It’s worse than that. What’s something you’re likely to have on hand at all times, and worse, are then likely to hand off to someone other person, who will hand it off to another, and so on and so forth?
Even if wizarding currency is protected against such shenanigans, some unknown number of UK sterling could have fractions of Voldemort’s soul in them.
Clever idea, but currency doesn’t stay long in circulation. Coins longer than bills—the oldest bill in my wallet is from 2006, while I found a quarter from 1976 in my pocket. And if horcruces are as hard to destroy here as they are in canon, I imagine even Muggles would find it curious if a 50p coin were found intact after it should have been melted down.
I suppose it’d work if you’re planning to keep supplies up on an ongoing basis and didn’t think much of Muggle investigative abilities or their ability to interface with wizarding authorities, though—and the latter does seem minimal in this universe.
How about the doorknob on the men’s room in St. Paul’s Cathedral? Or some other building you wouldn’t expect to go away for a while. Or, heh, the Blarney Stone, if you can find enough time alone with it.
Both are withdrawn from circulation as they decay, and if they don’t decay they’ll stick around for a while. As it gets old enough, it’ll get picked up by a collector of some sort, who will keep it better-preserved and think nothing of its long lifespan. (This does, however, limit the amount of possessing it can do)
Also, I read the original Horcrux restriction, not as “someone has to be close at the time,” but as “anyone who has ever touched the Horcrux.” Otherwise the original would be even more useless, since it’d be very likely to discharge while you were still alive.
I was thinking wedding rings. One of the few things that rarely leaves a person. Or some wizarding-equivalent of a heart valve, something kept inside the body.
Yeah the new version stills work by imprinting his brain state on to a victim. He just link the ghost and victims together so that they stay updated. Hence he can see space from the plague. The resurrection stone allows the ghost in the objects to move on their own and possess people without them touching them.
Voldemort making random rocks into horcruxs? One day someone steps on the wrong rock and turns into LORD VOLDEMORT! I hate it when that happens.
It’s worse than that. What’s something you’re likely to have on hand at all times, and worse, are then likely to hand off to someone other person, who will hand it off to another, and so on and so forth?
Even if wizarding currency is protected against such shenanigans, some unknown number of UK sterling could have fractions of Voldemort’s soul in them.
Clever idea, but currency doesn’t stay long in circulation. Coins longer than bills—the oldest bill in my wallet is from 2006, while I found a quarter from 1976 in my pocket. And if horcruces are as hard to destroy here as they are in canon, I imagine even Muggles would find it curious if a 50p coin were found intact after it should have been melted down.
I suppose it’d work if you’re planning to keep supplies up on an ongoing basis and didn’t think much of Muggle investigative abilities or their ability to interface with wizarding authorities, though—and the latter does seem minimal in this universe.
How about the doorknob on the men’s room in St. Paul’s Cathedral? Or some other building you wouldn’t expect to go away for a while. Or, heh, the Blarney Stone, if you can find enough time alone with it.
Both are withdrawn from circulation as they decay, and if they don’t decay they’ll stick around for a while. As it gets old enough, it’ll get picked up by a collector of some sort, who will keep it better-preserved and think nothing of its long lifespan. (This does, however, limit the amount of possessing it can do)
Better idea: Door handles.
The great Lord Voldemort, foiled by interior redecorating.
Also, I read the original Horcrux restriction, not as “someone has to be close at the time,” but as “anyone who has ever touched the Horcrux.” Otherwise the original would be even more useless, since it’d be very likely to discharge while you were still alive.
I was thinking wedding rings. One of the few things that rarely leaves a person. Or some wizarding-equivalent of a heart valve, something kept inside the body.
I was thinking a door handle, or a hand rail in a busy area.
How about a bullet? Make things appear like someone was the victim of an attempted murder, and have them “survive” with your identity hidden in them.
Too time-sensitive, I suspect.
Yeah the new version stills work by imprinting his brain state on to a victim. He just link the ghost and victims together so that they stay updated. Hence he can see space from the plague. The resurrection stone allows the ghost in the objects to move on their own and possess people without them touching them.
The door handles of the ministry of magic would be my own choice.