After hours, 18th January, 1894 — Ministry of Magic Offices
The Ministry building rarely ever shut completely – certain departments were on-call at all hours, after all – but as per usual, the translators’ offices in International Magical Co-operation on the fifth floor had cleared out hours ago, and people would not start filtering in for the morning’s drudgery again for a few hours yet.
Nick, however, was a week behind on his work – perhaps because he’d had an overdue translation of some German stories to finish for his freelance pay, and his German was rather rusty (he had not mentioned this to the publisher, obviously) – and he was currently paying for that.
Miserably. He was deep into Portuguese tonight (this morning?), and still had thirty pages left to go of this assignment to have done today, and his eyes, blinking behind his spectacles, were killing him. Nevertheless, once he had shot up a little cocaine on a toilet break, Nick’s brain was better awake again. Excessively active, maybe: for he had heard a startling noise come from – somewhere. What was it? Was it on from the floor above or the floor below – or coming from this level? Sometimes the Ministry, buried in the ground and built as it was, felt like a grand old mausoleum or an echo chamber. Still, Nick was alert and fidgety now, and if something was going on here in the early hours of the morning (say if someone was doing something devious, or the place was burning down), he was probably better off knowing about it, wasn’t he?
Maybe he wouldn’t be, but Nick had already edged up from his desk and padded along the deserted hallways of his floor, looking for any suspicious signs of light or movement. He had made it out to the entrance of the offices, where the lift stood, and listened again to decide where the strange sound was coming from.
Just then, the lift clanged open on this level right in front of him, and Nick yelped aloud.
Nick, however, was a week behind on his work – perhaps because he’d had an overdue translation of some German stories to finish for his freelance pay, and his German was rather rusty (he had not mentioned this to the publisher, obviously) – and he was currently paying for that.
Miserably. He was deep into Portuguese tonight (this morning?), and still had thirty pages left to go of this assignment to have done today, and his eyes, blinking behind his spectacles, were killing him. Nevertheless, once he had shot up a little cocaine on a toilet break, Nick’s brain was better awake again. Excessively active, maybe: for he had heard a startling noise come from – somewhere. What was it? Was it on from the floor above or the floor below – or coming from this level? Sometimes the Ministry, buried in the ground and built as it was, felt like a grand old mausoleum or an echo chamber. Still, Nick was alert and fidgety now, and if something was going on here in the early hours of the morning (say if someone was doing something devious, or the place was burning down), he was probably better off knowing about it, wasn’t he?
Maybe he wouldn’t be, but Nick had already edged up from his desk and padded along the deserted hallways of his floor, looking for any suspicious signs of light or movement. He had made it out to the entrance of the offices, where the lift stood, and listened again to decide where the strange sound was coming from.
Just then, the lift clanged open on this level right in front of him, and Nick yelped aloud.
