Tom. They make excellent pawns.”
“We are not pawns!” Klaus protested.
“No?” Grindelwald’s magic flickered—weak but precise. The man froze mid-word. “Fifty years you’ve had to free me, and you needed a different Dark Lord to manage it. What would you call yourselves if not failures waiting to become casualties?”
He turned back to Voldemort. “The wand. That’s my price. Let an old man hold his youth once more before the end.”
“Done.” Voldemort had no intention of honoring the bargain, but lies cost nothing. “The battle comes soon. Enjoy your freedom while I plan the siege of Hogwarts.”
They left, Grindelwald’s followers buzzing with plans and Voldemort already calculating their use as cannon fodder.
Behind them, Gellert Grindelwald returned to his window, counting clouds and wondering if Albus had thought of him at all, even once, in all those years.
—
“CONSTANT VIGILANCE!”
Harry threw himself sideways as Moody’s Killing Curse—and it was definitely a Killing Curse, the green light was unmistakable—carved a trench where he’d been standing.
“Moody!” Sirius shouted. “That’s actual murder you’re attempting!”
“And it’s actual murder the Death Eaters will be attempting!” the scarred Auror roared back, his magical eye spinning wildly as he tracked Harry’s desperate dodging. “You think they’ll use Stunners? They’ll use everything they’ve got, and if the boy can’t handle it in training—”
Harry launched himself upward, the jumping charm Arthur had suggested proving its worth as the floor beneath him sprouted metallic spikes.
“Better!” Flitwick called from his perch atop a conjured platform. “Now counter-attack! A stationary target is a dead target!”
Harry tried, he really did, but casting while airborne while also trying not to die proved challenging. His Stunning Spell went wide, and Moody’s follow-up caught him in the shoulder, spinning him into a crash landing that left him seeing stars.
“Dead,” Moody announced flatly. “If that had been Bellatrix Lestrange, you’d be in pieces small enough to post.”
“Encouraging as always,” Harry groaned, accepting Sirius’s hand up.
Arthur watched from his usual spot, noting Harry’s improvement. The boy’s enhanced speed served him well, but his thinking remained too linear. “Do not restrict yourself, Harry. You can even fight on a broom if that suits your style.”
“Easy for you to say,” Harry muttered, then louder: “Any chance you could demonstrate?”
“No.”
“Worth asking.”
Moody stumped over, his wooden leg clicking ominously. “Enough games. We need to talk.”
They gathered around, Harry gratefully accepting water from Sirius while trying not to show how much his everything hurt.
“My sources in the Ministry—the ones that aren’t dead or compromised—say You-Know-Who’s moving. Last week of October, full assault on Hogwarts.”
The training room seemed to drop ten degrees.
“How reliable?” Sirius asked, all humor gone.
“Reliable enough. He’s gathered allies—giants, werewolves, those damned spiders from the Forest. Even convinced some of Grindelwald’s old crowd to join.”
“Grindelwald’s people?” Arthur’s interest sharpened. “Still clinging to their dreams after all these years?”
“Apparently.” Moody’s magical eye spun wildly. “Grindelwald’s rotting in Nurmengard still, but his followers are joining up. Don’t know what You-Know-Who promised them.”
Harry had gone pale but determined. “A week. That’s not much time.”
“It’s what we’ve got,” Moody said grimly. “Ministry’s mobilizing everything. Every Auror, every able wand. Even got the French sending support.”
“Will it be enough?” Harry asked quietly.
Sirius glanced at Arthur. “If someone agreed to help, we’d be certain of victory.”
“That someone holds no love for the wizarding world,” Arthur replied evenly, “and the feeling is mutual.”
“They’ll change when they see you easily destroy You-Know-Who’s forces while saving their lives,” Moody pressed.
“Will they? Or will they simply declare me the next Dark Lord once Tom’s gone?” Arthur’s tone remained mild. “I’ve seen how they treat Harry. When needed, he’s the hero. When not, he’s an attention-seeking, delusional brat.”
“We’re changing,” Sirius insisted. “After the war, we could change the wizarding world together.”
“I’m not so optimistic. Better to focus on Harry. He is, after all, the Chosen One.”
“Please don’t remind me,” Harry said nervously. “I’ve grown stronger these past months, but Voldemort’s had decades to perfect his craft. I need an edge, something he won’t expect.”
