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Chapter 69 - Chapter 69 - Toward the Prison of Eternity

The golden lights of Black Mansion flickered across the rain-streaked windows as Harry finally stepped through the front doors. The air inside was warm and familiar—the scent of fresh bread from the kitchen, the faint hum of enchantments keeping the rooms clean and cozy. But even the mansion seemed to sigh with relief when he returned.

Andromeda stood in the entryway, her arms crossed, eyes sharp with worry. "Harry Potter," she said flatly, "you disappear for days, again, and you think you can walk in here like nothing happened?"

Harry dropped his travel cloak on the stand. His eyes looked tired—haunted, even—but he managed a faint smile. "I told you I had something important to do."

"Important?" she snapped. "You look like you haven't slept in a week, and you've been doing this ever since that sword business. You're running yourself into the ground!"

He sighed, rubbing the back of his neck. "I found something, Andromeda. Or rather, someone. A Titan."

Her face paled. "Harry…"

"Atlas," he said quietly. "He's still alive. Still holding the sky."

She stared at him in disbelief, lips parting but no words coming out. Finally, she managed, "You went looking for a Titan? By yourself?"

"I needed an ally," Harry said, his tone calm but tired. "Someone who doesn't owe Olympus anything."

Andromeda shook her head and walked toward the dining hall. "You need rest more than allies."

Dinner was unusually lively that evening. The long oak table was filled—Teddy, Percy, Sally, Hermione, Dan, Emma, and even Kreacher, who proudly hovered nearby, grumbling about "filthy mortals" using the fine silverware.

The mood was almost normal again, the kind of peace Harry rarely saw these days. Teddy and Percy were sitting side by side, whispering about their training schedule. Teddy's hands were fidgeting nervously, but Percy's grin was reassuring.

"So," Percy said loudly, looking across the table. "I've decided Teddy's going to spar with me tomorrow."

Teddy's fork froze mid-air. "What?! No! Percy, last time I— I threw you into a wall!"

Percy laughed. "Exactly. You're stronger now. You just need to learn control. You think I never got tossed around by my demigod friends? Happens all the time."

"But what if I hurt you again?" Teddy's voice was small, guilt-laced.

Harry looked up from his plate. "You won't."

Everyone turned toward him. His voice had that quiet certainty that silenced the room.

"I've been teaching Teddy how to use his strength," Harry continued. "He's learning restraint—something most never bothered with. He'll be fine."

Percy gave Teddy a grin and a thumbs-up. "See? Even the wizard says so."

That earned a laugh from Sally and Hermione, though Hermione's smile didn't last long. She was studying Harry closely, eyes narrowing.

After the laughter faded, Hermione leaned forward. "Harry, can I ask something?"

He nodded. "Of course."

"You've been… off lately," she said carefully. "Ever since the Olympian council. You work nonstop, you disappear for days, and you come back looking worse each time. I understand you're trying to keep Teddy safe, but you're not invincible."

Harry set his fork down. "I'm fine, Hermione."

"No, you're not," Andromeda interjected sharply. "You barely eat, barely sleep, and you're carrying the weight of gods on your shoulders—literally, if what you just told me about Atlas is true."

Hermione's eyes widened. "Atlas? The Titan Atlas?"

Harry gave a small nod. "He's still bound. But I promised him something, he'll help me when the time comes."

Dan Granger frowned. "Harry, forgive me for asking, but are you sure this is wise? The last time you 'made a deal' with someone, half of Olympus tried to kill you."

That earned a few uncomfortable chuckles, but Harry didn't smile. "I know the risks. But I also know the gods. Sooner or later, Zeus will break his oath—and when he does, I won't let anything happen to Teddy."

Andromeda leaned back, exhaling. "You're going to get yourself killed one of these days."

Harry gave her a tired grin. "Not today."

Dinner wound down slowly. Teddy dozed off on the couch with Percy watching over him, and Sally helped Andromeda clear the table. Hermione lingered beside Harry as he gazed out the window at the moonlit garden.

"You're carrying too much," she said softly. "You don't have to fight every battle alone."

Harry looked at her, eyes distant. "If I don't, who will?"

Hermione reached out and touched his arm. "Then at least let us help you."

He hesitated, then gave her a small nod. "Maybe soon. But first, I need to do what I promised."

Hermione sighed, knowing she couldn't change his mind. "Just… come back this time," she whispered.

Harry looked toward the dark horizon outside the window, where the faint shimmer of divine energy still lingered in the night sky.

"I always do," he said quietly.

But deep down, both of them knew—

the next journey might be the one that changed everything.

