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Now reading: Chapter 129 129: Unlocking the Language of Permanence from Harry Potter: The Idle Wizard, a Action novel by Shadowscale.

A brief, heavy silence descended upon the Defence Against the Dark Arts office. Albert hadn't anticipated Professor Brod stating the brutal truth so directly: that Ancient Runes were, in the modern era, functionally obsolete, surviving only as an esoteric academic exercise. He nodded slowly, acknowledging the hard reality of magical progress.

Indeed, outside the limited scope of deciphering fragnted ancient scrolls or archaic curse literature, Ancient Runes held little practical use today. They were ti-consuming, ntally draining, and delivered a result—if successful—that could often be achieved faster and more reliably with a simple, modern charm.

As for actively using them to cast spells?

In Albert's estimation, only wizards of truly exceptional, almost monuntal control, perhaps like Dumbledore himself, could wield them effectively and spontaneously in a combat situation.

For anyone else, it was akin to trying to write a complex treatise in a language you'd only just begun to learn in his past life—painfully slow, requiring constant dictionary lookups, and resulting in barely comprehensible, disjointed sentences. The speed required for dueling was entirely absent.

"Professor, may I examine the runes on your parchnt?" Albert finally asked, pointing to the scattered sheets on the desk. He felt an intense pull toward the script, an academic curiosity overriding his manners.

"By all ans, Mr. Anderson. Be my guest," Professor Brod replied easily, intrigued by the boy's sudden focus. He made no effort to stop Albert, assuming that as a self-taught beginner, the boy would only be able to recognize a few isolated characters. Brod knew the text was deliberately fragnted and corrupted, a ss of broken sequences he had been trying to piece together himself for days.

Albert crossed the room and picked up the nearest sheet of parchnt. As he began to scan the angular characters, he felt a strange sense of recognition. They were unlike the simplified, linear runes he had studied for basic translation; these characters seed to possess an interconnectedness, each stroke flowing subtly into the next, forming a web.

To successfully decipher them, one couldn't simply look up individual characters; one needed to understand the entire runic syntax—how they worked as a collective system.

He noticed tiny annotations scribbled in the margin, clearly the work of either Professor Brod or his colleague, Basildia. The decoded notes read: "...eye, tree, spring, spear, wisdom…"

These few keywords were disconnected, floating signifiers, but they made Albert pause and frown deeply. He felt a deep resonance, a sudden mory trying to surface from the deepest corners of his conceptual understanding of magical history, but it remained elusive.

"These runes… they haven't just been broken up, have they, Professor? They appear to be intentionally scrambled or shuffled," Albert remarked, looking up uncertainly.

"Precisely, Mr. Anderson," Professor Brod nodded, confirming his suspicion. "The ancient text, whatever its origin, was deliberately jumbled, perhaps as a safeguard, perhaps simply by ti. As you've noticed, these runic sequences are inherently difficult to decode precisely because their aning relies heavily on context."

"Yes, the text requires us to break it down, translate the components, and then re-piece the entire structure together to derive the original aning," Albert articulated seriously, already beginning the ntal process.

Is this the fundantal property of all true ancient magical script? Albert wondered. He recalled reading books written purely in runic sequences that were relatively straightforward. This text was different; it felt like a sophisticated puzzle, requiring imnse effort to assemble before any magical aning could be extracted.

Who in the na of rlin would expend so much ti and effort creating a text that requires this level of assembly just to read it? Albert ntally scoffed. Only a handful of people could truly read Runes, and an even smaller subset could weave them into complex, aningful chains.

Was this a historical relic, or rely a sophisticated academic exercise concocted by Professor Basilda for Professor Brod's personal practice?

Just as Albert was deeply imrsed in this calculation, there was a tentative knock on the office door.

Katrina McDougal entered, looking for Professor Brod for a follow-up assignnt. Her gaze imdiately fell upon Albert, who was standing at the Professor's desk, hunched over a piece of ancient parchnt with a look of intense, almost feverish concentration.

She blinked, visibly curious and slightly perplexed as to why the youngest published Transfiguration genius was currently spending his afternoon buried in Ancient Runes.

Albert looked up as the door opened, his eyes eting Katrina's briefly. He offered a quick, almost chanical nod of acknowledgent before his focus snapped back to the parchnt.

The scattered keywords were beginning to form a coherent pattern in his mind, and the more runes he deciphered, the closer he felt to a revelation.

