
Harry did not sleep. The night pressed in around him like a living thing- thick, breathing, watching. Fireflies drifted through the dark like wandering spirits, their glow pulsing in quiet rhythm with the forest’s heartbeat. The air smelled of damp earth, smoke, and something older than memory. He sat by the edge of the village, wand resting uselessly across his palms.

For the first time since he was eleven years old, Harry Potter felt completely unarmed. The people kept their distance. Children peeked from behind their mothers’ legs. Hunters clutched spears tipped with stone and bone. They whispered his name without knowing it, calling him the Sky-Fallen One, the man who tore the clouds open and survived. Harry stared at his wand and whispered, “Lumos.” Nothing. No spark.
No warmth.
Not even resistance. It was as if the wand had never existed. A ripple passed through the crowd. Then the ground shifted. Not violently, deliberately. From the shadows between the ancient trees, a figure stepped forward.

He was old- older than Harry had ever seen anyone be. His back was straight despite his years, his eyes sharp and deep as wells. White cloth wrapped his body, marked with symbols that seemed to move when Harry tried to focus on them. Cowries hung from his neck. A carved staff rested in his hand.
The village fell silent.
The old man stopped three paces from Harry and studied him, not with fear, not with awe, but with something far more dangerous.
Understanding.
“You are not from Orun,” the man said calmly, in flawless Yoruba.
Harry looked up slowly. “No.”
“You are not from Ilẹ̀,” the man continued. “Yet the earth does not reject you.”
Harry swallowed. “I don’t understand what’s happening.”
The old man smiled faintly. “That is because your magic listens only to you.”
He tapped his staff once against the ground.
The earth answered.
A low hum vibrated through Harry’s bones. He gasped, instinctively raising his wand - only for the staff to knock it from his hand. The wand skidded across the dirt and stopped, lifeless.
The old man’s voice hardened.
“Here,” he said, “magic does not obey.”
Harry rose to his feet. “I don’t want to fight.”
“I know,” the man replied. “That is why you will lose.”
Without another word, the Babaláwo drew a symbol in the dirt with his staff. The air thickened. Shadows stretched unnaturally long. The fireflies froze midair.
Harry felt something ancient coil around his chest.
“In this land,” the Babaláwo said, “power is not taken. It is granted.”
He clapped once.
The ground split.
From the earth rose a figure made of red clay and roots - its eyes glowing like buried embers. It took one step toward Harry, and the weight of it pressed down on him like a mountain.
Harry reacted on instinct.
“Expelliarmus!”

The spell left his lips ,
And vanished.
The clay spirit roared and charged.
Harry dodged, rolling across the dirt, heart hammering. Panic surged. He tried another spell. Then another.
Nothing.
The spirit slammed its fist into the ground, sending a shockwave through the village. Harry was thrown backward, crashing into a tree. Pain exploded through his ribs.
“Stop!” Harry shouted. “You’ll kill me!”

The Babaláwo’s voice cut through the chaos.
“No,” he said. “If you die, the earth will reject your body.”
Harry coughed, forcing himself upright. “Why are you doing this?”
The old man’s eyes burned.
“Because you fell from a broken destiny,” he said. “And broken destinies poison the land.”
The spirit raised its arm again.
Harry closed his eyes.
Not in surrender,
But in listening.
For the first time since arriving, he stopped trying to command magic.
He felt the ground beneath his palms. The heat of the soil. The memory buried in the roots. The rhythm of the land, slow, patient, enduring.

“Please,” he whispered - not to the spirit, not to the Babaláwo
But to the earth.
The ground shuddered.
The clay spirit froze mid-strike.
Cracks spread across its body.
Then it collapsed back into dirt.
Silence fell like a held breath.
Harry opened his eyes.
The Babaláwo was staring at him now with something new in his gaze.
Respect.
“You listened,” the old man said quietly.
Harry’s voice trembled. “I didn’t cast a spell.”
“No,” the Babaláwo replied. “You asked permission.”
He stepped closer, retrieving Harry’s wand from the ground. He turned it over in his hands, studying it like a relic.
“This thing,” he said, “is a tongue that only speaks one language.”
He handed it back.
“If you wish to survive here,” he continued, “you must learn to be silent.”
The villagers murmured. Fear shifted into reverence.
Harry looked around at the forest, the people, the night sky untouched by modern light.
“How long am I here?” he asked.
The Babaláwo smiled sadly.
“Long enough to forget who you were,” he said.
Then he turned and began walking toward the forest.

“Come,” he added. “Ifá has been waiting for you.”
Harry hesitated only a moment before following.
Above them, unseen by all but the gods, time folded quietly.
And somewhere beyond worlds, Oblivion turned its head
Sensing that something meant to end had begun to learn how to endure.