Harry's eyes flicked to Dumbledore. The old man stood stock-still, lips parted, as though the storm rolling around them had finally stripped away the comfort of half a century's lies. Then his posture tightened, and Grindelwald stepped into the light.
"Quick!" Grindelwald snapped, wand already raised. He moved at Nicolas's side, lashing power into the great silver shield. Perenelle joined them, threads of green binding into Nicolas's wards, stitching them tight. The three of them braced together, but it was like trying to dam a flood with cupped palms. Harry's cry and the storm above pressed down without pause.
The noise rose again, thunder cracking, beasts roaring, spells slamming against the hills. Lightning crawled down Spark's wings as he wheeled overhead, each beat of his wings rattling windows in the villages miles away.
Trelawney stepped forward, her skirts swaying as if the battlefield wind knew her name. She raised a hand, smiling like someone greeting a familiar ending.
"So long, Death's Champion," she called, her voice clear, stripped of theatrics. "I've seen your fall. Years before."
Nicolas didn't move. His focus was elsewhere, Harry, the storm, the beasts, the soldiers clashing below.
Then she paused.
Someone stood in front of her.
Trelawney blinked, the grin faltering.
The figure shouldn't have been there. She had seen every possible strand, every loop, every outcome. She could watch time like a film. Rewind. Fast-forward. Pause. There was no branch where this girl stepped into the path.
Yet there she stood.
Luna.
Dreamy-eyed. Barefoot. Calm as if she were in the Ravenclaw common room.
Luna smiled. "Nargles avoid you," she said. "I always thought it was the tea. Turned out it was something else."
Trelawney frowned. "You shouldn't be here."
"I am, though," Luna replied. "You looked too far ahead and missed the bit where I slipped past."
Trelawney didn't answer. Her gaze narrowed, trying to see the strings, trace the thread. But Luna wasn't on any thread. She was between them. Slippery. Untethered. Impossible.
Luna cocked her head. "Time is clever," she said. "But cleverness isn't always enough."
Then she stepped forward.
Trelawney's arm snapped up, magic flaring. But Luna was already gone. Not vanished, just not where she was supposed to be. The spell hit nothing. It didn't rebound. It simply didn't connect. Luna was elsewhere before the idea of casting had even finished forming.
Down below, the battle shifted.
Cedric had taken a hit but stood again, Cho at his side, wand spinning through another volley. Hermione shouted over the crash of spells, giving orders as if she were conducting an orchestra with sparks. The ground under Draco cracked and buckled, but Lavender steadied him, blasting the attacker from the flank.
The rhythm had changed.
Trelawney turned, searching. Luna appeared again, a few paces away, now sitting cross-legged on the air itself.
"It's strange," Luna said. "You play with time like it's yours. But it isn't. It just lets you borrow it for a bit. Doesn't like being told what to do, though. Gets cross. You should know better."
"You are nothing," Trelawney snapped. "You're a side note in a footnote. I have seen the shape of ages."
Luna shook her head slowly, eyes still fixed on Sybill. "Your mistake is thinking Time made time. That Death made death. That Magic made magic. It's the other way around." She stood up, brushing nonexistent dust from her skirt. "If a river runs down a mountain, who made what? Did the bed make the water, or did the water carve the bed?"
Sybill said nothing, though something shifted behind her eyes.
"Riverbeds guide the current," Luna said, light, almost curious. "But a dry bed is nothing. Time is made from time. Death borrows death. Magic, well... she's the one they all chase. If the river tries to run backwards, time just finds a new way downhill."
Sybill took a step back.
It was the first time she looked unsure. Her footing on the battlefield slipped, not literally, but the rhythm cracked.
And Luna just smiled.
A moment disappeared. Sybill's mouth opened, but the words were already too late. The timeline she tried to read had already rewritten itself.
On the far slope, Nicolas faltered.
His foot hit the ground and didn't quite land right. Not a stumble, but a hesitation, less than a breath, and in that beat, the rhythm of Harry's advance shifted again.
A rhythm stronger than prophecy.
Stronger than fate.
Nicolas raised his wand to break it, too late.
It wasn't chaos anymore.
It was a story. A legend. Not told by one, but dozens.
Time tried to rewrite it. Death tried to stop it. Neither could.
Because this wasn't the story of one boy with a wand.
This was twenty people fighting like they'd trained together forever. It wasn't a battle, it was a movement, and Harry was just the conductor.
He grinned when Tracey appeared at his side, flipping a small detonator into the air. The thing went off mid-arc, shoving the pressure downward into the ground, runes cracked, and a corner of Nicolas's army folded inward, caught under the blast.
"That's cheating," Harry said mildly.
Tracey shrugged. "You'd know."
The next impact came not from spells or beasts, but from Luna. She'd walked away from Trelawney without ever turning her back.
She reached Daphne's side like she'd always been meant to be there.
And suddenly, Perenelle blinked. A ripple passed through her. In all her years, no one had made her doubt.
Harry did.
Luna did.
