Transmigration: Into the Life of Severus Snape Chapter 135 - 131 – Anatomy of the Cursed
Location: Prince Manor – Laboratory
The laboratory was no longer a place of idle invention or casual experintation. It had transford into a fortress of accumulated knowledge — heavy wooden shelves groaning under the weight of leather-bound tos that reeked of dust and forgotten centuries, wooden crates stacked precariously high with smuggled manuscripts bearing the distinctive seal of the Zabini archives, and dominating the central table, a chaotic scattering of cream-colored parchnt already marked with half-finished diagrams rendered in his precise, angular script. The air hung heavy and oppressive, thick with the mingled scents of aged parchnt, the bitter herb sll of dried wolfsbane, and the faint but unmistakable iron tang of carefully preserved blood samples stored in crystalline vials.
Severus sat rigid and unmoving at his mahogany desk, his black-clad form hunched over his work like a scholarly gargoyle. Before him lay an incongruous pairing: a crisp Muggle textbook propped open beside an ancient, Zabini-funded grimoire bound in cracked dragon hide. The contrast between the two volus was jarring, almost offensive in its stark differences.
On the yellowed, brittle parchnt of the grimoire, blood and its properties were rendered in flowery mythic poetry, each line dripping with mystical significance: "The river of humors, bound by the moon's silver threads, flowing with curses that corrupt the very essence of the soul."
On the stark, white pages of the Muggle volu — Principles of Genetics, Third Edition — the sa life force was reduced to cold, precise diagrams, almost chanical in their clinical detachnt. Small red discs were labeled simply as erythrocytes. White, irregularly-shaped guardians bore the sterile designation of leukocytes. Most fascinating of all were the elegant double spirals of sothing called deoxyribonucleic acid, twisted like microscopic staircases.
Severus traced one of the spirals with his long, perpetually ink-stained finger, his dark eyes moving between the two vastly different interpretations of life itself.
"They call this the double helix," he murmured, his voice barely above a whisper, laden with the weight of discovery. The parchnt before him bore intricate sketches—spiraling structures that seed to dance in the flickering candlelight of his laboratory. "A structure that defines inheritance, behavior, even vulnerability. Patterns repeated endlessly, written into the very flesh before the flesh is ever ford, determining fate with molecular precision."
Eva's voice slithered into his mind like silk over steel, crisp and coolly analytical. "This double helix bears a striking resemblance to the binding matrices you so painstakingly mapped during your lycanthropy trials last winter. Look closely—here, where the strands cross and intertwine, the magical resonance aligns perfectly with your theoretical fraworks. You may very well be staring at the sa fundantal phenonon… only described in two entirely different tongues, two separate schools of understanding."
Severus's lips curved in what might have been mistaken for a smile, though it carried an edge far too sharp for re pleasure. It was the expression of a predator glimpsing prey, of a scholar scenting revolutionary truth. "Two languages attempting to capture one immutable truth. Wizards, in their ancient wisdom, call it essence—the fundantal nature that courses through all living things. Muggles, with their clinical precision, call it DNA—deoxyribonucleic acid, the chemical foundation of heredity." His dark eyes glead with fervent intensity. "Neither tradition possesses the complete picture, but together…"
His quill scratched furiously across the parchnt, the sound sharp and urgent in the stillness. Each stroke bridged disparate worlds of knowledge—scientific diagrams flowing seamlessly into ancient rune-script, anatomical precision weaving together with alchemical theory, creating sothing entirely unprecedented.
A dark thrill pulsed through his veins like liquid lightning, quickening his pulse and sharpening his focus to a razor's edge. For the first ti in his dual existence, he felt the separate worlds of his fractured identity truly align—George's buried treasure trove of scientific knowledge sparking and crackling against Severus's deeply honed instinct for magical innovation. It was a path no wizard or scientist had ever dared to walk, a convergence of disciplines that might just carve his na into the annals of history with letters of fire.
