Notes: Hey! So sorry for the delay, once again!

I've learned I really can't make any promises based on how fast I'll get these out XD But I have actually already started on the next chapter-in fact it's one I've been excited about for a long time, so I started on it a while ago-so that's a good sign at least, haha.

I'm very VERY excited to share this one with you! I hope you guys enjoy it as much as I do!

I hope you guys like it! As always, it's your comments, and interest, that keep me writing!


Snape marched towards the Headmaster's office, his cloak swishing about his heels. It was the next morning after everything had happed, and he wouldn't say the little sleep he accomplished left him feeling refreshed. Numerous meetings, and even more numerous questions have a way of making one altogether restless.

And, in the end…an innocent girl was dead. It isn't easy to sleep after such news, even barring the politics of it all.

When he entered he got the feeling that Dumbledore had just been speaking with the portraits, as words trailed off, and Dumbledore, standing in the middle of the room, turned to him like he had been about to make a very good point. The portraits too looked down at him in—if he wasn't mistaken—an annoyed way.

"Ah, Severus. Welcome. We were merely discussing if lemon drops or chocolate frogs are better. Theodore moved that chocolate frogs are more pleasingly sweet, but I think the best sweets have a bit of tang to them. Would you like to weigh in?"

Snape raised an eyebrow. The glare the portrait gave showed there was more than a small chance the matter they were discussing was something weightier than that.

When Snape didn't comment, Dumbledore moved on;

"Please, take a seat." He gestured to the chair in front of the desk. Snape reluctantly swept around and sat in it.

Dumbledore walked over to a side table with a strange contraption on it, which quickly revealed itself to be a sort of odd teapot, as he proceeded to pour the steaming liquid within it into a teacup. He retained his calm, pleasant demeanor, but Snape could tell the previous day weighed on him too: there was a slight shake to his motions, and his eyes held a heaviness that his smile couldn't mask.

"Sir…would it not be better to do this another time?"

Dumbledore gave a knowing smile. "You're not suggesting that I am getting old, are you?"

"No, merely that such news takes a toll on all of us."

"Many things take a toll, Severus." He gestured to the tea to ask if he wanted a cup, Snape gave a small nod. "It is if we decide to let that toll keep us from crossing the bridge that matters."

The headmaster brought the two cups over and he took his place on the opposite side of the desk.

Snape paused before speaking. "I assume you have brought me here to discuss the sentence of the boy...with the unspeakable name." He took a sip of tea.

"You know what they say about assuming, Severus." He lowered his glasses. "But in this case you are correct. And it's not so unspeakable, in fact, I encourage you to call him by it."

Snape resisted the urge to roll his eyes.

"Before I endeavor to divulge my carefully-laid plans," Dumbledore spoke, putting a handful of sugar into his tea. "I would like to hear your thoughts on the matter: what do you think we ought to do with the young Tom Riddle?"

"Permission to speak freely, Sir?"

"It's the only kind of speaking I endorse."

"I think we should dispose of him as soon as possible. He's too dangerous, too clever. It's inevitable that he'll get his memory back even if we attempt to do everything in our power to shield him from it—perhaps before we so much as try."

"That's what I've been saying!" One of the portraits burst out and a few others nodded in agreement.

"Keeping him alive is like keeping a ticking time bomb as a pet," Snape continued, "thinking a little love is enough to keep it from exploding. He's nothing more than a liability."

Snape's dark eyes flicked to Dumbledore, who had been listening pleasantly with his hands folded on the desk.

"But…"—Snape drew the kind of long breath one takes when they know they've lost the fight before it starts, and exhaled—"something tells me you disagree."

Dumbledore smiled. "It seems you know me too well."

"Sir…need I remind you of your meeting with him as a child? You once told me you wished you'd been more careful, more cautious, more discerning when dealing with him in the past."

"Thank you, but my memory has not proven faulty just yet."

"If that is true then I also don't need to remind you of the things I've seen him do first hand. Actions that do not make me partial to the idea of keeping him alive."

