Shadows in St. Mungo's: The Mind Burns Last - Chapter 09: All The Forgotten Things
Added 2025-05-04 14:35:00 +0000 UTCThe page was waiting for him when he came back from the market. A single sheet of standard-issue Ministry parchment, folded once and placed neatly on the desk beside the worn quill he hadn’t used in weeks. It wasn’t there when he left. He was sure of that. He remembered the table exactly — the slight tilt of the surface, the shallow crack in the inkpot ring, the way his unfinished notes had been stacked with deliberate disregard. He’d returned less than an hour later to find the stack rearranged and the folded page resting on top as though it had always been there.
It was his handwriting.
That was the first problem.
He unfolded the parchment slowly, the paper soft from years of handling but not fragile. The lines were clean, even. The ink slightly smudged at the edges, the way it always did when he wrote quickly and didn’t stop to blot.
The top line was simple:
April 24 – 11:46pm – Flat, Kitchen Table
Subject: Discussion – D.G.
The dialogue was written like a transcript.
H: “You ever wonder if they replaced you with someone better?”
D: “Better how?”
H: “Better at pretending to be you.”
D: “If they did, she has awful taste in tea and sleeps like she’s trying to disappear.”
H: “She’s also better at getting past my defenses.”
D: “That sounds like a problem.”
H: “You don’t seem surprised.”
D: “I’m not. You’ve never been hard to read, Harry. Just hard to hold onto.”
H: “And if I wasn’t me?”
D: “Then maybe I’d like you more.”
He stared at the page for a long time. It read like a memory — one of those quiet, late-night conversations spoken between silences, the kind of exchange that only made sense if you had already lived in the aftermath of it. The handwriting was his, but he didn’t remember writing it. He didn’t remember the conversation. Not the words, not the rhythm, not even the impulse to sit down and start transcribing something that had never happened.
Daphne came in a few minutes later, a book in one hand, her other curled loosely around a glass of water. She saw the look on his face before she saw the page.
“What is it?”
He held it out.
She took it without hesitation and read. Her brow furrowed by the third line, tightened by the fifth, and by the time she reached the end, she had lowered the glass to the table and leaned into the back of the chair like her spine had remembered something her mind couldn’t catch.
“This didn’t happen,” she said.
“No.”
“I never said these things.”
“You could have.”
She looked at him. “But I didn’t.”
He nodded. “I think I did.”
She read it again.
“This is your handwriting.”
“I know.”
“But it reads like a transcript.”
“I know that too.”
“Then who wrote it?”
He didn’t answer immediately. His mouth opened. Closed. The question didn’t have a logical response. He had no memory of sitting at this table, writing those lines. But when he read them, they felt like residue — not fiction, not invention, but overlap. Like pages from a version of the night that had occurred just slightly adjacent to the one they remembered.
She folded the page carefully and set it down.
“This has happened before,” she said quietly. “Not like this. But close.”
“When?”
She looked at the window. Her voice was more fragile than usual.
“There was a morning, a few weeks ago. You told me I’d fallen asleep humming. That I’d said a name in my sleep.”
“You said Lyra.”
“No. I said your name. But I wasn’t dreaming about you.”
He waited.
“I just thought it was stress. But what if I’m remembering someone else’s version of you? What if we’re both remembering versions of each other that never happened?”
The silence that followed was different now — not the comfortable silence they had managed to live within, not the watchful one that followed most of their conversations. This was the silence of a wall beginning to crack — not from pressure, but from within, like something inside the structure had shifted against itself.
Harry picked up the page again.
He read the final line.
D: “Then maybe I’d like you more.”
He wasn’t sure which was worse — the possibility that it had never been said, or the sense that somewhere, once, it had been.
~HP~
The Ministry courtroom had been sealed since the first reconstruction efforts began — not due to structural damage, but because no one wanted to reopen the records it held. Officially, it had served as an emergency tribunal chamber during the final year of the war, later used for closed inquiries, and eventually decommissioned once the threat of postwar purges had passed. Unofficially, it had become the administrative shell for trials that could not be documented, proceedings too delicate to exist on parchment, too unfinished to be named. Harry had passed by the locked door a dozen times during his first years in the Department, but never asked what lay behind it. The secrecy had been self-enforced. You didn’t ask about Level 10. You didn’t ask about the room beneath Courtroom Seven. You didn’t ask why there was no Courtroom Thirteen, even though the directory claimed one existed.
Tonight, they found the door already ajar.
The enchantments on the perimeter had lapsed. Either someone had deliberately withdrawn them, or the old magic had finally succumbed to time and institutional neglect. Daphne moved ahead of him as they stepped inside, her wand drawn low, casting the faintest trace-light ahead. The room smelled of soot and parchment glue, layered beneath the cool, inorganic tang of magically sterilized air. The tribunal desks had been cleared long ago. What remained was architectural: benches, an empty witness stand, a collection of warped bronze chandeliers suspended above a floor marked with symbols too faint to read without enchantment.
