Harry stood, arms folded, in a place that looked like nothing at all. No ground. No sky. Just white thinning into more white. No wind, no sound, no edge. Neither cold nor warm. Just... empty.
He'd been here before. Once. Ages ago. Back when he'd nearly died in the hands of Vernon. Or maybe that time didn't count. Hard to tell when you'd trained for twenty thousand years and time stopped making sense somewhere around year four.
Footsteps clicked behind him.
He didn't turn. "Took your time."
A woman stepped up beside him. Long dark hair. No robe or crown. She wore black boots, sharp trousers, a white button-up shirt rolled to the elbows, sleeves rumpled like she'd been up too long. No wand in sight.
She smiled faintly. "I suppose congratulations are in order."
Harry shrugged. "If you like."
They stood side by side in the endless nothing. Just two people.
Sort of.
"Does this place actually exist?" Harry asked. "Or is this just some flashy dreamscape?"
She nodded at the space around them. "It's real enough. Not part of your world, though. This is where Magic lives."
He smirked. "So, your flat?"
"Let's call it a very large office," she said, amused.
Harry gave her a sideways glance. "Do I call you Magic? Or do you have a normal name like Sarah or Gwen?"
"Magic will do."
"Right." He exhaled through his nose, then tilted his head slightly. "You lot really don't do subtle, do you?"
"We gave up subtle when Time decided timelines should collapse if someone sneezes in the wrong century."
After a bit, he asked, "So why now?"
Magic turned to face him properly. "You pulled me back. Piece by piece. Every time you broke a limit, redefined a spell, taught others to use me in ways I haven't seen for ages. You brought belief back."
Harry shrugged. "Wasn't exactly trying."
"Doesn't matter. You did it. System was my last real creation. And now, you've taken it further than I ever meant it to go."
He looked her over. "You were gone, then? Properly gone?"
"I was sleeping. Drained. Death and Time left me behind when they stopped caring about rules. I put everything I had into the System. Built it from scratch. Tied it to all three of us. Thought it'd hold."
"And it didn't."
"No," she said simply. "They turned on me. Gutted half the core, pulled their pieces out. Tried to trap me in it."
Harry raised a brow. "So you were stuck?"
She gave a slight nod. "Until you."
He gave a low whistle. "Bit dramatic, don't you think? Choosing me to bring you back?"
She smiled faintly. "You weren't the first choice. You weren't even the tenth. But you're the only one who didn't break. The only one who pushed back hard enough when the world tried to squash you."
"Cheers," he said dryly.
"You've done well."
He eyed her. "That supposed to be praise from a deity or a job review?"
"Both."
He huffed a laugh. "Great."
Harry glanced to the side. Two figures hung in the white space, flat, stretched, and thin like they were being worn down. They weren't on the ground, there was no ground, but they hovered low, barely holding form.
They didn't move.
"Why are they dying?" he asked.
"They aren't dying," she said, sighing. It was clear she was saddened. "Not quite. Fading is the better word."
Magic turned, then walked a few steps through the void. Harry followed, "Let's start from the beginning," she said. "Before stars. Before time. Before anything that breathed or thought."
She pointed toward the two figures suspended in the blank space. "We were the first. Not made. Not born. Simply there. Before stars, before thought. Before anything decided to call itself real."
"When the universe came to be," she said, "we were already every part of it. The foundation."
"Time was first. Not because she was oldest, but because she insisted on beginning. She marked the difference between one moment and the next. The first breath, the first pause, the first after. She created the idea that there was a before."
"Death came second, or perhaps alongside. The moment something ended, he appeared. He wasn't cruel. He wasn't kind. He was just the answer to Time's question. If there was a first, then there must be a last. So he marked it."
"I came last," she said. "I was the deviation. The mistake that wasn't a mistake. I was the refusal to follow either. If Time moved forward, and Death marked the end, then I was what broke the line between. A choice where there shouldn't be one. Magic isn't rebellion. It's possibility."
She turned slightly. "None of us created anything. Creation is a word mortals gave to what was already happening. Stars didn't appear because we made them. They appeared because the rules allowed them to. Time made motion. Death gave it shape. I gave it the option to shift."
"We were the face of three concepts that gave possibility to this universe. Manifestation in a sense, but we are not Magic, Time, or Death. Your little friend Luna connected to Time, overriding even her—" she nodded toward the shriveling figure curled in the still air, "—authority. Similarly, Magic, not me, chose you to assist me, its manifestation."
She didn't look smug when she said it, just honest. The kind of tone someone uses when listing ingredients off a box. "Let's get this straight," she continued. "Magic, Time, Death, those are forces. Foundations. If the universe is a house, they're the bricks, the air inside, the space between. They don't speak. They don't think. They just are. But that's not enough."
