....
.
Next day.
It was late - 10:58 p.m.
Regal just ca back from finishing his part-ti job, and his small flat was still, bathed in the soft glow of the streetlamp outside.
However, currently he couldn't be bothered with any other things right.
As soon as everything was set up, he yanked out the chair at his desk and powered up the computer.
The hum of the device powered on as he cracked his knuckles.
His sharp blue eyes fixed on the blank docunt.
For a mont, just a mont, he paused.
Then he began typing.
The first words appeared on the screen:
<Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone>
tap-!tap-!
tap-!tap-!
tap-!tap-!
tap-!tap-!
Followed by, the docunt began increasing in size, Chapter by Chapter, all coming down with eerie clarity.
Hours slipped by unnoticed.
The night outside deepened, the city's sounds fading to nothingness except for his typing sounds.
....
Regal finally leaned back in his chair, exhaling slowly as the faint gray of dawn filtered through the windows.
The screen before him displayed the finished manuscript - a full volu, ticulously typed out.
He blinked at the clock in the corner of the screen. 5:23 AM.
A dry laugh escaped him as he rubbed at his bleary eyes, his lips quirking into a tired but triumphant smirk.
The hard part was done, but he wasn't finished.
With a stretch of his arms and a roll of his neck, Regal pulled the keyboard closer.
Now, it was ti to polish.
This wasn't just about copying - it never was.
The foundation was solid, but it wasn't perfect, not yet.
He started with the glaring holes, the ones fans from his old world had ranted about endlessly.
A weak explanation here, a clunky piece of logic there.
With the [System] feeding him clarity and recall, Regal dissected each inconsistency with surgical precision.
Every line had to make sense, every thread tightly woven.
As the hours passed, he moved on to what really excited him - the additions.
Harry is still the wide-eyed, slightly clueless boy from the original, but he added infused nitpits of intelligence shown through in quieter monts and even doubting his own place in the Wizarding World.
To reinforce this, he gave Harry small but aningful habits - a tendency to doodle on parchnt when nervous, and an uncanny knack for recognizing patterns.
Harry was still kind-hearted but carried more physical scars from his upbringing.
However, in the end, not all of those scars were entirely negative - they were the very marks that had reshaped who he had beco.
He carried signs of resilience born from hardship - ntal toughness, calloused hands, remarkable endurance.... and made him understand the preciousness of showing kindness to others.
These traits weren't just superficial - they beca a quiet part of his identity, subtly influencing his daily life at Hogwarts.
Whether it was handling grueling Quidditch practices, navigating the castle's corridors with his friends, or enduring challenges others might shy away from, these qualities added depth to his character.
All this because as a fan himself, Regal wanted Harry to feel less like a vessel for the plot and more like a real person thrust into an extraordinary world - making him stand out not just as 'the Boy Who Lived' but as soone shaped by his past in both strengths and vulnerabilities.
These details would not only make him relatable but also set the stage for more dynamic growth.
Regal also changed the Antagonists a little.
He wanted a tad bit more of an aura surrounding him than what was shown - like being extra secretive in taking his na while also exploring his carkyness and twisted idealism.
The Wizarding World, as magical as it was, felt smaller than it should have been.
So, he stretched its horizons.
The world itself beca a character under Regal's revisions.
He fleshed out magical politics, giving the Ministry of Magic internal factions vying for power.
Regal introduced underground magical societies, rogue potion-makers, black-market wand smiths, and even magical archaeologists uncovering long-forgotten secrets.
He expanded the reach of magic beyond Britain, planting seeds for any side stories and future arcs.
The existence of magical beings like phoenixes, centaurs, and goblins was now tied to intricate legends, with hints that so of them knew secrets even wizards had forgotten.
Hidden citadels buried in the folds of ti.
A deeper lore behind magical creatures, connecting them to legends that made their existence feel rooted in history.
Then ca the foreshadowing - oh, how he loved foreshadowing.
Subtle hints, barely noticeable on a first read but clear as daylight in hindsight.
The tiniest ntion of a cursed artifact here, a fleeting reference to a shadowed figure in ancient texts there.