"Quite the contrary, it is for that exact reason that I am trusting with this situation." He paused, looking at him over his half moon spectacles and saying meaningfully. "You and no one else."

"'Trusting me with this situation'?" He drummed his fingers on the armrest.

"Is that not what you would call telling you all this?"

Snape said nothing, taking another sip of tea. That was true too, he was sure, though this was one of those moments in which he could tell Dumbledore meant something more than just that.

Dumbledore stood, walking over to the window as if he had all the time in the world, and he wanted to enjoy some sunlight.

"That boy is not Voldemort," he murmured, taking a sip of tea.

Snape raised an eyebrow. "Respectfully, Sir, I beg to disagree."

"That boy is merely a young Tom Riddle: a teenager who looks like who Voldemort once was when he was young, and who has some of the personality of Tom riddle, and who, if given the right parameters, could become Voldemort. But he is not Voldemort now."

"All he needs to become the Dark Lord again is to get his memory back, something which I do not think will prove altogether difficult."

"Perhaps. But there is something else. After giving it careful consideration I find that my theory holds water."

"What theory would this be?"

He paused, gathering his words. "It is my understanding that a door, once opened, can be walked through in either direction."

Snape remained silent, waiting for him to tie the statement to their situation.

"What if I told you that our dear Ginny Weasley may not be dead?"

"I would say that is something we'd all like to hear, but that it would be wiser not to put your faith into fairy tales."

"As I expected." He turned, smiling. "However," he began taking careful steps towards Snape, looking at his feet, "it is my personal inclination that the method by which he returned to the land of the living had a fatal flaw."

"Which is?"

He looked up at him and stopped, saying meaningfully, "It required a young girl's life.

"You see," Dumbledore continued, "he will have assumed, of course, that her soul was destroyed in the process of bringing him back to life—her life merely energy to use up. But what if, as it were, he assumed wrongly? In my experience, human souls are far more resilient than that. What if, much like she poured herself into the diary, her soul was simply"—He took an extra teacup off the table—"poured into a new vessel:"—he poured the tea from his cup into the empty one—"The form of Tom Riddle himself."

Pondering this for a moment, Snape looked away. As he did, Dumbledore returned to his seat once more.

Snape wanted to dismiss the theory right away, and intended to. However, the more Dumbledore explained it, and the more he thought about it…it wasn't baseless. However—

"You are assuming a rather large amount with little to go on. We can't base our decisions on a theory, especially one so far-fetched as the idea that the simple method of revival was enough for the soul of a young girl to persist."

Far-fetched, perhaps…but then he thought of what he saw when he read the boy's mind yesterday. The wall in his head. How there seemed to be something trapped behind it. Something...alive.

"No, but we can let theories inform our decisions. If there is that chance, do you not think it worth exploring?"

"Are you proposing we let the young Dark Lord live on the very small chance we can salvage her soul from the brink? Or else that her presence within his soul will cause him to …what? Grow a heart? Forgive me but that sounds like a hopeless endeavor. Lamentable as the situation may be, we can't sacrifice all of wizardkind for the soul of one little girl."

Dumbledore sighed, and there was a heaviness to it. "No. I am afraid that it is unlikely the poor Ginny would be able to return to her original state. I am unsure if her soul is even fully intact. Or, further still, she may not be entirely aware of her current predicament herself either. When speaking of souls, it's difficult to discern where consciousness resides. It would be unwise, however, to dismiss any of these options entirely either. Rather I am proposing that the presence of her soul is a variable with unprecedented possible outcomes."

"This is the Dark Lord we're talking about. I don't think one little girl's presence is going to make much difference."

Dumbledore smiled. "You of all people should know it is unwise underestimate the influence of one little girl."

Snape turned his head away.

"The Dark Lord is incapable of love, of human emotion," Snape muttered softly.

"Perhaps. However, personally I like to refrain from making such bold statements, even about the cruelest of men. But, even so, it is for precise reasons such as those that I believe the simple presence of someone who is capable of love, of human emotion, within his soul, could make all the difference. As long as there is more holy water than plain, the whole vat becomes holy."

