June 20th, 1894 - Diagon Alley
It was weird, being back in the Alley after being away for a whole year. With her own twenty-eighth birthday come and gone this week, she had plans to see Cash at some point and check up on him. Letters in their journal only gave her so much information when she could not read his expression. Leaving last June hadn't sat right with her, but it was hard to say no when she needed the job and the money. Being back at the bank didn't sit right either and she was antsy for something new. It was a strange conundrum to find herself perpetually in. Wanting to be home, but not wanting to work there. Ang needed the new and exciting to keep her mind busy, but the bank did not provide that when she was stuck working on planning and other paperwork from her most recent trip.
She needed a lunch break and to get out of the stuffy office and away from the mumbling of the Goblins who always seemed to magically forget that she could understand them now. Or maybe the didn't care. It wasn't often about her, just not things she cared to hear about what they were planning after work or other crass comments about patrons of the bank. Ang worked predominantly with men and somehow this was still worse.
The summer heat hung over the alley like a blanket and Angie was so used to it, that she as unphased as she exited the bank and headed towards the Cauldron for something cold to drink and maybe something to eat. It was strange being back on a normal-ish schedule when she was simply used to eating and sleeping whenever she found the chance to. Dressed in a plain white linen shirt and trousers, hair swept back into a bun at the base of her neck, Ang knew she stood out in the Alley for a variety of reason, but she didn't let the looks bother her. In this part of town she figured there were all kinds, she was hardly the most interesting.
As she rounded the end of the Alley toward the Cauldron, she stepped up to the door, only for it to swing open before her, a familiar face, on his way out. Angie knew Theo Gallivan, though she was pretty sure that Cash hadn't told him much about her. Still in her surprise, she couldn't help but to betray that knowledge, "My apologies Mr. Gallivan," she said quickly as she stepped aside for him to exit.
She needed a lunch break and to get out of the stuffy office and away from the mumbling of the Goblins who always seemed to magically forget that she could understand them now. Or maybe the didn't care. It wasn't often about her, just not things she cared to hear about what they were planning after work or other crass comments about patrons of the bank. Ang worked predominantly with men and somehow this was still worse.
The summer heat hung over the alley like a blanket and Angie was so used to it, that she as unphased as she exited the bank and headed towards the Cauldron for something cold to drink and maybe something to eat. It was strange being back on a normal-ish schedule when she was simply used to eating and sleeping whenever she found the chance to. Dressed in a plain white linen shirt and trousers, hair swept back into a bun at the base of her neck, Ang knew she stood out in the Alley for a variety of reason, but she didn't let the looks bother her. In this part of town she figured there were all kinds, she was hardly the most interesting.
As she rounded the end of the Alley toward the Cauldron, she stepped up to the door, only for it to swing open before her, a familiar face, on his way out. Angie knew Theo Gallivan, though she was pretty sure that Cash hadn't told him much about her. Still in her surprise, she couldn't help but to betray that knowledge, "My apologies Mr. Gallivan," she said quickly as she stepped aside for him to exit.