Robert couldn't honestly say he liked the Ministry's temporary digs, but they'd been generously loaned by the muggle Prime Minister. Some old ancient underground cavernous spaces under Whitehall that the muggles had deemed far too easy a target. Wizards, however, had better protection spells. There had been one proviso, though. "Please down blow this one up, Robert..."
Yeah, yeah. Well, the spaces were yawningly enormous. Ugly brick and concrete cinder block, left over from the first muggle world war. He'd gone in, with a handful of trusted staff and had erected some offices for those who needed them. Most of the workers would work in the large common area with old surplus desks and chairs that were solid and functional, albeit ugly, separated by still rather uglier partitions. He had decided the workers could cosmetically transfigure them to meet their own tastes.
For some of the department heads, brick spaces had been added, with doors of wood and glass. Lighting was warehouse industrial. He was working on that part. His own desk looked a great deal like it had been dug up out of an old schoolhouse, and the deskchair was an ancient wooden swivel chair. Not a frill about it.
He'd given Millie a partitioned off space--wood, and some spectacularly intricate leaded glass windows that brought color and light into her space. He'd found the windows in a muggle architectural salvage and had bought them himself for her. He'd give her a better desk and chair than he had for himself. And he had give her a lovely new beta in an art glass bowl.
And already there was more annoyance than he'd expected. The few things he'd brought back in that were necessary were, for some reason, running amuck with untold numbers of those damned rainbow pygmy puffs. There were a few annoyed workers--including himself. But most were delighted to see something colorful and living and friendly. Delighted enough that work had slowed a bit while pygmy puffs were getting excessive attention. That, and in the dust of the old massive space, some of the puffs were starting to look more softball sized than puff sized. He wasn't sure where the puffs had come from but he had had a notion to blast them.
He'd not done it, because he'd made a mumbling remark about wanting to make them all into pieces of lint instead, and Millie had forbade him from doing it. He'd rolled his eyes at her, and let her have her way--for now.
He'd been in his office since about 2 am. He'd gone up to the street during the night in search of cigarettes and the best he could find was some weedy muggle brand that smelled a lot like torched up paper bags. And didn't taste any better. Millie hadn't gotten in yet, so he felt no remorse in making a tobacco haze in his office. Or, as he was starting to think of it, his "cell." His tea was cold, bitterly brewed orange pekoe that was now lingering in a somewhat soggy paper cup on his desk, brewed by a bleery eyed teenage clerk in the same place he'd gotten the foul cigarettes. This was London, for God's sake. Couldn't anybody make tea? He had intended now for hours to go out for something better, but it hadn't happened yet.
Some of the very early risers were starting to drag in and were either petting puffs or enchanting their spaces to be more human friendly. And someone had thought bringing food would warm things up, because he was smelling warm pastries and cinnamon and sugar--somewhere on the other side of his tobacco cloud.
He picked up the old worn out quill he'd dug out of some box, and as he went to start writing, the quill spit up a blob of black ink on his parchment.
"Buggar," he sighed, replacing the quill into the stand. Well, he wondered, what else could go sideways?