31st October, 1894 — Halloween Creature Feature, Podmore Zoological Gardens
This was not the sort of event one came to to be seen – there were curses and blessings to this, both. This was no high society Halloween; this was hardly society at all. So hopefully this meant her personal boggart, Iphigenia Adebayo, would not be here to ruin her evening (although Miss Adebayo would be perfectly on theme amongst the horrifying array of beasts and creeping creatures; in her animagus form she would suit life very well in an enclosure).
In any case, she had come with her father rather than one of her more society-minded aunts, which was not much of a dampener to her mood tonight; as a magizoologist, Mr. Farris was in his element, and after they had taken a turn about the place he had gotten caught up with one of the other magizoologists or employees about the creatures or the enchantments, she wasn’t sure. Truthfully, she hadn’t been listening.
Mattie was well-acquainted with the zoological gardens, particularly as they were local to Irvingly, but the darkened enclosures of the exhibition were unfamiliar enough to be a little thrilling. She hadn’t been scared of the acromantula, the dugbogs or the clabbert; she had been simultaneously repulsed and fascinated by the kappa, and had watched it a while in the gloom before moving on alone. She turned a corner and couldn’t see anything in what must be the next exhibit; she took another step forwards in the darkness and something swooped towards her, so close that she could feel its wings flapping near her face. Something stopped it – the enchantments, she supposed; of course they would not have let a swooping evil attack the visitors! – but not before Mattie could hear the drum of her heart in her ears. In the shock of the moment and her gasp of breath, she had also (unintentionally – at least mostly unintentionally?) reached to the side in the dim light and grasped someone by their upper arm, clinging to them as if for safety.
In any case, she had come with her father rather than one of her more society-minded aunts, which was not much of a dampener to her mood tonight; as a magizoologist, Mr. Farris was in his element, and after they had taken a turn about the place he had gotten caught up with one of the other magizoologists or employees about the creatures or the enchantments, she wasn’t sure. Truthfully, she hadn’t been listening.
Mattie was well-acquainted with the zoological gardens, particularly as they were local to Irvingly, but the darkened enclosures of the exhibition were unfamiliar enough to be a little thrilling. She hadn’t been scared of the acromantula, the dugbogs or the clabbert; she had been simultaneously repulsed and fascinated by the kappa, and had watched it a while in the gloom before moving on alone. She turned a corner and couldn’t see anything in what must be the next exhibit; she took another step forwards in the darkness and something swooped towards her, so close that she could feel its wings flapping near her face. Something stopped it – the enchantments, she supposed; of course they would not have let a swooping evil attack the visitors! – but not before Mattie could hear the drum of her heart in her ears. In the shock of the moment and her gasp of breath, she had also (unintentionally – at least mostly unintentionally?) reached to the side in the dim light and grasped someone by their upper arm, clinging to them as if for safety.
