28th May, 1889 — Padmore Park
Porphyria had left her bag on a patch of grass, and gone to investigate a strange carving on a tree. She hadn’t plans until later, so had spent an idle half-hour in the park on her way through Hogsmeade, watching the clouds cross the sky with empty threats of rain.
Eventually, she returned to where she had abandoned her things and swept up her bag onto her arm, progressing down the park path at an impressive clip. The tree-carving had proven as mysterious and interesting as she imagined, so with one hand, she rummaged in her bag as she went, looking again for the notebook she had with her at all times, crammed full of drafts of poetry and half-grasped thoughts.
She couldn’t find it, and, almost out of the park now, glanced down at her bag. It was a plain enough thing, easily missed and easily mistaken, and -
This was not her bag.
She stopped short and dug around in it, looking for something that might prove her wrong.
Never mind the coins littering the bottom of the bag, or her favourite dipping pen with the bone-handle or even the folding knife; she wasn’t worried about the dog-eared anthology, the slightly-squished plum, a loose fork, or the odd-looking mushrooms she had tipped in there earlier. The case of calling cards - well, not actual calling cards, just card after card of the Ten of Swords in the tarot deck (much more fun to press into the possession of unsuspecting acquaintances than anything as devastatingly plain as her name and address) - was a pity to lose, but she could always have more printed.
None of that was in there, and none of that mattered.
But the notebook. The notebook was weeks, months, years of scribbled, vital work. She needed that notebook.
She paced back to the place she had left her bag, if not the place where she had picked up this one, but there was no sign of hers now either. With a darkening countenance, she rifled through the bag she had, this sorry impostor, searching for some sign of whose it was.
Porphyria pulled something out, making a face. What the hell was this?
Eventually, she returned to where she had abandoned her things and swept up her bag onto her arm, progressing down the park path at an impressive clip. The tree-carving had proven as mysterious and interesting as she imagined, so with one hand, she rummaged in her bag as she went, looking again for the notebook she had with her at all times, crammed full of drafts of poetry and half-grasped thoughts.
She couldn’t find it, and, almost out of the park now, glanced down at her bag. It was a plain enough thing, easily missed and easily mistaken, and -
This was not her bag.
She stopped short and dug around in it, looking for something that might prove her wrong.
Never mind the coins littering the bottom of the bag, or her favourite dipping pen with the bone-handle or even the folding knife; she wasn’t worried about the dog-eared anthology, the slightly-squished plum, a loose fork, or the odd-looking mushrooms she had tipped in there earlier. The case of calling cards - well, not actual calling cards, just card after card of the Ten of Swords in the tarot deck (much more fun to press into the possession of unsuspecting acquaintances than anything as devastatingly plain as her name and address) - was a pity to lose, but she could always have more printed.
None of that was in there, and none of that mattered.
But the notebook. The notebook was weeks, months, years of scribbled, vital work. She needed that notebook.
She paced back to the place she had left her bag, if not the place where she had picked up this one, but there was no sign of hers now either. With a darkening countenance, she rifled through the bag she had, this sorry impostor, searching for some sign of whose it was.
Porphyria pulled something out, making a face. What the hell was this?
a sublime set by Lady! <3