Location: Subterranean Laboratory
The reinforced sub-lab was a world apart from the bright halls above. Ancient wards humd faintly in the stone walls, their protective magic thrumming through the air like a distant heartbeat. Silver inlays traced intricate patterns along the rough-hewn walls, glowing with an ethereal light that cast dancing shadows across the chamber. Heavy iron-lined doors had sealed them in with an ominous finality, the tal gleaming dully under the ward-light.
Severus sat at his writing desk, quill moving across parchnt with precise, economical strokes. His tone remained clinical despite the weight of what sat chained in the chamber with him—a being that had once been human, now sothing far more dangerous.
Subject V1 (Lucian – vampire, turned 1824):
Blood consumption: requires feeding every four hours, despite carefully controlled rations of fresh animal blood. Subject describes the hunger as "a pressure in the bones, not the stomach"—a sensation that appears to radiate from within rather than manifest as traditional appetite. The craving intensifies rapidly after the three-hour mark.
Sunlight test: deliberately exposed subject's index finger for precisely seven seconds to direct morning sunlight. Epidermis blistered imdiately, acrid smoke rising from the contact point. Subject showed signs of acute distress but maintained composure. Rapid healing comnced once digit was shaded, though tissue restored unevenly—a thin white scar remained as permanent evidence. Observation: apparent cellular conflict between residual human regeneration capacity and vampiric stasis.
Abilities: demonstrates heightened speed and strength approximately ten tis that of average human male. Possesses extraordinarily acute senses—can detect heartbeat from across the chamber, identify individuals by scent alone. Reports occasional fragnted thoughts when in close proximity to potential prey, suggesting rudintary telepathic capabilities. Notably denies traditional weaknesses to garlic and holy water, dismissing them as "folklore." Confirms silver causes systemic poisoning rather than instant death—effects accumulate over ti. Vervain acts as both paralytic and corrosive agent, causing visible burns upon contact.
Psychological state: markedly weary and emotionally detached. Speaks with deliberate, asured precision, as though each word carries weight.
Subject W1 (Gareth – werewolf, infected fifteen years):
Pre-moon behavior: exhibits compulsive pacing patterns, circuits lasting precisely twelve minutes before resuming. Cannot remain stationary longer than several minutes without visible distress. Appetite surges dramatically in the forty-eight hours preceding transformation; specifically demands raw or barely-seared at, rejecting all cooked preparations. Shows particular aversion to vegetables during this period.
Transformation: describes the experience as "like drowning in your own bones while they reshape themselves." Maintains complete cognitive awareness throughout the tamorphosis but reports total loss of motor control. Can observe his own body changing but remains powerless to influence the process. Duration of transformation: approximately twenty-three minutes of conscious observation before full wolf consciousness erges.
Wolfsbane potion: effectively alleviates the murderous frenzy and bloodlust, but provides no relief from the physical agony of bone restructuring and muscle reformation. Post-transformation, experiences profound lethargy lasting three to four days, requiring extended rest periods.
Silver: causes imdiate burning sensation and tissue damage in both human and wolf forms. Notably, wounds inflicted by silver implents show marked resistance to both natural and magical healing thods.
Psychological state: demonstrates resigned acceptance of his condition. Primary motivation centers on his fervent desire to ensure his future descendants remain free of the lycanthropic curse. Cooperates fully with research efforts in hopes of contributing to a permanent cure.
Subject W2 (Rowan – werewolf, infected twelve years):
Pre-moon behavior: suffers from severe insomnia beginning five days before each full moon. Reports that sleep, when achieved, brings intensely vivid dreams that amplify what he terms "the wolf's voice" – a constant internal presence that grows stronger as transformation approaches. Often found wandering the facility corridors during late night hours.
Transformation: describes the experience as complete psychological obliteration. "The wolf does not share consciousness or negotiate. It devours every trace of human thought." Reports no mory of events during wolf form until dawn breaks and human awareness gradually returns. Unlike Subject W1, experiences no conscious observation period during the change itself.
Wolfsbane: expresses strong aversion to the potion's effects, describing them as suffocating and disorienting. "It smothers every part of – wolf and human alike – then abandons to endure the full pain without any of my natural defenses." Requires physical restraint for administration.
