Albert stepped out of the Charms professor's office feeling a strange, heavy sort of disappointnt. It wasn't just that he had failed to secure the permission slip for the Restricted Section—though that was a blow to his imdiate plans—but rather that his head felt like it had been stuffed with wet wool. Flitwick's parting words about the nature of charms being the "essence of the wizarding world's mobilization" were ant to be enlightening, but to Albert, they felt like a puzzle with several missing pieces.
What, exactly, was a charm?
If you stripped away the Latin, the wand movents, and the intent, what was left? According to Flitwick, it was a bridge between the wizard's internal spark and the ambient magical field of the universe. It was an act of negotiation with reality itself. But Albert was a man of logic and systems; he liked things that could be quantified, leveled up, and categorized. This philosophical "wisdom" felt dangerously close to the kind of abstract mysticism that led wizards to wander into forests and never co back.
He shook his head, trying to clear the fog. Digging too deep into the "why" of magic was a rabbit hole he wasn't ready for yet. If he pushed too hard, he might end up with the magical equivalent of a blue screen of death in his brain.
"One step at a ti," he muttered to himself, descending the spiral staircase. "The panel exists for a reason. If I can't understand the soul of magic yet, I'll just keep mastering the body of it."
He decided to take Flitwick's advice: sotis, the best way to understand a complex truth is to stop staring at it and let it co to you in its own ti. Besides, he had more pressing, albeit more mundane, problems to deal with. His roommates were currently in the hospital wing, and according to Lee Jordan, the situation was "botanically embarrassing."
"You wouldn't believe it, Albert," Lee said, catching up to him in the corridor, looking breathless and suspiciously entertained. "Fred and George got into it with Lucian Bole on the second floor. It was a massacre. A weird, leafy massacre."
"Bole? The Slytherin Seeker?" Albert asked, raising an eyebrow. "I thought the twins were playing the long ga. What happened to staying under the radar?"
"Luck ran out, I guess," Lee grinned. "George has leeks growing out of his ears. Literal leeks, Albert. I think I saw a bit of dirt falling out of his left earlobe."
By the ti they reached the Hospital Wing, the air was thick with the sterile sll of potion fus and the muffled sounds of laughter. They found George sitting on the edge of a bed, looking remarkably cheerful for a man who had six-inch green stalks protruding from his head. Fred was sitting next to him, casually peeling a sugar quill as if they were on a sumr picnic.
"How's the harvest coming along?" Albert asked, leaning against the bedpost.
"Fantastic," George chirped, reaching up to pat a leek. "Madam Pomfrey says they're high-quality. If I wait another hour, we might be able to make a soup."
"I told him he looks more 'organic' this way," Fred added, winking at Albert. "Gives him a bit of character, don't you think?"
"So, what's the real story?" Albert sat down on a stool. "You two don't just 'stumble' into a duel with Slytherin's starting lineup. You're smarter than that."
Fred's playful expression shifted just a fraction. He leaned in and lowered his voice. "We were near the old girls' lavatory—the one with the ghost. A few Gryffindor seventh-years were cornering Bole and a couple of his cronies. They were looking to pay them back for that stunt the Slytherins pulled with the sli-buckets last month. We just happened to be in the splash zone."
"Innocent bystanders," George added, though his eyes danced with mischief. "We saw the seventh-years move in, and we thought, 'Hey, it would be a sha if soone accidentally tripped the Slytherins while they were trying to draw their wands.'"
"And?" Albert prompted.
"And then soone—I think it was Cassius Warrington—panicked and threw a 'Garden-Variety' jinx. George took it for the team," Fred explained. "But don't worry, Bole got it worse. I hit him with a Hairy-Nose Hex. Last I saw, his nostrils looked like two overgrown bramble bushes. He had to be led away because he couldn't see past his own facial hair."
Albert sighed, though a small smile played on his lips. "And Professor McGonagall? I assu she wasn't thrilled about the 'innocent bystanders' participating in a hallway brawl."
