The abandoned atrium of the Ministry of Magic stretched before Harry like a mausoleum. His footsteps echoed against marble floors that had once bustled with hundreds of wizards and witches going about their daily business. Now, dust particles danced in shafts of light that filtered through grimy windows high above.
"Magnificent, isn't it?" Death's voice drifted from the shadows cast by the fountain. "How quickly order collapses without constant maintenance."
Harry ignored his unwanted companion. The fountain stood dry and cracked, its golden figures tarnished and broken. Water hadn't flowed here in years. Not since the last skeleton crew had finally abandoned their posts and fled to safer postings in remote departments.
They feared him. All of them.
Harry approached the lifts. The golden grilles hung open like toothless mouths. He pressed the call button out of habit, though he knew the lifts had been disabled months ago. Another security measure. Another futile attempt to keep him out.
"They think locked doors will stop you," Death observed.
"They think a lot of things." Harry pulled out the Elder Wand. Power flowed through the ancient wood without him even casting a spell. The lift mechanism groaned to life. Gears that hadn't turned in months began moving again. Magic sparked through dead circuits as Harry stared impassively.
The lift arrived with a cheerful ding that sounded obscene in the empty atrium.
Harry stepped inside. "Department of Mysteries."
The lift began its descent. Each floor they passed held memories. Level Two, where he'd once testified before the Wizengamot. Level Four, where Arthur Weasley had worked before the family moved to Ireland. Level Six, where Hermione had tried to reform magical creature rights before she'd given up and emigrated to Australia.
They'd all left. One by one, his friends had found reasons to be anywhere but England. George had been the last to go, taking his family to Romania to work with Charlie and his dragons. Even Mrs. Weasley had stopped sending Christmas sweaters.
"You drove them away," Death said.
"I saved their lives."
"Same thing, in your case."
The lift stopped. The grille opened onto a corridor that hummed with protective enchantments. Ward after ward layered the air like spider webs. Harry could see them all—detection charms, stunning hexes, memory modification spells, and darker things that would have killed an ordinary wizard.
He was no ordinary wizard.
He walked forward. The wards parted before him like curtains. Not because he broke them, but because they recognized what he was. The Elder Wand's mastery extended beyond simple spell-casting. It commanded magic itself.
"The Unspeakables worked for months on these defenses," Death said.
"The Unspeakables work for me. Have been for years now. They just don't know it, or if they do, they refuse to acknowledge it."
Harry reached the end of the corridor. A single door stood between him and the Department of Mysteries. No handle. No keyhole. Just smooth black wood that absorbed light.
He placed his palm against the surface. The wood was warm, almost alive. For a moment, nothing happened. Then the door recognized him and swung open.
Inside, the Department of Mysteries looked exactly as he remembered. Dozens of doors lined a circular room. Some were locked. Some weren't. All of them led to chambers where the Ministry's brightest minds studied the deepest mysteries of magic.
Harry had been here before. Officially twice. Unofficially, more times than he cared to count.
"The Time Room," Harry said, nodding toward one door. "I erased three months of research there last year. They were trying to send messages to the past. To warn people about me."
"Pragmatic," Death agreed.
"The Love Room." Harry indicated another door. "I modified the memories of everyone who worked there. They kept trying to understand why I couldn't feel anymore. Why love had stopped working on me."
"Necessary."
"The Death Chamber." Harry's eyes fixed on a door marked with ancient symbols. "Where I should have died at fifteen. Where everything started going wrong. Where Sirius died. Killed by family."
The door to the Death Chamber stood slightly ajar. Whispers leaked through the gap—not words, but the sound of voices calling from somewhere far away. Harry had heard those whispers in his dreams for years before he'd stopped dreaming at all.
He steeled himself and pushed the door open.
The Death Chamber hadn't changed. Stone steps descended toward a dais where an ancient archway stood. The Veil of Death hung within the arch like black silk, moving without any wind to stir it. The whispers grew louder as Harry descended the steps.
"Can you hear them?" he asked Death.
"I am them. In a sense."
"What do they say?"
"Come home."
"Charming."
Harry reached the bottom of the steps. The archway loomed before him, taller than he remembered. The Veil rippled with its own dark current. Somewhere beyond that fabric, voices called his name.
He sat on the stone floor and leaned against the dais. The whispers surrounded him like old friends. For the first time in months, he didn't feel alone.
"Tell me about Romania," Death said, materializing fully beside the archway.
"You were there. You know what happened."
"I want to hear your version."
Harry closed his eyes. The memory came easily. It always did when he didn't want it to.
"Curse-breakers had found something in an old tomb. Pre-Roman magic. They thought they could contain it." He opened his eyes. "They were wrong."
"You felt the magical disturbance from London."
"I felt three hundred people about to die. The curse was spreading through the ley lines. It would have reached Bucharest within hours."
"So you went."
"So I went." Harry stood and paced in front of the archway. "I apparated into the middle of their excavation site. Twenty curse-breakers standing around a pit that was bleeding dark magic into the air. The curse had already claimed four of them."
"What did you do?"
"What I always do. I solved the problem." Harry's voice hardened. "I traced the curse back to its source. Ancient blood magic tied to a ritual sacrifice. The only way to stop it was to complete the ritual."
"You killed someone."
"I killed the right someone. The excavation leader. The one whose greed had triggered the curse in the first place." Harry stopped pacing. "One life for three hundred. Simple math."
"The curse-breakers saw you do it."
"They saw me murder their boss to save their lives. Yes."
"How did they react?"
