gay necromancers in the potterverse
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Isaure Wang swaddled Galath tightly. She didn't have any way of securing the note to him other than by tightening the blankets; she hoped it would be good enough.

Odhran Lan had named him Cadoc, an old family name which meant "battle." It had belonged to many great warriors of the Lans, many who died young in the service of some great wizard or Dark Lord. It was what Odhran hoped for him. Isaure named him Galath, after the Mediwizard protagonist of her favorite novel, and after Galahad, the greatest of all knights, the one who didn't pick up a sword.

She had drafted a dozen letters to Galath, pages and pages, pouring out her love and her hopes and her wisdom, saying everything that a luckier mother would have been able to spread out over eighteen years. Finally, she'd decided on a single small note: Your name is Galath Wang. I love you. I know that you will make me proud. There are many things that they will tell you are important, but the only thing that really matters is that you are kind.

Isaure was not an exceptional person. Odhran Lan had told her that, told her how lucky she was that he had exalted her by loving her. He could have loved anyone. He could have loved someone worthy of him. She should be grateful.

Isaure was a halfblood from a family that often married Muggleborns if not Muggles. Her mother had been a veela, which left her with the one thing that was remarkable about her, the beauty that had made Odhran Lan fall in love with her. She'd been a Hufflepuff, more-or-less by default. Her mediocrity at magic and poor background had led her to a job at Knockturn Alley, black-market retail, the sort of job that didn't require many skills, where being served by a halfbreed reassured customers that their goods were as Dark as they expected.

Galath watched her with wide, interested eyes. Something new was happening, and new things didn't happen often to Galath; his first year of life, like the last eight years of Isaure's, had been confined to a single room from which they couldn't see the sun. He didn't cry. Galath never cried. In a different world, Isaure would have felt lucky about it. 

She kissed him on the forehead. He smiled. 

The Death Eaters didn't gossip much in front of Isaure. But, in the prison cell that Odhran Lan called her quarters, she didn't have anything else to do except to watch and to listen. She knew that there was something planned for Galath, some Dark magic, and she knew he wasn't expected to survive. 

She had tried to escape when Odhran had first taken her as his prisoner, or as his wife. She had spent nearly three days on the run with Rordan after he was born. They'd gotten more paranoid since then. The wards were stronger and blocked off her ability to use magic entirely. Her food was cut up for her because they didn't want to give her a knife. Her guards were house elves, immune to veela magic. 

But she'd packed up a little bag with the essentials, and she'd broken off the leg of a chair, because no matter how hard you tried you couldn't deny someone everything that was a weapon. 

She was going to die, or Galath was going to live. She was at peace.

Isaure kissed Galath's forehead again. In books, she thought, once you'd made this decision, the guards had the grace to show up immediately afterward. In books, they always knew when it was their last chance to say goodbye.

Galath cooed, entirely unknowing.

--

It only took three minutes to take Isaure down. It didn't even delay the ritual.

Odhran Lan would mourn the loss of his wife, but he had agreed to sacrifice that which was most precious to him in the world, his own infant son, so that his Dark Lord would live forever. If anything, the loss of his wife would give the ritual more strength. 

Though no one had thought of it, for no one thought much of Isaure Wang at all, when Isaure Wang stood at her door with a broken chair leg in her trembling hand, it was the third time that she had defied the Dark Lord. 

Perhaps the Dark Lord would have noticed if he'd touched the child. But the Dark Lord had never been a man who was affectionate to children. 

Galath had been quiet during the ritual. There were frightening sounds, strange people; but still he had thought, perhaps, that his mother would be back soon. 

And there was an Avada Kedavra and a flash of green light and a surge of magic that even the Muggles had felt for kilometers around, and the cry of a small child who had just realized that his mother would never come back again. 

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At the same time, four counties away, another child made the same realization.

The first social worker rocked the baby back and forth. The baby, offended, cried harder. He wanted his mother. He would not accept this inferior replacement mother who didn't smell right, no matter how much deceptive rocking she provided. "It looks like they haven't been back in days."

"And no one reported them missing?" her coworker asked.

