He was running.
The hallway twisted endlessly, lit by flickering torches that burned without fire — casting shadows that moved like living things.
Men in black robes stood ahead.
Motionless.
Waiting.
Their faces were hidden beneath hoods, but their eyes... their eyes burned through the dark like coals. And as Tom drew closer, they didn't move.
Not yet.
Then the first one raised a hand.
And everything changed.
The corridor cracked beneath his feet like thin ice. Screams rose behind the walls — real, human, and close.
Tom turned.
He saw flashes of people dying — crumbling, burning, falling.
A body collapsed beside a shattered window. Another was swallowed by shadows. Then—
Lily.
She was on the floor.
Eyes wide.
Unmoving.
Blood trailing from her forehead to her cheek like a painted line.
He opened his mouth to scream her name — but no sound came.
The robed figures stepped forward now.
Slow.
Certain.
Hands outstretched — too long, too sharp, like claws carved from smoke.
Snakes slithered across the ceiling and down the walls, hissing words he couldn't understand, voices like water boiling in his ears.
The hallway shattered behind him.
He was falling.
The air collapsed around him. The cloaked hands reached—
Tom woke up.
Breathless. Damp with sweat.
The dorm was silent. The green light from the lake outside painted his sheets in soft ripples. His heart pounded.
His wand lay just beside the bed, faintly warm.
And in the quiet...
he could still hear a whisper.
Just one.
"Soon."
The next morning, the castle halls felt colder.
Or maybe Tom just couldn't shake it.
The dream lingered behind his eyes — not like smoke, but like ink soaked deep into the page. He hadn't told anyone. He hadn't written it down.
But it was still there.
Transfiguration class was already in motion.
Professor Minerva McGonagall, sharp-eyed and swift-tongued, paced slowly across the front of the classroom. Her tartan robes swept the floor behind her as she waved her wand toward the blackboard.
"Now, remember — intention is just as important as incantation," she said. "If your wand senses uncertainty, it will mimic it."
She turned. "Mr. Riddle."
Tom didn't answer.
He was staring out the window — not really seeing the trees, or the sky. He wasn't even seeing Hogwarts anymore.
He was seeing snakes, coiling up stone walls.
Hands in black reaching through his mind.
Lily's blood, like a red thread across the marble.
"Mr. Riddle?"
Still nothing.
"Mr. Riddle."
Her voice was firmer now, cutting across the class like a whip.
Heads turned. Whispers hushed.
"Mr. Riddle!" McGonagall snapped.
Tom blinked — sharply, as if someone had slapped him.
He straightened in his seat, breath caught halfway through his chest.
McGonagall's eyes narrowed.
"Care to join us in the present moment?" she said.
A few students chuckled. James was already smirking.
Tom didn't respond with sarcasm or apology. He just nodded, eyes sharp again, jaw tight.
"Good," McGonagall said. "Then perhaps you can demonstrate how to transfigure a matchstick into a needle without splintering it in half."
She gestured to the wand beside his parchment.
Tom picked it up silently.
The matchstick quivered under his focus — and with a whisper of silver light, the needle formed. Clean. Perfect.
McGonagall raised an eyebrow but said nothing more.
Tom lowered his wand.
But even as the class moved on, and parchment rustled, and James leaned to whisper something to Sirius—
Tom was still somewhere else.
Still hearing a whisper.
"Soon."
The bell rang, and the classroom emptied like water draining from a basin.
Chairs scraped. Bags swung onto shoulders. James laughed about something — too loudly — and Sirius barked a reply.
Tom moved quickly, slipping his books into his satchel and heading for the door without a word.
"Tom—wait."
Lily's voice.
He paused, but didn't turn.
She caught up beside him in the corridor, matching his pace.
"Are you okay?" she asked gently. "You seemed... off in class. McGonagall nearly turned you into a beetle."
He let a half-smile tug at the corner of his mouth.
Nothing sharp. Nothing fake.
"I'm fine," he said simply.
Lily didn't look convinced.
"You just... didn't seem like you today."
Tom adjusted the strap on his shoulder, eyes straight ahead.
"Maybe I'm still waking up."
There was a pause — not awkward, just quiet.
Lily nodded slowly.
"Well, if you ever want to talk... or not talk. Either works."
Tom stopped walking.
He turned to her, just slightly — not fully facing her, but enough to catch her eyes.
"I appreciate it," he said softly.
Then, cool and calm, he added:
"But I'm good, Lily. Really."
She studied him for a second longer.
Then gave a small, understanding nod.
"Alright."
