Powel
growled as he called the Shadows forward, trapping the pair of them in a world
that only they could see, borrowing an idea he’d seen in his host’s memories to
create a giant chess board which formed with the two players in place of the
Kings.
“Unoriginal.”
The part of Voldemort currently resting inside the Guardian of the Millennium
Items snorted, unimpressed by the game before him. At least until the pieces
not only came to life, but the knight’s horses leapt off of their pedestals,
which faded from the scene before the horses’ hooves hit the ground, and the
other pieces started talking amongst themselves as they stepped off of their
platforms and onto the board.
“Slightly
more impressive.” Voldemort corrected himself as he took in the pieces around
him which seemed to be acting fearful towards him, while Powel’s pieces were
guarding the young man stood amongst the black pieces.
“You
have first move, Voldemort. Just remember that this is a Shadow Game, if you
attack me you’ll pay the price.” Powel said with a slight growl in his tone,
feeling weird putting the dark lord in charge of the white pieces considering
the modern day attitude towards darkness being evil, while light was good.
There had been no such nonsense in his day, but his host’s thoughts and
feelings had begun tainting his own from the moment that he had started using
Harry’s body as his own and looking through Harry’s memories and that was how
the boy had been taught.
Once
Powel had managed to finally have a proper conversation with the boy for more
than a few moments he planned on making sure that Harry started to understand
shades of grey much better but until that time he had to work with what he had.
Voldemort,
amused that the spirit of the Bracer, who had less right to be in Harry’s mind
then he did, had the audacity to challenge him, ordered a pawn forward two
spaces and, trembling as it did so, the pawn walked forward.
“Your turn, ghost.” Voldemort sneered. Powel didn’t rise to it. Much better
people had come up with much better insults over the years and ‘ghost’ wasn’t
even an insult coming from a warped creature like the one in control of the
intruder’s form. He would much rather be a ghost than a twisted wreck of a soul.
Not
that Powel was certain that what he was facing was a full soul. Not from what
he had sensed every time he had stumbled past the creature’s door on his way
back to bed and especially considering the fact that Powel had already run into
a fragment of the soul he was supposedly fighting, the quarter soul that had
been bound to the diary had been a threat and it had only, supposedly, recently
learnt of the powers of the Serpent Items, unlike this fragment in front of
him.
As
he directed the pawn opposite the one Voldemort had moved, he wondered just how
many ways Voldemort had split his soul, for it was possible that the person in
front of him was just an eighth of Voldemort’s soul or less. If it was then
obviously Shadi was pathetic or had incredibly low mental defences, for it
should never have been able to take control of a strong, healthy mind.
“I
have a name.” Powel informed the spirit who was considering his next move, “See
if you can work it out.”
Voldemort
ordered one of his knights forward, the blue armoured knight on the back of his
huge purple horse leapt over the heads of the pieces in front of it and landed
on the right square.
“I
don’t need to work it out.” Voldemort said, beginning to feel woozy and cursing
his lack of a Shadow Item that would willingly work for him, “You come from the
Bracer and you have to be the rightful owner of a Shadow Item for it to work
for you. Other than Potter only one person has ever held it.” He gestured for
Powel to continue his move as he spoke, “That same person was found soulless
after a battle involving the Blood Mages that the Founders had so much trouble
with.”
Powel
blinked at him, confused, then informed the Bishop on his right hand side that
he wanted him to move. “How do you know that?” Powel demanded, confused
considering that there was no way anyone living would have remembered that long
ago.
“This
isn’t the first time I’ve run into a Shadow Spirit.” Voldemort’s reply shocked
both host and spirit, and the pair stared at the spirit of the Dark Lord with
identical expressions of surprise. “I’ve
met two of the Founders.”
Suddenly
Powel felt concern from his young host. It took him a moment to realise why but
then it hit him. Luna carried a Serpent Item, inside of which was the spirit of
Helga Hufflepuff, and Luna was Harry’s friend.
“Which
two?” Powel asked carefully, surprised by his own concern for Harry’s friend.
“Hufflepuff,”
Voldemort answered, “Who was possessing Lovegood’s wife...” And that made more sense
than him having a run in with Luna considering that the Dark Lord had been dead
over a decade, long before Luna had inherited the Serpent Comb, “And the
Greatest of the Hogwarts Four, Salazar Slytherin.”