Arthur studied Harry, who had grown quite different from what he might have been—more confident and capable, yet weighed down by fate’s burden.
“Wait here,” Arthur said, disappearing with a crack.
He reappeared moments later with a leather-bound book. Nothing fancy, just an ordinary-looking tome.
“What’s this?” Harry accepted it carefully.
“An interesting find,” Arthur said. “The Tongue of Serpents—Voice as Magic. Translated from the original Sanskrit. Turns out Parseltongue isn’t just for chatting with snakes.”
Harry’s eyes widened as he flipped through pages. “This is… I can cast spells in Parseltongue?”
“More than that. Parseltongue is one of the oldest magical languages. Spells cast through it are raw, primal. Tom won’t expect you to weaponize your shared gift.”
“Where did you find this?” Sirius asked, peering over Harry’s shoulder.
“Here and there,” Arthur said vaguely. “What matters is that it’s perfect for Harry. Well, him and Tom.”
“But if Tom knows this skill—”
“He doesn’t.” Arthur’s smile turned sharp. “That I can guarantee.”
“How can you be certain—” Moody started.
“Because if Tom knew battle magic in Parseltongue, he would have conquered the wizarding world during the first war,” Arthur said simply. “Even Dumbledore wouldn’t have stood much chance against a Parseltongue-powered Tom.”
Harry had already started hissing at the first incantation, and the training dummy in the corner burst into pieces.
“Wicked,” Harry breathed.
“Practice carefully,” Arthur warned. “This magic responds to emotion more than intent. Anger makes it vicious. Fear makes it wild.”
“Joy makes it creative?” Harry asked hopefully.
“No idea. I don’t speak snake.”
The rest of the session devoted itself to Harry experimenting with his newfound ability. By the end, he’d managed a stunning spell that could breach even Moody’s shields.
“One week,” Moody reminded them as they prepared to leave. “Be ready.”
“We will be,” Sirius said firmly.
Arthur said nothing. He would be ready—with popcorn to witness a war for the ages.
—
October 30th arrived with the kind of warm evening that made you forget winter was coming. Arthur was enjoying a particularly good scotch and a genuinely terrible book when his wards announced a visitor.
Sirius Black stood at his door, looking haggard and smelling distinctly of firewhiskey.
“Drinking before battle?” Arthur asked, pouring his own glass. “Poor form.”
“Liquid courage,” Sirius corrected, dropping into a chair. “Though I could use the real kind too.”
“The Ministry’s forces insufficient?”
“We’ve got numbers. They’ve got monsters.” Sirius stared into his glass. “Giants don’t care about Stunning Charms. Dementors don’t care about anything.”
“You’ll manage.”
“Will we?” Sirius looked up sharply. “That’s actually why I’m here.”
Arthur waited.
“Can you really not fight?” Sirius said quietly. “It would help lift the gloom that’s settled over everything.”
“I told you before—”
“I know what you told me.” Sirius leaned forward. “But I’ve only recently gained this new life—something to live for. Harry, Amelia… I’ve spent so long running or rotting in Azkaban that I’d forgotten what having a future felt like. And now, right when I remember, it’s probably going to end.”
“Have confidence in Harry. He’s fated to vanquish Tom.”
“But what if everyone else dies first?” Sirius’s voice cracked with desperation. “What if tomorrow we all fall, and Harry defeats him standing alone among corpses?”
Arthur studied his friend—and somewhere along the way, Sirius had become exactly that. How inconvenient.
“Arthur, please. I know you have your reasons, but if you fought—”
“No.”
“You could end it in minutes!”
“Yes.”
“Then why—”
“Because pain is the only teacher that leaves scars deep enough to remember.” Arthur’s voice was calm, almost gentle. “If I solve this for you, what happens next time? And there will be a next time, Sirius. There always is. Another Dark Lord, another threat, another excuse for the wizarding world to hide behind someone else’s power instead of finding their own spine.”
“People will die!”
“People always die. It’s rather what they’re best at.” Arthur sipped his scotch. “The question is whether their deaths teach anything.”
“That’s cold, even for you.”