She moved her hand in a smooth arc, tracing something invisible. "So, when belief started spreading, when mortals named what they didn't understand, whispered about Magic with wonder, about Death with fear, about Time with frustration, they didn't just give meaning. They gave shape. Gave edges to the edge-less."
"That's how we appeared. Not the forces themselves. Not gods, not spirits. Manifestations. Masks, if you want to call them that, worn by the raw truth so it could talk back."
She let her hands fall. "I am not Magic. I am its voice. Its anchor. I am what your world understands when it tries to picture something that cannot be pictured."
"You want to know how we can appear at the beginning, but from people's beliefs, right?" Magic said simply. "Because time is a mortal concept. To us, it doesn't apply."
Harry hummed lightly. "What happens now?"
Magic smiled, "Magic is stirring again. People speak your name with meaning. Not just stories, belief. Some call you a saviour, some whisper it like you're something divine. That belief reshapes things. It pulls me back to where I belong."
"You've carved your place into the weave. Rewritten rules. You've outgrown being my Champion," she said. "You are Magic's face now. Its voice. You're what people see when they think of it."
Harry raised an eyebrow. "And Death?"
"No one from your group quite fits. Too grounded. Too soft. Too sane. But it's your choice."
Harry didn't need long. "Nicolas and Perenelle."
"I thought you'd say that." Her voice held no surprise. "He's earned it in his own way. Carried Death with him longer than most men stay alive. A fitting trade."
She paused, then added, "Your people, your lot, they'll ascend with you. No one left behind."
***
Harry sat on a throne that looked like it had been made out of concentrated starlight, magic woven tight and humming low beneath him. The shape of it shifted every so often, still a chair, still something to sit on, but never quite the same form twice. Luna lounged to his right, bare feet tucked beneath her, plucking at a string of something invisible. Nicolas sat to his left, legs crossed, elbow on the armrest, chin in hand, clearly amused. Perenelle by his side.
"Magic, Time, and Death," Luna said, grinning up at the endless sky above them. "Together again."
"Does this make me highest in your harem?" she asked, still grinning like she already knew the answer.
Harry sighed. "I'm not commenting on that."
Nicolas let out a chuckle. "You've ascended to deity, lad. Top of the order. And you're still afraid of your harem?"
Harry slumped slightly. "Yes."
They both laughed.
Others appeared around them, one by one.
Daphne Greengrass, Goddess of Order and Binding.
Tracey Davis, Goddess of Chance and Disruption.
Hermione Granger, Goddess of Knowledge and Law.
Susan Bones, Goddess of Endurance and Judgment.
Hannah Abbott, Goddess of Restoration and Memory.
Ginny Weasley, Goddess of Conflict and Fire.
Pansy Parkinson, Goddess of Illusion and Ambition.
Astoria Greengrass, Goddess of Runes and Hidden Magic.
Behind them, the rest came in.
Neville Longbottom, God of Courage and Earth.
Fleur Delacour, Goddess of Flame and Oaths.
Blaise Zabini, God of Precision and Wealth.
Su Li, Goddess of Direction and Thought.
Cedric Diggory, God of Resolve and Light.
Cho Chang, Goddess of Wind and Edge.
Draco Malfoy, God of Shields and Lineage.
Lavender Brown, Goddess of Emotion and Sound.
Theodore Nott, God of Records and Secrets.
Megan Jones, Goddess of Balance and Force.
The twins didn't so much enter as explode in.
Fred Weasley, God of Invention and Mischief.
George Weasley, God of Chaos and Craft.
Angelina Johnson, Goddess of Skill and Thunder.
Alicia Spinnet, Goddess of Aim and Rhythm.
And then, at last, Lily and James appeared. Petunia stepped out from the fold next. Hagrid followed behind her.
Lily Potter, Goddess of Warding and Healing.
James Potter, God of Spirits and Binding Magic.
Frank and Alice stood behind Neville now.
Their parents appeared one by on. Favourite Professors, pets, people who wouldn't be wanted to left behind. Bellatrix joined the group. Even Ron Weasley.
Then, at the end, Nigel walked in.
Same suit, same expression, same irritatingly perfect posture. If anything, the man looked even more smug now that he had an official title.
"Nigel," Harry said, not moving from his seat.
"Master Harry," Nigel replied, inclining his head as he stepped into the circle and took his place.
"God of Dry Humour," Luna added cheerfully, clapping.
"Fitting," Daphne muttered.
"Oh, completely," Tracey agreed.
Nigel gave no reply, only flicked an imaginary speck off his cuff.
That was it.
This was it.
The END.