Harry Dursley Translated with ChatGPT

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Summary:
Harry Potter fanfiction written in 2022
And if after a few years the Dursleys had come to love Harry and treat him as their own son, while continuing to consider magic as a defect. How to reconcile his nature with the love of his adoptive parents? Very simple, just reject magic. But will the wizards let him do it?
Originally, I wanted it to be a succession of very short chapters based on the model of:Une adolescence à St Brutus
But quickly, I abandoned this idea and made a more classic fanfic. There are still a few very short chapters (especially in volume 1) thattestify tothis original ambition.
Prophecy
To his great surprise, Harry had once again been summoned to the headmaster's office. Harry went up there with great apprehension. What horror was the headmaster going to announce to him now? He was almost beginning to regret having learned Occlumency.
It is time for me to explain to you the reason why Voldemort wanted to kill you 12 years ago. Because yes, I regret to inform you that you were right last year. Contrary to what most wizards think, it was not Lily Potter but you whom he came to assassinate that night. It is time for you to listen to it in full.
After that, he tapped the Pensieve with his wand, and a high-pitched voice with supernatural tones resounded.
The one with the power to vanquish the Dark Lord approaches... he will be born to those who have thrice defied him, born as the seventh month dies... and the Dark Lord will mark him as his equal, but he will have power the Dark Lord knows not... and either must die at the hand of the other for neither can live while the other survives...
Harry was stunned upon hearing that. He tried to turn the prophecy every which way, but he could see only one possible interpretation. It was worse than anything he had imagined. He had to either die or kill the most powerful dark wizard of all time. He could only think of one thing. He didn't want to die. Never had he felt so bad. He felt like Dumbledore had just told him he had an incurable disease. It hurt so much. He wanted to scream, to shout, to break everything. But all he managed to do was sit there in a state close to catatonia.
I understand that you are shocked. To be honest, I thought I would wait until you were older to tell you. It's a heavy burden for an adult wizard to bear. Too heavy for a child. After what happened in the cemetery two years ago, I thought it would be several decades before one of Voldemort's Horcruxes resurfaced and he had a chance to return. I thought the wizarding world was once again a place where you could grow up in peace and safety until you were ready. But last year cruelly made me realize that I was wrong.
Finally, Harry asked:
Do prophecies always come true? Is there a way to escape them?
The question is simple but the answer is complex, and in your case, I think we can simply answer no.
In my case. So not all prophecies come true? he asked hopefully.
I will answer you with another question: If you were in my place, how would you find out if prophecies always come true?
I would try to find a prophecy that has not come true, and if after analyzing hundreds I don't find one, I would conclude that they always come true.
This is indeed the most instinctive method. However, it also brings some significant drawbacks. The most obvious are that to know if a prophecy has come true, one must be able to interpret it correctly and then find proof of its fulfillment. For example, in your case, how can you be sure of what the prophecy indicates? The prophecy speaks of the dark lord and not explicitly of Voldemort. And even if we admitAs she indicates to him, and that you will kill Voldemort, can't we say that it has already happened? After all, it was your mother who defeated Voldemort thanks to her sacrifice.
Happy to know that there is at least one wizard capable of understanding that a child of a few months is not to blame for Voldemort's death. But it doesn't help me much.
Be attentive anyway. One day it might help you. And then you were the one who asked for details. Understand that it is quite difficult, if not impossible, to know with certainty the percentage of prophecies that have come true. However, for the past 50 years, one of the main subjects of study of the English Department of Mysteries has been prophecies. They have collected thousands of them from all eras. They dissected them and after exhausting a number of historians, they agreed that about 60% of known prophecies have clearly come true, 39.9% seem to have come true, and 0.1% may not have been.
In other words, we are sure of nothing, but it still seems that the prophecies always come true no matter what we do.
This is the conclusion that most wizards have drawn from this work once it was released to the general public. And it explains why Voldemort took the existence of this prophecy so seriously. However, among the Unspeakables, there is, on the contrary, a consensus that it is false. A prophecy can be broken.
After this revelation, Dumbledore paused, visibly waiting for a reaction from his student that did not come.
You have nothing to say. Dumbledore finally observed.
Well no, I'm waiting for the rest. Replied his student with an insolent smile.
Harry had come to understand that his director was not so much fond of flourishes as of the effects they produced on his audience.
In any case, I won't give you a summary of all the controversies on the subject, especially since a number of these pieces of information are classified as top secret by the ministry and neither you nor I should be aware of them. I'll just briefly give you the theory that I think is closest to the truth.