Psychological state: maintains deep-seated resentnt toward wizarding society and displays general distrust of magical practitioners. However, exhibits an unexpected willingness to provide detailed, honest responses to direct questioning when researchers address him by his given na rather than his subject designation. This suggests retention of core identity despite his lycanthropic condition.
Severus capped his inkpot with deliberate precision and leaned back in his chair, the leather creaking softly in the silence of his laboratory. His obsidian eyes swept across the workbench before him as his mind began to turn over the implications of what he had observed.
"Not parasites," he murmured to the shadows, his voice barely above a whisper. His gaze fixed on the collection of vials containing blood samples, each one secured beneath shimring containnt wards that pulsed with protective magic. "Not wounds inflicted from without. These are patterns rewritten from within. A fundantal code undone and restructured."
The enchanted microscope beside him humd with a low, constant vibration, its brass fittings warm to the touch as ancient runes carved into the eyepiece glowed with amber light. He adjusted the enchanted lenses with practiced movents, bringing the samples into sharper focus. The vampire blood appeared darker than the deepest crimson, almost black in its intensity, with an unmistakable tallic sheen that caught the candlelight. Even separated from its host, it moved with unnatural sluggishness, the individual cells clumping together in patterns that defied conventional biological behavior.
In stark contrast, the werewolf blood seed to possess a restless energy all its own. The sample appeared fundantally unstable under magnification, with certain cells swelling and contracting in slow, rhythmic pulses. They twisted and elongated as though responding to so invisible lunar clock, even here in the depths of the dungeons where no moonlight could penetrate.
With thodical care, Severus began to sketch both samples, his quill scratching against parchnt as he layered detailed Muggle diagrams of cellular division with his own intricate rune-work notations. The combination of scientific observation and magical theory created a comprehensive map of the transformations he witnessed. For the first ti since beginning this research, the puzzle that had confounded him for months began to feel genuinely solvable.
Location: Prince Manor
The candles in the drawing room had burned low, their wax pooling in pale rivulets at the bases of tarnished silver holders. Shadows danced along the wallpaper, flickering with each guttering fla. Eileen sat rigidly in her high-backed armchair, the burgundy velvet worn smooth beneath her fingers. Her embroidery lay forgotten in her lap—a half-finished pattern of nightshade blossoms that now seed mockingly appropriate—the silk thread dangling uselessly from her needle like a lifeline she could not grasp.
Her eyes never left the heavy oaken door at the far end of the corridor, its iron hinges black with age. The door to Severus's laboratory. Hours had crawled by since he had gone below, each minute stretching like pulled taffy. Hours since she had seen the flicker of his black robes as he descended into the dark stone stairwell, his footsteps echoing hollowly against the walls before being swallowed by silence.
She had grown used to his absences over the years, to his vanishing into dusty tos and bubbling cauldrons for days at a ti, erging only when hunger finally drove him upward. But this was different. This felt like a retreat, a wound licking itself in solitude. He was seventeen—seventeen—barely more than a child, and yet he had returned from whatever battlefield claid him with blood crusted beneath his fingernails, his left sleeve charred and smoking, his eyes as cold and lifeless as chips of obsidian. He had not gone to rest. He had not even acknowledged her presence beyond the barest recognition. He had simply walked past her chair, silent as the grave, and sealed himself inside the laboratory like a monk taking vows of eternal silence.
She had tried to reach him once, hours ago when the courage had finally gathered in her chest. "Severus," she had called softly, her voice barely above a whisper, almost pleading. He had paused at the threshold, his pale hand resting on the door fra, and slowly turned. For a heartbeat—one precious, painful heartbeat—she had seen her boy beneath the marble mask. The boy who had once brought her wilted flowers from the garden, who had curled against her side during thunderstorms, the boy she had failed to protect, failed to defend against his father's rage and the world's cruelty. But then the shutters had slamd closed behind his eyes. The mask had slid back into place with practiced ease. He had inclined his head with cold politeness, distantly, formally, as though she were rely another guest to be humored rather than the woman who had birthed him. And then he was gone again, swallowed by stone and shadow and the weight of whatever darkness he now carried.
