Drip, Drip, Drip, Drip...
Icarus von Pfetten was not an impatient man, far from it in fact, but as he stood within the walls of Azkaban he found himself feeling increasingly agitated though he blamed much of that on the ever looming presence of the Dementors just beyond the wooden door that was little to no protection from their poisonous influence. He was not a short man, in fact the opposite. He was a height greater than most of those he knew, swaying from side to side at a height of six foot six inches. He was lanky, having been so all his youth and wore his hair slicked back away from his face at a length that was just shy of his shoulders. His eyes were large, magnified by the half-moon spectacles he wore on the end of his nose, beneath which was a well-trimmed moustache, the same auburn colour as his hair. A sigh escaped his thin, pink lips and his gaze found the round, mocking face of his watch that once again reminded him that he was obligated to stay within the prison for another hour yet if he wished to receive his pay - a feat for anyone, not just a photographer. He was not new to the job but even after twenty years he could not get used to the screams; though, he wasn’t sure what was worse, the screams or when it all went silent.
The man sat down, finally relenting and dropping his body into one of the cleaner of the chairs sat around a table made of the same dark mahogany. His burgundy suit regrettably began to crease and he threw himself back up onto his feet, reaching around to wipe the back of his trousers just as the door opened, revealing him to the guards and the prisoner in a rather dishevelled fashion. von Pfetten whirled around, clapping his hands together and masking his horror with a smile that looked rather more like a grimace. He cleared his throat and looked at the guard who was giving him a rather queer look, unsure whether the man was sane or had lost his mind at some point between arriving and now. They’d been gone twenty minutes; that was all. It hadn’t been any great length of time. Granted they had been longer than they had first thought but it had not been the newly inducted prisoner that had given them trouble. In fact, it had been those in her neighbouring cells that had given them grief. She’d merely stared at them with her large sunken eyes, her gaze betraying not even a slither of emotion.
“You alright, von Pfetten?” One of the guards, a well-built young man perhaps in his late-twenties, early thirties, asked, his eyebrows having risen to the middle of his forehead. His voice was gruff, von Pfetten noted, like a sore throat only far scratchier, like the result of being in constant cold and then being thrown into stifling warmth. An occupational hazard, von Pfetten supposed. “von Pfetten?”
Icarus blinked, leaving his thoughts, and met the dark, testy eyes of the guard with his own fairer stare. He gave a short nod and stepped forward to the camera he had set up on his tri-pod within the first ten minutes of getting to Azkaban while the Head of Security had briefed him on what had changed and exactly what he should watch out for. Icarus couldn’t claim to have listened much but he knew the gist of it. Azkaban hadn’t changed that much. Security was tightened though, that’s what Icarus had noticed especially. The problems were still the same, though, and the faults that were large enough to begin with only seemed to gain a wider berth. There were many ways to get out of Azkaban - even in the high security cells. It was not quite the impenetrable fortress they all thought it to be.
“Icarus von Pfetten, meet Athena Goyle, our newest resident.”
The other guard’s words made Icarus look for the first time at the entrant in the grey and white prison uniform. She had already lost the glow of life that many retained weeks into their Azkaban sentence. She, he had been told, had only been there a week but rumours went around and it was suggested she didn’t have that lust for life to begin with, that she was already dead inside. Looking at her as he did in that moment, von Pfetten could see why such rumours would be circulated. She was a shadow of a human being; her emaciated frame swallowed whole by the uniform that he was sure was the smallest size they stocked. Her skin was of the palest of whites he’d ever seen and her tiny wrists were shackled with chains that she struggled to drag along behind her but did so with a clenched jaw, finding no other way to struggle through it. Her hair was longer than the initial pictures in the Daily Prophet had shown it to be. The curls were unruly, no longer the neatly pressed ringlets von Pfetten remembered seeing in the newspaper. She was a creature the Ministry never should have condemned to Azkaban but the government had never been known well for its sense of justice - especially under the Lupins, though von Pfetten kept that opinion particularly close to the chest.
“Good Morning.” Icarus’ voice seemed out of place and far too light and airy for the liquid streaked walls, floors and ceilings of the prison, the liquid said to be tears rather than anything less sanitary: the tears of past and present inmates, those that never made it out alive and those that were doomed to the same fate.
The girl didn’t reply. She was merely marched into place in front of the window that had been sealed off a decade or so before. von Pfetten could recall the trial of trying to settle Augustus Rookwood down long enough for the picture to be taken. The sight of the world beyond the sodden stone walls of Azkaban had struck Rookwood in a way that no one cared to speak of again. The guards had been quick to block up the window but the damage had been done and once the picture had been taken no one had been in a particular hurry to tear away the wood they’d used to steal the world from the view of the prisoners. He was used to the screaming of the prisoners as they came in contact with something as close to the outside world as possible: him. He was used to the insanity of it all. What he was not used to was the silence that had engulfed this one. She merely stared at him with wide, knowing eyes. She took her gaze from his and he followed her line of sight to the chains she shook with laboured shakes of her wrists.
“Look this way, Ms. Goyle. Yes, that’s right. Stay there...”
Drip, Drip, Drip, Drip...
“You had your picture taken?”
Athena glanced away momentarily from the water that dripped in intermittent showers from the ceiling. Her eyes found the source of the voice and narrowed when she found that once again, Tiberius Bishop had spoken out of turn. Athena did not dignify his inane question with a response, she merely stared coldly at him before turning her gaze back to the window where, if she arched her neck far enough, she could see the darkening sky. Tiberius Bishop had been resigned to Azkaban for no good reason, or so he claimed. In reality he was a mere petty thief, or so he liked people to think if they were to know any truth at all. In fact, the burly fifty-something year old man had tried to assassinate a past Minister in his youth, though he kept that rather close to the chest. He wore the Dark Mark, though. That was what had initially sparked Athena’s interest but she could no longer bring herself to care. The unkempt, insufferable individual was not a concern of hers. She was a concern of his, it seemed though. Tiberius had taken it upon himself to try and look after the unwilling Goyle girl. She seemingly wanted nothing to do with him though, she preferred just to stare into nothing.
Tiberius reached for the piece of crusty bread he’d been given hours before, the last piece that his stomach had so desperately wished to consume. After the bowl of gruel though, he couldn’t bear to force it down and so he saved it for someone more in need of it - Athena. It was a tiny loaf, one that barely fit in the palm of his hand though he supposed it would dwarf the girl’s tiny feminine ones. Curling his fingers around one of the bars, Tiberius pulled himself across the slick, cobbled floor and reached out towards Athena’s cell. The girl regarded him for a moment and tipped her head to the side minutely. She considered him carefully before lowering herself from where she was standing to her knees, disregarding her earlier desire to keep as dry as possible in the cell.
Her fingers groped for the bread and Tiberius found releasing it much harder than he had first thought it would be. He retracted his hand hesitantly and watched as the girl passed the bread between her hands. He was right; it did dwarf them. Carelessness made the bread slip from Athena’s hand and she stopped, her hands still outstretched in front of her, as the bread rolled away to sit between their cells, out of their reach.
“No thank you.” Athena replied softly, making her action seemingly deliberate. “I’m full.”
Liar, her mind accused.