"Love is an emotion, but emotion is not love. Just as anger, jealousy, and hatred are related to love, yet are not love themselves."
"Love is pure. It is beautiful."
Dumbledore smiled softly.
"Dawn, we live, we breathe, and we endure all the mundane frustrations of life because we love something."
"Magic blossoms from the heart. And when we cast magic driven by pure love, its power surpasses anything imaginable. The more you love, the stronger you become."
Dumbledore spoke with absolute conviction.
"We all know that Harry survived Voldemort's Killing Curse because of his mother's protection."
"I firmly believe that when Lily cast magic to protect her son, her heart held only pure love—nothing tied to death, not even hatred for Tom. And that was why she created a miracle."
Dawn nodded expressionlessly. "That is… a refreshing theory."
It still fell within the scope of emotion-driven magic, but Dumbledore had layered his own understanding atop it.
And Dawn had to admit—there was sense in it.
All emotions arise because there is something you love?
Dawn stared into space for a moment. Compared to Dumbledore's earlier, vague talk about "anchors," this explanation was far easier to digest.
"Dawn, do you still remember what you told me last time?"
Dumbledore asked softly.
"You said love is not a universal solution for every conflict. That was beautifully put. After that night, I kept thinking… how could I refute you?"
"But eventually, I realized—you were right."
"Utopian fantasies cannot exist.
Religious teachings describe heaven as a place filled with love and harmony precisely because they understand better than anyone that the mortal world is merely the mortal world."
"You also told me: another's hero is my villain. And that too, I cannot rebuke. Loving the sheep is inevitably cruel to the wolf."
"So I have been reflecting—what does love mean in my eyes?"
"What I believe love to be should not only be romance between people. It should be something purer. More fundamental."
Dumbledore smiled faintly, gentle as morning mist, new and alive like a bamboo shoot after rain.
"Love is not merely an emotion. Love is a way of perceiving the world. When you see a wolf eat a sheep, you cry for the sheep. When you see the wolf starve, you feel pity for it too."
"Love is our lens for seeing the world. It is a momentary eternity."
He spoke with both firmness and serenity.
"The French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson proposed the concept of the decisive moment—the idea that a tiny instant can carry a grand theme, and a brief second can determine an eternity."
"Love is the same."
"What you see, hear, touch, imagine—any one moment can leave an eternal mark in your heart."
"That is the beginning of love. Not shallow affection tied merely to people, but a purity that can attach to anything."
Dawn listened silently.
For no reason at all, he thought of that afternoon when William poured water on his face and whispered, "I don't want to die."
Ordinary words.
But the boy's eyes, his expression, his trembling voice—something in that moment had shaken Dawn, moved him to promise he would save him.
That was why these past days, even though William had become a significant burden, Dawn had not once considered leaving him to die in Egypt.
Dumbledore paused, giving him space to think. After a long moment, he spoke again.
"Now that we've spoken of these things, Dawn… let us talk about you."
Dawn blinked. "…Talk about me?"
"Yes. About you."
Dumbledore smiled.
"You have emotions. You're not a cold stone. That means there is something you love—perhaps yourself, perhaps something else entirely. But whatever it is, I want to hear it."
He looked straight into Dawn's eyes and asked warmly:
"Child… tell me. What is it that you love?"
"I… don't know." Dawn answered coolly.
Dumbledore sighed. He could see plainly: Dawn wasn't ignorant of the answer—he simply refused to say it.
The headmaster didn't press him.
Instead he said gently, "Then let us start from the beginning. Since you are a Ravenclaw, let us begin with knowledge."
"Dawn, why do you crave knowledge?"
Dawn's pupils dimmed slightly. Occlumency sealed away his tangled thoughts.
"What is there to explain, Headmaster? A child raised in the Muggle world suddenly discovers the wonders of magic—of course he'd be curious."
"No."
Dumbledore shook his head.
"Curiosity is pure. But Dawn—you are not."
"Perhaps you won't like hearing this, but in your thirst for knowledge, I see a naked desire hidden beneath it."
"I believe you are curious about magic, yes. But I do not believe knowledge itself is what you truly love."
"Or at least—not what you loved first."
Dawn frowned, annoyance flaring. "Headmaster, that's my business. It has nothing to do with you."
"You're right. You don't have to answer me. But Dawn, the one who needs the answer… is you."
Dumbledore was not angered.
"It is difficult to know oneself. Strong desires cloud our true selves. Only love is the rope we can follow through the fog to find the truth."
He continued with a gentle smile:
"A person's childhood—when he first begins to understand the world—is when love most deeply shapes him."
"That is why we say the events of childhood carve a person's character, influence his worldview, and shape how he experiences love."
"Lack of connection leads to insecurity and fractures in personality. Excessive control breeds avoidance or the instinct to please."
He sighed—regret, pain, and sorrow entwined.
"Tom Riddle's years in the orphanage made him lose the ability to trust. And the fire I lit in his wardrobe ignited his hunger for power."
"So, Dawn, I believe your complex desire for knowledge cannot be explained by simply 'discovering the magical world.' There must have been a decisive moment—a moment that forged your path."
"What was that moment?"
Dawn stayed silent, feeling winter wind trace a cold line across his back.
He spoke softly once more.
"It has nothing to do with you, Headmaster."
___________
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