Chapter 210: Chapter 210: Shadows Gathering
June 15, 2009 – Hayes Residence, New York
Eileen left for work soon after, Winky apparating her directly to A.I.M. headquarters in Miami before returning a moment later with a soft pop.
If Tony ever looked closely at how things worked in the Hayes household – the fact that Eileen commuted to Florida daily and returned to New York each evening without ever booking a flight – he would realize something was deeply unusual.
But Tony was a good friend. He never pried into matters that weren’t offered freely. And so he remained blissfully unaware of the magical world existing just beneath the surface of his reality.
With Winky watching over the children, Arthur retreated to his study. Tony’s situation still hovered in his mind, refusing to settle.
The complications ran deeper than simple overconfidence.
For one, Tony’s relentless assault on Ten Rings bases was dangerous in ways Tony couldn’t possibly understand.
The Ten Rings weren’t just a random terrorist cell—they were connected to the Mandarin. To Xu Wenwu and his actual Ten Rings. By any logical measure, Wenwu should have retaliated already. A warlord of his caliber wouldn’t tolerate an unknown armored figure systematically dismantling operations that bore his organization’s name.
But no retaliation came.
Why hasn’t he acted? Arthur mused.
Then the answer clicked into place.
Right now, Wenwu should still be mourning Ying Li, his wife and training his son.
That explained the silence. The Ten Rings were effectively running on autopilot, their true leader withdrawn from the world.
Lucky timing, Arthur thought. For Tony, at least.
If the real Mandarin were active, Iron Man’s career would have ended last week in a smoking crater. The mystical Ten Rings weren’t mere jewelry—they were weapons of unimaginable power, wielded by a man with a thousand years of combat experience. Tony, for all his genius, wouldn’t last a minute.
But that wasn’t the only problem on the horizon.
There was another, quieter danger ticking away beneath Tony’s chest.
The Palladium poisoning.
“Eve,” Arthur said to the empty room. “Based on Tony’s current flight hours and combat output, run a projection on his palladium core consumption.”
“Calculating,” the AI responded smoothly. A moment passed. “Based on the energy requirements for trans-continental hypersonic flight and repeated weapons deployment, Mr. Stark is burning through reactor cores at an accelerated rate. Consequently, the palladium toxicity in his blood is likely rising forty percent faster than your original timeline estimates.”
Arthur closed his eyes.
It was a ticking clock. In canon, Tony had nearly a year to enjoy his fame, to grow complacent, to slowly notice the symptoms creeping up on him.
But here?
Tony was flying halfway across the world every few days. Engaging in sustained combat. Pushing the reactor harder than ever.
The events of Iron Man 2—the poisoning, the desperation, the spiral—were going to hit him much sooner than expected.
And the supposed villain of that story? Ivan Vanko?
Arthur drummed his fingers on the desk.
In the original timeline, Tony’s dramatic “I am Iron Man” press conference had been broadcast around the world. It had made him a celebrity.
It had also reached a dying man in Russia. A man who watched his supposedly stolen invention being paraded before the cameras and tasked his son with revenge.
But here, there had been no such announcement. No global broadcast. No viral moment.
Tony Stark was still officially just a traumatized billionaire recovering in private. The mysterious armored figure was just that—mysterious.
Which meant Anton and Ivan Vanko knew nothing.
There would be no Whiplash. One more villain removed from the board.
Arthur should have felt relieved. Fewer villains meant a safer world.
Instead, he felt a flicker of something uncomfortably close to frustration.
Tony was going to have it easy. Too easy. No supervillains to fight.
Obadiah Stane was gone. Ivan Vanko would be a no-show. And with Killian successfully integrated into A.I.M., that particular monster would never be born either.
With the Tesseract locked away safely, perhaps even the events of the Avengers would never come to pass.
Piece by piece, the world’s dangers were dissolving—and with them, the crucibles that forged heroes.
It was a paradox. Arthur wanted to be happy that he had made the world safer, that he had ensured Tony would be safe. But without a villain to push him, Tony would never have the opportunity to grow. To become the man he was meant to be at the end.
