Latest website: This is nothing to Voldemort.
Although he needed to personally know Snape, the previous owner of the Death Stick, Voldemort would not blink an eye as long as he could be sure that the wand taken from Dumbledore's tomb was the legendary Death Stick, even if Snape had to be sacrificed.
With the Death Stick in hand, which absolutely obeys his orders, Voldemort can easily clean up the current situation.
The next ti he ets that Mudblood Albert Anderson, he will definitely be able to kill him easily.
Without the Mudblood in the way, the other rebels were not worth ntioning.
Whenever Voldemort thought of Albert, a cloud of gloom appeared in his heart.
The despicable and shaless conspiracy of the Mudblood really left a deep shadow on Voldemort, and even made him subconsciously worry that he would step into the trap carefully set by the other party again.
It’s not that Voldemort is timid, but he was really impressed by the case of his recent trip to Nurngard to look for Grindelwald.
Although all signs indicate that this matter has nothing to do with Albert, Voldemort does not think so because Grindelwald's reaction is very abnormal.
Moreover, it was also unusual for the group of Aurors to appear at that ti and try to surround and kill Voldemort. If Voldemort had not made preparations in advance, even if he was confident in his own strength, he could not guarantee that he would be able to escape unscathed in that situation.
At the ti, Voldemort was not facing most of Europe's Aurors, but a group of killers who had the audacity to throw Avada Kedavra directly at them.
It was definitely a carefully planned siege, and although Voldemort managed to escape by chance, he also learned a lesson.
We must be wary of Albert Anderson's conspiracy.
For example, this ti?
Did that guy expect him to co to the diterranean to find a wand maker?
It's undeniable.
The result of this trip to the diterranean was satisfactory to Voldemort. Not only did he obtain many secrets about the Death Stick, but he also got what he wanted.
But this is really not that guy's conspiracy?
Voldemort never forgot that guy was a master of prophecy. Who knew whether the other party would set a trap for him sowhere?
The wand maker did reveal a lot of useful information to him, and did make him think that he had obtained the Death Stick, but was this really the legendary Death Stick?
Voldemort began to question the wand in his hand.
Although the wandmaker never said this was the Deathstick, his aning was clear.
Because even Voldemort himself thought so.
But if he were that guy, knowing where the Death Stick was in advance, would he not take it away in advance?
Voldemort didn't think the Mudblood would give up doing that just because the Death Stick was in Dumbledore's grave.
If it were him, he would definitely take the wand directly instead of leaving it to his enemy.
The most likely reason why the Mudblood didn't do that was not because he didn't know where the wand was, but because this was a trap that he had carefully prepared for himself?
Thinking of this possibility, Voldemort's face suddenly turned ugly.
Because he thought of another possibility, the wand in his hand might be the legendary Death Stick, but the legendary Death Stick is only stronger than other wands, and it can't create miracles like the legend says. After all, Voldemort is a wizard with strong magic power, and Albert is also a powerful wizard. They don't need any powerful wands at all, because they are powerful in themselves. They only need a suitable wand to show their extraordinary power. ….
So, that guy deliberately left the Death Stick to himself, intending to use this magic wand to kill the previous owner so that he could beco the new owner of the Death Stick?
This is also the main reason why Voldemort did not suspect that the Death Stick was fake.
If Albert Anderson really wanted to hook him, he wouldn't have used a fake magic wand as bait.
This was also the Mudblood's best trick.
Because even Voldemort knew very well what price he would have to pay if he killed Snape, a man who had made great contributions.
Most of the guys gathered around him now are fence-sitters. The reason they don't collapse at the first sign of trouble is more because of his own deterrence and the remaining small number of Death Eaters who want to use his power to gain more power and status. Those pure-blood wizards are his core.
But once Snape died, with this precedent, what would the other Death Eaters think? If there was no hope, how many Death Eaters would be willing to continue to unite around him?
Perhaps, due to his intimidation, he has not yet reached the point where he is deserted by his friends and relatives, but he is not far from it.
This was exactly what the Mudblood had hoped to see. He had been working hard to undermine the power around Voldemort.
No matter what ans are used, try to make him a lonely person.
Without helpers around him, the threat posed by Voldemort would be greatly reduced.
It was with this in mind that Voldemort, with dangerous light flashing in his eyes, finally used Legilincy on the wand maker and roughly read through Osido's mory, not caring at all about the other party's life or death.
Just as Voldemort expected, although this poor wand maker showed no signs of being bewitched by the Mudblood, so of his mories were still kept strictly confidential. This was why Voldemort increased the intensity of his Legilincy. He suspected that Albert had tampered with Osido's mory.
However, before Voldemort could dig out that part of his mory, the poor wand maker had already collapsed and turned into a half-idiot.
Voldemort didn't care about this, and before leaving, he used Avada Kedavra to end his life.
To him, a person who is insignificant is dead, so he dies.
What's more, the other party was most likely a trap set for him by the Mudblood, which made him even more damnable.
Although Voldemort did not find any evidence, he told him directly that this matter was a trap set for him by the Mudblood from beginning to end.
Because that part of the hidden secret is related to Osido's family, as if soone had inford them of his arrival in advance.
Poor Osido had made such an effort, but in the end he still couldn't survive.
Perhaps, just as Dumbledore said, the unexpected encounter with Voldemort ultimately led Osido to suffer such a tragic fate.
Although soone may need to take so responsibility in this matter, at least he allowed Osido's family to survive. Even if Osido eventually lost his life, he still needs to be thanked.
After all, this matter was not his problem after all. Even if he did nothing, it was still a question whether the wand maker could survive.
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