After hearing Draco's thoughts, everyone couldn't sit still.

Chapter 158 The End



Chapter 158 The End

Hearing this familiar voice, Albus Dumbledore and Harry Potter observed calmly and saw the 'little black-robed man' who was obviously shorter among the saints.

Harry Potter locked onto the slightly taller and thinner saint at first sight, and he couldn't help but show his most handsome side to the saint.

Ahem, how's it going? My battle-damaged makeup and resolute face must have charmed Draco Malfoy, right?

It's a pity that the flirting was thrown to a blind man. Draco Malfoy was listening to his peer's complaints with great interest.

"There are only a few Death Eaters here. Compared to the Saints' vast numbers, they have no advantage. Their strength is also not on par." Draco shook his head.

No wonder Voldemort waited until Headmaster Dumbledore died to find Grindelwald. He knew their relationship and wanted to kill him to destroy his heart. "Old Dumbledore, your lover is dead, aren't you angry? And you didn't even know how to hand over the Elder Wand?" Wasn't that how Voldemort acted then?

Who knew that Grindelwald had no desire to live after learning of Dumbledore's death, and would never reveal the whereabouts of the Elder Wand, just to protect his lover's grave?

Draco thought about the eternal love between these two people and felt that sometimes it was really important to have an open mouth.

Exciting! Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger, hiding in the Saints, were stunned. They knew Gellert Grindelwald and Albus Dumbledore, but the two of them? In love? Really?

[That night in Godric's Hollow, Grindelwald left without saying a word, so who accidentally killed Ariana will always remain a mystery.

If Grindelwald had stayed, Dumbledore would have had to face the fact that he might have been the murderer of his sister, which would have been a lifelong wound that would have been difficult to heal.

Grindelwald was a criminal, so taking another life wouldn't make much of a difference. But Dumbledore was a very pure man, and this would be the cross he would bear for the rest of his life.

Grindelwald's departure took away the secret. As long as Dumbledore could not see Grindelwald, it would be difficult for him to determine the truth, and his self-blame would be alleviated a little.

But from Dumbledore's perspective, this is obviously what he is most worried about.

Grindelwald left with this secret, and he had to leave Dumbledore in order to take the blame. It has to be said that Grindelwald's love for Dumbledore was really great.

Because compared to being abandoned by his lover, the pain of accidentally killing his sister was much greater. Grindelwald's departure saved Dumbledore from falling into a deeper vortex of pain.

However, it wasn't Dumbledore who accidentally killed Miss Ariana, but Miss Ariana herself was hit by a flying curse, but she didn't know who cast it, while Grindelwald knew.

Gellert Grindelwald had originally been quite interested in listening to the little guy's story, but when he mentioned Ariana, his expression changed and he wanted to stop Draco from continuing. However, an unknown force bound him and he could not move.

He listened to the whole thing stiffly, and at the end, his eyes widened in disbelief, and he quickly looked in the direction of Albus Dumbledore.

A burning gaze came from behind, and even Albus Dumbledore, who had long known the truth, couldn't help but look complicated. Gale...

Harry Potter's expression also became complicated. He thought of Professor Green, who he had seen in Draco's world, always with Professor Dumbledore. Could it be that...

Voldemort looked at the two men who were standing there, neither attacking nor speaking, but with complicated expressions, as if he had misunderstood something.

He scoffed inwardly. Were these decent characters worried about how to deal with him? Oh, it didn't matter. As long as he was still alive, he would repay all the humiliation he had suffered today!

[Triggering a small theater—Voldemort's sense of ritual.] The system's cold mechanical voice suddenly rang out.

What the hell? Everyone within earshot was bewildered. What was Voldemort's sense of ritual? Draco, with great interest, began to review it in his mind.

[Although Tom Riddle was born in an orphanage, he spent so many years in Slytherin House and became a respectable person under the influence of his surroundings.

Of course, he pays more attention to spiritual pursuits and doesn't care much about appearance.

When he was successfully resurrected in Little Hangleton Cemetery, his first thought was to kill Harry Potter. At this moment, all he had to do was say "Avada Kedavra" to the immobilized Harry, and everything would be over.

But surprisingly, Voldemort insisted on following the etiquette of the duel. Not only did he ask for a formal one-on-one duel with Harry, he also specially arranged a ceremony of bowing to each other before the duel, and beautified it as "etiquette must be observed."

This undoubtedly gave Harry a chance to breathe, and ultimately allowed him to escape the threat of death. Voldemort could only stamp his feet in anger, but he was helpless.

Hmm... that's hard to say. Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger both knew that this could have happened in the original timeline without Draco and the others' interference.

Lucius Malfoy, hiding among the saints, couldn't help but twitch his lips. Is this sense of ritual really necessary?

[Except for the first old diary, Voldemort's six Horcruxes were all carefully selected. They were either heirlooms or relics of the founders. There was also the Nagini snake, whose venom was definitely more valuable than that of the Acromantula on the black market.

Because they knew Voldemort's criteria for choosing Horcruxes, it was easy for Harry and Dumbledore to guess what his Horcruxes were.

If Voldemort had chosen something that no one would pick up on the street as a Horcrux, why would he have lost all of his Horcruxes?

Draco thought it made sense. [If it were me, I would pick an ordinary stone and throw it into the sea to see who can find it.]

Don't think about that, Draco. Albus Dumbledore thought Draco's idea was good, but he was almost sweating.

[Voldemort needs "the bones of his father, the flesh of his servants, and the blood of his enemies" when he is resurrected. In a conversation between Voldemort and Peter Pettigrew, Peter Pettigrew suggested using someone else to replace Harry.

In fact, this is a good suggestion. In the words of Peter Pettigrew, "It is too difficult to harm Harry Potter. He is under strict protection now."

Voldemort had countless enemies, but he had set his sights on Harry. No matter how difficult the process was, he had to obtain Harry's blood and hold a resurrection ceremony in Little Hangleton Cemetery.

Although Voldemort succeeded in the end, his pursuit of ritual made him abandon the near and seek the far, and even cost him a little Barty Crouch.

Harry Potter felt that he was quite unlucky to have met such a lunatic with such a strong sense of ritual.


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