“Is it? Tell me, Sirius, how many wizards are there in Britain? Twenty thousand? Thirty? And how many Death Eaters? A few hundred at most? Every witch and wizard has a wand. If they united, if they fought together instead of waiting for a kid to save them, Tom would be dead within the hour.”
“It’s not that simple—”
“It’s exactly that simple. But they won’t, because they’ve been trained to be sheep. They bleat for a shepherd when the wolf comes, never realizing they outnumber the wolf a hundred to one.”
Sirius was quiet for a long moment. “You really won’t help.”
“I’ll ensure the war ends tomorrow. If Harry can’t defeat Tom, I will. I’ll keep Amelia and Susan safe. But the rest?” Arthur shrugged. “The rest need to learn that citizenship in the magical world comes with a price.”
“You’re talking about hundreds of deaths.”
“I’m talking about a lesson. The muggle world is advancing, Sirius. In twenty years, maybe less, the Statute of Secrecy will be a worthless piece of paper. When that happens, wizards will face threats that make Tom Riddle look like a playground bully. If they can’t handle one megalomaniac with delusions of grandeur, how will they handle missiles that fly faster than spells and bombs that can level cities?”
Sirius went very pale. “Muggles can’t—”
“Muggles can and do. Daily. They just usually point them at each other.” Arthur conjured an image—a mushroom cloud rising over a desert. “This is from 1945. They’ve gotten much better at it since.”
“Merlin’s beard.”
“Merlin would weep. The world’s moving forward, and wizards are still fighting the same wars with the same spells for the same stupid reasons. Tomorrow’s battle needs to hurt enough that they finally, finally learn.”
“And if I die tomorrow?”
“Then I’ll raise a glass to your memory and make sure Harry doesn’t do anything too stupid at your funeral.”
Despite everything, Sirius snorted. “Your eulogy skills need work.”
“I’ll practice.”
They drank in silence for a while, watching the fire.
“Any advice?” Sirius finally asked. “Since you won’t be saving our asses?”
“You were a prankster once. The Marauders, wasn’t it? Death Eaters expect Auror tactics—formal dueling, defensive positions, strategic withdrawals. They don’t expect dungbombs filled with Peruvian Instant Darkness Powder, or any of the hundred creative ways you used to torment Slytherins.”
A slow smile spread across Sirius’s face. “Chaos.”
“Chaos is just another word for opportunity. Use it.”
As Sirius stood to leave, he paused at the door. “If I don’t make it tomorrow—”
“You will. You’re too stubborn to die before you’ve properly embarrassed Harry in front of his kids.”
“I already have plans for that.”
“Then you definitely can’t die.”
After Sirius left, Arthur returned to his firewhiskey and his thoughts. Tomorrow, the wizarding war would likely end, one way or another.
The calm before the storm. Perfect.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 310: The God’s Frustration – Part - 1
- Chapter 309: Puny God
- Chapter 308 308: The Beast on the Leash
- Chapter 307 307: The Breach
- Chapter 306: The Scepter’s Games – Part - 2
- Chapter 305: The Scepter’s Games – Part - 1
- Chapter 304: The Cage – Part - 2
- Chapter 303: The Cage – Part - 1
- Chapter 302: Hammer and Iron – Part - 2
- Chapter 301: Hammer and Iron – Part - 1
- Chapter 300: Brothers
- Chapter 299: Not Really My Style
- Chapter 298: The Soldier and the God
- Chapter 297: The God Walks – Part - 2
- Chapter 296: The God Walks – Part - 1