At the far end of the chamber stood a wall of glass, backlit faintly from within — not with spell-light, but with something dimmer, older, organic. The wall was etched with hundreds of names, arranged in rows, each accompanied by a set of glyphs and a clearance code. Many of the names were smudged, worn to the point of illegibility. Time hadn’t faded them — magic had. Selectively. Purposefully. The only names that remained intact were the ones meant to be remembered.
Harry approached the wall slowly. His eyes scanned the central row, third column.
There it was.
Potter, H. J.
Gate Entry Date: 16 May — Five Years Prior
Status: Inducted / Cleared
He stared at it, throat dry, pulse steady but low. The name wasn’t just a registration. It was a certification. He had passed through the gate. Not figuratively. Not metaphorically. He had gone through Avalon — the Prototype Gate. Not an idea. Not a symbol. An event. Logged. Recorded. And cleared.
Daphne came to stand beside him. She didn’t say anything at first. Then her hand rose and traced the line beneath his name, slowly, with the back of her knuckle. Her gaze drifted down the glass.
A few names below his was another.
Greengrass, D. E.
Gate Entry Date: —
That was all.
No date. No status. No clearance. Just her name. Hanging unfinished in the glass, as though someone had begun to record her passage, but hadn’t yet decided what she was.
She exhaled softly. Not surprising. Not fear.
Resignation.
“They listed me,” she said.
“You were flagged,” Harry said. “Maybe never entered.”
“Or maybe I never exited.”
He turned toward her, but her face had already settled into stillness.
The glass hummed faintly.
Neither name faded.
Neither name glowed.
But one of them was finished.
And the other was still coming.
~HP~
The owl arrived in the late morning, just after the silence between them had settled into its usual cold familiarity — not tense, not hostile, just weathered, like the quiet between two people who no longer expected to be surprised. Harry had gone back to the Department for a closed briefing; Daphne stayed behind, claiming exhaustion, though her eyes had been sharp and restless since the moment they’d returned from the courtroom. She’d said she needed time. He hadn’t asked what for.
The owl tapped once against the window before fluttering to the sill and extending its leg with a kind of mechanical stillness, like it had been instructed long before the message was ever written. Daphne opened the window without ceremony, untied the letter, and watched the bird disappear without waiting for acknowledgement.
The parchment was smooth, formal, folded into thirds. No seal. No Ministry mark.
Just her name, handwritten.
Not “Miss Greengrass.” Not “Daphne.”
D.
She stood at the sink for a moment, the letter in one hand, the kettle whistling faintly behind her. Then she turned off the heat, set the kettle aside, and unfolded the page.
The handwriting was unmistakable.
It was hers.
Every curve, every slant. The compressed descenders, the tight spacing between words, the slight downturn in the final stroke of her “y.” It wasn’t forged. It wasn’t enchanted.
She had written this.
But she hadn’t.
She read it once, then again, slower.
To D.
If you’re reading this, it means the tether’s loosened. You’ve started to feel it — the static at the edges of thought, the sense that memory is folding back on itself. You’ve probably lost the name already. Don’t look for it. That’s how they find you again.
Here’s what you need to remember:
The images are not yours.
He means well. He doesn’t know.
If he begins to remember too quickly, leave.
You volunteered differently. Not like him. You asked for a way out, not through. That’s why they didn’t clear you. That’s why you’re still here.
He’s still tethered. You’re not.
Trust the version of yourself that wrote this.
—D.
She read it a third time, hands trembling now, but only slightly — not from fear, not from shock, but from the cold inevitability of the logic laid bare. It wasn’t the instruction that undid her. It was the voice. The syntax. The way the letter knew what she was already thinking before she’d thought it. The way it treated Harry — not with anger, not even with suspicion, but with grief. As if whatever came next had already been mourned.
She folded the letter with the precision of a spell being cast and slid it into the back of her coat pocket. She didn’t burn it. She didn’t hide it in the flat. She simply kept it close.
When Harry returned that evening, tired and vaguely distant, she watched him carefully, the way one might study a door just beginning to open on its own.
He smiled. Briefly. Tentative.
She smiled back.
But not all the way.
She didn’t tell him about the letter.
And she didn’t ask which version of her had written it.
Because part of her already knew — the version that hadn’t made it out.
~HP~
It began with a flicker. A ripple in the air just above the stovetop, no larger than the heat-laced shimmer cast by boiling water — except there was no kettle on the flame, no charm in progress. Just Harry, standing with one hand braced against the counter, the other stilling the tremble in his fingers as he stared at a coffee cup he hadn’t poured yet. The light in the flat had taken on that strange late-evening quality again, the pale yellow of illusion settling over everything, casting edges where they didn’t belong. He blinked, expecting the shimmer to vanish. It didn’t.
Instead, the shimmer clarified.
A shape formed.