Snape sighed, looking away. "It is an immense risk for something that is nothing more than an educated hypothesis. What if you're wrong?"

"Then I will face the consequences."

"Then we all will face the consequences. Those consequences could easily be the destruction of all of either wizard or muggle-kind—or both. What would you do then?"

Dumbledore sighed. "You seem to be rather caught up in that."

"I'm more surprised to find that you're not. Unless there is some way to guarantee he won't repeat his past sins, then I cannot entertain the thought of keeping him alive."

"I think we may be able to work something out."

Snape's eyes narrowed. "This isn't some misguided journey to erase your past sins."

"No." Dumbledore smiled pleasantly. "It's a misguided journey to try to erase his."

"Think for a moment! If you are wrong, is there any reason you have to keep the Dark Lord alive, if not for the thought that perhaps Ginny Weasley yet lives within his soul? Any at all?"

"Oh yes, several in fact."

Another eyebrow raise.

Dumbledore leaned forward on his desk. "I think you are underestimating the gravity of the opportunity we have been given. An opportunity which I do not believe will present itself again. We have been handed a young Tom Riddle—without memory, no less. Tom Riddle, who has yet to commit the crimes of his previous self."

"Tom Riddle, who already exhibited little to no regard for others' well-being! He felt no compassion upon seeing a corpse!" Anger reached his voice, he was very close to slamming his fist on the table.

"Yet he has hurt no one."

"He's only been around for a day."

"A day which Voldemort could have easily spent hurting and killing as many people as he wished."

"One amnesic day does not determine the capacity of a life."

"No, you are correct about that. But…try to imagine for a moment. Do you understand what kind of asset it would be if we were able to get a young Tom Riddle to come over to our side? If we could save him from becoming who he once was…it could save us all."

"You've made this mistake before."

"I've made this decision before. My mistake was in the fact that I did not realize just how much evil such a young boy was capable of. I know now what that boy could become—and already has once—and that it will take much more than a watchful eye to save him from the darkness lurking in his own heart."

"Do you realize just how easy it would be for him to fall back into that darkness?"

"Which is why I want to keep him alive. To try to prevent him from making the mistakes of his past self. The key difference here, is that there is a chance he has light in him now, in the form of Ginny. If that's true, we need only water that seed."

"You don't know that there's light in him!" Snape stood abruptly sweeping around resting his hands the back of his chair." At best that's an informed hunch! Are you really willing to base such an important decision on that?! The only way to guarantee he won't make the mistakes of his past self is to prevent him from making any decisions at all!

"Where's the fun in that?"

Snape blinked. "Is that all this is to you? A bit of fun?" He spat.

"Of course not." His smile dropped at last, along with his eyes to the desk. "A young girl's life has been lost. I'd prefer not to lose another."

"Even if that other life is the life of the Dark Lord?"

"It is not the life of the Dark Lord." He traced his finger along the rim of his teacup. "It is the life of the young Tom Riddle, who is entirely unaware of the crimes of his previous self—or anything much at all. He has shown no immediate inclinations to harm others. Forgive me, but I do not think it right to simply dispose of him.

"There is another thought that gives me unease as well." Dumbledore seemed unsure he wanted to say it aloud. He folded his hands and looked at down. "If it turns out that my theory is correct, and Ginny isn't dead after all…if we decide to dispose of him now, we, and not he, will be the ones who killed her." The words were altogether too soft.

Snape ran his hand through his hair. "So what do you propose we do with him? Keeping the young Dark Lord alive, and a secret, will be much more difficult than simply killing him."

"Oh I'm not denying that. If all goes according to plan, there are a number of portraits and other such lingering spirits we will have to inform of the situation." He eyed the portraits, which folded their arms, harrumphed and looked away.

"And you're actually proposing that we teach him magic? To the point where, when he does remember who he is, he'll have the means at his disposal to destroy us all?"