"They were quiet, apparently," the first social worker said. "Kept to themselves. No note, no trace of where they might be... they're just gone."

"Who just disappears and leaves their baby to starve?"

The first social worker shook her head. She'd been working for child protective services for nine years, and what she'd learned is that no matter how unthinkable an action might be to take against an innocent child, someone would do it, and ten other things you didn't imagine besides.

"It looks like they loved him," her coworker said. "Look at all the toys. Books. Photos... they even have a journal about his first year of life."

Memories flashed through the first social worker's mind in spite of her attempt to repress them. "You never know," she said, trying to keep her voice steady.

"I guess you don't," her coworker said. "We should gather up this stuff, take it to his placement? It'll probably help the transition for him to have something familiar."

The first social worker nodded. "You do that and file the missing persons report, I'll keep an eye on him and try to find him a placement. Is that right," she said to the baby in a sing-song-y voice. "Am I going to find you a placement? Are you going to have a new family?"

The baby cried harder. The first social worker knew he was too young to understand English-- if his parents had even spoken English instead of Chinese-- but she couldn't shake the feeling that he was protesting the idea of having a new family. He didn't want a new family. He wanted his mother back. 

"You and me both, kid," she said. "You and me both."

Within a few weeks, the Wei file was closed. No family, no friends, no apparent source of income, and no sightings. They had disappeared as smoothly as if they'd never existed at all. After a few months, there was only one person who really remembered that the Wei family had existed at all. 

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Ten years later--

Cyrus Wei was lucky. 

There were, admittedly, a lot of ways that you might assume that Cyrus Wei wasn't lucky. For example, most people would assume it was pretty unlucky to have both of your parents die when you were barely a year old. But if Cy's parents hadn't died, then he wouldn't be in foster care, and if he wasn't in foster care, he wouldn't be taken care of by Mrs. Irving. Cy was pretty sure adults were supposed to be constantly up in your business, asking where you were going and who you were with and what you were planning on doing there, and these were just not questions he felt comfortable answering for adults. But he and Mrs. Irving were on the same wavelength. Mrs. Irving thought that taking care of kids was annoying so she didn't. He got his three meals and a bed and new shoes when the old ones had too many holes to be wearable, and she got her money from the UK government, and otherwise they both minded their own business.

Kids with parents didn't get this sort of arrangement. 

But Cy was lucky in lots of other ways. He was brilliant enough to ace all his classes without doing his homework or, usually, showing up. If he was somewhere he wasn't supposed to be, which he was whenever possible, no one ever saw him. Sometimes he got annoyed at how uncool his clothes were, and then right when he hit the point of maximal despair he would always find an incredibly badass jacket or pants that he'd forgotten about. (You might think that being forgetful meant you weren't lucky, but Cyrus liked it. Forgetfulness just meant you were constantly encountering presents from your past self.) One time he'd gotten really annoyed at a teacher and then they'd gotten really sick and they had a nice teacher for the rest of the year.

No, from Cy's perspective, his life was just about perfect. After he left Mrs. Irving's house in the morning, he was free to do whatever he liked: shoplift at the mall, climb trees, read books at the library, break into abandoned buildings, hang out with his friends, take apart an old toaster he'd pulled out from the dumpster, try to build a railgun. 

He would have thought there was no way to improve it, but then he got the letter.

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The letter did not show up in the mail slot in the normal way of letters. It showed up directly on his pillow one afternoon while he was out. 

The letter was not made of paper in the normal way of letters. It was made of thick translucent parchment and addressed to "Cyrus Wei, the northwest bedroom" in bright green ink.

The letter did not contain advertising or direct requests for money in the normal way of letters. It said, in handwriting perfect enough to come from a computer if computers ever had to re-dip their pens:

HOGWARTS SCHOOL of WITCHCRAFT and WIZARDRY


Headmaster: Albus Dumbledore
(Order of Merlin, First Class, Grand Sorc., Chf. Warlock,
Supreme Mugwump, International Confed. of Wizards)


Dear Mr. Wei,
We are pleased to inform you that you have been accepted at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Please find enclosed a list of all necessary books and equipment.
Term begins on 1 September. We await your owl by no later than 31 July.
Yours sincerely,

Minerva McGonagall

Deputy Headmistress

The other sheet of paper in the envelope was a book and equipment list, asking him to buy a cauldron and robes and a pointy hat and several books on magic and to definitely NOT buy a broomstick.

