Irene had always liked the Ministers Office. It was spacious with large windows to let unnatural light into the space, creating a strangely pleasant atmosphere. There were portraits on the walls, pictures on the shelves, and a potted plant sat in the corner. It was the kind of office whose decorations felt artificial and posed, left over from the rooms previous owners and not having a shred of sentimental value to its current occupant. Ana Levski occupied the large chair behind the desk, claiming the territory that didn't quite belong to her and holding it with a pleased authority.
She looked tired. The two women passed each other in the Ministry halls on a daily basis and over the past six months Irene had watched Ana's hair get steadily grayer, day after day. There were bags under her eyes and the eyes themselves looked exhausted and vaguely angry that she was being subjected to sit in yet another life-ruining meeting. Irene and Ana had never spoken socially but now they exchanged the traditional small talk, discussing the weather, spring flu in the ministry, and the construction happening just outside on the muggle streets.
There was a distinct gap in the conversation as they skirted around the elephant in the room. Irene hadn't mentioned their purpose in being there and Ana returned the favor, neither woman willing to move to that difficult subject until it became absolutely necessary. The civil words exchanged hid the anger and fear that soaked Irene head to foot. She had watched her colleagues get paired off one by one but somehow she had never truly registered that some day it would be her.
It was easy to forget that she was no longer married. The last name, the house, the ring, the second pillow - everything remained when her husband did not. Not once since losing Rufus did Irene consider that she was anything but Mrs. Irene Norwood. Burying him in the ground did not seem as final as signing divorce papers. She was his wife, he was her husband, and it didn't seem possibly that she was sitting here now, willingly waiting to become engaged.
The summoning letter was folded neatly in her purse, the creases becoming more and more pronounced every time she opened the paper to examine it for any changed. The letter had been read five, ten, twenty times over, always giving the same paralyzing news. 3 pm, Deputy Minister's Office, life as she knew it would cease to exist. Irene had taken to over-analyzing the situation as she considered every scenario that this meeting could possibly bring.
Worst case? He was a happy-go-lucky do-gooder who had nothing better to do with his life than buy her a white dress and start picking out baby names. Best case? He took one look at her and sprinted to his best friend with pleas to elope. That or he got hit by a bus.
Irene couldn't bring herself to make a scene. She valued her reputation, image, and job too much to flirt with the idea of Azkaban, even if she avoided it in the end. The Ravenclaw had never been a rebel, always content to watch other children break the rules and be waiting with band-aids when they returned home. She was by no means a goody-two-shoes herself but rather than getting her hands dirty, Irene had always preferred to sit back and watch madness unfold, enabling the participants in any way she could.
Now, Irene simply waiting for the revolution to break out. They had gone too far and someone was bound to snap sooner or later, even if it couldn't be her.
Irene watched the clock ticking forward on the wall, a moment of silence falling between discussion of pointless tidbits. It was time.