Harry opened his eyes to brilliant white.
Not the harsh fluorescent glare of St. Mungo's. Not the sterile brightness of the Hospital Wing. This was something entirely different—a soft, encompassing radiance that wrapped around him like a warm blanket.
He sat up slowly, bracing for the familiar fire in his scar.
Nothing.
The burning that had been his unwelcome companion for many years since that Halloween night was simply... gone. Like a door slamming shut on a lifetime of pain.
"Where am I?"
His voice echoed strangely, as if the space couldn't decide how large it was. Harry stood, looking around. The whiteness began to take shape—benches, archways, a high vaulted ceiling.
King's Cross Station. But clean, empty, and impossibly bright.
"Am I dead?"
"Not quite, dear."
Harry spun so fast he nearly fell over.
His heart stopped beating.
Lily Potter stood a few feet away, exactly as she appeared in every treasured photograph. Red hair that caught light like living flame. Green eyes that mirrored his own. A smile that could have powered all of magical Britain.
"Mum?"
The word came out strangled, barely a whisper.
"Hello, Harry." Her voice was everything those lonely nights at Privet Drive had imagined—warm honey and fierce protection and unconditional love. "My beautiful boy. You've grown so tall."
Harry didn't remember moving.
One heartbeat he was frozen in place. The next, he was wrapped in the hug he had dreamed of all his life, clinging to her as if she might vanish.
"Easy there, Prongslet. You'll crack your mother's ribs."
Harry's head snapped up. James Potter grinned down at him, messy black hair defying gravity just like Harry's own.
"Dad?"
"The one and only." James ruffled Harry's hair. "Looking good, son. Though we need to talk about that Wronski Feint you attempted last month. Bit sloppy on the pull-up."
Harry laughed, surprised by the sound. "You've been watching?"
"Every match," James said proudly. "Every Quidditch game, every adventure, every time you chose to do the right thing when you could have walked away. We've seen it all."
"We're so proud of you," Lily added, cupping his face. "So incredibly proud."
"I always wanted to hear that." Harry said while pulling back slightly and wiping his eyes. "What is this place? How are you here?"
"Think of it as a crossroads," a familiar voice interrupted.
Albus Dumbledore sat on a bench that definitely hadn't existed moments before. He looked younger somehow—fewer lines etched around his eyes, less weight bowing his shoulders. But his blue eyes carried a sadness Harry had never seen before.
"What is he doing here?" Harry's voice turned cold. "Mum, can you make him leave? I don't want to talk to him."
"Harry, my boy—"
"Don't." The word came out sharper than Harry intended. "Don't call me that. You don't get to anymore."
Dumbledore stopped walking. "I understand you're angry—"
"Angry?" Harry laughed, but there was no humor in it. "You planned for me to die. You raised me like a pig for slaughter!"
"It was necessary—"
"Necessary?" Lily's voice could have frozen hellfire. Her green eyes blazed with protective fury. "You planned my son's death and call it necessary?"
"Lily, please, you must understand. The prophecy required—"
"Damn the prophecy!" James stepped forward, wand hand twitching despite no wand being present. "Prophecies are self-fulfilling nonsense. That Hayes boy could've destroyed Voldemort last year if you'd asked for help instead of playing your chess games."
Dumbledore's face tightened. "Mr. Hayes possesses knowledge and abilities I could not have predicted—"
"Because you never asked for help," Harry interrupted. "You kept everything secret, made all the decisions alone. How many people could have helped if you'd just trusted them?"
"The fewer people who knew—"
"The fewer people who could find solutions," Lily finished. "My son carried that monster for sixteen years because you couldn't admit you might be wrong."
"I researched extensively—"
"In your spare time," James said coldly. "Between running a school, leading the Wizengamot, heading the ICW, and playing puppet master with everyone's lives."
Harry watched the exchange with fascination. He'd never seen anyone dress down Albus Dumbledore like this. The great wizard looked genuinely ashamed under his parents' combined assault.
It was terrifying.
And oddly comforting.
"Your portrait told me my mother's protection lived in my blood," Harry said quietly, his voice cutting through the heated exchange. "That Voldemort taking my blood meant I could survive his Killing Curse. But you weren't sure, were you?"
