You are caught in a dangerous love triangle at Hogwarts between the silent, controlled Theodore Nott and the chaotic, loud Mattheo Riddle. What begins as subtle tension quickly turns into rivalry as both boys become unwillingly tied to you—and to each other. As their past friendship fractures and their emotions escalate, you find yourself torn between stability and chaos, while the lines between love, loyalty, and obsession begin to blur.
In sixth-year Potions at Hogwarts Y/N begins suffering from increasingly severe headaches that disrupt her focus and feel like something is pressing directly into her mind. At first, she blames stress or potion fumes, but the pain becomes too consistent and always intensifies around a specific person. Theodore Nott is the first to notice the pattern. Quiet and highly observant, he watches her closely until he can no longer ignore that something is wrong. When her symptoms align with moments of mental instability, he makes an unusual choice and uses Legilimency on her. What he discovers is not simple illness, but signs of an external presence interfering with her mind, something she has been unknowingly resisting. As he investigates further, he realizes her headaches are linked to a deeper mental intrusion, and that her mind may already be partially compromised or protected against it. Meanwhile, Y/N begins to experience strange gaps in her thoughts and emotions that feel чуж like they are not entirely her own, along with an unsettling awareness of Theodore’s attention. When she briefly senses him inside her mind, the truth becomes unavoidable: someone has already been inside her thoughts. This forces a tense dynamic between them, as Theodore tries to uncover the source of the intrusion and Y/N struggles to understand whether he is a threat to her mind or the only one capable of saving it.
In the quiet corners of Hogwarts, Theodore Nott never says what he feels—but he shows it in every small, unnoticed way. He remembers the little things about Y/N: the books she mentions once, the way she likes her tea, the places she sits when she wants peace. He doesn’t confess, doesn’t explain, and never makes a scene. Instead, he exists beside her in silence that slowly becomes comfort. Y/N doesn’t need grand gestures to understand him. Between shared glances, late-night study sessions, and unspoken understanding, something soft and undeniable begins to grow. Because Theodore Nott doesn’t love loudly. He loves quietly— in details, in distance, and in everything he never says.
In Slytherin, Y/N and Theodore Nott are known for only one thing: their constant, effortless hatred for each other. Every glance is a challenge, every conversation a battle, and every shared space a disaster waiting to happen. Neither of them backs down, and neither of them has any intention of changing that—especially not in front of their chaotic friend group made up of Draco Malfoy, Pansy Parkinson, Blaise Zabini, Lorenzo Berkshire, Mattheo Riddle, and the Greengrass sisters. But Hogwarts has a way of forcing people together. When circumstances push Y/N and Theodore into unavoidable proximity, their carefully built animosity starts to crack. Small moments slip through the tension—glances that linger too long, words that cut a little less sharply than before, and silences that feel heavier than they should. Still, neither of them is willing to be the first to admit anything has changed. Because in a world where pride means everything, falling for the person you hate most might be the most dangerous thing of all.
In sixth year at Hogwarts, everything changes for Y/N and Draco Malfoy during a Potions lesson on Amortentia—the most powerful love potion, known for smelling differently to everyone. For two people who have perfected the art of hating each other, it becomes the moment that shatters everything they thought they understood about their rivalry. Their relationship has always been built on sharp words in corridors, dueling glares across the Great Hall, and a careful refusal to ever show weakness. Draco is arrogant, controlled, and infuriatingly observant, while Y/N matches him with stubborn silence and a refusal to react. Neither of them ever crosses the line. At least, not publicly. But when Y/N leans over her Amortentia and smells something clean, cold, and unmistakably Draco Malfoy, she panics—and says it out loud. Draco hears her. And he doesn’t forget. What starts as a humiliating slip becomes something far more dangerous when Draco admits he can smell her too. Suddenly, every insult carries weight, every glance lingers too long, and every encounter turns into a silent challenge neither of them wants to lose. Because hatred was always easy. It’s what comes after that neither of them is prepared for.
In sixth year at Hogwarts, Theodore Nott uses an unstable Time-Turner that can rewind up to three days, becoming fixated on changing outcomes so Y/N will choose him instead of rejecting him, ignoring him, or falling for someone else. Each reset within the same three-day window gives him another chance to adjust his approach, but instead of improving things, it causes reality to fracture. Conversations begin repeating with slight differences, memories blur, and people start reacting as if they’ve experienced moments before. Y/N gradually develops déjà vu and notices that time itself feels inconsistent, especially around Theodore. As the loops continue, she realizes she isn’t dealing with one version of him, but multiple overlapping versions created by repeated rewinds. Caught in unstable fragments of the same days, she must confront the truth of what he’s doing—and what it means for love when time itself keeps being rewritten.