Harry laughed bitterly. "First they thanked me. Then they realized what they'd witnessed. Then they started backing away. Then they started running."
"You let them go."
"I modified their memories first. They remember a cave-in. A tragic accident. Their leader died heroically trying to save them."
"Merciful."
"Practical. The truth would have caused problems."
Death moved closer to the Veil. The whispers grew louder, more insistent. "You've done this before. Killed to save lives. Modified memories to preserve order."
"Seventeen times in the last three years." Harry's voice was matter-of-fact. "A dark wizard in Scotland who was breeding acromantulas to attack muggle towns. A Department of Magical Accidents employee who was selling classified information to foreign governments. A healer at St. Mungo's who was experimenting on patients."
"All threats."
"All people. All someone's son or daughter or parent." Harry touched the Elder Wand in his pocket. "I've become very good at killing, Death. Very efficient. Very clean."
"The greater good."
"Grindelwald's words. Dumbledore's philosophy. My reality." Harry turned to face the archway. "Do you know what the worst part is?"
"Tell me."
"I don't feel anything when I do it. No guilt. No satisfaction. No regret. Just... completion. Like crossing an item off a shopping list."
"You've transcended mortal limitations."
"I've lost my humanity." Harry stepped closer to the Veil. The whispers became almost intelligible. Almost welcoming. "In Romania, after I killed their leader, I looked at the other curse-breakers. Do you know what I saw?"
"Fear."
"Sheep. Just sheep that needed protecting from wolves they were too weak to fight themselves." Harry's reflection wavered in the dark fabric. "I used to be one of them. Now I'm something else entirely."
"Evolution."
"Devolution. I've become the thing I once fought against. A being so far above ordinary wizards that their lives mean nothing to me except as problems to solve."
Death reached toward the Veil but didn't touch it. "The whispers are getting stronger."
"They've been calling to me for years. Ever since I mastered the Hallows." Harry pulled out both wands—the Elder Wand and his original holly and phoenix feather wand. "Do you know why I really came here, Death?"
"To die."
"To choose. For the first time in my adult life, I want to make a choice that's entirely mine. Not about saving someone else. Not about preventing some catastrophe. Just about me."
"And your choice is?"
Harry looked at both wands. The Elder Wand hummed with power. His original wand felt warm and familiar. Both had served him well. Both had cost him everything.
"I choose to stop." He placed both wands on the stone floor. "I choose to stop being the solution to everyone else's problems. I choose to stop being feared by the people I save. I choose to stop existing in the space between life and death."
"The Veil may not give you death. It may give you something else entirely."
"Then I'll deal with that when it happens. But I won't spend another day as the Master of Death who can't live and can't die."
Harry stood before the archway. The Veil rippled more violently now, as if sensing his intention. The whispers rose to a crescendo of voices calling his name.
"Harry Potter."
He turned. Death stood beside the discarded wands, no longer a figure of shadow but something more solid. More real.
"Yes?"
"You were the most remarkable mortal I ever encountered. You survived numerous times, but you truly defeated me three times. You mastered powers that were never meant for human hands. You bore burdens that would have crushed anyone else."
"Past tense?"
"Present tense. You are remarkable. Even in this choice."
Harry smiled. It was a smile that truly reached his eyes. The expression felt genuine for the second time in months.
"Thank you."
"Will you give me a message for them? The ones who loved you?"
"Tell them I'm finally free."
Harry turned back to the archway. The Veil beckoned with promises of rest. Of silence. Of an end to the endless responsibility that had defined his adult life.
He thought of his parents, young and laughing in old photographs. He thought of Sirius, forever frozen at the age he'd died. He thought of all the allies who'd died, all the friends who'd moved away, all the people who'd feared him, all the lives he'd saved and all the prices he'd paid.
Most of all, he thought of sleep. Real sleep, without dreams of power or responsibility or the weight of the world pressing down on his shoulders.
"Goodbye, Death."
"Goodbye, Harry Potter."
Death's voice was a caress of whisper, gentler than he'd ever heard. No howling of the wind this time, no noise accompanying it that would terrify lesser men.
Harry stepped forward. The Veil parted around him like water. For a moment, he felt nothing but peace. The whispers faded. The weight lifted from his shoulders. The Elder Wand's power released its hold on his soul.
Then reality screamed.
The world exploded into light and sound and sensation that tore through his consciousness like lightning. The Veil meant death. But for him, the Veil wasn't an ending. It wasn't rest. It was a doorway, and he was falling through it into something that definitely wasn't death.
Colors that had no names flooded his vision. Sounds that existed beyond human hearing filled his ears. The taste of starlight and the scent of time itself overwhelmed his senses.
He tried to scream but he had no voice. He tried to think but he had no thoughts. The essence of what made him Harry Potter scattered like leaves in a hurricane, each piece spinning away into an infinity that stretched in directions that didn't exist.
And just as his consciousness began to dissolve entirely, something caught him. Something vast and ancient and impossibly complex wrapped around his scattered essence and pulled it back together.
Not yet, a voice said that wasn't Death rasp or howl and wasn't human and wasn't anything he recognized. Not here. Not like this.
You have work to do.
In a different world.
With different rules.
But the same heart.
Harry Potter, Master of Death, fell through the spaces between realities toward a destiny he could never have imagined. Behind him, the Veil sealed itself shut. Ahead lay something that might be a second chance or might be a different kind of prison.
Either way, he was no longer alone with Death in a dead world.
He had sought to end his life. He had failed.
For better or worse, his story was just beginning. In a different world.
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