Harry fell through colors that had no names and spaces that had no dimensions. Time moved sideways. Gravity pointed in seventeen different directions. His body stretched and compressed, scattered and reformed, torn apart and rebuilt a dozen times in the span of a heartbeat.
His last coherent thought before the vortex claimed his consciousness wasn't fear. It was relief. Something new was happening. After years of predictable patterns—crisis, solution, sacrifice, repeat—he was finally experiencing something unexpected.
Then he slammed into hard, wet pavement.
The impact drove the air from his lungs. Pain shot through his ribs and left shoulder. His head bounced off concrete, and stars exploded behind his eyelids. The familiar weight of the Elder Wand pressed against his chest where he'd fallen on it.
So it had followed him here as well, wherever he was. A quick scan showed him the other two Hallows had also made the journey. He should have expected it.
Harry lay still for several minutes, waiting for his vision to clear. The world smelled wrong. His nostrils filled with the acrid stench of garbage and exhaust fumes instead of the clean scent of magical Britain. Car engines rumbled in the distance, and although the voices spoke in English, the accents he didn't recognize.
He opened his eyes blearily to find himself in a narrow alley between two tall buildings. The walls were brick, stained with decades of city grime. A dumpster sat ten feet away, overflowing with trash bags. Water dripped from a fire escape above, creating a small puddle near his head.
The sky was gray and overcast, but the quality of light felt different. Alien. The very air seemed to vibrate with energy that his magical senses couldn't quite interpret.
Harry pushed himself to his feet, wincing as his shoulder protested. Everything hurt, but nothing seemed broken. His powers from the Hallows which he assumed had traveled with him had protected him from the worst of whatever had just happened.
After finally catching his bearings, he looked around the alley more carefully. The buildings were tall—taller than most structures in London. The architecture was different too. More glass and steel, less stone and wood. Street sounds echoed off the walls: car horns, sirens, and the rumble of subway trains deep underground.
This wasn't London. This wasn't even Britain.
"Where the hell am I?" he muttered, pulling out the Elder Wand to check if it still worked.
Magic flowed through the ancient wood, but it felt muted. Constrained. The local magical field was different—thinner in some ways, denser in others. Like trying to swim in water that was the wrong temperature and salinity.
Harry pointed the wand at the dumpster and whispered a levitation charm. The heavy container rose into the air smoothly, then settled back down with barely a sound. Magic worked here, but it required more effort than it should have.
He needed information. Fast.
Harry walked to the mouth of the alley and peered out at the street beyond. The sight that greeted him confirmed his worst fears. This definitely wasn't his world.
The cars were wrong. Not just different models, but wrong in fundamental ways. Their designs were more streamlined, more advanced than anything he'd seen in magical Britain. Some of them didn't even seem to have exhaust pipes.
The people were wrong too. Their clothes were similar to what he was used to, but the styles were subtly different. Hair cuts that were almost familiar but not quite. Shoes that looked like they'd been designed by someone who'd heard about human feet but never seen them.
And the sounds. The city hummed with an energy that felt technological rather than magical. Power lines carried electricity that seemed almost alive. Radio waves flickered at the edges of his consciousness, carrying signals he couldn't decode.
A businessman in an expensive suit walked past the alley, talking rapidly into a device that looked like a cross between a telephone and a small computer. Harry had seen similar devices before—cell phones, they were called—but this one was different. Thinner. More sophisticated.
Harry made his decision. He needed to know where he was, when he was, and what kind of world he'd landed in. There was only one way to get that information quickly.
He stepped out of the alley and fell into step behind the businessman. When they reached a less crowded section of sidewalk, Harry drew his wand and cast a silent Confundus charm.
The man stopped mid-sentence and looked around in confusion. "Sorry, I'll have to call you back," he said into his phone, then put it away.
Harry moved closer and placed his hand on the man's shoulder. "Just relax," he said quietly, then slipped into the man's mind with wandless Legilimency.
The technique was invasive, but Harry had stopped caring about such niceties years ago. He needed information, and this was the fastest way to get it.
The businessman's memories flowed through Harry's consciousness like water through a sieve. Most of it was useless—meetings, phone calls, family dinners, and mundane concerns. But there were nuggets of information that made Harry's blood run cold.
The date was September 15th, 2008. The location was Manhattan, New York City. The United States of America.
But not the United States Harry knew from his world's history books. This was a different America. A different Earth entirely.
Harry dug deeper into the man's memories, searching for anything that might explain how this world differed from his own. What he found made him step back in shock.
Superheroes. This world had superheroes.
Not the kind Harry was used to—wizards and witches with wands and robes. These were people with impossible abilities who wore costumes and fought crime in broad daylight. They had names like Spider-Man and Captain America. They battled villains with equally impossible powers, all while ordinary people watched and cheered.
And recently, very recently, something had happened that had changed everything.
Harry pushed deeper into the businessman's memories, following threads of excitement and fear. The man had been watching television three months ago when it happened. A live press conference that had made history.
