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Now reading: Chapter 220 220: The Santa Claus Boggart and The Headmaster’ from Harry Potter: Most Annoying System Ever, a Adventure novel by LegionZ72.

Dumbledore watched Orion carefully, his blue eyes searching the boy's calm, impassive face for any sign of panic or defensiveness. Finding none, the Headmaster offered a small, reassuring smile.

"First of all, Orion," Dumbledore began, his voice soft and stripped of any interrogative pressure. "I would like to state clearly that this is not an inquisition. I simply want to have a talk. If you feel pressured, or if you are uncomfortable discussing this, please just tell . We can talk about sothing else entirely."

Orion remained silent. He didn't shift in his chair. He simply offered a polite, attentive nod, silently inviting the Headmaster to continue.

Dumbledore let out a quiet sigh.

"Professor Lupin inford about your private session with the Boggart," Dumbledore said gently. A sudden, unexpected twinkle returned to his eyes. "Well... amusingly, he tried to inform between bouts of rather uncontrollable laughter."

Orion blinked, genuinely surprised for a mont. "Laughter? I assure you, Headmaster, the initial encounter was quite harrowing."

"Oh, I do not doubt the terror of the Boggart," Dumbledore chuckled softly. "But Remus found the conclusion of your encounter incredibly humorous. Apparently, your choice to dress the Boggart in a rather flamboyant Santa Claus costu triggered so deeply buried, fond mories for him."

Dumbledore's smile turned nostalgic.

"Their school ti mories," Dumbledore mused, his eyes crinkling. "I distinctly rember a Christmas feast during their sixth year where they managed to successfully transfigure Professor McGonagall into a very angry reindeer, and Professor Flitwick into an exceptionally cheerful elf, among others that is. Whatever complex, delayed-action spell they had used on the punch... it was funny indeed. Those were fun tis, before the shadows lengthened."

Orion allowed a small, genuine smirk to touch his lips. So Lupin was laughing at the mory of a prank, not at my fear. A lucky, narrative coincidence.

Dumbledore cleared his throat, returning to the present.

"Regardless of the humorous ending," Dumbledore continued, his tone sobering, "I learned of the shape the Boggart initially took. ."

Dumbledore leaned forward, resting his elbows on his desk.

"Frankly speaking, Orion, there can be multiple inferences to a Boggart's form. Take Remus's own Boggart, which I am certain must have been pivotal in your own brilliant deductions regarding his lycanthropy. A full moon is a common fear for a werewolf."

Dumbledore raised a finger.

"But a moon does not necessarily represent that specific affliction. It can represent a fear of the darkness, a fear of the night, a fear of being watched from above... or a fear of anything else entirely. The subconscious is a vast, symbolic landscape."

He looked directly into Orion's deep blue eyes.

"Similarly," Dumbledore said softly, "I will not claim to understand your fear. I will not presu to know why, in your heart of hearts, a vision of myself represented your greatest dread."

Orion held his gaze, his Level 2 Mind Arts ensuring his surface thoughts remained a perfectly still, unreadable pool of calm observation.

"However," Dumbledore continued, a profound, quiet sincerity settling over his features. "In my part, I have watched you closely. I have observed how you act around during the entire ti we have spoken, both tonight and in the past."

The Headmaster offered a small, deeply relieved smile.

"And I will note this, Orion: I do not believe you are actually afraid of ."

Orion didn't blink. He simply listened, letting the silence stretch.

"And that," Dumbledore whispered, leaning back in his chair, "fills with a profound level of peace."

Dumbledore looked toward the window, where the dark Scottish night stretched endlessly.

"There are many people who are afraid of , Orion, for many different reasons," Dumbledore admitted, his voice heavy with the burden of his reputation. "So fear my power. So fear my authority. So fear the history that follows , or the secrets I tend to keep to myself."

He turned back to the boy.

"Whatever the reason may be, it is often beyond to handle or assuage their fears. Fear is a strange, irrational thing. It twists the perception of mind. It encroaches upon trust, belief and in so parts on peace of mind as well. But... it is also entirely possible to overco it once you truly understand the source of it."

Dumbledore stood up, signaling the end of the eting. He didn't demand answers. He didn't push for an explanation of the tiline or the 'Greater Good'. He simply offered a philosophical olive branch.

"I hope that you continue to watch carefully, Orion," Dumbledore said gently, offering a slight, respectful bow of his head. "And then, perhaps... you yourself can judge whether whatever it is you fear about is justified or not."

He smiled. "Good night, Orion. My door is always open for you, should you wish to talk to about anything at all."

Orion stood up smoothly. He felt a strange, tight knot in his chest—a knot composed of respect, caution, and a deep, unexpected empathy for the old man standing behind the desk.

"I will watch carefully, Headmaster," Orion promised softly. "Good night."

He turned and walked out of the office, the heavy oak door clicking shut behind him, leaving Dumbledore alone with his silver instrunts.

Orion descended the spiral staircase in silence. He didn't speak until he was safely within the dark, damp corridors of the dungeons.

"Well," Sparkle's voice broke the silence in his mind, her interface glowing a thoughtful, muted blue. "That was... anticlimactic. He didn't interrogate you at all. He just gave you a pep talk."

"He gave a choice," Orion corrected, walking slowly toward the Slytherin entrance. "He saw the fear, but he also saw my actions. He recognized that I wasn't cowering, and he decided to trust that my fear was based on a misunderstanding rather than malice."

Orion stopped near a suit of armor, leaning against the cold stone.

"He really is dangerous, Sparkle," Orion murmured, his eyes tracking a spider scuttling across the floor. "But he is also a very good man. A man who desperately wants to believe the best in people, even when his instincts scream at him to be cautious."

"He's complicated," Sparkle agreed.

Orion pushed off the wall, murmuring the password to the stone door.

"No wonder he is respected so much," Orion whispered to the empty corridor as the door swung open, revealing the dying embers of the common room fire. "To wield that much power, and still offer the benefit of the doubt... it requires a strength I am not entirely sure I possess."

He headed for his dormitory, the weight of the Headmaster's words settling deep within his mind. The ga was still on, but the opponent had just proven himself to be far more noble—and far more difficult to outmaneuver—than Orion had ever anticipated.

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