By studying prophecies, seers, and the subjects of prophecies, the lead tongues realized that the magic at play was not the same type as the rare temporal magics we knew. On the contrary, it strongly resembles that emitted by a Felix Felicis potion, more commonly known as the luck elixir. This potion influences the behavior of the drinker so that they succeed in everything they undertake, of course, within the limits of their magical and physical capabilities. For example, by drinking it, a person who cannot apparate will suddenly understand how to do it and will be able to apparate perfectly, but they will not be able to apparate to the moon. The prophecies would be exactly the same. Prophecies would not be visions of the future but very powerful charms that compel those who are victims to behave in ways that make the prophecy come true. And like all spells, with enough willpower, magical strength, and knowledge, they can be broken. And the proponents of this theory claim to hold at least one example of a prophecy that has been broken.
So if this theory is correct and I face Voldemort...
Then you will emerge victorious feeling like you owe your survival to a huge stroke of luck. Voldemort and you will make strange choices that will ensure this outcome. On the contrary, if I tried to destroy Voldemort or his HorcruxesI would be very likely to do something stupid that will lead to my death, because I am not the one who can defeat him. The prophecy protects you as much as it protects Voldemort.
But even without the prophecy, during 10 years of war, I was unable to defeat Voldemort or find even one of his Horcruxes. And mysteriously, in your first year in the wizarding world, you accidentally found and destroyed one of them. Against all odds, just after defeating the main part of Voldemort, the one residing in his body, you find yourself having to face one of his Horcruxes.
What a coincidence indeed. Harry declared darkly. In fact, even if it were possible, you would not want the prophecy to be broken. And without your help, I have no chance, so the prophecy cannot be broken.
In fact, it seems that to break the prophecy, all the people concerned by it must agree and act together. Even if I wanted to help you in this way, I don't think I would be able to convince Voldemort to cooperate.
On this last point, I only have your word.
As with everything else. Lies and suspicion are Voldemort's methods. Mine are trust and truth. Have I ever lied to you?
Not that I know of. But you have hidden things from me.
In retrospect, do you think I was wrong?
No. Harry said reluctantly.
On that note, I want to warn you that you must not talk about it to anyone. Not even your parents or your friends. I include young Theodore Nott.
Nott is not like his father. Well, it's complicated. But you don't need to worry. I have no desire for the press to learn about the existence of this prophecy. I already receive enough letters from all the crazies in the country.
Certainly, that would be a good reason in itself to hide the existence of this prophecy, however, what worries me is that for the moment Voldemort only knows the beginning of the prophecy. And he will do anything to hear it in full. He may potentially go after anyone you have spoken to about it.And of course, I don't need to explain to you why it's better that he never knows its exact content.
Harry nodded with conviction. Then he asked:
Why did Voldemort try to kill me? Even knowing only the beginning of the prophecy, he should have known that facing me was not a good idea.
I doubt that Voldemort is aware of everything I just told you. As a true Slytherin, Voldemort has always had a very utilitarian relationship with knowledge. In his studies, he was never motivated by curiosity or the pleasure of learning, but by the power that his new knowledge could bring him. Consequently, he always despised the study of less prestigious magic or those with little immediate practical use. For these, he settled for very superficial work. And you probably don't know this, but divination is considered, not without reason, a collection of superstitions by most wizards.
As a result, I think that Voldemort was content with very basic, and especially old, knowledge about the nature of prophecies. He must have been convinced that the prophecy warned him of a danger that had to be eliminated as quickly as possible. That your death would mean the destruction of the last obstacle to his absolute domination. But as always, his main motivation must have been hisQuest for exceptionality and immortality. I think he couldn't resist making this very symbolic murder a special moment: the moment of his access to immortality.
That is why, despite the risk, he waited until the day of the autumn equinox, which, as you know, is a very special day for wizards, especially dark mages. He must have thought that it would be the definitive proof of the exceptional nature of his destiny and that the resulting Horcrux would be particularly powerful. And of course, I cannot rule out that it was prophetic magic itself that pushed him to this most questionable choice.
After this last exchange, the director motioned for him to go to bed.
By the way, Harry, one last thing.
Yes sir?
It's not your fault that your parents died. I hope you're aware of that?
Yes sir.
Then he went away with a heavy heart. That night, despite all his efforts, he could not clear his mind before falling asleep.