A malfunctioning Room of Requirement traps Y/N and Draco inside with nothing but echoes of their past traumas: her broken childhood, his impossible expectations, their deepest fears. Except the room isn't showing memories — it’s showing possibilities. Timelines where Draco dies, where Y/N falls to the Dark Lord, where they betray each other… and where they choose each other and burn the world down. They have to choose which vision to follow to escape. ࿎☆࿎
Sixth year at Hogwarts is defined by silence. Draco Malfoy is drowning in secrets he cannot share, and the person he once loved is learning how to live without his voice. Y/N survives stolen glances, unfinished conversations, and a love that never ended—only withdrew. Surrounded by Slytherins who watch, provoke, protect, and push, they circle each other through corridors heavy with things left unsaid, knowing that one truth could save them—or ruin everything.
In a post-war wizarding world where marriage is currency, Y/N Romanova becomes the most desired pureblood on the market—untouchable, extravagant, and fiercely unownable. Draco Malfoy needs her hand to stabilize his name; she refuses to be claimed by obligation. What begins as a strategic negotiation turns into a volatile alliance of power, defiance, and slow-burning desire, forcing them both to choose between legacy and autonomy.
On-screen, Y/N is Draco Malfoy’s forbidden love, a Slytherin fighting the darkness creeping into Hogwarts. Off-screen, Y/N navigates the chaos of fame, shared houses, late-night secrets, and the sparks that ignite between castmates. Between magic and reality, loyalties blur, hearts ache, and love doesn’t follow the script.
After the war, the Wizengamot enforces politically motivated marriages to preserve pure-blood lines. Y/N becomes bound to Draco Malfoy, a union born of duty, restraint, and mutual grief rather than choice. Both carry the scars of absent parents and a legacy of neglect. Within the shadowed halls of Malfoy Manor, they navigate cold civility, whispered expectations, and shared trauma. Slowly, recognition replaces distrust, and two people raised on absence begin to confront the possibility of trust