Tom turned again, walking off down the corridor, his footsteps steady and quiet.
Lily stood behind him for a moment, watching him disappear into the flow of students.
She didn't believe him.
But she let him go anyway.
Tom walked down the corridor alone.
The voices around him faded into a blur — just noise. Faces passed, names passed, footsteps passed.
But the image didn't.
Not the one from class.
The one from his dream.
Lily, crumpled on the stone floor. Blood painting her cheek. Her eyes wide with fear — or worse, nothing at all.
He blinked once, and the vision flashed behind his eyelids like lightning.
"I don't know what's going on with me..."
He exhaled sharply through his nose.
The shadows of the hallway seemed to stretch longer than they should. Cold air hugged the stone too tightly.
"But I can't get her involved anymore."
He didn't slow down.
Didn't look back.
And this time, when he rounded the corner, there was no one watching him go.
Just the quiet sound of his own footsteps.
And the silence that followed them like a shadow.
The fire in the Slytherin common room burned low.
It was past midnight, and the stone chamber was empty — save for the quiet scratching of a quill.
Tom sat alone, hunched over a black notebook, the green-glow of the lake outside casting soft ripples across the walls. His eyes were heavy, but his thoughts refused to sleep.
He turned to a fresh page.
And began to write.
"The dream again. But clearer. Their faces. Their voices. Her."
He paused.
"They were calling to me. Reaching. The mark still burns when I think about it."
He tapped the quill once, then drew something near the bottom of the page — a rough circle, spiraled, just like the symbol burned into the back of the book.
He stared at it.
The ink looked like it was bleeding.
Then—
A sound.
A hiss.
Low. Sharp. Whispering from behind the fireplace.
Tom froze.
He turned slowly, wand already half-drawn — but saw nothing.
Just the fire flickering.
But the sound continued. Clearer now.
Words. Hissing, curling, alive.
He didn't know why he stood up. He didn't know why his lips parted. He didn't even know what language he was speaking — only that the words came.
"Sssta vassh'tha... narisss..."
The flames rippled in the hearth — bending, twisting toward him.
The shadows behind the mantel danced in the shape of a serpent.
And then — just for a moment — the stone behind the fireplace pulsed.
A faint glowing circle, marked like the one in his notebook, blinked once... then faded.
The hissing stopped.
Tom blinked.
His heart pounded — not with fear.
With recognition.
"What was that...?" he whispered.
The fire offered no reply.
He looked back at the notebook.
The mark he had drawn...
It was smoldering on the page.
He couldn't sleep.
Even after the fire dimmed, even after the mark in his notebook stopped glowing, Tom could still hear the voice.
Not loud.
Just there.
Whispering like wind through cracks in the wall.
Calling.
He slipped out of the dorm quietly.
The castle was still. No portraits stirred. No suits of armor creaked.
Just the echo of his own soft footsteps on the stone floor, and the whisper:
"Come..."
Down the stairs.
Past the torches that burned a little colder.
Into a hallway he didn't remember ever walking through before.
It curved. Narrowed. Descended.
The stone underfoot was older here — damp, worn, like it had forgotten the sound of students long ago.
And then he stopped.
Because something was already waiting for him.
A snake.
Coiled in the center of the corridor.
Thick. Green. Its eyes gold and gleaming, fixed directly on him.
Tom didn't raise his wand.
He didn't run.
He didn't even feel afraid.
The snake didn't move.
But it hissed.
Not like an animal.
Like a voice.
"You sssmell like him..."
Tom froze.
"You carry hisss breath..."
He opened his mouth. And without thinking — without meaning to — he answered.
"Who...?"
The words came out like silk — hissing, ancient, not English. But he understood them.
He felt them.
The snake tilted its head.
"You ssspeak. That meansss it'sss true..."
It slithered back slightly, toward a corner of the wall where the stones formed a strange pattern — almost like a carving, a curve... a door.
"He'sss waking up... The blood isss calling..."
Then the snake was gone.
It disappeared between the cracks in the stone, like it was never there at all.
Tom stood alone.
But something behind that wall pulsed — once — as if it knew he had come.
Tom didn't know how long he stood staring at the stone wall.
The air around it felt heavier now, like it had just exhaled.
He raised a hand — just about to touch it —
"Oi!"
The voice cracked through the corridor like a whip.
He turned sharply — and saw Mr. Filch, the caretaker, limping down the hall with a swinging lantern and a scowl.
"Out of bed at this hour? Wandering this deep? What do you think this is — a night stroll?"
Tom's mind raced.
