It might have been pure legend. But it was also plausible enough that a civilization of magic-users, especially one from
The line of reasoning continued: Atlantis had been an isolated civilization that had somehow brought into being the Source of Magic, and told it to serve only people with the Atlantean genetic marker, the blood of Atlantis.
And by similar logic: The words a wizard spoke, the wand movements, those weren't complicated enough of themselves to build up the spell effects from scratch - not the way that the three billion base pairs of human DNA actually
So the words and wand movements were just triggers, levers pulled on some hidden and more complex machine. Buttons, not blueprints.
And just like a computer program wouldn't compile if you made a single spelling error, the Source of Magic wouldn't respond to you unless you cast your spells in exactly the right way.
The chain of logic was inexorable.
And it led inevitably toward a single final conclusion.
The ancient forebears of the wizards, thousands of years earlier, had told the Source of Magic to only levitate things if you said...
'Wingardium Leviosa.'
Harry slumped over at the breakfast table, resting his forehead wearily on his right hand.
There was a story from the dawn days of Artificial Intelligence - back when they were just starting out and no one had yet realized the problem would be difficult - about a professor who had delegated one of his grad students to solve the problem of computer vision.
Harry was beginning to understand how that grad student must have felt.
This could take a while.
Why did it take more effort to cast the Alohomora spell, if it was just like pressing a button?
Who'd been silly enough to build in a spell for
Why did wordless Transfiguration require you to make a complete mental separation between the concept of form and concept of material?
Harry might not be done with this problem by the time he graduated Hogwarts. He could still be working on this problem when he was
Harry's mind briefly considered whether to get on a gut level that he might never solve the problem at all, then decided that would be taking things much too far.
Besides, so long as he could get as far as immortality in the first few decades, he'd be fine.
What method had the Dark Lord used? Come to think, the fact that the Dark Lord had somehow managed to survive the death of his first body was almost
"Excuse me," said an expected voice from behind him in very unexpected tones. "At your convenience, Mr. Malfoy requests the favor of a conversation."
Harry did not choke on his breakfast cereal. Instead he turned around and beheld Mr. Crabbe.
"Excuse
Mr. Crabbe didn't look happy. "Mr. Malfoy instructed me to speak properly."
"I can't hear you," Harry said. "You're not speaking properly." He turned back to his bowl of tiny blue crystal snowflakes and deliberately ate another spoonful.
"Da boss wants to talk with youse," came a threatening voice from behind him. "Ya'd better come see him if ya know what's good for ya."
There.
"A
"What I did to him was worse."
The old wizard stiffened in sudden horror. "Harry,
"I tricked Draco into believing that I'd tricked him into participating in a ritual that sacrificed his belief in blood purism. And that meant he couldn't be a Death Eater when he grew up. He'd lost everything, Headmaster."
There was a long quiet in the office, broken only by the tiny puffs and whistles of the fiddly things, which after enough time had come to seem like silence.
"Dear me," said the old wizard, "I
"
The old wizard sighed. This was taking it too far. "Tell me, Harry. Did it even