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That's a neat prank. Cy is impressed by this prank. It involves creative writing skills and breaking into his bedroom.

He puts the letter away securely under the bed, where he will definitely remember where he put it, and wonders what the prankster will do next.

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About a week later a woman knocks on his door. She's tall and thin, with dark green robes and a bun, age somewhere between fifty and a thousand, and if she gives off an obvious air of being a witch despite not at this moment wearing a pointy hat, well, it's not as though anyone would dare call her out on it.

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"Uh, hello." He belatedly remembers his manners. "Ma'am."

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"Good afternoon. Are you Cyrus Wei?"

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"Yes, ma'am. --Um, if this is about the thing at the hospital, I am genuinely very sorry about what happened, I didn't realize that the steam tunnels let out there."

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Her eyes narrow a little but she says, "No, it is about the future of your education. Are you and your family familiar with Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry?"

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Ohhhhh whoever is organizing this is incredibly good at pranks. Cy Wei is in love with her now. 

"No, I'm not," Cy says, "because witchcraft isn't real and that's not a real school."

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The woman smiles a little smile, just a bit too friendly to be a smirk. "Well. I am Professor Minerva McGonagall, and I am delighted to inform you that you are mistaken. May I come inside and offer you some proof?"

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Oh man he has got to see this.

"Sure," he says, and lets her inside. Probably Mrs. Irving is going to be pissed that he let a complete stranger in her house but that sounds like a problem for Future Cy.

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She enters the house with a graceful swirl of robes and shuts the door behind her, then looks around to make sure there are no other witnesses--

 

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And turns into a cat and leaps onto the back of the faded sofa to smirk--it's definitely a smirk, on this face--at Cyrus.

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"Holy fucking shit that's awesome. Do me next."

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McGonagall returns to human form and says, "Unfortunately, that particular spell can only be performed on oneself. Would you like to be levitated? That's always popular."

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"YES."

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"--also holy shit you just violated multiple laws of thermodynamics, where did your mass go, can you create a perpetual motion machine, did it go to hyperspace, is hyperspace real, this is so fucking cool. Why doesn't anyone know about this? Why am I the person you're telling about it? Is this why I'm so lucky? Seriously how does any of this interact with physics at all, is there something quantum involved--"

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She pulls a wooden wand from her sleeve and swishes and flicks it while saying "wingardium leviosa"; now Cyrus is floating about two feet off the ground. It feels like floating in water without the wetness. 

"When I transform my human body is stored outside ordinary space, yes. The initial energy for any spell comes from the witch's or wizard's own body, but unlike technological systems you can get out more than you put in. So yes, objects that move indefinitely are quite possible. And I am telling you all of this because you, Cyrus Wei, are a wizard, with a place in our secret world, and with enough study you can learn to do everything I can do."

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Holy shit he's flying!! This is amazing. He is literally never going to travel any other way going forward. 

Ooh what happens if he tries to swim through the air? What if he tries to push off a wall? Can he flap his arms and go somewhere? What if he turns himself upside down?

This is the best day of his life.

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He can't really get anywhere by swimming; if he pushes off a wall he drifts about a foot and comes to a stop. He can eventually figure out how to turn himself upside down, though, and then he's upside down!

McGonagall watches happily. 

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Oh no he has run out of experiments. He should have thought ahead and made a list of experiments he wanted to do if he ever turned out to be able to fly.

He processes what McGonagall said. "I'm a what?"

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"You're a wizard, mister Wei. Which means you get your own wand and you can come live at Hogwarts and study magic. But magic is very secret, so you mustn't tell anyone except your parents."

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"Oh, I don't have those. They died." He sounds unbothered.

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"My condolences. You may also tell your current guardians."

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