He almost wished Stane would come back. He almost wished for the drama of the original timeline—the betrayal revealed, the highway battle, the final confrontation on the rooftop of Stark Industries. It would have been spectacular to witness. And he very badly wanted to see the iconic “I am Iron Man” moment delivered the way it was meant to be delivered.
Arthur rubbed his face with both hands.
“Stop it,” he muttered. “This isn’t a movie anymore. These are real people. You don’t get to wish for disasters just so you can watch from the sidelines.”
He leaned back in his chair, pinching the bridge of his nose.
Maybe he was worrying too much.
The universe had a way of creating its own balancing forces. He’d told Eileen exactly that that morning. He’d seen it play out in Harry’s life—events stubbornly bending back toward certain outcomes despite his best efforts.
Maybe it would be the same here.
Arthur had no idea how right he was.
—
Moscow, Russia
The rain in Moscow was cold, smelling of rust and old diesel. It hammered against the corrugated metal roof of the derelict warehouse, drowning out the distant sirens of the city.
Inside, the air was thick with the scent of ozone and grinding metal.
Obadiah Stane stood in the shadows of the catwalk, looking down at the workshop floor below.
He looked nothing like the titan of industry who had graced the cover of Forbes and charmed Senate committees with practiced ease. His bespoke Italian suits were gone, replaced by a heavy, grease-stained woolen coat. His head was shaved as always, but rough white stubble covered his jaw, and his eyes—usually cold and calculating—now burned with a feverish, desperate intensity.
He was a fugitive. A wanted man. His assets were frozen, his reputation incinerated by the godson he had protected for over twenty years.
Tony Stark.
The name was a curse in his mind. A poison.
Stane had watched the news. He had seen the blurry footage of the red and gold machine tearing through the Middle East, leaving burning terrorist camps in its wake. He had recognized the technology immediately. The impossible power output.
It was the miniaturized Arc Reactor. Tony had actually done it—shrunk the technology down to something portable, wearable, weaponizable.
“He thinks he’s untouchable,” Stane muttered, his voice like gravel scraping stone. “He thinks he’s the only one allowed to play with the big toys.”
He turned his gaze to the center of the warehouse floor.
An old man sat in a wheelchair, wrapped in moth-eaten blankets. A tank of oxygen stood beside him, a plastic tube running to his nose. His breathing was shallow, labored—the wet rattle of lungs that had spent too many years in Soviet prisons and too many nights in freezing apartments.
Anton Vanko.
It had taken Stane considerable effort to find this man. Every favor he had left in the global underworld. Every contact who still owed him from the old days, before the fall.
Anton Vanko, Howard Stark’s old partner. The man who had helped design the original Arc Reactor, only to be deported and erased from history. Stane didn’t know why Howard had done it. Some dispute over credit, some falling out that had been scrubbed from the records. He didn’t particularly care. What mattered was that Anton Vanko understood the technology at a fundamental level.
Stane had found him rotting in a Soviet-era apartment block, consumed by bitterness and poverty, waiting to die.
He had offered him something better than death. He had offered him revenge—and a future for his son.
“Is it done?” Stane asked, his voice echoing in the cavernous space.
The old man coughed—a wet, hacking sound that seemed to tear at his lungs. He gestured with a trembling hand toward the workbench.
There, sitting in a cradle of steel clamps, was a circle of glowing blue light.
It wasn’t as refined as Tony’s. The housing was cruder, the components visible through gaps in the casing. It buzzed louder, the light harsher, flickering with barely contained instability. It looked angry.
But the energy output readings on the monitor beside it were off the charts.
Stane descended the metal stairs slowly, his eyes fixed on the light. He reached out, feeling the hum of raw power vibrating against his palm.
“Magnificent,” he whispered.
He looked down at Anton. “You delivered.”
“The technology…” Anton wheezed, his Russian accent thick and labored. “It is… Vanko legacy. Not Stark. I deserved the credit. The recognition. Howard took everything.”