If
Powel had ever needed proof that the boy in the Chamber was the same person as
the spirit now possessing Shadi, that was it. ‘The Greatest of the Hogwarts
Four’ had been said in exactly the same way, in exactly the same tone. That
wasn’t what Powel wanted to know.
“How?”
He asked as the two players took turns moving their pieces, with Powel castling
himself at the first available opportunity.
“Hufflepuff
and her precious host challenged me during the war. I won but Hufflepuff left
her host an out that allowed her to escape with the Comb. Once I’m done with
you that will be my next stop.” Voldemort snapped, finding it harder and harder
to resist the pull of the Shadows, with every breath feeling like he was
walking on nails and every thought slow, like his mind was trying to drag them
out of a lake.
With
Voldemort struggling to concentrate on the game, Powel was in a position to win
in just three more turns. This was a relief to the spirit of the Bracer, who
was tired from his earlier game and was finding it difficult to keep his guard
up the entire time even though he was expecting Voldemort to try and cheat any
second.
“And
Slytherin?” Powel asked as he moved one of his pieces into position, “Check by
the way.”
Voldemort
glowered at the black queen, who was glaring back at him and moved one square
backwards, putting himself out of check.
Powel
chuckled, having expected it, and moved another piece into position. “Check
again.”
Voldemort
glowered as he looked around, his head pounding and his body about ready to
give up on him, realising that he was caught. He couldn’t move without putting
himself in check except to one square and if he moved there the next turn it
would be checkmate.
There
was one answer though. The host he had taken had picked up the wand of the man
that Powel had gamed earlier and that same wand was sat in his back pocket.
He
drew it and pointed it at the spirit of the Bracer, casting before the other
player could react.
“Avada
Kedava!”
Powel
started moving far too late, but luckily for both him and Harry, the Pawn whose
square was in front of him threw himself in the way, protecting the ‘King’ from
attack just as it was supposed.
Powel
drew Harry’s wand, the Game’s magic already shifting and turning against the
one who had broken the rules as the white pieces retreated and the black ones
turned on Voldemort, drawing weapons and give Voldemort looks that would have
killed him if it had been possible for looks to kill.
“You
cheated.” Powel growled, the Bracer glowing and the golden serpent resting on
his brow once more as the Shadow practically begged to be allowed to feast on
the soul of the cheat. Powel saw no reason not to allow them to do so either as
it would free both his host and the intruder from the evil man’s influence,
“And for that there’s a Penalty.”
“You
dare judge me?” Voldemort demanded, though he looked much less imposing when he
was shaking with the effort to stay upright, the only reason he had survived
this long being the fact that while the Millennium Items wouldn’t protect him,
they had been willing to shield his host and he had been drawing what little
magic he could from that protection. “Me? Lord Voldemort?”
“You’re
nothing, a pathetic little ant who aspires to a rather hypocritical form of rule.”
Powel snarled back, “And you’re done. Penalty Game!”
With
those words the black pieces attacked Voldemort who bellowed in agony and anger
as the pieces started to destroy him completely. It was at point Powel took
himself and his host, who had steadily grown quieter and sleepier as the game
had gone on until he’d eventually just toppled over in the corridor, out of the
Shadow Realm.
Both
Ron and the intruder were staring at him as he blinked and slowly came to
himself in the real world.
“The
bloody hell was that?” Ron demanded, having entered the room as Powel had
launched the game and not seen any of it.
“You,”
Powel glowered at Shadi, ignoring Ron’s question, “Stay the hell away from me
and from my host. We have done nothing wrong and your little trip through our
mind nearly cost us everything.”
“If
you stay away from the Millennium It...”
“No,
no deals. No bargains.” Powel shook his head, furious, “You stay the hell away
from us or I’ll do to you what I did to Voldemort. I don’t care what kind of
game you’re running or what plans you have, but leave us out of it.”
Shadi
considered him for a moment longer then nodded, “I owe you a debt, so I will
retreat, for now. But I warn you, should your path cross with that of the
Pharaoh, you and I will meet again.”