Together, the battlefield wasn't one line against another. It folded into a storm, turning inwards, cutting through expectation like wire through thread.
And then Sybill Trelawney disappeared.
Not vanished. No poof. No scream. She simply wasn't where she had been. Her place on the hill stood empty. Like Time had decided she'd had her turn and pulled her out before her thread could knot the rest.
Nicolas saw it happen.
His face didn't change, but the wand in his hand trembled.
Then the cry came again.
It rose above everything. It sounded like something older than shouting. It came from every throat that had ever refused to die just because someone else said they should.
It wasn't a challenge.
It was a reminder.
Harry raised his wand.
Magic moved.
The whole hill turned, and Nicholas saw it for what it was.
The moment he'd warned others about.
The story slipping out of his control.
He moved to block but Hermione had already broken the last of his anchor wards. Susan's counter-hex ate the shrapnel before it reached them. Hannah tossed the ground up like water, knocking half a line off their feet.
Luna walked between two bolts of light that never reached her.
Daphne met Perenelle face to face now, no longer behind Harry's flank. The fire that licked between them bent away, then vanished. Pansy stepped into the gap and said nothing. Just stood, wand ready, because that's all that was left to say.
Harry stepped up the slope toward Nicolas.
Nicholas raised his wand, finally putting full force behind it. No more games. The hill cracked under it. Magic split sideways and sent a roar through the field.
Harry tilted his wand.
The spell passed around him.
Not blocked. Not deflected. It simply moved around him like it had never meant to land.
Nicolas watched it happen.
And knew.
Harry wasn't dodging.
Magic was.
They came face to face at the top of the hill, ash drifting in lazy spirals through the air around them. The battlefield had quieted for the moment, just the hum of wards fraying, the faint crackle of burnt magic hanging in the wind.
Nicolas gave a short, tired laugh. "You've truly bested me."
Harry smiled faintly, not gloating. "Not something I ever aimed for."
Nicolas tilted his head. "And yet, here we are."
Harry's fingers relaxed around the Elder Wand, lowering it without a word.
"I am sorry, Nicolas," he said after a moment, and meant it.
The old man shook his head. "Don't be. The one you saw, the teacher, the alchemist, even the man who let you into his home, that was just a mask. One I wore well, I'll admit. But don't feel sorry. I don't deserve it."
Nicolas looked away for the first time, across the torn field where beasts still prowled and sparks flickered in the dirt. "You've done something rare, Harry. You stopped pretending. Most of us, me, Albus, even Morgana, we build stories around ourselves so deep we forget they're not real anymore. But you..." He looked back. "You walked in, took the board apart, and played your own game."
"Didn't mean to, half the time," Harry said. "World just kept trying to kill me, and I got bored of playing target."
Nicolas chuckled, shaking his head again. "You remind me of Rowena, in the worst way."
"I'll take that as a compliment."
"It wasn't one."
Harry smirked.
Nicolas's smile faded, just a little. "I made an oath, Harry. Long ago. Before the Stone. Before the names. Before the school. Death doesn't forget promises."
Harry's gaze didn't waver. "You're bound to keep fighting."
"I am." Nicolas's voice stayed level. "If you don't kill me here, I will try again. I'll plan. I'll gather strength. I'll do everything I can to end you. It's not hatred. It's not vengeance. It's just..."
Harry nodded. "I know."
There was a beat of silence, neither of them filling it.
"You brought an army of beasts, bent spells sideways, dodged fate. You survived every trap, every prophecy, every scheme we threw. You've outlived more stories than I've written. Don't be modest."
"I wasn't," Harry said lightly. "Just thought you liked taking credit."
Nicolas's laugh this time was short, amused in a bitter sort of way. "You've always had sharp teeth, boy."
"Better than a soft back," Harry replied.
The air hung thick again, but neither raised their wand.
Nicolas glanced up, toward the sky that was still simmering with the last of Spark's storm. "If it ends here, Harry, make it clean."
"I've seen enough dragging for one lifetime."
"Then do it." Nicolas squared his shoulders. "You've earned it."
Harry lifted his wand. There was no tremble in it.
The magic shimmered in the air, thick and old.
And still, Harry didn't cast.
Nicolas tilted his head. "Waiting for something?"
Harry let out a breath. "I thought I'd feel something. Not guilt. Not glory. Just… something."
Nicolas's expression shifted, just a hair. "Do you?"
"No." Harry's eyes were clear. "Just tired."
"Good." The old man nodded. "Means you're still sane."
Another pause. Harry didn't lower the wand, but he didn't speak either.
Nicolas closed his eyes. "Then do it."
Harry flicked the wand.
There was no flash. No sound. Just a single pulse of magic, clean and sharp, like a string pulled taut and then cut.
Nicolas's shoulders slumped.
He hit the ground quietly. Perenelle followed.
The runes stitched into his robes flickered and went out.
Somewhere above, Spark wheeled in a slow arc.
The storm faded.
Harry turned away. Didn't look back. He stepped down the hill.
The wind carried the scent of ash and crushed earth, but the air was clearer than it had been in hours.