- Chapter 295 295: Assemble Part - 2
- Chapter 294 294: Assemble Part - 1
- Chapter 293: The Shield He Built
- Chapter 292 292: Unmade
- Chapter 291: The Annihilator
- Chapter 290: The Missing Fleet
- Chapter 289: Vanishing Act
- Chapter 288 288: Damage Assessment
- Chapter 287: Shattered
- Chapter 286: The God of Mischief
- Chapter 285: Doors Open From Both Sides
- Chapter 284 284: Clear Skies
- Chapter 283 283: Between Worlds
- Chapter 282: The Changing World
- Chapter 281 281: The Day Medicine Changed
- Chapter 280 280: Balance
- Chapter 279 279: Death
- Chapter 278 278: The Queen's Garden – Part - 2
- Chapter 277 277: The Queen’s Garden – Part - 1
- Chapter 276: The Hayes Invasion – Part - 3
- Chapter 275: The Hayes Invasion – Part - 2
- Chapter 274: The Hayes Invasion – Part - 1
- Chapter 273: Foundations
- Chapter 272: The Day After
- Chapter 271: Movie Night Part - 3
- Chapter 270: Movie Night Part - 2
- Chapter 269: Movie Night Part - 1
- Chapter 268 268: Round Two
- Chapter 267: The Boy Who Lived and The Ice Queen
- Chapter 266: The Wake-Up Call
- Chapter 265: The Shape of the Universe
- Chapter 264 264: Days in Asgard
- Chapter 263 263: The Singular Focus Part - 2
- Chapter 262 262: The Singular Focus Part - 1
- Chapter 261 261: The Man Out of Time
- Chapter 260 260: Winter Soldier
- Chapter 259: The Cleanest SHIELD
- Chapter 258 258: House Cleanup
- Chapter 257: Twenty Minutes of Light
- Chapter 256: The Sorcerer at the Crossroads
- Chapter 255: Closure
- Chapter 254: The Hulk Whisperer
- Chapter 253 253: The Morning After
- Chapter 252: The Cost of Victory
- Chapter 251: The Unforgivable
- Chapter 250: Hell on Fire Part - 2
- Chapter 249: Hell on Fire Part - 1
- Chapter 248: The Arcane Mage
- Chapter 247: A Father’s Wrath
- Chapter 246 246: The Line You Don't Cross
- Chapter 245: Hulk
- Chapter 244: When Devils Come Calling
- Chapter 243: Like Father, Like Children
- Chapter 242: The Ice Queen’s Wrath
- Chapter 241: The Monster of Harlem
- Chapter 240 240: Girl’s Day Out
- Chapter 239 239: Homecoming
- Chapter 238: After the Storm
- Chapter 237: The Frost King Part - 3
- Chapter 236 236: The Frost King Part - 2
- Chapter 235: The Frost King Part - 1
- Chapter 234: Asgard Under Siege
- Chapter 233: The Road Home
- Chapter 232: Worthy
- Chapter 231: The Destroyer Part - 2
- Chapter 230: The Destroyer Part - 1
- Chapter 229: Friends and Foes
- Chapter 228: Worthy and Unworthy
- Chapter 227: God of Thunder
- Chapter 226: The Hammer Falls Part - 2
- Chapter 225: The Hammer Falls Part - 1
- Chapter 224: The Sins of the Father
- Chapter 223: The Iron Vows
- Chapter 222 222: Sparring and Howard's Legacy
- Chapter 221 221: Extremis and Rebirth
- Chapter 220: AIM and Apologies
- Chapter 219: The Stark Expo Part - 2
- Chapter 218: The Stark Expo Part - 1
- Chapter 217: The Waiting Game
- Chapter 216: Secrets and Snakes
- Chapter 215: I Am Iron Man
- Chapter 214: The Cleanup Part - 2
- Chapter 213 213: The Cleanup Part - 1
- Chapter 212: Iron Monger Part - 2
- Chapter 211: Iron Monger Part - 1
- Chapter 210: Shadows Gathering
- Chapter 209: The Unchallenged Hero
- Chapter 208: Purpose
- Chapter 207: Brooms and Bad News
- Chapter 206 206: First Flight
- Chapter 205: Tony Stark Returns Part - 2
- Chapter 204 204: Tony Stark Returns Part - 1
- Chapter 203 203: Birth of Iron Man
- Chapter 202 202: Director Fury’s House Call
- Chapter 201 201: The Spark of Iron
- Chapter 200 200: The Need for Speed