Regal added every detail he could in the first volu.
A bedti tale hinted at the Deathly Hallows, while Ollivander spoke of legendary wands with veiled significance.
Hagrid's recounting of Voldemort hinted at his obsession with immortality, and whispers of cursed objects foreshadowed darker magic to co.
Regal deepened character layers too.
Neville's quiet parallels to Harry hinted at his significance, while Draco briefly questioned his father's beliefs, showing early signs of inner conflict.
Hermione, in an unguarded mont, confided her struggles with belonging, and Snape's cryptic remark about loyalty foreshadowed his complex motivations.
The world itself felt richer.
Harry stumbled upon hints of other magical schools and ancient murals depicting forgotten battles, teasing a grander magical history.
Legends of the Founders were woven into subtle discoveries, like a cryptic riddle tied to Salazar Slytherin.
Regal smiled to himself, imagining readers catching these breadcrumbs in later books, their amazent as they realized it was all planned from the start.
Still, he made sure the story stayed true to its roots as a children's book.
Any additions aid at older readers were subtle, serving as small nods or takeaways without overshadowing the core narrative.
Actually, he deliberately made sure these elents went unnoticed by a ten-year-old audience.
He wanted younger readers to simply skim past them, captivated by the next exciting line, while the deeper layers lingered for those who could appreciate them later.
....
By the ti he leaned back again, the light outside was brighter, the morning well underway.
"This is going to blow them away." Regal murmured to himself, his voice hoarse from hours of silence.
He finally rose from his seat, his body stiff from sitting in the sa place for a straight twenty-eight hours.
A few quick stretches loosened him up.
He made his way to the kitchen, grabbing a bite for breakfast, well, lunch at 03:29 a.m.
Afterward, he collapsed onto his bed, completely drained.
Sleep ca quickly, and he needed it.
He had a job to report to at 9:30 a.m.
It had been a long, deliberate night, he had planned, from yesterday evening until now.
....
.
Over the next four days, Regal shifted between verifying his work and handling his part-ti job.
Every detail was checked, rechecked, and refined.
Finally, after a thorough review of everything, he felt confident enough to secure the copyright for his novel.
As soon as the paperwork was complete, Regal didn't hesitate.
The hunt began imdiately.
He wasn't naive enough to think it would be easy.
He knew how tough it was to break into the publishing world - the big players wouldn't give an unknown writer a second glance, not with zero credentials.
Still, he dove in headfirst, sending query letters to every major publisher he could find, the manuscript polished and ready to go.
Each pitch was ticulously crafted.
Regal highlighted the uniqueness of his reimagining, the depth he had added, and the twists no one saw coming.
He made sure to emphasize the originality, the raw potential.
But as expected, the responses were mostly silence.
The few that ca back were the sa painfully polite rejections that felt like pre-written templates.
No surprises there. He knew it wouldn't be a quick win, but it still left a bitter taste each ti.
What did surprise him, though, was how little attention even the smaller, independent publishers gave his work.
His manuscript was too bold, too different for them to consider a debut novel.
Still, he kept continuing.
...and for god's sake, why wouldn't he?
When he already saw it with his own eyes, the potential this book could reach.
So, he simply kept at it.
Days turned into weeks.
More and more unanswered emails piled up in his inbox, with a couple of rejection mails.
But then, one evening, an email arrived.
It was from a publishing house called - Everleaf Press.
And despite it not belonging in his initial sought-out list, he rembers the na.
He read so intriguing stories about.
A nad publishing house with so decades of history....
However, many reports claim that currently the house is on the verge of shutting down due to a string of unsuccessful ventures.
For so reason, Regal felt he might get his book done here.
Again, not like he had many choices to begin with, so without hesitation, he emailed them his manuscript.
And now seeing an editor reach out to him made his guess more solid.
They liked it and wanted to et.
Regal didn't waste ti.
His reply was instant, his words clear and professional.
Within minutes, the eting was set for tomorrow.
.
....
[To be continued...]
★─────⇌•★•⇋─────★
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