The silence in the dungeon was absolute. For a long, frozen moment, the only sound was the faint bubbling of a forgotten cauldron. The Slytherins' mocking sneers had vanished, replaced by slack-jawed disbelief. The Gryffindors were staring at Hermione with a mixture of awe and terror. She had not only answered the unanswerable questions but had done so with the bored indifference of someone reciting a grocery list.
Snape's face was a pallid mask of fury, but underneath it, Hermione could see a flicker of something else—a flash of grudging respect for her talent, warring with his deep-seated prejudice.
"…Correct," he finally hissed, the word tasting like poison in his mouth.
Then, as his gaze shifted from her to the boy sitting beside her, his expression changed. The anger momentarily vanished, replaced by a haunted, faraway look. For a split second, he was no longer seeing the boy who had survived, but the ghost of a green-eyed girl from a life long past.
Hermione, with the memories of an adult who knew his tragic story, understood completely. He wasn't looking at her. He was looking at Lily Evans's eyes.
The moment of vulnerability passed as quickly as it came. Snape snapped back to the present, his sneer returning like a familiar cloak. "Five points from Gryffindor," he snarled, a desperate, petty attempt to regain control. "For your insufferable arrogance."
He didn't mention the history book again. The rest of the class was a tense, silent affair. Snape pointedly ignored Hermione, but she could feel his dark, brooding gaze returning again and again, not to her, but to Harry. It was an unnerving, constant pressure that made the very air around their table feel heavy and cold.
In the days that followed, Hermione's reputation as a terrifying genius was cemented. She settled into a ruthlessly efficient routine. Mornings were for classes, where she would absorb every piece of magical theory with frightening speed. Afternoons and evenings were spent in the vast, silent sanctuary of the Hogwarts library.
She devoured the first-year curriculum in a matter of days. Charms, Transfiguration, Herbology—it was all child's play. Her grimoire copied every spell, and a few hours of practice was enough to master what took other students weeks to learn. Even Defense Against the Dark Arts, taught by the stuttering and perpetually nervous Professor Quirrell, became a valuable resource. While the man himself was a pathetic wreck, she could sense the faint, foul aura of dark magic clinging to him like a shroud. She played the part of the diligent student, all while her mind's eye was busy copying his spells and analyzing the vessel of the Dark Lord.
Her relationship with Harry and Ron solidified into something resembling a friendship. They were her associates, her followers, her link to the main plot. She remained aloof, but they seemed to gravitate toward her anyway, drawn by her quiet confidence and undeniable power. They would often find her in the library, where Ron would complain about a difficult essay, and she would provide a perfect thesis statement without even looking up from her book. Or Harry would struggle with a wand movement, and she would demonstrate it flawlessly, leaving them both speechless. They were, as the rumor mill had dubbed them, "The Library Witch and her two followers."
One dark and windy night, armed with the knowledge of the staff's patrol schedule, she slipped out of the Gryffindor common room under a flawless Disillusionment Charm. She moved through the moonlit, sleeping castle like a ghost, her destination the cold, empty Potions dungeon.
"Alohomora," she whispered, and the heavy oak door swung open with a low groan. The classroom was even creepier at night, the pickled creatures in their jars casting long, distorted shadows on the walls. In a dusty corner cabinet, behind a stack of cracked cauldrons, she found her treasure: an old, heavily annotated copy of Advanced Potion-Making.
On the inside cover, a line of elegant, spidery script declared: This Book is the Property of the Half-Blood Prince.
A slow, triumphant smile spread across Hermione's face. This was a goldmine. As she flipped through the pages, marveling at the brilliant, often dangerous, handwritten modifications to the standard recipes, her grimoire buzzed with activity. Two powerful, non-standard spells were copied directly from the Prince's notes.
[Dark Arts]
Spell Learned: Sectumsempra
[Spells]
Spell Learned: Levicorpus
She could feel the creative genius and the chilling cruelty behind a spell like Sectumsempra. It was a work of art, and a tool of brutal efficiency. Half an hour later, having copied every curse, hex, and potion from the book, she carefully returned it to its hiding place and slipped away into the darkness.
A month passed. The initial wonder of Hogwarts began to fade, replaced by a gnawing impatience. She had hit a plateau. She'd mastered the entire lower-school curriculum, and the professors, while impressed, could no longer teach her anything new at a pace she found acceptable. She started skipping classes, attending only the bare minimum to maintain her persona. The one exception was History of Magic, where she would often stay late to have long, detailed discussions with the ghostly Professor Binns, mining his centuries of knowledge for any clue about the nature of Ancient Magic.
The other professors were at a loss. She was their star pupil and their biggest headache, a prodigy who was simply too advanced for their curriculum. They tolerated her eccentricities because they had no other choice.
Marvel Universe, New York.
With a sickening lurch, the world twisted. One moment, she was in a drafty stone corridor that smelled of history and magic. The next, she was standing in a filthy New York alley, the overwhelming stench of garbage and rain-soaked pavement hitting her like a physical blow. She took a deep, shuddering breath, her lungs burning with the toxic air.
"Home sweet home," she muttered sarcastically.
She had spent nearly a month at Hogwarts, absorbing knowledge like a sponge. But her core magic level was still stuck at Lv. 1, which was capping her spell progression. Worse, her experience gain had slowed to a crawl. Grinding basic spells now yielded diminishing returns, and she could feel the mental and physical exhaustion that came from casting too much magic—the wizarding equivalent of a drained mana bar.
Her grimoire was a cheat code, but it still had rules. Her own magical core was the bottleneck. She could wait, letting it grow naturally as she aged, but she didn't have that kind of time. Both worlds she now inhabited were ticking time bombs. Voldemort was a known, almost comfortable threat, but the Marvel universe was a chaotic horror show of cosmic gods and alien armies. She felt a deep, gnawing insecurity, a primal need to get stronger, faster. Voldemort himself had said it: there is no good and evil, there is only power. And she needed more of it.
That was why she was back. Hogwarts was the armory, but Marvel had to be the training ground.
She stepped out of the alley, pulling her cloak a little tighter. The city was a roaring, neon-lit beast. She was an alien here, a stranger in a strange land, with no money and no plan. Her thoughts drifted back to the one person who had shown her kindness. Sal. The barbecue restaurant. It was a small, insignificant anchor in the overwhelming chaos of her life.
As she turned the corner onto his street, the sound of panicked shouting cut through the night air. It was coming from inside the shop.
Hermione's eyes narrowed. She felt a flicker of something cold and protective. Sal was a good man. And more than that, this chaos, this violence… it was an opportunity. She quickened her pace, her hand already reaching for the wand hidden up her sleeve.
PLS SUPPORT ME AND THROW POWERSTONES