- Chapter 199: Christmas Gathering Part - 2
- Chapter 198 198: Christmas Gathering Part - 1
- Chapter 197: The Gathering Begins
- Chapter 196: The Extended Family
- Chapter 195: The Red Room Part - 2
- Chapter 194 194: The Red Room Part - 1
- Chapter 193: The Ice Queen of Europe
- Chapter 192: Home
- Chapter 191 191: The Years In Between - Part 4
- Chapter 190 190: The Years In Between - Part 3
- Chapter 189 189: The Years In Between - Part 2
- Chapter 188 188: The Years In Between Part - 1
- Chapter 187 187: Shopping with a Princess
- Chapter 186 186: New Century, New Path Part - 2
- Chapter 185: New Century, New Path Part - 1
- Chapter 184: Tony Stark
- Chapter 183: Fate’s Quiet Architect Part - 2
- Chapter 182: Fate’s Quiet Architect Part - 1
- Chapter 181: The Thorn That Pricked a Finger
- Chapter 180: The Pan Elf
- Chapter 179: Vengeance
- Chapter 178: Hogwarts Again
- Chapter 177: When Chi Meets Cosmic
- Chapter 176: The Iron Fist
- Chapter 175: The Dragon’s Heart
- Chapter 174: Chi
- Chapter 173: Starting From Zero
- Chapter 172: K’un-Lun’s Uninvited Guests
- Chapter 171: The Path to K’un-Lun
- Chapter 170: Path Forward Part - 2
- Chapter 169: Path Forward Part - 1
- Chapter 168: The Devil and the Death-Marked
- Chapter 167: The Devil’s Bargain
- Chapter 166: Trials and Resolve
- Chapter 165: The Hand’s Plan
- Chapter 164: The Dream’s End
- Chapter 163: Unintended Consequences
- Chapter 162: The Dream Master
- Chapter 161: Back to Hala
- Chapter 160 160: When Plans Fail
- Chapter 159 159: Tea with Old Friends Part - 2
- Chapter 158: Tea with Old Friends Part - 1
- Chapter 157: Homecomings
- Chapter 156: The Dying World Part - 2
- Chapter 155: The Dying World Part - 1
- Chapter 154: The Annihilator
- Chapter 153: The Wizard and The Star
- Chapter 152: Combat Training Part - 2
- Chapter 151: Combat Training Part - 1
- Chapter 150: A Parting Gift
- Chapter 149: Dawn After Victory
- Chapter 148: Hard Truths
- Chapter 147: Mephisto’s Game
- Chapter 146: The Devil’s Bargain
- Chapter 145: Endgame of a Dark Lord Part - 2
- Chapter 144: Endgame of a Dark Lord Part - 1
- Chapter 143: The Fated Duel Part - 3
- Chapter 142: The Fated Duel Part - 2
- Chapter 141: The Fated Duel Part - 1
- Chapter 140: All Hallows’ War Part - 4
- Chapter 139: All Hallows’ War Part - 3
- Chapter 138: All Hallows’ War Part - 2
- Chapter 137: All Hallows’ War Part - 1
- Chapter 136: Gathering Armies
- Chapter 135: Ancient Magic
- Chapter 134: The Hidden Vault
- Chapter 133: The Art of the Duel
- Chapter 132: The Dark Lord Moves
- Chapter 131: The Wounded Guest
- Chapter 130: Ordinary Moments
- Chapter 129: Master of Death
- Chapter 128: Harry Potter and the Exploding Dummies
- Chapter 127: Ariadne
- Chapter 126: Master of the Elder Wand
- Chapter 125: Shadows and Fire
- Chapter 124: Boy Who Lived Reborn
- Chapter 123: Healing
- Chapter 122: At the Crossroads
- Chapter 121: Soul Surgery
- Chapter 120: An Elegant Battle
- Chapter 119: Learning to Live
- Chapter 118: The Weight of Love
- Chapter 117: Echoes of the Dead
- Chapter 116: Vault Hunting
- Chapter 115: A Warning to Spies
- Chapter 114: The Alien Crossroads
- Chapter 113: Grave Robbing
- Chapter 112: Secrets in the Serpent’s Den
- Chapter 111: The End of an Era
- Chapter 110: The Fall of the Light
- Chapter 109: Walking Into a Trap
- Chapter 108: The Dead Man’s Moves - Part 5
- Chapter 107: The Dead Man’s Moves - Part 4
- Chapter 106: The Dead Man’s Moves - Part 3
- Chapter 105: The Dead Man’s Moves Part - 2