Harry hadn't slept properly in days. His desk inside Black Mansion's library looked like the aftermath of a hurricane — open books stacked in towers, half-burnt candles, scrolls filled with sketches of runes, and several enchanted lenses humming softly with blue light.

He had been researching one name again and again — Calypso.

Every myth, every divine record, every obscure mortal legend led to the same impossible truth:

The island that held her, Ogygia, was not bound to a single point on Earth. It drifted across the world like a dream — a living prison that appeared and vanished at will.

No map could mark it.

No mortal or god had ever found it twice.

Harry turned another page from an ancient Black family manuscript. The parchment smelled of dust and time, and the ink shimmered faintly with enchantments.

"Ogygia: the isle of timeless calm. A paradise for those who seek peace, a curse for the one who keeps it."

He frowned. "A paradise and a prison…"

From the doorway, Andromeda watched him silently, arms folded. "You're doing it again," she said softly.

"Doing what?"

"Losing yourself in a quest that might kill you."

Harry smiled faintly without looking up. "This time, it's not about me."

Andromeda sighed, knowing it was useless to argue. "Just… promise me you'll come back in one piece."

Harry looked up and gave her a tired but genuine smile. "Always."

Two days later, Harry appeared inside the marble corridors of Doce Encanto, the magically expanded wizarding shopping district in Newark. The place shimmered with enchanted glass and floating signs, glowing softly in the early morning light.

He went straight to the Research Archives — a vast, spiraling library guarded by goblins and runic automatons. For six hours, he pored over magical logs, celestial positioning maps, and obscure navigation journals written by demigod sailors.

He found fragments of information:

Ogygia followed no known route.

It existed "in the gaps of the world," tethered to the magic of the sea itself.

The only pattern was emotional — the island often appeared where heroes were broken or souls were lost.

That last part stayed with him.

By the end of the day, he had gathered every relevant text, a collection of enchanted compasses, and a crated magical tracking crystals. Each crystal could sense divine resonance over thousands of miles — but only if the user had something belonging to the one being searched.

Which meant he needed something of Atlas.

That night, Harry returned to the mist-shrouded island where Mount Othrys pierced the clouds. The ground trembled as he approached, and a deep voice rolled down the mountain like thunder.

"Son of Thanatos," Atlas rumbled. "You return sooner than I expected."

Harry stepped forward, his cloak billowing in the divine wind. "I've found out more about your daughter's island. But to track it, I need something of you—your essence. A strand of hair, and a drop of blood, with your permission."

Atlas's eyes burned like bronze suns. "You would use my blood for a spell?"

"Yes," Harry said simply. "Blood carries divine resonance. If I use it as an anchor, I might be able to trace her magic, even across the sea."

The Titan studied him for a long moment. Then, slowly, he nodded. "You have my permission."

With one hand, he plucked a single strand of hair, shimmering like molten copper, and let it fall. Then he drew a cut across his palm, and a single drop of glowing ichor hit the ground — hissing like lava meeting water.

Harry caught both in a crystal vial, sealing it with a rune of Thanatos. The bottle glowed faintly red.

Atlas leaned closer, his massive shadow engulfing Harry. "Find her," he said softly. "Free her, and I will owe you more than a debt."

Harry nodded. "I'll bring her peace."

Within a week, Harry was standing on a private dock in the early dawn, the salty air whipping at his coat. A small ship waited for him—a sturdy modern vessel reinforced with enchantments and laden with magical instruments.

The crew was small, just six men and. two women, but all of them had agreed the moment Harry showed them the payment — enough gold and American dollars to make them richer than they'd ever dreamed.

The captain, a grizzled sailor named Marcos Vega, looked skeptical at first. "You're telling me, Mr. Black, we're searching for an invisible island?"

Harry smiled faintly. "Invisible, yes. Impossible, no."

Marcos whistled. "Well, money talks, and you've paid enough to make me deaf. We'll head straight into the Atlantic currents at first light."

Harry nodded. "Good. Keep us steady. I'll handle the navigation."

As the ship left the harbor, the sea stretched endlessly around them. Harry stood at the bow, the wind howling through his hair, his enchanted compass glowing faintly in his hand.

Teddy's laughter echoed in his memory; Andromeda's worried eyes haunted him. But his mind stayed focused on the task.

He would find Calypso — the girl trapped by the gods, the daughter of the Titan who bore the heavens.

He would find the island that moved.

And this time, not even the sea itself could hide from him.

The voyage across the Atlantic was nothing like any mortal expedition. The ship Harry hired was small but alive with enchantments — sails that caught wind even when the air was still, compasses that spun only for magic, and runes glowing softly across the hull to repel sea pressure and storms.

The crew aboard were not ordinary sailors. They were wizards and witches, adventurers from different parts of the magical world. For a reward that could buy them mansions and freedom for life, they'd follow him into the ends of the sea.