"I was lost—"
"Save it," Filch snapped. "Professor McGonagall will love this."
He grabbed Tom by the arm — not roughly, but firmly — and marched him back through the corridors like a captured thief.
The fire in her office crackled quietly.
Books lined every shelf in strict alphabetical order. A single silver cat statue glowed on her desk.
Professor McGonagall stood in front of it, arms crossed tightly across her tartan robes.
"Well?" she said.
Filch pushed Tom forward.
"Caught him wandering the lower dungeon corridor near the sealed tunnels."
McGonagall didn't take her eyes off Tom.
"That section hasn't been used in over a hundred years. What were you doing down there, Mr. Riddle?"
Tom hesitated — just slightly.
"I couldn't sleep. I was walking."
McGonagall's eyes narrowed like knives.
"And you happened to walk into a part of the castle even most seventh years haven't seen?"
Silence.
She sighed through her nose, walked around her desk, and sat down.
"You've been distracted, distant, and now this. Something is clearly troubling you. And I'm not in the mood for clever deflections."
Tom didn't answer.
His hands were behind his back, clasped tightly.
"Am I going to need to speak with Professor Slughorn?" she asked. "Or Headmaster Dippet?"
Still no answer.
But his expression never wavered — not guilt. Not fear.
Just... silence.
McGonagall leaned back.
"Go back to your dormitory. I'll speak to your Head of House. And if it happens again, there will be consequences."
Tom nodded once.
Turned.
And walked out the door.
But even as it closed behind him, the feeling didn't fade.
That wall...
That snake...
That voice...
They were still waiting.
The next morning at Hogwarts began like any other.
The enchanted ceiling of the Great Hall reflected soft silver clouds. Students buzzed through the corridors, clutching parchment and half-eaten toast, navigating their schedules.
Tom didn't say much. He hadn't slept again. The dream lingered. So did the snake. So did the corridor.
And something inside him still whispered.
Their first class of the day was listed as Foundations of Magical Theory — a subject most thought would be another lecture-filled bore. The first-years from all four houses gathered into a wide, high-ceilinged classroom on the second floor. Ravenclaws sat forward eagerly. Hufflepuffs yawned. Slytherins lounged. Gryffindors slouched in suspicion.
Tom took a seat near the back. Lily arrived a minute later and sat diagonally across, watching him quietly. He avoided her eyes.
Then the door opened.
And everything shifted.
Professor McGonagall entered first, followed by a man none of them had seen before.
He was tall — too tall. Dressed in dark, finely tailored robes with silver clasps that caught the morning light. His face was narrow, pale. His hair black and neatly slicked back.
But it was his presence that froze the room.
It was... off.
And to Tom, it felt familiar in the worst way.
"Students," McGonagall announced briskly, "as part of a curriculum expansion, you'll be attending rotating lectures from a visiting academic. This is Professor Ardyn Sallow. He'll be teaching selected sessions on a discipline called Arcane Studies."
She stepped aside.
Professor Sallow moved slowly, his eyes drifting across the sea of young faces.
When his gaze passed over Tom, it stopped for just a heartbeat longer than the rest.
Tom tensed.
He couldn't explain it.
There was nothing wrong with the man. Nothing overt.
But something in his blood recoiled.
The professor smiled softly — too softly.
"Good morning, students," he said, his voice low and composed. "Arcane Studies is a subject rarely taught in modern schools, but one of great importance. It concerns the origin of power. Magic in its rawest, most ancient forms."
A few Ravenclaws sat straighter.
Sirius poked James with a quill. Bellatrix leaned forward slightly.
Tom said nothing.
He didn't move.
But he couldn't look away.
"Before spells, there were whispers," Sallow continued. "Before incantations, there was intention. Before wands... there was blood."
A hush fell over the room.
"Some bloodlines stretch back further than history dares to remember. And though their names may fade, blood remembers."
And again — that slight pause.
As if the words were meant only for him.
Then he smiled — perfectly controlled — and nodded to McGonagall.
"I look forward to working with you all."
He turned and walked out, robes trailing like smoke behind him.
Tom barely breathed.
He could feel his pulse in his fingertips.
The name Sallow meant nothing to him.
But that man...
Something in him knew:
"He knows me."
A few minutes later, it was time for their first Arcane Studies class.
Students from all four houses gathered again, still unsure what to expect. The classroom was different this time — colder, quieter, as though the walls themselves were listening.
Tom sat near the middle, his thoughts still chasing shadows from the earlier introduction.
He didn't speak.
He didn't blink.
He was watching the door.
It opened without a sound.
