Cold stone pressed against Harry's back.
His eyes snapped open to the vaulted ceiling of the Black family ritual chamber, ancient runes swimming into focus above him.
"There you are." Sirius's worried face appeared overhead, relief flooding his features. "How do you feel?"
Harry sat up slowly, taking mental inventory of his body and mind. Everything felt... different. Like someone had opened all the windows in a stuffy room and let in fresh air.
"Free," he said, wonder coloring every syllable. "I feel completely and utterly free."
Arthur knelt beside them, studying Harry with clinical precision. "Any lingering effects? Disorientation? Memory gaps?"
"Nothing like that." Harry touched his scar experimentally, bracing for the familiar lance of pain.
Nothing. Not even a twinge.
"It doesn't hurt anymore. At all. It's like it was never there."
"Excellent. The Horcrux destruction was a complete success." Arthur's expression remained carefully neutral, but satisfaction flickered in his eyes. "Tell me, did you happen to encounter a certain twinkle-eyed manipulator during your unconscious adventure?"
Harry's jaw dropped. "How could you possibly know that?"
Arthur smiled. "Trade secret."
"Wait, you actually met Dumbledore?" Sirius looked thunderstruck. "What happened? Did you give him the bollocking he deserved?"
A genuine smile broke across Harry's face. "Actually, no. Someone else beat me to it."
"Someone else?" Arthur's eyebrow arched with interest.
"Mum and Dad." Harry's voice carried a joy that made him look younger than his seventeen years. "They were there too, in this place that looked like King's Cross but all bright and clean. They told me they'd been watching everything—every Quidditch match, every mad adventure I've stumbled into."
The simple words hung in the air like a blessing.
Sirius's breath caught audibly. "Your parents? James and Lily?"
"They said they were proud of me. That they love me." Harry's smile widened. "And they had some choice words for our dear departed Headmaster. Mum was particularly... vocal about his manipulations with my life."
"I would have paid good money to see that," Sirius muttered.
"They also said to tell you to stop blaming yourself for everything that goes wrong in the universe," Harry added, watching his godfather carefully. "And that they love you too."
Sirius turned away abruptly, suddenly very interested in examining a moth-eaten tapestry on the wall. His shoulders shook once, twice.
But Harry's radiant smile dimmed as reality crept back in. The joy faded, replaced by shadows that had lived in his eyes too long.
"What is it, pup?" Sirius asked, turning back, his own grief momentarily forgotten.
"He's gone from my head." Harry stared at his hands. "But Voldemort's still out there. Alive. Hunting me. And now I've lost the advantages brought by having his soul in my head. No more visions to warn us of his plans. The next battle..." He swallowed. "I'm just Harry now. And he has decades of dark magic I can't match."
"You don't have to face him alone," Sirius said firmly. "I'll be right there with you. So will the Aurors, and what's left of the Order."
"Besides," Arthur interjected, seeing the boy's anxiety spiral, "prophecies are notoriously unreliable. 'Either must die at the hand of the other' could mean anything. For all we know, destroying the Horcrux fulfilled your part of the bargain. Maybe the prophecy referred to the soul fragment, not Voldemort himself."
Harry looked unconvinced. "It feels unfinished. Like this is still my fight to end."
"Destiny is what you make of it," Arthur said sharply. "Not what some half-mad Seer babbled decades ago while high on sherry and desperation."
"But—"
"No buts. You're free now, Harry. Free to choose your own path." Arthur's voice carried absolute conviction. "Don't let anyone—living, dead, or painted—tell you otherwise."
Harry looked marginally comforted, but doubt still lingered in his green eyes like storm clouds.
"Moving on," Arthur continued smoothly, "when's the last time you had a proper medical examination? Not Madam Pomfrey slapping some paste on your wounds, but actual diagnostic magic."
"Er... never?"
"That's what I thought." Arthur's wand was already moving, golden diagnostic spells layering over Harry like a second skin. "Let's see what seventeen years of Dumbledore's 'care' have done to you."
Glowing symbols materialized around Harry, shifting from reassuring gold to concerning amber to alarming red in several places.
"That's... a lot of red," Harry observed weakly. "Though I feel fine."
"You feel 'fine' because your body's gotten used to being a complete disaster," Arthur said grimly. "These readings tell a different story."
"What kind of issues are we talking about?" Sirius asked, tension creeping back into his voice.
"Oh, where do I start?" Arthur's tone turned clinical. "Chronic malnutrition from his childhood, which stunted both physical and magical development. His magical core shows signs of prolonged suppression—likely from years of living with magic-hating relatives. There are also micro-fractures throughout his body from repeated trauma.""
Sirius looked murderous. "Those bloody Dursleys—"
"There's more." Arthur continued his examination. "Sixteen years hosting that parasite meant most of Harry's magic was constantly fighting a defensive war. Now that energy's been freed, but his body isn't equipped to handle the sudden power increase."
"Has removing the Horcrux made me stronger?" Harry asked hopefully.
"About fifty percent boost to your raw power," Arthur confirmed. "Useless if your body tears itself apart trying to channel it."
"Wonderful," Sirius muttered. "Any other disasters hiding in there?"
Arthur paused at a particularly complex reading. "There's residual basilisk venom in his bloodstream. Fawkes's tears are keeping it neutralized, but I'm not certain about long-term effects. And... blood quill scarring?"
Harry's hand clenched reflexively. "Umbridge. Fifth year."
"'I must not tell lies,'" Sirius growled. "I should have killed her."
"Blood quills don't just scar flesh," Arthur explained. "They create sympathetic damage in your magical core. Every word carved into your hand carved something into your magic too. You're lucky you can still cast at all."
"Can it all be healed?" Harry asked.
"Yes, but slowly. A two-year potion regimen to address the accumulated damage. It would have been better to get you all healed before you reached magical majority, but this is still workable."
