Mr. Ollivander stared at Mirkoda with pale eyes: "It seems that I was right, it chose you. But how can a wand without a core...? Hmm...Miss Williams, Do you have any material suitable for the core, or try it with your hair? I think it may have sensed the existence of the core suitable for it."

"Hair?" Mirkota looked at Jason and Olivia, saw them nodding, and pulled a hair to Ollivander for experimentation.However, the results of the experiment were not very satisfactory, "There should be other things." Ollivander muttered.

"Plant? Mineral? On me?" Mirkoda thought for a while, and took out the necklace on his neck. It was the moon pendant that Jason had strung together with a mithril chain. "Mr. Ollivander, would you please take a look at this?"

Ollivander's eyes lit up: "Mithril and...? I seem to have seen this kind of ore somewhere? Oh, I saw it when I was looking for materials for making wands in Asia. It should be called mica. You can try it. Oh, absolutely. This is amazing, amazing." Ollivander was very excited: "If you don't mind, I will make this wand tomorrow."

"Of course! Thank you very much."

That night, Milkoda returned a thank you letter to Voldemort out of courtesy, and by the way sent him a work he had recently completed with Jason's help - a pair of cufflinks with protective runes superimposed.

The next day, Mirkoda followed Jason and Olivia to Ollivander's wand shop.

"Oh, here you come." Ollivander came out of the workshop, wand case in hand. "Olive wood, mithril and mica ore, plus the owner's hair, come on, Miss Williams, try it."

Milkota picked up her wand and waved it, filling the room with moonlight.

"What a wonderful combination!" Ollivander muttered, "Maybe I can try some mineral wand cores in the future..." While putting the wand into the U-box, wrapped it in brown paper and handed it to Mirkota .

"Hold it, Miss Williams. It is the wand that chose the wizard. I can feel that this wand still has a lot of plasticity. Olive wood is solid, and mithril is much stronger than steel but very light. It stands to reason that this wand The wand is supposed to be very hard, but it's actually very flexible and elastic. I think that's the reason for the piece of mica. I'm not an expert in materials like minerals and metals. Maybe you can help this wand find it In perfect condition."

Milkota paid Mr. Ollivander seven Galleons for the wand, and Mr. Ollivander bowed and sent them out of the shop.

The author has something to say:

Suddenly I really want to release all the articles in the manuscript box, I have to control my plan!

Tap the screen to use advanced tools Tip: You can use left and right keyboard keys to browse between chapters.

You'll Also Like