Julius had tried too. He had crept down the stairs with his broom clutched in hand, the polished wood gleaming despite the dim light of the corridor. His small fingers had tugged insistently at Severus's dark sleeve. "Co fly with . Just for a bit. Please." His voice had carried that particular note of hope that only children possessed, bright and fragile as spun glass.
Severus had paused in his descent, turning to ruffle his cousin's dark hair with fingers that lingered a mont longer than necessary. "Later," he had murmured, the word a gentle promise that sohow felt hollow even as it left his lips. Then he had returned to the depths below, his footsteps echoing against the stone walls. Julius had remained at the top of the stairs, watching his father disappear into shadow, his small shoulders slumping in defeat as the broom trailed forgotten against the cold stone floor.
Eileen's hands trembled now as the mory replayed itself, and she pressed them tightly together to still their betraying shake. Regret gnawed at her in the suffocating silence, sharp-toothed and relentless. How many nights had she sat just like this in the cramped confines of Spinner's End, listening to Tobias's drunken rage rattle the thin walls, too frightened to intervene, too broken and beaten down to protect the son who needed her? How many tis had young Severus looked at her with those sa bottomless black eyes, silently waiting for her to shield him from his father's fury, and she had turned away like the coward she was?
"I cannot lose him," she whispered to the empty room, her voice cracking on the words. "Not again. Not after everything we've both endured."
Her gaze fell on the small, carefully preserved stack of letters she had kept from his school years at Hogwarts. The ink was sharp and black against the parchnt, every stroke as precise and controlled as his brilliant mind. And yet, buried within those asured lines, his voice had softened perceptibly when he wrote about the unexpected friends who had sohow coaxed him out of his self-imposed solitude. Aurora with her relentless, probing questions that made him think in new ways, Kiera with her unshakable laughter that could brighten even his darkest moods, Ben with his fierce, unwavering loyalty, Alessandro with his reckless charm and easy confidence, Evie with her quiet, steady warmth that asked for nothing in return.
They had done what she had not been strong enough to do. They had steadied him when the world threatened to knock him down.
Eileen dipped her quill in ink, the silver tip trembling slightly as she steadied her grip. Her hand was still unsteady from weeks of worry and sleepless nights, but her words were not. She had spent hours crafting each ssage, weighing every phrase. Now she wrote one letter after another, each carefully phrased, urgent but never frantic, her desperation carefully masked behind maternal concern:
He will not admit it, but he needs you. He will not eat—I find untouched plates outside his door each morning. He barely sleeps—I hear him pacing the corridors at all hours, muttering incantations and theories to himself. If he continues as he is, I fear he will burn himself hollow from the inside out. Co if you can. Remind him he is not alone in this world, that brilliance shared is not brilliance diminished.
She sealed each letter with trembling fingers, her family crest pressed deep into the erald wax. The owls took flight before dawn, their wings vanishing into the California night like dark promises carried on the wind.
The replies ca quickly, faster than she had dared hope:
Aurora, already in California for her potions apprenticeship, sent a brisk, no-nonsense response written on parchnt that still slled faintly of healing herbs. My master is abroad in France at the International Healers' Congress for another fortnight. I am free to help. Expect tomorrow evening—I'll bring strengthening draughts and a firm hand.
Ben, writing from his Auror training barracks in cramped, hurried script, was blunt but fiercely loyal. If I leave without permission, I risk more than my instructors' temper—I could face expulsion. But I will surely visit during my off training days soon. Tell him to hang on. Tell him so battles can't be fought alone.
Eva and Kiera wrote together from their shared flat in New York, their parchnt dotted with ink blots from shared quills and interrupted by bouts of laughter that sohow translated even through written words. We'll co in a few days—just need to convince our employers that family ergencies trump inventory reports. Tell him he's not allowed to drown himself in ink and cauldrons and dusty research without us there to keep him human. We're bringing chocolate and terrible jokes.