Not violently, not with magical force, but calmly — like a thought long suppressed finding its place in the room again.
Ernie Macmillan sat at the kitchen table.
Alive. Whole. Looking down at a tattered copy of the Prophet with the same half-bemused expression he used to wear during study group debates. His hands were unscarred. His hair shorter than Harry remembered, neatly combed back. He wore a dark jumper with a Hufflepuff crest — something he’d stopped wearing after sixth year — and looked up as if only just now noticing Harry’s presence.
“Hope you’ve still got the stronger tea,” he said mildly. “You always brewed it like a crime.”
Harry didn’t move. Didn’t speak. Just stared.
Ernie didn’t fade.
He reached for the cup on the table, took a slow sip, then turned the page of the paper. The rustle was real. Too real.
Then, without transition, the shimmer was gone.
The table was empty.
No tea.
No cup.
No paper.
Harry exhaled, slow and shallow, and turned toward the hallway.
That was when he saw them.
Lupin and Tonks, arm in arm, walking past the mirror with the quiet ease of two people who had never had to die to become remembered. They looked content — not young, not ghostly, but present. Lupin said something — Harry couldn’t hear it — and Tonks laughed, her hand brushing his coat in a gesture so casually familiar that it broke something beneath Harry’s ribs. They didn’t look at him. They didn’t stop. They moved past the mirror, turned the corner, and did not reappear.
He moved toward the hallway, fast now, heart beginning to thud — not panic, but dread, old and rising. He passed the edge of the living room, stepped into the low lamplight near the mirror, and froze.
Someone stood in the corner.
Silent. Motionless.
Facing him.
It was himself.
Not a mirror.
Not a reflection.
Another him.
Younger. Maybe twenty-one. Face tighter, cleaner, less hollow. The kind of younger that still believed in things — or at least hadn’t yet learned the shape of what was being taken from him. He wore the black coat Harry had burned after the war. The shirt with the tear near the cuff. His eyes were alert. Still. Calculating.
Harry stared.
The other him didn’t move.
Then he blinked — once — and tilted his head.
It wasn’t mimicry.
It was observation.
Harry stepped forward.
The figure didn’t retreat.
But as he crossed into the corner, the space that had seemed filled now held nothing. No figure. No echo. Just the low, constant pressure of a spell that had never fully discharged.
He turned slowly, scanned the room.
There was no one else.
But something had been there.
Watching him.
Not as enemy.
Not as friend.
As successor.
~HP~
He awoke with the taste of ash in his mouth and the sharp sting of pressure blooming across the inside of his wrist — a low burn where the skin remembered its connection to magic before the mind caught up. The air was too still. His body was too tense. His eyes opened not with grogginess, but with clarity, the kind that followed adrenaline, not sleep.
The room was dim. Not dark. The hallway light was on, casting a long yellow line across the wooden floorboards. His feet were bare. The wand was already in his hand.
And it was pointed at her.
Daphne stood ten feet away, arms down, posture still. Her face was unreadable, but her hands weren’t trembling. She didn’t look afraid. She looked ready, like someone who had rehearsed this moment too many times to count, and had decided long ago how it would end.
He didn’t lower the wand.
Because he didn’t remember picking it up.
He didn’t remember waking.
He didn’t remember anything between the moment he lay down and the moment he opened his eyes to find himself standing, wand leveled, and her watching him like she’d seen this scene play out before.
“Harry,” she said, soft, not soothing — not the tone people used for frightened children, or for volatile curses. It was the voice of a field Healer speaking to a soldier still in shock. “You’re not here yet. I know. But you will be.”
His mouth opened, but nothing came out.
The wand didn’t drop.
She took a step forward, slowly, carefully, her movements precise. Not cautious — calibrated.
“You don’t know where you are right now. You think you do. But something’s still running in the background.”
He blinked.
Her face came clearer. The corner of her mouth was tight, not in fear — in restraint.
“You’ve been somewhere else,” she continued. “You brought it with you.”
“I—” His voice cracked. His throat was dry. “What happened?”
“You were asleep.”
“I don’t remember—”
“I know.”
She stopped two paces away.
Now she was within reach of the wand.
She didn’t reach for it.
She lifted her hand — slowly — and placed her fingers against his, not forcing them open, not prying.
Just contact.
Skin to skin.
The wand tipped, slightly.
His arm shook.
Then dropped.
Not from release, but from collapse.
The wand clattered against the floorboards and rolled under the edge of the table.
He stared at the ground.
The floor was real. The wood was cool. He could hear the sound of the street two floors below. Somewhere in the building, someone turned on a wireless.
But none of it felt connected.
He dropped to his knees, hands pressed to his temples, not in pain — in containment.
“I think there’s more than one of me in here.”
Daphne didn’t speak.
She didn’t move.
She waited.
And the silence between them grew heavy with the knowledge that she had known this moment would come.
And that the next one might be worse.