- Chapter 104: The Dead Man’s Moves Part - 1
- Chapter 103: The Art of Persuasion
- Chapter 102: Farewell to the Sanctuary
- Chapter 101: Foundations of an Empire
- Chapter 100: Dangerous Games
- Chapter 99: Blueprints for an Empire
- Chapter 98: An Unexpected Partnership
- Chapter 97: The Quiet After
- Chapter 96: A Reluctant Janitor
- Chapter 95: Final Judgment
- Chapter 94: The Gloves Come Off
- Chapter 93: Death Walks the Halls
- Chapter 92: The Hunt Begins
- Chapter 91: The Calm Before the Kill
- Chapter 90: The Weight of Power
- Chapter 89: Silent Retribution
- Chapter 88: The Trifecta of Villainy
- Chapter 87: Hunting Shadows
- Chapter 86: Uncomfortable Truths
- Chapter 85: Picking Up Pieces
- Chapter 84: The Nightmare Unleashed
- Chapter 83: Bullets and Spells
- Chapter 82: Temporal Mechanics
- Chapter 81: Dead Man Talking
- Chapter 80: Dark Lord Showtime
- Chapter 79: Behind the Veil
- Chapter 78: The Department of Mysteries
- Chapter 77: A Call for Help
- Chapter 76: Magical Renaissance
- Chapter 75: Through Different Eyes
- Chapter 74: Lessons in Humility
- Chapter 73: The Dark Dimension
- Chapter 72: Gates to the Unknown
- Chapter 71: Dimensions of Power
- Chapter 70: The Making of Adversaries
- Chapter 69: Spatial Affinities
- Chapter 68: The Art of Rivalry
- Chapter 67: Dark Paths
- Chapter 66: Dimensional Energy
- Chapter 65: The Ancient One
- Chapter 64: Unexpected Doors
- Chapter 63: New Beginnings
- Chapter 62: Farewells
- Chapter 61: Winky
- Chapter 60: Revelations
- Chapter 59: Confrontation
- Chapter 58: The Maze
- Chapter 57: The Final Countdown
- Chapter 56: Old Enemies, New Strength
- Chapter 55: Metamorphosis
- Chapter 54: Hard Truths
- Chapter 53: The Healing
- Chapter 52: Back to Hogwarts
- Chapter 51: Aftermath
- Chapter 50: Cosmic Awakening
- Chapter 49: Desperate Measures
- Chapter 48: Escalation
- Chapter 47: Kree Confrontation
- Chapter 46: Mar-Vell’s Laboratory
- Chapter 45: A Space Mission
- Chapter 44: Black Box Revelations
- Chapter 43: Maria Rambeau
- Chapter 42: Project Pegasus
- Chapter 41: Desert Revelations
- Chapter 40: Pancho’s Bar
- Chapter 39: Pursuit
- Chapter 38: Fragments of a Forgotten Past
- Chapter 37: The Arrival Part - 2
- Chapter 36: The Arrival Part - 1
- Chapter 35: The Waiting Game
- Chapter 34: Rules and Rulings
- Chapter 33: Aftermath
- Chapter 32: The Second Task Part - 2
- Chapter 31: The Second Task Part - 1
- Chapter 30: Preparations and Hints
- Chapter 29: Unwelcome Return
- Chapter 28: Across the Pond
- Chapter 27: Breaking Tradition
- Chapter 26: Explanations and Evaluations
- Chapter 25: The First Task
- Chapter 24: Dragons and Conversations
- Chapter 23: Perks, Plans, and Preparations
- Chapter 22: Dumbledore
- Chapter 21: The Headmaster’s Office
- Chapter 20: The Four Champions
- Chapter 19: When a Slytherin Bargains
- Chapter 18: The Goblet’s Choice
- Chapter 17: An Eventful Morning
- Chapter 16: Foreign Arrivals
- Chapter 15: The Final Year
- Chapter 14: Six Years of Solitude Part - 4
- Chapter 13: Six Years of Solitude Part - 3
- Chapter 12: Six Years of Solitude Part - 2
- Chapter 11: Six Years of Solitude Part - 1
- Chapter 10: The First Day
- Chapter 9: The Muggle-Born Slytherin
- Chapter 8: Hogwarts and Sorting
- Chapter 7: The Letter
- Chapter 6: Preparing for Hogwarts
- Chapter 5: New Beginnings
- Chapter 4: Aftermath & the Magical Unveiling
- Chapter 3: Shattered
- Chapter 2: Second Chances
- Chapter 1: The King’s Cross Station