Alessandro's letter arrived last, written in his familiar sprawling script that seed to dance across expensive parchnt embossed with his family seal. My mother insists I shadow her through these tedious political negotiations for now—sothing about learning the finer points of magical diplomacy. Politics is a duller duel than I'd like, but apparently necessary for my "proper developnt." I'll return to Arica within weeks, and then—straight to him. Tell our brilliant Shafiq he is not permitted to vanish into dusty books and theoretical fraworks without there to mock him for his terrible eating habits and remind him that genius ans nothing without friends to share it with.
Eileen folded the letters slowly, her movents deliberate and reverent, pressing her hand to the neat stack as though it were a protective charm she could weave around her son's wounded heart.
Help was coming.
And this ti, she swore to herself with the fierce determination that had once made her a formidable witch in her own right, she would not stand by and let her son be consud by the shadows of his own making—no matter how brilliant the fire he carried burned, no matter how he insisted he could weather this storm alone.
Location: Prince Manor – Laboratory
The microscope's lenses clicked into sharper focus with chanical precision. Under them, Lucian's blood swam in distorted rhythm, black-red clumps caught in a web of brilliant white light that cast dancing shadows across the laboratory walls. Severus sketched quickly, his quill scratching out the elegant curves of the double helix with practiced strokes, overlaying it with intricate rune-structures copied from the ancient Zabini grimoires. Science and sorcery coiled together on the yellowed parchnt like serpents in an eternal dance.
"They call it DNA," he murmured, his voice barely above a whisper in the silence of the vault. "We call it essence. But what if it is both? What if the wolf and the leech do not replace the human — they overwrite it, like ink bleeding through parchnt?" His fingers traced the sketched patterns, following the spiral chains with reverent precision. "Then I need not erase them. I need only restore what was lost… or create sothing entirely new."
He straightened slowly, vertebrae cracking after hours hunched over his work, black eyes glittering with the cold fire of resolve that had carried him through his darkest monts.
"Lorenzo will give more," he whispered to the rows of gleaming vials that lined the walls like silent sentinels. "A female vampire. A female wolf. The patterns must be compared, dissected, understood. Gender, bloodlines, age, the phase of the moon during transformation… every variable matters. Every detail could be the key that unlocks everything."
Eva's dry voice humd in his skull like the buzz of electricity through copper wire. "You are building an arsenal, Severus. And now you seek a Muggle doctor to map the battlefield."
"Exactly," Severus said, his lips curving into sothing that might have been a smile on a less haunted face. "The Muggles have charted the human body more completely than we ever dared, catalogued its secrets with their relentless curiosity. Their microscopes, their studies of blood and what they call DNA — they may hold the key to what we've been searching for in darkness for centuries. We must find a bridge. A squib doctor who walks their sterile world of hospitals and laboratories and rembers ours of wands and ancient magic. Soone who can provide blood of every type: O positive, O negative, A, B… all of it, every variation nature has crafted. I need to know whether the leech hungers rely for life, or for sothing deeper and more primal in the marrow."
He pressed his palm against the cool glass containnt, feeling the faint thrum of magical energy from the vials beneath, each one pulsing with its own terrible potential.
"If Voldemort wants war," he said, his voice a blade of ice that could have cut through steel, "then I will take his soldiers away before he can use them. I will unravel the very threads that bind them to darkness."
The vials pulsed again, silver and red in eerie unison, casting shifting patterns of light across his gaunt features.
And in that subterranean vault, surrounded by the fruits of his forbidden research, Severus Shafiq felt the first threads of his legacy tightening around him like a noose woven from his own ambitions.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hi everyone,
Thank you so much for your continued support!
I hope you're enjoying the story so far—your feedback truly ans the world to . I'd love to hear your thoughts on where you'd like the story to go next, so feel free to share any ideas or suggestions in the comnts.
Get early access to up to 25 advanced chapters by joining my Patre on!
Stay ahead of the story, enjoy exclusive perks, and support my writing while helping this content grow!
Please visit :-
Patre on (slash) Maggie329
User Comments
0 comments from readers