Professor Sallow glided into the room like he'd always belonged there. No grand entrance. No forced smile. Just presence — tall, pale, still.
"Good morning," he said softly.
The class murmured in reply.
Sallow didn't ask for attendance. He didn't look at a single name. Instead, he walked to the front of the class, waved a long-fingered hand, and with a flick of his wand, a single word shimmered across the board in cold silver:
LEGACY
"Magic is not simply a matter of spell and counter-spell," he began, voice smooth like ink sliding across parchment. "It is a matter of origin. Of intention. Of inheritance."
Tom leaned forward — slightly, instinctively.
"There are those born with power," Sallow continued, "not because they seek it... but because the world remembers them."
He let the sentence sit. It echoed louder than it should have.
Tom felt it.
So did Lily. Her glance flicked toward him — subtle, unsure.
"Bloodlines," Sallow said, walking the length of the class, "are not just names. They are codes. Curses. Keys. And when they awaken... they do not ask permission."
He passed directly by Tom without looking at him — yet it felt like every syllable had been meant for him.
"A legacy may be forgotten by men..." he added, stopping near the fireplace, "but not by magic. Magic always remembers."
No one spoke.
Not even Sirius.
Not even James.
Tom's hand curled slowly into a fist beneath the desk.
He didn't know this man.
But this man... knew him.
The silver word "LEGACY" still glowed faintly on the board behind Professor Sallow.
But now, he was no longer pacing.
He stood still — hands folded, gaze distant — as though speaking to something beyond the room.
"They say you can choose your path," he began quietly. "But there are some paths... already carved in stone."
No one moved.
"There is an old parable," Sallow continued. "Of a boy born beneath a cursed star. Every prophet who saw him spoke the same thing: 'He will bring ruin or greatness — but never peace.' So his parents tried to hide him. Shelter him. Raise him among the gentle and the good."
He tilted his head slightly, his voice calm.
"But destiny is not swayed by comfort. Or kindness."
The air in the room grew heavier.
"The boy grew. The signs returned. And the world... remembered him."
Tom's pulse pounded in his ears.
"No matter how far you run," Sallow said, now walking again, slowly, "some names always find their way home."
He turned — eyes sweeping the room again, not directly at Tom this time, but close.
"Tell me, students — is that cruelty?" he asked softly. "Or purpose?"
No one answered.
Not even the Ravenclaws.
Not even Lily.
"Perhaps both," he said, almost to himself.
Then, without warning, the glowing word on the board vanished.
In its place appeared a symbol — an ancient, swirling rune no one could read.
Except maybe... one person.
"Study this mark," Sallow instructed. "Trace it. Memorize it. Understand it not with your mind... but with your blood."
Tom's eyes locked on it.
His skin felt cold.
The shape was almost the same as the one from the back of the gaunt book.
It was calling to him.
The bell echoed faintly through the stone halls.
Chairs scraped. Bags swung over shoulders. One by one, students filed out of the Arcane Studies classroom — whispering about the lesson, the symbol, and the strange chill they couldn't explain.
Lily lingered for a moment, her eyes flicking to Tom.
He didn't move.
Just stared ahead.
After a pause, she followed the others out.
And then, the door closed.
Only Tom remained.
And Professor Sallow.
The older man stood with his back to him, running a fingertip across the symbol he had conjured on the blackboard — now glowing faintly like cold embers.
Tom cleared his throat.
"That parable," he said. "About the boy and the cursed star."
Sallow didn't turn.
"Yes?"
"Was it real?"
There was a long pause.
Then:
"All parables are real," Sallow said softly. "The wise ones just know how to read them."
Tom's eyes narrowed.
"Why do I feel like you were talking about me?"
Sallow finally turned.
His face was unreadable.
"Should I have been?"
Tom stepped closer.
"You know something," he said. "About me. About that symbol."
Sallow studied him for a long moment — not smiling, not blinking. Just... watching.
"I know many things," he said. "Some of them are true. Some of them... not yet."
Tom didn't flinch.
"What are you?"
Sallow's lips curled — barely.
"A teacher. For now."
He stepped closer — not threatening, not loud, just present.
"You should be careful, Tom Riddle. Power responds to those who seek it. Especially... those born for it."
The room felt colder.
Tom clenched his jaw.
"I'm not afraid of power."
"No," Sallow whispered. "You're afraid of what happens when you use it."
Tom said nothing.
The professor reached into his sleeve and pulled out a folded slip of parchment.
He placed it gently on a nearby desk.
"When you're ready to ask the real question," he said, "read this."
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