It is over. An end to a beautiful beginning.
Seven books. Eight films. Because some endings cannot fit inside one.
Deathly Hallows was split into two. Not because the studio wanted more money. Because the story needed more room. Part 1 was the escape. Part 2 was the acceptance. Part 1 was running. Part 2 was turning around and facing what you had been running from.
Hogwarts Week was supposed to be seven posts. It is now eight. For the same reason.
Part 1, Harry Potter and the Hidden Flame, was the escape. I wrote it on day seven because I could not publish what was supposed to be there. This, Part 2, is the acceptance. The part where I stop running and explain why.
Before Hogwarts Week, I had writer’s block. Seven posts on the blog and the words had stopped coming. So I invented a challenge. Seven Potter-themed posts in seven days. A way to force the block open. It worked.
But while all of that was happening, there was another post. One I had been carrying for much longer. Written during my vacation. Rewritten after. About Harry and Hermione and Lily-Rose. About the greener grass we never stop painting. About a word in Arabic that I inherited from my mother and spent without noticing. القناعة. It was called Stay Here. Grow Old. And it had nothing to do with Hogwarts Week. It existed before the challenge. Before the block. Before any of the seven days.
But I could not publish it.
The first time I came to post it, I was not ready. So I did not. The next day I revisited it. Still not ready. So I told myself the problem was the featured image. It needed a better one. When I had the better one, I came to post it. But by then, things had changed. Circumstances had changed. So I held off and rewrote it to match. When the rewrite was done, the featured image no longer fit the new version.
Then Hogwarts Week started. And on day six I realised Stay Here. Grow Old was Potter themed. It could close the week. Day seven. The final post. Perfect.
And on day seven, as I was reading it one last time, I deleted it. Maybe by mistake. Maybe on purpose dressed as a mistake. The kind of accident that only happens when part of you wanted it to happen. Because I was not ready. I was never ready. And every excuse, every delay, every rewrite, every image that did not fit was me already knowing this. I just needed to delete it to understand.
Something broke that day. The way something broke in Voldemort the night he went to Godric’s Hollow. He made six Horcruxes on purpose. Each one planned. Each one deliberate. But the seventh was an accident. Harry. A fragment of soul that split off and attached itself to a boy without anyone planning it. Not because Voldemort chose it. Because something had already broken so badly that a piece came loose on its own.
So instead, a new post split off on its own. A confession about never watching the films properly. About consuming Harry Potter the way a second hand smoker consumes nicotine. Standing close. Breathing. Without ever lighting one myself. I called it Harry Potter and the Hidden Flame. The accidental Horcrux. Part 1. The escape. And that is how Hogwarts Week ended. Not with the post I had been carrying. With the fragment that broke off from it.
But Deathly Hallows did not end with Part 1. And neither does this.
Part 2 is where Harry walks into the forest. Not to fight. To accept. He had been running the entire series. Seven books of running. And in Part 2 he stops. He walks toward the thing he had been avoiding. Not because he is brave. Because he finally understands that the running was the problem, not the destination.
Maybe it is better this way.
Dumbledore always knew more than he said. He answered questions with riddles. He left rooms before the conversation was finished. He kept truths in drawers he never opened in front of anyone. And when Harry asked him direct questions, he often smiled and said nothing. Not because he did not have the answer. Because some answers do more damage when spoken than when kept.
Some things are better left unsaid. Not because you are not ready. Because they were never meant to be said. Every delay was the answer. Every excuse was the answer. Every rewrite was the answer. I just was not listening.
Now I am.
Hogwarts Week is over. Six Horcruxes on purpose. A seventh by accident. Seven books. Eight films. Seven planned posts. An eighth that broke off on its own. Some things break. Some fragments survive. Some endings need two parts.
But the lighthouse is still on. The keeper is still here. And at the top of this post, the only thing that survived. A featured image for a post that no longer exists. A frame with no painting. A shell with no pearl.
Hidden. But the flame is still warm. Always.
One more thing. I will not be posting for a while. Three weeks. Maybe more. The keeper is not leaving the lighthouse. He is just stepping down to the workshop. Tinkering. Finishing things that were started and never completed. Starting things that have been waiting. The light stays on. The beam keeps turning. But the keeper will be downstairs. Building. And an intern will be with him assisting.
And maybe, just maybe, while I am down there, I will start writing my own tale. Three characters. A witch. A cockroach man, a cat, and goons. A story that has been sitting in my head the way Stay Here. Grow Old was sitting on my screen. Waiting. Not ready. But not leaving either.
Except this time, I will not delete it.