"She was fuming," George admitted, "but since the older students admitted to starting it, we got off with a stern lecture about 'wrong place, wrong ti.' No detention. No points lost. We're officially victims of circumstance."
"Victims who managed to land a hex before falling," Albert noted. "You three are getting far too good at this 'innocent passerby' routine. It's starting to rub off on ."
The incident, as it turned out, was the spark that set the dry brush of house rivalry on fire. Since the "culprits" of the previous sester's pranks had never been caught, the school had been a tinderbox. Now that so older Gryffindors had been caught red-handed attacking Slytherins, Snape was on a warpath. He had spent the afternoon trying to convince Dumbledore that the twins were the masterminds behind every bad thing that had happened since September, but McGonagall had held her ground.
For the next few days, the Great Hall was divided by a wall of icy glares. The Slytherins felt persecuted; the Gryffindors felt emboldened. And in the middle of it all sat Albert, watching the chaos with the detached interest of a chess player.
"They're taking the bait," Albert whispered to the twins during dinner a few days later.
"Who?" Fred asked, reaching for the mashed potatoes.
"The whole school. Everyone is so focused on the hallway fights and the house points that they've forgotten about us," Albert said. He pulled out a stack of parchnt covered in neat diagrams and lists. "Which ans it's the perfect ti to launch the next phase."
"The cards?" Lee Jordan asked, his eyes lighting up.
"The cards," Albert confird. "Our club has grown to nearly forty mbers. We have enough players to make it official. I want to hold the first Hogwarts Wizarding Card Tournant."
Angelina Johnson and Alicia Spinnet, who had been sitting nearby, leaned in with interest.
"A tournant?" Angelina asked. "Are you serious? With everything going on between the houses, do you really think people will sit down to play a card ga?"
"That's exactly why they'll play," Albert explained, his voice calm and persuasive. "People need an outlet. Quidditch is only once every few months. The Wizarding Card ga is fast, competitive, and—most importantly—it's neutral ground. It's a way to beat a Slytherin without getting a week of detention from Snape."
"Will there be prizes?" Alicia asked. "People won't show up just for the glory."
"Of course," Albert said, tapping the parchnt. "I'm thinking of a tiered reward system. Third place gets a custom-made leather notebook for spell-research. Second place gets five Galleons and a rare 'Founder' card. First place..."
He paused for dramatic effect.
"First place gets a commorative trophy and a large barrel of Butterbeer for their house common room. Plus, a seat on the 'Grand Council' of the club, which ans they get a say in future card designs."
"A barrel of Butterbeer?" Lee whistled. "That's going to cost a bit, Albert. Who's paying for all this? We haven't exactly started charging mbership fees yet."
"I am," Albert said simply. "Consider it an investnt. If we make this a Hogwarts tradition, the ga becos more than just a hobby. It becos an ecosystem. Once people are hooked, they'll want expansion packs. They'll want specialized decks. They'll want 'shiny' versions of their favorite cards. This tournant is the marketing campaign."
"You're scary sotis, you know that?" Fred muttered, though he looked impressed. "You talk about a ga like you're planning a takeover of the Ministry."
"Maybe I am," Albert joked, though his eyes remained sharp. "But for now, I just want to see a Hufflepuff take down a seventh-year Slytherin with a 'Dragon-Fire' combo. It'll be poetic."
The group spent the rest of the evening hamring out the details. Albert's plan was ticulous: a series of qualifying rounds held in the various common rooms, followed by a 'Final Four' showdown in the Great Hall or a vacant classroom. To ensure fairness, Albert decided the club would provide the decks for the qualifiers, allowing players to build their own strategies from a shared pool of cards.
"It levels the playing field," Albert explained. "It's not about who has the most money to buy cards; it's about who understands the chanics of the ga. That's how you build a real fan base."
As he watched his friends argue over the point-values of different cards, Albert felt the familiar satisfaction of a plan coming together.
He might not understand the "essence" of a charm just yet, and he might not have his hands on the Restricted Section books, but he was building sothing tangible here. In a world of ancient curses and unpredictable magic, a well-balanced deck of cards was a comfort.
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