Vol 2 Chapter 839: Outbreak of contradictions


"You are targeting my mother," Seamus growled.
"I will only target anyone who calls me a liar," Harry said.
"Don't talk to me that way!"
"I will talk to you the way I want," Harry said, his anger rising, and he grabbed his wand from the table beside the bed. "If you think there is a problem living in the same dormitory with me, then ask Professor McGonagall if he can give you another one so that your mother won't worry—"
"Don't involve my mother, Potter!"
"What's wrong?" Ron appeared at the door. He opened his eyes wide and looked at Harry who was kneeling on the bed and pointed his wand at Seamus, and then looked at Seamus who was also very angry.
"He was targeting my mother!" Seamus shouted.
"What?" Ron said. "Harry wouldn't do that-we met your mother and liked her very much..."
"That was before she believed every word about me written in the Daily Prophet!" Ha said in his loudest voice.
"Oh," an understanding expression appeared on Ron's freckled face. "Oh yes."
"What do you know?" Seamus said excitedly, giving Ron a malicious glance. "He was right. I never want to live in the same dormitory with him again. He is crazy."
"You have lost your mind, Seamus," Ron said, and his ears started to turn red-which is usually a sign of danger.
"Lost reason, am I?" Seamus shouted, contrasting Ron, his face pale. "You believe his nonsense about Voldemort, don't you think he is telling the truth?"
"Yes, I believe it!" Ron said angrily.
"Then you are crazy," Seamus said in disgust.
"Really? Well, buddy, unfortunately, I'm still the prefect!" Ron pointed a finger to his chest. "If you don't want to be confined, pay attention to what you say!"
Seamus thought for a few seconds, as if confinement was a reasonable price for what he said; but with the creak of his heels, Seamus jumped onto the bed and violently pulled down the curtains to remove them from The bed was torn down, and dusty piled on the floor.
Ron stared at him, then at Thomas and Neville. "Whose parents are dissatisfied with Harry?" he said aggressively.
"My parents are Muggles, man," Thomas said with a shrug. "They don't know anything about Hogwarts, I'm not so stupid to tell them that."
"You don't know my mother, she will tell anyone anything!" Seamus said sharply. "Anyway, your parents won't read the Daily Prophet. They won't know that our principal has been expelled from the Wizarding Jury and the International Wizarding League because he lost his mind—"
"My grandma said it was nonsense," Neville said sharply. "She said it was the Daily Prophet that was falling, not Dumbledore. She did not subscribe. We trust Harry," Neville said simply. He climbed onto the bed, pulled the quilt to his chin, and looked at Seamus seriously. "My grandma often said that Voldemort would be back one day. She said that if Dumbledore said he was back, then he would really be back."
Harry suddenly felt grateful for Neville. No one said a word again. Seamus put down his wand, mended the curtains on the bed and disappeared inside. Thomas got on the bed and turned over and fell silent. Neville, there seems to be nothing to say, looking lovingly at his weird plant in the moonlight.
When Ron stood by the bed in a hurry to clean up his bed, Harry lay his head on the pillow.
He was shocked by the quarrel with Seamus, knowing that he had always liked Seamus very much.
So, how many people think he is lying? Or think he is insane? Did Dumbledore experience this kind of experience throughout the summer? In the beginning, the Wizarding Jury, and then the International Wizarding League, excluded him. Will he be angry with Harry, maybe this is why Dumbledore has not contacted him for months?
But after all, they were in the same situation; Dumbledore trusted him in Harry, and announced the things he said to the whole school, teachers and students, and the magical world outside.
If anyone thinks Harry is a liar, then he must think so too, otherwise Dumbledore has been deceived.
One day they will know that we are right.
When Ron climbed into bed and blew out the last candle in the dorm, Harry thought miserably. But he wanted to know how many attacks like Seamus would have suffered before that day.
There is no doubt that this is not a minority.
You can tell from the weird look after getting on the train. There is no doubt that he is now a focus because of his lies?
lie?
Why did no one ask Cedric?
Well, Cedric was also a poor man. He was forced to change his identity as a human wizard and became a vampire, living on that viscous liquid every day.
Harry felt that he was very sorry for Cedric, and Cedric would not have become like this if he hadn't tried to pull Cedric together.
Go to face Voldemort and almost die where.
It seemed that there was no difference between becoming a vampire and dying in that cemetery. Suddenly Harry was a little grateful that Cedric had not stayed at Hogwarts. Wouldn't Cedric suffer such doubts?
Or complete silence?
It must be impossible for Fanlin to silence Cedric~EbookFREE.me~ Harry knows very well, with Fanlin’s character, he will do what is good for things, but this is definitely a very important thing for Cedric. Big burden.
Just like being questioned about the Slytherin heir, in the eyes of more people, he is now an out-and-out liar, together with his lunatic principal.
And that Umbridge, which feels terrible to Harry.
From the moment the woman sat there, it made people feel uncomfortable, and from the attitude of everyone, it was obvious that few people would like this guy, and she was still a member of the Ministry of Magic and worked for Fudge...
How could Dumbledore allow Umbridge, an obvious messenger, to become their Defence Against the Dark Arts professor?
Harry couldn't figure out why Dumbledore would trouble himself, but...
Perhaps Hogwarts was not as good as expected, at least when in the Order of the Phoenix, no one went back to question him, and it was different here.
Latest chapter of Ebook HP Magic Biography Click here