"Mr. Anderson and I just concluded a quick chess session," Professor Brod said smoothly, sensing Katrina's inquiry. "He showed an unexpected interest in ancient scripts. Katrina, why don't you sit down and take a turn at the board while he works? It might prove relaxing."

Professor Brod's casual optimism regarding Albert was evident. Katrina, highly intelligent herself, rely guessed that Albert, being a recognized genius, was simply given special access to academic projects.

"Focus, Katrina," Professor Brod gently reminded her, noticing her attention drifting toward Albert's intense study. "Don't let others distract you. Concentrate entirely on your own objective."

Katrina refocused on the board, but her subsequent ga against the Grandmaster was equally brief and brutal. She ultimately lost, and when she looked up, slightly dazed by her defeat, she saw Albert sitting comfortably in Professor Brod's own desk chair, a quill in his hand, rapidly annotating the parchnt.

How dare he… she thought, slightly scandalized by the casual assumption of the Professor's seat, yet intrigued by the speed with which he was working.

"Professor," Albert said, rising from the chair and holding up the parchnt. "The runes on this sheet—they aren't entirely correct, are they? They're just pieces of sothing larger."

"Oh? And why do you say that, Mr. Anderson?" Professor Brod asked, his casual curiosity deepening into genuine interest. Albert was absolutely correct; the text was incomplete and heavily edited.

"Well, after I translated the sequences and reassembled them, they didn't form a continuous, grammatically sound sentence, but rather two very famous poetic fragnts," Albert explained, picking up the sheet of parchnt covered with his hasty translations and deductions.

Albert walked over, setting the parchnt down. He pointed to the deciphered fragnts, his finger tracing the associated keywords.

"I believe these must be two very well-known verses from what is often referred to as 'The Word of God' in Norse mythological texts. This text describes the origin of the Runes themselves," Albert announced, the revelation finally clicking into place.

He recited the deduced aning: "It is the account of Odin, who traded one of his eyes for the waters of wisdom... and in his quest for the secrets of higher knowledge, he hung himself from a mighty tree for nine days and nine nights, wounding himself with a spear; his blood fell to the ground and coalesced into the runes."

Albert spoke the translation with certainty, having pieced the content together not just through rote dictionary translation, but by recognizing the cultural frawork and using it to deduce the context of the fragnted script. The keywords—eye, tree, spear—were the dead giveaways.

Katrina McDougal, though still recovering from her chess loss, was utterly bewildered. She knew what Runes were, academically, but this historical-mythological context was leagues beyond the course material.

Professor Brod, however, looked completely and utterly stunned, a look of profound disbelief flooding his features. He simply stared at Albert, his mind reeling.

He actually deciphered it? Just by guessing the context? No, that's impossible. You cannot deduce the Word of God from a few scrambled, disconnected keywords unless you already know the source material and the underlying runic structure intimately.

"Seriously, Mr. Anderson, are you absolutely certain you have only just taught yourself the runic alphabet?" Professor Brod's face twitched violently, his composure montarily shattered.

His internal monologue was screaming: He has the audacity to claim he can 'barely understand' them! If this is 'barely understanding,' then what does that make the rest of us who struggle to translate simple declarative sentences?

"Professor Brod?" Albert called out, noticing the old man's frozen, incredulous expression.

Professor Brod snapped out of his trance, forcing a wide, slightly manic smile. "I apologize, Mr. Anderson. That was… an impressive deduction. I'm not entirely sure myself, as I was working through the fragnts, but your conclusion certainly seems the most plausible explanation for this specific combination of keywords."

"Professor Basilda would be overjoyed that you've taken such a deep interest in Ancient Runes. You should absolutely write to her, or perhaps attend her advanced session…" Professor Brod trailed off, considering the absurdity of the suggestion. Why would Albert need to attend a class when he could seemingly perform the final exam from mory?

The Professor looked at the remaining pieces of fragnted runic text still lying on his table. Albert had analyzed and translated the core aning without a single textbook, rely by breaking down the pieces and reconnecting them based on external historical knowledge.

Professor Brod wasn't sure if even Professor Basilda, the Ancient Runes specialist, could have achieved that speed and accuracy, but he was certain he couldn't have.

"The deeper issue remains, Professor," Albert pressed, his voice firm, returning to his original concern. "The reason why this knowledge is considered 'useless' is not because the runes themselves are powerless. It's because the wizards who study them are satisfied with rely translating the script, instead of comprehending the architecture of the magic they contain."

"It's a language of magical engineering, not just translation," Albert concluded, his eyes bright with certainty. "Nobody is digging deep enough."

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