Dumbledore's silence was answer enough.
"You gambled with my life on a theory."
"The magic suggested—"
"Suggested!" Lily's hair seemed to crackle with fury. "You sent my baby to die on a suggestion!"
"And if it failed?" James demanded. "If Harry died and stayed dead? What was your backup plan?"
"I... believed it would work."
"You believed." Harry felt hollow. "Like you believed leaving me with the Dursleys would keep me safe? Like you believed keeping me ignorant would protect me?"
"Harry—"
"First year, you let me face Voldemort. I was eleven years old." Harry counted on his fingers, his voice gaining strength. "Second year, a basilisk that could kill with a glance. Third year, a hundred soul-sucking demons. Fourth year, you let my name stay in that bloody goblet despite knowing it was a trap."
He stepped closer to Dumbledore.
"I've had time to think about it all. You knew about every danger, could have handled each one easily. But you were perfectly happy to sit back and watch me fight deadly battles for your entertainment."
"Those experiences made you stronger—"
"Those experiences nearly killed me!" Harry shouted. "Multiple times! A child shouldn't need to be strong like that!"
"And Sirius," James added, voice dangerous. "You left him in Azkaban. Twelve years, Albus. You never even asked for a trial."
"I believed—"
"You believed Peter was dead and Sirius was guilty." James's hands clenched. "You didn't check. Didn't investigate. My brother in all but blood, Harry's godfather, rotted with dementors because the great Albus Dumbledore believed him to be guilty."
"The evidence—"
"Would have crumbled under Veritaserum," Lily said coldly. "One dose. One question. That's all it would have taken to save an innocent man from hell."
Dumbledore seemed to shrink with each accusation.
"Why?" Harry asked finally. "Why was it always about what you believed, what you planned? Why couldn't you trust anyone else?"
"I had seen too much evil done by those with good intentions." Dumbledore's voice was barely a whisper. "I thought if I controlled every variable, managed every outcome—"
"You became what you fought against," Lily said softly, but her words hit like physical blows. "A man so convinced of his own righteousness that he couldn't see the harm he caused."
"I tried to protect—"
"You tried to control," Harry corrected. "There's a difference. A huge difference."
Silence stretched between them, heavy with years of unspoken truths. In the distance, something rumbled like an approaching train.
"Am I really alive?" Harry asked his parents. "Or is this death?"
"You're alive," James assured him. "That Hayes boy did good work. Clean extraction, no damage to your soul."
"Though we had to hold you back," Lily added with a small smile. "You tried to follow that parasite out of stubbornness."
"I don't remember that."
"Souls rarely remember the struggle." She cupped his face. "But you're free now. Completely free."
"Will I see you again?"
"Someday," James promised. "But not for a long, long time. You've got a life to live, son."
"A real life," Lily emphasized, shooting Dumbledore a look. "Not some predestined path. Your choices, your mistakes, your victories."
The rumbling grew louder. The white space began to ripple.
"Time to go back," James said gently. "Give Sirius our love, will you? Tell him to stop blaming himself for everything that goes wrong."
"And tell Remus to grow a backbone," Lily added with a touch of fond exasperation. "He needs to stop wallowing in self-pity and start living again."
She paused, her eyes twinkling with mischief.
"Oh, and Harry? That Susan Bones is absolutely lovely. Don't let her get away."
"Mum!" Harry's face went nuclear red.
She laughed—the sound like silver bells in a spring breeze. "What? I'm allowed to want grandchildren eventually!"
"I'm seventeen!"
"Eventually, I said!" She kissed his forehead. "We love you. We're proud of you. Never doubt that."
"Love you too," Harry managed through a tight throat.
His parents began to fade. Dumbledore stepped forward.
"Harry, I—"
"Save it," Harry said tiredly. "I'll probably forgive you eventually. But not today. Not anytime soon."
Dumbledore nodded slowly. "I understand. Perhaps that is my true punishment—seeing clearly the pain my choices caused."
"Perhaps."
"Live well, Harry," his mother's voice carried on the fading light. "Just live."
The brightness collapsed inward like a dying star, pulling him back through layers of existence. The last sensation was warmth—his parents' love wrapping around him like armor against the world.