"If we don't teach him magic, if and when he regains his memory, do you not think he would seek out those means on his own anyways? At least this way we're teaching him in a controlled environment, where we know where he is, and how much he knows at any given time—not to mention we can decide how much caution to exercise in the smaller details of the situation."

"Even so…we can't place a sixteen-year old who knows nothing of magic in first year classes."

"Nor am I proposing that we do so. I intend to have someone teach—or remind, rather; I think he will be quick to pick it back up—of the basics over the summer. It may not be an easy task to get permission from the ministry to allow a boy under seventeen to do magic over the summer, but I think I may be able to come up with something. Either that, or we may be able to hope they assume the one doing the magic is the wizard who already lives in the house."

"You've told me he has a penchant for flattery that caused many teachers to let their guard down around him. I don't think I have to tell you why I don't think it wise to have just any wizard teach the young Dark Lord."

"I fear you underestimate me, Severus. You really think I would choose just any wizard teach to him? In fact—if you'll permit my saying—he'll have a teacher who is rather stern, and won't find himself so easily swayed by flattery."

"And who is the lucky contestant?"

Dumbledore gave him a look strangely similar to the smirk of a mischievous schoolboy, running his fingers along his wand.

"I did tell you I was trusting you with the situation, did I not?"

Snape's eyes widened. He took a step back as if he'd been physically hit.

"No."

"You asked me if I was proposing that we teach him magic. I must amend my earlier response. For the summer at least, I'm proposing that you teach him magic."

Snape rarely found himself struck dumb, but in that moment he was at a loss for both words and actions. For a moment he wasn't entirely convinced he hadn't been placed under a powerful confundus charm.

"During the school year, of course, he'll learn here." Dumbledore continued. "That is, if aforementioned summer goes smoothly."

Snape blinked, shook his head, as if trying to remove a wrackspurt. The only thing he could ask was:

"Why me?"

Dumbledore frowned. "I thought I'd made that rather obvious. Because—as you so well proved over the past few moments—no matter how kind, how flattering, how clever, he appears, you will always keep in mind who and what he is. And, if he shows any signs of becoming his past self—or future self, as it were—you will not hesitate to do what is necessary."

"Is there a reason you can't do this, Sir?"

"Oh, I'm an old sap, Severus. For all we know I might grow attached to the boy."

"And you want me to…what?" He spat. "Invite him cordially to stay in my home," He held out a hand and bowed, "feed him, coddle him, tell him what a good little boy he is,"—he clapped his hands—"all the while teaching him all sorts of dangerous spells?!"

"No. I will inform him of the situation. Then after that I am suggesting you take him to your house—you don't have to be too terribly cheerful about it, merely as amicable as you are able—feed him, provide him a place to stay over the summer. I'm not suggesting you coddle him—though kindness is a virtue—rather give him both praise and criticism, and each in moderation. That you teach him the basics of magic, and the spells you think would be useful, but not terribly dangerous. I trust your judgment there wholeheartedly."

Snape stared at a speck of dirt on the ground as if that could tether him to this moment, breath weighing heavy on his chest, his mind splintering into fractals of thoughts. How could Dumbledore possibly expect this of him?

"I feel like I'm forgetting something…" Dumbledore stroked his beard in thought. "Oh!" He held up a finger. "Yes! Harry will be staying with you as well."

Snape jerked his head to look at him, and this time couldn't hold back:

"WHAT?!"

"I'll admit, it's a bit—the poor boy has been through a lot, he won't be fond of the idea—but I think it's important that he and the young Tom Riddle become…Well let's put it this way, we've endeavored to keep his existence a secret, and I don't think Harry giving him hateful glares in the hallways at school will help the situation." Dumbledore looked at him out of the corner of his eye. "Currently both you and he seem to have more than enough of those to spare."

"Oh yes, and forcing us all to live together will certainly solve that problem!"

"While it's true that living with someone can indeed increase one's distaste…I do find that living with someone forces you to build a bond of some sort with them, and sympathize with them, in ways you would never have otherwise."