Even though Harry never revealed the exact nature of his mission, the crew respected him enough not to ask. They simply called him Captain Black, and when he gave an order, they obeyed without hesitation.

Navigation was easy. Magic guided them better than any star. The helmsman, a broad-shouldered witch named Selene Frost, chanted weather wards while the ship glided across the waves as if carried by unseen hands. A runesmith named Tobias Grant checked the enchantments every few hours, while the others kept watch for storms or sea beasts.

For the first three days, the ocean was calm. The crew laughed, shared stories, and cast spells to dry their clothes and cook food with enchanted flames. But on the fourth night, the sea changed.

The wind died suddenly. The stars vanished. And something enormous stirred beneath them.

The deck shuddered.

"Something's rising!" Selene shouted.

A slick tentacle — black and glistening like wet stone — broke through the surface, lashing against the hull with a sound like thunder. The ship groaned, the wood creaking under the pressure.

"The Kraken," Tobias whispered, paling. "By Merlin's beard—"

"Focus!" Harry commanded. His voice was calm, but his eyes glowed faintly with divine energy.

The wizards began firing spells — bolts of flame, spears of ice, chains of lightning that danced across the sea. Smaller sea beasts fled, but the Kraken did not. It rose higher, its monstrous eyes glinting like lanterns from the deep.

"Keep it away from the hull!" Harry shouted, raising his wand.

A surge of wind burst from him, throwing several tentacles aside. The sea frothed violently as the creature bellowed, the sound shaking the very air.

Tobias launched a barrage of fire spells, Selene summoned a wall of wind, and the others reinforced the wards on the ship's runes — but the Kraken was too strong. One of its arms smashed into the mast, splintering wood and sending debris flying across the deck.

"Fall back!" Harry ordered.

He stepped forward alone, the air humming around him. His wand was already dissolving into light, replaced by the black, curved scythe of Thanatos — his divine weapon. The crew froze as they watched their captain transform, the air turning colder, heavier.

Harry raised the scythe skyward. The runes along its blade flared white.

"Ventus Mortalis!"

A cyclone of energy erupted from the weapon, slicing through the tentacles like silk. The Kraken shrieked, its massive form recoiling in pain. Then Harry leapt — impossibly high — landing on the creature's back, his scythe carving runes of death into its flesh.

The sea turned red.

One final swing — a wave of black energy cut through the ocean like a storm. The Kraken convulsed, then slowly began to sink beneath the waves, the water hissing around its dissolving form.

When Harry returned to the deck, soaked in seawater and shadowlight, the crew stared at him in stunned silence.

Selene finally spoke, her voice trembling with awe. "You… killed a Kraken."

Harry wiped the seawater from his face. "It's not that impressive," he said quietly.

Tobias exhaled slowly, nodding. "Captain… you have our respect. You tell us to sail through fire now, we'll do it."

Harry smiled faintly. "Let's hope it doesn't come to that."

Two days later, under a calm sun, Harry felt it.

It wasn't sight or sound — it was presence. A ripple through the air, an echo through the sea. Something ancient and enchanted pulsed from far ahead.

He walked to the bow, closing his eyes. "We're close."

The horizon shimmered with mist, but not ordinary fog — it glowed faintly, like moonlight trapped in glass. The sea around it churned unpredictably, waves colliding from every direction. Even the air smelled strange, rich with flowers and salt and something timeless.

Selene stared ahead. "That place… it's not on the charts."

Harry nodded. "No. And it never will be."

He could feel it — a spell woven by the gods themselves, designed to conceal something divine. The mist was impossibly thick; it distorted reality.

"This is where she is," Harry said quietly. "Calypso."

The crew looked at him, confused but trusting.

"What now, Captain?" Tobias asked.

"Anchor the ship," Harry ordered. "Stay here. I'll go alone."

Selene frowned. "You're going in there? That sea's cursed! You won't make it ten meters!"

Harry smiled slightly, his eyes faintly glowing. "No mortal can. But I'm not mortal."

Before anyone could protest, he climbed the railing. The wind whipped his cloak as the sea beneath roared.

"Captain!" Tobias shouted. "What if you don't come back?"

Harry looked over his shoulder, his expression calm. "Then sail home."

And with that, he jumped.

The water swallowed him instantly, the impact barely making a sound. The mist around the ship rippled outward — then folded in on itself, swallowing the place where Harry had vanished.

The crew stared at the empty waves, silent and awed.

Selene whispered, "May the gods help whatever waits for him in there."

But Harry didn't need help.

He was already swimming toward the island that moved — the prison of eternity, and the girl who waited for freedom.

Calypso's island had finally found him.

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