Harry Potter Fabric Relationship: Harry Potter/Tom Riddle | Voldemort Word Count: 157,935
Harry Potter is murdered, crucified for the last-ditch effort at the greater good. But death is not as black and white as one would want it, not when Death claims you as his master. Harry has a do-over, reincarnated back into his past life, with all the knowledge he needs to piece back together an old enemy that might just be the only one that can save him from his grizzly fate in 1999.
Thinking back on it there really should have been a rule. Don’t travel back in time if you are just going to fall in love with the person that you are destined to kill. And, as an add-on, if you are going to fall in love with them make sure that they stay focused on the task at hand and do not overindulge in dark magic and madness along the way.
This story begins with… atrocious spelling. This continues, but during the middle it gets better. The storytelling is much better (around the middle), so the author probably just could not be arsed to spell properly; in some cases I had to do wild guesses, in others (“jeperize” for jeopardise) I just had a laugh (after figuring it out — which isn’t easy for nōn-native speakers as readers).
Close to the end, it got confusing, many guns unchecked, etc. again, so while I was tempted to round up to three stars, nope.
At least it has cats… even if most of the actual work cats’ pets have to do is left to Kreacher off-screen.