Y/N arrives at Hogwarts in her fifth year as a transfer student, unexpectedly sorted into Slytherin. But there is one problem: she is Severus Snape’s daughter. The truth spreads quickly, and so do the assumptions. In Slytherin, she is immediately labeled as someone untouchable — someone who will never face consequences, will receive unfair academic advantages, and will always be protected by her father’s position as a professor. Resentment builds fast. Draco Malfoy, Mattheo Riddle, Theodore Nott, Blaise Zabini, Pansy Parkinson, Astoria Greengrass, and Daphne Greengrass all react in their own way — but none of them trust her. In a house built on ambition, reputation, and control, being Snape’s daughter makes Y/N a target before she even speaks. And Hogwarts is never as simple as it seems.
Y/N arrives at Hogwarts in her fifth year as a transfer student, unexpectedly sorted into Slytherin. Her surname is enough to shift the atmosphere the moment it is spoken. Years ago, her family was involved in a major Ministry scandal — a betrayal that exposed confidential pure-blood affairs, led to investigations, and destroyed reputations tied to some of the most influential wizarding families. Although Y/N was never directly involved, the consequences of that betrayal still linger within Hogwarts corridors, especially in Slytherin, where legacy and bloodlines are never forgotten. Surrounded by silent resentment, unspoken rules, and people who were raised to distrust her name, Y/N quickly learns that survival in Slytherin is never simple. Within the house of serpents, every alliance has a cost, every smile hides intention, and every interaction carries unspoken tension. But the longer she stays, the more she begins to realize that history is never as clean as it seems — and neither is the truth behind her own family. And in Slytherin, even silence can be dangerous.
Y/N arrives at Hogwarts in her fifth year as part of a Ministry scholarship program, an unexpected addition to a world she doesn’t belong to and a system she doesn’t understand. Sorted into Slytherin, she quickly becomes an anomaly within the house. She doesn’t follow its unspoken rules, doesn’t seek approval, and refuses to adapt to the social hierarchy that defines it. To most Slytherins, she represents everything wrong with her presence there: someone placed through external influence rather than tradition or status, and someone who doesn’t seem interested in proving otherwise. Suspicion spreads fast, followed by resentment. In Slytherin, reputation is everything — and Y/N has none they are willing to accept. What starts as quiet judgment slowly turns into collective resistance, as the house begins to test her limits in different ways. But Hogwarts is never just about belonging. It is about power, perception, and survival. And Y/N might be the one person in Slytherin who refuses to play the game at all.