"You're asking the three people in this school who have the greatest distaste for each other to spend three months in a confined space!" He spat. "Not only do I think the boy would likely kill one of us before the summer is over, I'd be surprised if we don't all end up killing each other halfway through June!"

"Or…perhaps the three of you will come to a new understanding about each other." Dumbledore was as calm as ever. Snape wanted to wipe that smug look of his face.

"I don't see than happening any time soon."

"You might be surprised."

Snape leaned against a pillar, running his hand over his face. He knew from the beginning that he wasn't going to win this argument, but this was more than a loss, it felt like a slap in the face.

"Don't you understand?" Dumbledore resumed his previous argument. "Tom Riddle never had a single friend—even at this age his 'friends' were all merely supporters and worshippers. If he and the boy destined to destroy him—who will most certainly neither blindly worship nor support him—were to become something even remotely close to friends it could make all the difference. And I think Harry is the only one who can truly change him."

"The Dark Lord doesn't make friends. Even without memory I don't believe he'll have any inclinations to form attachments—especially not to someone like Potter. He himself said he feels hatred at the sound of Potter's name."

"Need I remind you once more this is not the Dark Lord we're speaking of? Memoryless, and with the presence of Ginny inside him—who already has an affinity for Harry—I think there is at least some chance his opinions on Harry, as well as concepts such as friendship at large, may change. He did mention that he hates the sound of Harry's name, as well as mine, yes. However, when I asked him if it made him sad that he had no friends, he truly pondered the thought."

Snape let out a breath.

"Does Potter not need to stay with his aunt and uncle?" Snape rubbed his temple, feeling defeated, voice breathy, "His mother's protection—"

"Oh he will stay with his aunt and uncle at first, still. I was discussing it with the portraits, and considering the strange situation, I find the rules may be a little different, don't you?"

"Oh yes, have him live with the Dark Lord! That will keep him very safe!" Snape sighed, slumping in his chair once again, holding his head in his hand.

"It is not one of my safest ideas, I'll admit. But you'll be there, of course. And you haven't given me reason to doubt that you're up to the task of protecting him, should the need arise."

"You expect too much of me. There is only so much I can do."

"It is true you can only be so many places at once. But if I did not think you were capable of accomplishing such a task, I would not ask in the first place."

"This is lunacy," he breathed into his hand.

"I hope I haven't fallen prey to madness just yet. But I will not rule out the possibility."

Dumbledore paused, standing back up and walking around the desk. "I understand if you need more time to mull it over. I often find after jarring news a walk and a good bottle of mead do wonders."

"I only have one guest room, Sir," Snape muttered.

"Harry can sleep on the couch." Dumbledore said pleasantly. "He's very small, I'm sure you'll barely notice him."

Snape glared at him through his fingers. "…I think I'll notice him."

"You haven't answered my most pressing concern. What's to say the boy won't get up and kill us both in our sleep?"

"…That doesn't sound much like Harry at all."

"The other one."

"We will need to discuss what protections we should put in place, certainly. But you and I are both very smart, very skilled wizards. It would be disappointing if, putting our heads together, we are unable to come up with something."

There was a long moment of silence. Snape put his hand in his hair, thinking of all the things that could go wrong, and had gone wrong before…or at least just how much annoyance such a living situation would provide, even if there was no real danger. No matter how much chaos may occur over the school years, his summers at least had always been quiet.

His next words were soft, but thick with emotion. "I don't think it wise for him to live with me, Sir. I don't think I could ever feel any kindness towards the man who killed her."

"But," Dumbledore's voice was as gentle as a moth's wing beat, no annoyance or exasperation in his tone at the fact that he had to keep repeating himself, "he is not the man that killed her. Not yet. And you have the unique chance of saving him from becoming that man."

"Not a chance that could save her."

"No, you're right, that chance has long since passed. But you can save hundreds of other men and women just as kind as her."

"No one is as kind as her."

Dumbledore knelt down beside him, putting his hand on his arm, a certain twinkle in his eyes. "If you give it a chance…I think you may just find that Harry is."