The Tenth Weasley - CH - 107
Added 2025-08-01 15:56:09 +0000 UTCThe vast, enchanted arena buzzed with excitement as crowds gathered to witness the upcoming match between Professor Navarro of Durmstrang and a highly anticipated Swedish duelist named Astrid Malmström. Harry and Sonja sat in the VIP balcony reserved for distinguished guests of the tournament, watching the pre-match ceremonies unfold with interest. Below, banners of gold and blue floated above the dueling ring, while magical announcers amplified commentary in multiple languages.
Navarro, dressed in his customary black dueling robes embroidered with silver runes, looked poised and confident. Astrid stood across from him, tall, elegant, and wrapped in a midnight-blue cloak that shimmered with every movement.
Harry leaned closer to Sonja. âIâve never seen her duel before. She looks like she means business.â
Sonja nodded, adjusting the collar of her fur-trimmed coat. âAstrid is ranked twelfth. Navarro barely made it to sixteenth. But if he fights smart, he has a chance.â
Harry chuckled softly. âIf he uses what we practiced last week, heâll overwhelm her in ten seconds.â
Sonja smirked. âOnly if he doesnât get distracted by her illusions. Sheâs famous for her Veela heritage.â
Just as the duel began with the ceremonial bow, something pricked at Harryâs senses. His back stiffened. A tingling heat rolled across his shoulder bladesâa spell.
His eyes widened.
Not a dueling charm. A probe spell.
It wasnât cast from the stage. It came from behind.
He turned his head just slightly, enough to glance at the audience section above and behind him.
And thatâs when it hitâan aggressive pulse of Legilimency slammed against his magical core, attempting to shatter through his mental defenses. Instinct took over.
Harry spun on the spot and raised his wand, drawing a blindingly fast arc in the air. His counter-spellâa silvery whip of deflectionâlashed backward, crackling like lightning, and shattered the probing spell mid-air. It rebounded with a snap that sent three spectators stumbling.
âWhat theââ Sonja stood, wand out, eyes scanning.
There was a silence. Then someone shouted, âItâs him! Itâs Grindelwald!â
In a heartbeat, wands came out.
Three more spells hurled toward Harry. He didnât even blink.
His wand moved with lethal grace, invoking the signature dueling style passed down by the master himselfâGellert Grindelwald. One deflection, one redirection, and one retaliatory burst of a binding curse that slammed the first attacker against the stone pillar.
The crowd erupted into chaos.
âGET DOWN!â someone screamed.
âCall the Aurors!â
âDEFENSE WARDS UP!â
Sonja stepped beside Harry without hesitation. âWeâre surrounded!â
Harryâs eyes glowedâone green, one silverâand his voice deepened with cold command. âThen we make them regret their choice.â
More spells cameâstunning hexes, flame curses, even a bone-crusher hex from the side.
Harry danced through them.
He didnât dodgeâhe flowed. His wand swept and turned, creating magical ripples that snuffed fire mid-air, shattered bone spells into dust, and reflected stunners like a mirror. He didnât use standard dueling formâno, his style was sharp, efficient, unorthodox. Deadly.
A wizard in red robes lunged toward himâHarry flicked his wrist and sent a twisting black cord of magic spiraling through the air. It wrapped around the man like a serpent, yanked him upward, and slammed him into the ground.
Sonja fired a chain of icy blades toward a group approaching from the left. Three fell, one screamed, the fourth barely blocked the spell with a shimmering shield.
âHarry, your left!â she called.
Without turning, Harry whispered, âMortivox.â
A sound-shatter curse ripped across the marble, exploding like a sonic boom. Two witches staggered back, clutching their ears.
By now, ten witches and wizardsâsome from the professional circuit, some old masters from their primeâhad joined the fight.
And one by one, Harry took them down.
He didnât kill. But he could have. That was the part that terrified them most.
One wizard collapsed, gasping, pinned under a field of gravity. Another screamed as vines of fire crawled up his robesâHarry extinguished them with a snap of his wand, leaving the man sobbing and scorched. Another fell unconscious after being struck by a twisting bolt of silver light that left his wand cracked.
Around them, the arena was chaos. Screaming crowds, fleeing spectators, and a dozen magical wards flaring as security teams tried to lock down the area.