A man in an expensive looking suit had stood before a crowd of reporters and cameras. He'd looked directly into the lenses and said four words that had changed the world forever:
"I am Iron Man."
Tony Stark. Billionaire. Genius. Inventor. And now, apparently, the world's first publicly acknowledged superhero.
Harry released the man's mind after seeing the flash of Tony Stark flying in a red and gold metal suit and stepped back. The businessman blinked a few times, shook his head, and continued walking as if nothing had happened. The Confundus charm would wear off in a few minutes, leaving him with nothing but a vague sense of having lost track of time.
Harry found a nearby bench and sat down to process what he'd learned. This world was like his own in many ways—same general history, same countries, same basic human nature. But somewhere along the way, things had diverged.
Here, people with extraordinary abilities revealed themselves to the public instead of hiding. Here, technology had advanced along different lines, creating wonders that his world's purely magical society could never have imagined. Here, the line between science and magic had blurred beyond recognition.
And here, Harry Potter was nobody.
He should have felt relieved. After years of being the most famous and feared wizard in Britain, anonymity was a gift. But instead, he felt unsettled. His magical senses were screaming warnings he couldn't interpret.
The fundamental forces of this world were different. Magic existed here—he could feel it thrumming beneath the surface of reality—but it was wild and unstructured. No wand traditions. No established schools. No Ministry of Magic to regulate its use.
And Death was different too.
Harry reached into his pocket and pulled out the Resurrection Stone. It was warm, but not with the familiar heat he'd grown accustomed to. The stone's connection to the realm of the dead felt muted, distant. As if Death here was a completely different entity than the one he'd known.
The Elder Wand, too, felt changed. Still powerful, but its authority was diminished. The wand was no longer the master of all magic in this world because the rules of magic themselves had changed.
Only the Invisibility Cloak felt unchanged. It still whispered promises of concealment and protection. Still carried the significance of his father's legacy. It still was the Hallow closest to his heart.
Harry stood up and began walking down the street. He needed to find a place to stay, a way to acquire money and identification in this world. But first, he needed to understand what he'd gotten himself into.
As he walked, he became aware of something else. A different kind of sight, one that had nothing to do with magic or the Hallows. He could see threads of fate connecting the people around him—thin lines of possibility and probability that showed how their lives might unfold.
It was a skill he'd developed over the years as Master of Death. The ability to see the patterns that connected all living things. The web of cause and effect that determined who lived and who died.
But here, those threads were different. They were tangled with something vast and cosmic, something that existed far beyond the scope of ordinary human experience. The threads glowed with colors that were different than those in his previous world, and they connected to points of power that he couldn't identify.
Harry focused on a young woman walking ahead of him. Her thread of fate was bright gold, twisted around itself in complex patterns. She was important—would be important—to the future of this world. But her thread was also connected to something else. Something that made Harry's skin crawl with recognition.
Infinity. The concept materialized in his mind without conscious thought. This world's threads of fate were connected to forces that dealt in cosmic scales. Powers that could reshape reality itself.
He thought about the businessman's memories. Tony Stark in his metal suit. The casual way people in this world discussed impossible technologies. The matter-of-fact acceptance of beings who could fly or lift cars with their bare hands.
This wasn't just a world where magic was different. This was a world where the impossible was routine. Where cosmic forces played games with entire civilizations. Where death and rebirth were just another Tuesday.
Harry smiled for the first time since arriving in this strange place. After years of being the most dangerous person in his world, he'd landed somewhere that might actually be able to challenge him.
In the distance, he could see the skeletal framework of a building under construction. Even from here, he could tell it was going to be massive. The kind of tower that declared its owner's importance to the world.
He flagged down a passing taxi and showed the driver his handful of British pounds. The man looked at the foreign currency with confusion, but Harry cast a subtle Confundus charm that made the money look like American dollars.
"Where to?" the driver asked.
"That construction site," Harry said, pointing toward the tower. "I want to get a better look at it."
"Stark Tower?" the driver laughed. "Yeah, that's gonna be something when it's finished. Tony Stark's building himself a monument to his own ego."
Harry leaned back in the seat as the taxi pulled into traffic. Stark Tower. The home of the world's first public superhero. A man who'd looked the world in the eye and announced that he was something more than human.
It seemed like a good place to start.
As the taxi drove through the crowded streets of Manhattan, Harry felt the threads of fate shifting around him. His arrival in this world had already begun to change things. Small changes, for now. But the Master of Death knew better than most how small changes could cascade into world-altering consequences.
He'd come to this world seeking an end to his story. Instead, he'd found a place where his story might finally have room to grow.
The connection to the Hallows was still there, but muted. Death here was different, but not absent. And somewhere in this city of eight million people, threads of fate were converging on events that would reshape reality itself.
Harry Potter had sought to die. Instead, he'd found a world where death was just another challenge to overcome.
For the first time in years, he was curious about what would happen next.
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