“Yes, yes. Legacy.” Stane waved a hand dismissively, his eyes never leaving the reactor.
“My son…”
“Ivan. Yes.” Stane pulled a phone from his coat pocket and showed the screen to the dying man. “Ten million dollars. Transferred to a secure account in his name. Untraceable. He’ll never have to scrape for scraps again. He can drink himself to death or build his own empire. I don’t care which.”
Anton Vanko stared at the screen for a long moment. Then he nodded slowly, slumping back in his wheelchair. Tears pricked at his rheumy eyes as he looked at the reactor—his life’s work, finally realized. Not for the glory of science. Not for recognition. But as payment to secure his son’s future.
It was enough.
“Now,” Stane said, turning to the men waiting in the shadows. “Mount it.”
Three engineers hurried forward. They lifted the reactor with reinforced gloves—carefully, reverently—and carried it toward the massive shape looming in the darkness at the back of the warehouse.
It stood ten feet tall.
It wasn’t sleek like Tony’s suit. It wasn’t designed for aerodynamics or elegance. There was no gold, no hot-rod red, no artistic flourishes.
It was a brute.
A walking bunker of thick, gray steel. Hydraulic pistons the size of tree trunks powered the limbs. A rotary cannon was mounted on one arm, a cluster of missile tubes on the other. The helmet was a featureless slab of metal, save for two dark eye slits that seemed to drink in the light.
The design was familiar—an evolution of the Mark I armor Tony had built in that Afghan cave.
Stane smiled, a shark-like baring of teeth. Getting the designs had been almost disappointingly easy.
Before his arrest, his teams had gathered every scrap of intel related to Tony’s escape, trying to understand how he had survived. Buried inside that data was a footnote about Tony’s fellow prisoner, Dr. Yinsen—how the man had walked out of captivity with a battered laptop and a handful of files.
Yinsen had taken them home, tucked them away like mementos from another life, never suspecting anyone would come looking.
Stane had gambled that the files would be valuable. He had gambled correctly.
His people copied everything without Yinsen ever realizing he’d been compromised. And there it was—blueprints, sketches, fragments of calculations. Enough to reconstruct Tony’s crude cave-built armor and understand how to improve it.
Stane hadn’t wasted a second.
Using Tony’s designs as a skeleton, he rebuilt the suit from the ground up. Then he upgraded it with Russian military hardware—weapons systems meant for tanks and gunships, armor plating rated to withstand anti-materiel rounds, servos powerful enough to flip a car with one hand.
The Iron Monger.
The engineers positioned the reactor at the chest cavity. Cables as thick as a man’s wrist connected to ports along the spine. Coolant lines hissed as they pressurized.
“Slotting now,” one of the engineers announced, backing away.
The reactor clicked into place.
CLANG.
Connections locked. Systems initialized. A low whine began to build, rising in pitch until it became a scream. The warehouse lights flickered—once, twice—then died completely as the suit drew power, sucking the electrical grid dry.
For a moment, there was only darkness and the sound of rain.
Then the eyes of the helmet flared white.
The chest piece blazed with blinding blue brilliance, casting harsh shadows across the warehouse floor.
Stane threw his head back and laughed. It was a loud, ugly sound that echoed off the metal walls, drowning out the storm.
“Tony!” Stane shouted at the ceiling, his voice thick with venomous triumph. “You built a suit to save the world? How touching. How naive.”
He walked toward the open cockpit of the monster, running his hand along the cold steel of its leg. The metal hummed beneath his palm, alive with power.
“I built one to rule it.”
Stane climbed the gantry and stepped into the pilot’s harness. Actuators whirred as restraints locked around his arms and legs. Neural interface pads pressed against his temples.
The heavy chest plates began to close around him, sealing him inside.
As the final piece locked into place—as darkness enveloped him and the HUD flickered to life—Stane felt a surge of power unlike anything he had ever known. It coursed through him like electricity, like fire, like destiny.
He was coming back.
He was coming for his company. For his legacy. For everything that had been stolen from him.
And he was going to crush Tony Stark with his bare hands.
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