But none could stop the duel.
Because what they saw wasnât just a talented boy.
They saw a legend reborn.
Finally, ten minutes into the skirmish, a dozen security officers apparated in, surrounded by floating shields and throwing net-curses.
âCEASE IMMEDIATELY!â one roared. âYou are attacking tournament personnel!â
But Harry didnât even blink as the magical nets closed in. He raised both arms and let the nets fall around him, encasing him.
He let himself be captured.
The crowd hushed.
The arena, shattered and cracked in many places, fell silent. Broken pillars, scattered wands, and groaning duelists lay around the floor where Harry stood perfectly stillâsurrounded by magical chains.
A security officer cautiously approached. âState your name and origin.â
Harry looked at him, calmly. His mismatched eyes gleamed.
âI am Harry Weasley, son of Arthur and Molly Weasley.â
The words rang out, enchanted and amplified by his wandâs truth-verifying magic.
The runes on the chains shimmered.
The officer frowned. âConfirmed⊠no identity spells, no glamours, no illusions. This is not Grindelwald.â
The crowd, now frozen, began to murmur againâbut this time in confusion. In disbelief.
âHeâs just a boyâŠâ
âBut he fought just like himâŠâ
âNo. Like a Dark LordâŠâ
Hours later, after everything was cleared, after all charges were dropped and Harry had been thoroughly questioned by international authorities, he stood outside the venue in the dusky evening light.
Sonja walked beside him, brushing a scratch off her shoulder. âWell⊠I think we can safely say your dueling career is over for the year.â
Harry gave a humorless smile. âThatâs fine. I think Iâve had enough of tournaments.â
She paused. âYou know⊠they still think youâre him.â
âI know,â Harry replied, eyes looking off toward the mountains. âBut maybe thatâs okay. Let them fear me. Itâll keep them from trying again.â
Sonja nodded. âStill, next time someone attacks you, remind me not to stand too close. You damn near collapsed the floor.â
They shared a tired laugh.
Harry sighed and turned away from the arena, the bruised earth behind him. âI think Iâll head back to Durmstrang. Iâve got exams, secret researches, and far fewer idiots to duel.â
Sonja smirked. âAnd Iâll stay here and win the tournament, now that everyone else is too afraid to fight me. Perks of having a dark lord for a best friend.â
Harry raised an eyebrow. âFormer. Alleged dark lord.â
âRight,â she said with a wink.
And with that, the two walked off in opposite directionsâone toward the dueling spotlight, the other back into the shadows of Durmstrang. But the world would remember what happened that day. The dueling masters had been humbled by a red-haired boy with eyes of fire and stormâwho fought like the legend reborn.
The sun had barely crested the horizon when owls flooded the skies of magical Europe.
Bundles of folded newspapers soared through dormitory windows, dropped onto porches, and thudded against doors across wizarding cities, villages, and schools. The bold headline dominated every major publication from La Gazette Enchantée in France to Der Tageszauber in Germany.
"DARK LORD REBORN? MYSTERIOUS RED-HAIRED DUELIST STUNS TOURNAMENTâIS HE GRINDELWALDâS SUCCESSOR?"
And beneath the title, an enchanted photograph dominated the front page.
A boyâyoung, fierce, and red-hairedâstood in the center of a ruined dueling arena. His cloak billowed behind him, eyes glinting like a storm, and from his outstretched wand blossomed a glowing, spiraling shield that shimmered silver and violet. Four deadly spells collided into it from different directionsâand the shield held.
In the next frame of the magical photograph, the boy spun, launching a binding curse so fast it blurred through the air. The crowd behind him recoiled in awe and fear.
The caption read:
"Harry Weasley, age 14, schooling at Durmstrang, battles ten professional duelists in a chaotic bout during the International Dueling Tournament. Experts alarmed by resemblance to Gellert Grindelwaldâmagical analysis of fighting style confirms uncanny similarities."
In Hogwarts, the Great Hall was silent. Not the usual breakfast clatter. Not the gurgling chatter of students.
Silence.
Because every single studentâHufflepuff, Slytherin, Ravenclaw, and Gryffindorâhad the same paper open in front of them. Some stared at the photo looping endlessly. Some whispered behind their hands. Others watched the teachers.