Harry frowned. "Is there a faster way? I want every advantage I can get against Voldemort."
Arthur hesitated. "There is one option. But I don't recommend it."
"What kind of option?"
"The magical reconstitution ritual."
Sirius went pale. "The ritual with less than ten percent survival rate? The one where people literally die from the pain before they can enjoy the benefits?"
"That's the one." Arthur's voice was carefully neutral. "Excruciatingly painful, but it would rebuild you from the ground up—stronger, faster, more durable. Perfect healing."
Harry's eyes lit up. "Is this what you used to be able to do magic again after the Triwizard tournament year?"
"Yes. Without it, I wouldn't have survived my injuries."
"Then I want—"
"No." Sirius cut him off. "Absolutely not."
"Why not?" Harry turned to his godfather. "If it could heal everything and make me strong enough to face Voldemort—"
"Tell him about the pain," Sirius demanded.
Arthur sighed. "The pain is... indescribable. I can't properly convey what it's like to have every cell in your body torn apart and rebuilt while you remain conscious. Most people don't die from the ritual itself—they die because they can't endure the agony long enough for it to work."
Harry didn't flinch. "I've been under the Cruciatus Curse."
"The Cruciatus is a gentle back massage compared to this," Arthur said bluntly. "That curse inflicts pain. This ritual is pain—pain with purpose, reshaping your very existence at the cellular level."
"How many people actually survive it?" Harry pressed.
"I've never heard of anyone in the Black family attempting it," Sirius said quietly. "The survival rate is too low. I'm frankly amazed Arthur lived through it."
"The circumstances of my original injuries were... unique," Arthur said evasively. "Let's just say I was already familiar with that level of pain."
"What could be worse than—"
"That's not important." Arthur waved the question away.
"I still want to do it," Harry said stubbornly.
"Harry, you don't need to risk it," Sirius pleaded. "The fate of the wizarding world doesn't rest on your shoulders alone."
"This isn't just about the war," Harry said quietly. "It's about finally being whole. Getting rid of all these scars I've been carrying, inside and out."
Sirius turned to Arthur with desperate eyes. "What are his real chances? Honestly."
Arthur studied Harry for a long moment—taking in the determined set of his jaw, the steady green eyes that had faced down death multiple times without breaking.
"If anyone besides myself could survive it, it would be Harry," he said finally. "Everything he's endured—the abuse, the adventures, sixteen years of carrying a Dark Lord's soul without losing his sanity—that speaks to extraordinary mental fortitude."
"Give me numbers," Sirius demanded.
Arthur calculated quickly. Harry was the protagonist of this world, protected by a lot of forces. There was a really high chance that Harry would come out of this ritual just fine. But he couldn't say that aloud.
"Seventy percent survival," he said finally. "Ninety percent chance of remaining sane if he survives."
"Those are good odds," Harry said immediately.
"Those are terrible odds!" Sirius protested.
"Those are better odds than half my Hogwarts adventures," Harry countered. "And this time, I actually get to choose."
"Research it first," Arthur suggested diplomatically. "Speak with Healer Cadwallader at St. Mungo's—he performed my ritual. Make an informed decision."
"Fine," Harry agreed. "But I'm still going to do it."
Sirius sighed deeply. "Your parents are going to haunt me if you die."
"I won't die," Harry said with absolute confidence. "I've got too much to live for now."
An awkward silence fell. Arthur was about to continue when Sirius suddenly straightened.
"Bloody hell, I almost forgot!"
"What?"
"The Chamber of Secrets." Sirius turned to Arthur. "I promised to go on a treasure hunt there, but without the Horcrux, Harry might not be able to speak Parseltongue anymore."
Arthur blinked, realizing he hadn't considered this scenario. Were the secrets of Slytherin really going to be lost?
"Let's test it." Arthur waved his hand, conjuring a small grass snake that immediately began exploring the stone floor.
Harry looked at the snake and hissed, "§Hello there.§"
"§A speaker!§" the snake hissed back. "§How wonderful!§"
Relief flooded through Harry as Sirius let out a breath he'd been holding.
"Still works perfectly," Harry grinned, then paused. "But how? I thought it came from Voldemort."
Arthur vanished the snake thoughtfully. "Perhaps it didn't.Tell me, what color were your mother's eyes?"
"Green. Like mine."
"The exact shade of green mentioned in every historical description of Salazar Slytherin."
The silence was deafening.
"You're saying my mum—"
"Was likely descended from a Squib line cast out generations ago," Arthur finished. "The eye color, her unprecedented magical talent for a supposed muggle-born, and now your retained Parseltongue despite losing the Horcrux."
"Lily Evans, heir of Slytherin." Sirius shook his head in amazement. "She'd have either loved that or tried to strangle you for suggesting it."
"Probably both," Harry said quietly.
"She never spoke it around you?" Arthur asked Sirius.
"Never. But think about it—a muggle-born arrives at Hogwarts and discovers she shares Voldemort's signature ability? She'd have been branded dark immediately."
"So she hid it," Harry realized. "Pretended it didn't exist."
"Smart woman, your mother." Arthur said as golden sparks began forming a portal. "Well, that's a mystery for another day. Get your ritual done first. Take a week to recover. Then we'll explore whatever secrets Salazar left behind."
"A week?" Harry protested.
"The ritual will leave you magically exhausted for days," Arthur explained. "Besides, if a secret chamber has stayed hidden this long, it's not going anywhere."
"Fine," Harry grumbled. "One week."
"Excellent." Arthur stepped toward the shimmering gateway. "Try not to die, Harry. I'm rather curious to see what you'll become."
As the portal closed behind him, Arthur couldn't help but smile.
The Boy Who Lived, rebuilt and improved.
This should be interesting.