Chapter 86 Li Huo
"What's wrong, Little Tierra?" A line appeared in Tom Riddle's diary.

Ever since Quirrell failed to steal the Philosopher's Stone, Tom Riddle's tone has become increasingly soft and increasingly...ambiguous.

Of course, Tom Riddle's true thoughts at this moment were probably:
Haha, this mud-blood is so easy to fool. I just had to be gentle with him and he was easily under my control.

Tierra rolled her eyes in exasperation, while her left glove wrote in the diary:

Good evening, Tom. Hagrid asked me to look after his burrowing snails all day, and I only just now have a chance to be alone with you.

At the same time, Tiera used Occlusive Magic to mimic the feeling he had when he successfully confessed his love in his previous life, fabricating a happy and excited mood.

Since Voldemort doesn't understand love, Tyella would actually find it much easier to fake such feelings.

In contrast, it took Tiera a lot of effort to fake the feeling of being isolated and bullied. After all, he was born into a well-off family and lived under the glory of socialism for the first thirty years of his life. You could say that he was bullied and ostracized, but these were just a drop in the ocean for him and not worth mentioning.

It's okay, I'm happy to see you've found a new friend.

Tiera rolled her eyes again.

Tom Riddle is such a hypocrite; he's clearly complaining in his heart that Hagrid is hindering Tyella's studies.

It must be said that Voldemort was qualified to be a teacher; at least the knowledge he taught was many times better than what was taught at Hogwarts.

Since Voldemort had found such a "high-quality" sacrifice as Tyrell, he naturally hoped to squeeze every last drop of value out of her.

Having spent a semester with Tyrell, Voldemort recognized her talent. So, after the summer vacation began, Voldemort gradually instilled in Tyrell the idea that there was no good or evil, only power, through their daily chats and flirting.

And they began to entice Tyra to come into contact with, and even learn, dark magic.

If Tierra is just an ordinary first-year student... then the soon-to-be second-year wizards are probably going to fall for it.

Unfortunately, Tierra is not.

The construction of the fourth layer of Tiera's spiritual wall is just beginning, and it will take at least another month to complete, including calculations.

Tiera will not initiate her plan until the fourth layer of mental defenses is completed.

The plan was launched when Voldemort realized he could use the power of dark magic.

Tierra's plan was based on Voldemort's resurrection plan.

Tiera will use herself as bait.

Therefore, Tyrell is still pretending to be ignorant of Voldemort, just like a young man in love, accepting all of Voldemort's theories without question, but knowing nothing when asked.

Despite having mastered some dark magic, Tyrell was completely unable to use it when facing Voldemort.

This made Tom Riddle occasionally grit his teeth in anger.

But there was nothing that could be done. Although Tyella was intelligent and exceptionally talented, in Tom Riddle's eyes he was just a twelve-year-old wizard. Allowing a wizard of that age to master dark magic was, in a sense, no less than forcing a seedling to grow too fast.

Therefore, Tierra's slowness in learning dark magic did not arouse Voldemort's suspicion; instead, it made him more patient and persuasive.

This inadvertently led Tom Riddle to reveal even more knowledge, spells, and magic.

Who made Tyrell able to read Tom Riddle's mind?

Even if Voldemort didn't say it, as long as the thought or idea had crossed his mind, Tyella would keenly capture it with her "knowledge" blessing.

In the past few short months, Tiera has learned of the Imperius Curse, the Killing Curse, and the Cruciatus Curse.

In addition to these, there's Fiendfire, Dark Magic Marks, Blood Curses, Orc Curses, and the creation of Infernals. Of course, this also includes Dark Magic evolution and Horcrux rituals—because Voldemort doesn't seem to intend to completely devour Tiera during the resurrection ritual, but rather to spare her life.

Then he fused Tierra and the Basilisk into an orc, as Voldemort's eternally loyal servant and his last Horcrux—

Of course, if Tyra were to die, Voldemort would have no choice but to turn her into an Infernal.

vomit--

vomit--

vomit--

When Tierra learned of Tom Riddle's idea, she rolled her eyes three times.

Tierra was deeply moved, and then...

I opened the book I'd found in the Room of Requirement, "Ancient Black Magic Ritual Studies"—

Page 76——

The Fierce Fire Chapter.

Fiendfire is easy to learn but difficult to control. In ancient times, this black magic required three wizards to control it through the Holy Triangle ritual.

Although with the development of magic, Fiendfire has been simplified to be used and controlled by a single person, it still requires the wizard using it to have extremely strong control abilities.

After the recent experiments, Tiera has basically confirmed that the cursed worm can be used to construct artificial life forms for "life reconstruction".

This glove was just Tiera's initial attempt.

The materials used in "life reconstruction" determine the quality and strength of the final artificial life form.

Tierra's glove only used worms made from plague, AIDS, liver cancer, lung cancer, brain cancer, and a few worms made from Weasley's failed truancy candy.

The glove has a very limited function. Apart from giving Tiera more tentacles to do more things at the same time and absorb and release the plague, it can only allow Tiera to influence or even control the wearer's mind through the glove.

However, this function is obviously useless now, since the gloves are on Thiera's own hands.

I can't control myself, can I?

However, the curse worm's effects are not limited to diseases and plagues.

There is also black magic.

Just like when Tiera separated Voldemort's dark magic from the unicorn in the Forbidden Forest.

What if the artificial life form he actually used as a backup to save his life wasn't made of these diseases, but rather constructed from cursed worms of black magic?
To take a closer look, consider the Killing Curse, the Crucifixion Curse, or the Soul-Stealing Curse—

It could also be the basilisk's venom, its petrifying gaze, or the venom of the giant eight-eyed spider—

Or perhaps Tiera didn't need the "Inheritor" to go through all that trouble to circumvent the unicorn's curse while in the Forbidden Forest; he could have simply slaughtered a unicorn and extracted the cursed worm from it.

It could even be Fiendfire. Tiera once conducted an experiment where she poured alcohol on a rat and set it on fire. The curse worms had no effect on the rat's burns.

However, when the flames burn on the rats, Tiera can turn the flames into cursed worms.

(End of this chapter)

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