Hermione sat stiffly at the Gryffindor table, ignoring the dozens of eyes that flicked between her and the paper. She stared at the headline, lips pressed tightly, while Ginny and Rose Porter sat beside her protectively.
âHe looks soâŠâ Ginny whispered.
âPowerful,â Rose finished, awestruck.
Neville leaned over from the Hufflepuff table. âDid you know he could fight like that?â
Hermione blinked slowly, her throat dry. âNo. I mean⊠I knew he was strong. But notâŠâ She gestured helplessly at the photo where Harryâs magic exploded like a tempest. âNot that.â
Professor McGonagall cleared her throat from the High Table.
No one noticed.
She cleared it again, louder.
Still, no one turned.
Finally, she rapped her goblet with her wand, sending a chime across the hall.
âAll of you,â she said crisply, âfinish your breakfast. The Headmaster has called an emergency staff meeting.â
The teachers rose. Even Hagrid looked grim as he followed them out.
In Dumbledoreâs office, the fire crackled gently, but the atmosphere was suffocating. The headmaster paced in front of the Pensieve, his long hands clasped tightly behind his back.
Severus Snape sat in one corner, arms folded, face unreadable.
McGonagall looked shaken. âItâs the second time, Albus. First Voldemort, and now this boyâour own student once! If he becomesââ
âHe wonât,â Dumbledore said sharply. âHe mustnât.â
Snape sneered. âYour optimism is as persistent as ever.â
âHeâs not Grindelwald,â Dumbledore insisted, though he sounded less sure of it himself. âHeâs Harry. Heâs just Harry.â
âThe Just Harry, whom we ignored in second year when he wanted our help. Harry, who you dismissed again and again until he left for Durmstrang,â McGonagall said bitterly. âIf he becomes a Dark Lord, Albus⊠itâs because we helped push him there.â
Dumbledore stopped.
There it was. The guilt. The moment it returned to wrap around his heart like chains.
âI should have helped him,â Dumbledore whispered. âWhen he was accused of being the Heir of Slytherin⊠when the school turned against him⊠I should have reached out. Instead I did what I always doâwaited.â
McGonagall gave him a look, neither pitying nor condemning. âYou cannot change the past. But you can reach him now.â
Snape said quietly, âAssuming itâs not already too late.â
Dumbledore sat down behind his desk and pulled the newspaper toward him.
The image stared backâHarry, mid-spin, his hair a fiery halo, eyes burning mismatched. One green like emeralds. The other silver like a frozen sky.
He looked like a conqueror.
Like vengeance incarnate.
Like a legend reborn.
âI donât care what the papers say,â Dumbledore said finally, voice calm. âHe is not Grindelwald. He is Harry Weasley. And when Voldemort returnsâand he will returnâthere is no one else I would rather have standing at our side.â
Back at Hogwarts, the murmurs and whispers grew louder.
âHeâs dangerousââ
âHe fought ten duelists and didnât get scratchedââ
âHeâs dating Hermione Granger! Did you know that?â
âIs it true he killed someone?â
Hermione clenched her jaw. âNo, he didnât kill anyone. And yes, heâs my boyfriend. And if you say one more word about him, Ginny will hex you.â
Ginny cracked her knuckles. âAnd Iâm really good at hexes.â
The crowd backed off.
That night, Hermione sat alone in the Gryffindor common room with the mirror Sirius gave her.
She tapped it.
âHarry?â
The glass shimmeredâand his face appeared. Tired, eyes still glowing faintly in the dim light of his Durmstrang room.
âHey,â he said softly.
She smiled. âHey.â
âRough day?â
Hermione nodded. âTheyâre all talking about you. All the papers. Even the teachers are spooked.â
Harry sighed, rubbing his face. âI didnât mean for that to happen.â
âI know,â she whispered. âBut they donât.â
âThey think Iâm a dark lord?â Harry muttered.
âNo,â Hermione said firmly. âThey think youâre powerful. And theyâre scared. But theyâre wrong, Harry. Youâre not a dark lord. Youâre my Harry.â
And for the first time that day, Harry smiled.
Tired.
But real.