It had been a frustrating morning. The work that Alice had been tasked with was challenging, though that she didn’t mind about it. What she minded was that the people she was phoning around for information from had been utterly useless. A lamp post, in her mind, would have been more help than them. Instead she found herself floundering, much to the muted delight of some of the other people in the office that highly suspected that she only had the job because of who she was sleeping with. Regardless, she felt underqualified and decided that she definitely should’ve been a primary school teacher. She certainly dressed like one, according to one of the women gossiping by the photocopier.
Sighing, Alice released the end of her pen from the hold of her teeth and she threw it down roughly onto the desk, shoving her feet back into her shoes as she did so. They were the high point of the day thus far. They were new and shiny and she was certainly in love with them. They made her feel like Dorothy, albeit there was a distinct lack of sparkle. Getting up, she decided that now was the best time to take her lunch hour. She was sick of the giggling and far too close to snapping at one of them. She felt as though she was back at school, only this time she didn’t have Jemma to defend her or Henriette to tell them just how stupid they looked with their sneering faces and dripping disdain. She was alone.
Pulling on her coat, the witch picked up her bag and trounced from the office in a way that was as adult as she could manage, with scarlet embarrassment shining on her cheeks. Once out in the cool winter air she felt relieved somewhat and was glad to go to Diagon Alley. She was even gladder for the walk there, with the London winds running their fingers through her hair and loosing it from the bun she had it up in until the tendrils ran free about her cheeks. The Leaky Cauldron was full with the lunchtime crowd of Ministry workers who had little pleasure outside of midday ale and hotpots. Out in the courtyard there was throng passing through, in and out of the shopping district.
Diagon Alley was hardly quiet, either. It was a kaleidoscopic buzz of activity that hummed about Alice’s ears and dazzled her senses. She found herself smiling, losing her tight-lipped terseness as she knew that here she could spend some gold and then, most importantly of all, go and have lunch with Ollie. This was what was going to tide her through the rest of the day and keep her sane until she could go home and take Lemon out for a run. Once she had all of the negative feelings showered off, she could commit herself to some quality time with Ariel, being mini-chef, or playing with the dogs, or better still: convincing Ollie that he shouldn’t be tippy-tapping away, he should be snuggling with her instead.
A flower stall caught her eye and like a bee ever drawn to pretty colours she drew in, smiling broadly at the elderly witch who returned it, albeit in a sneering sort of way that gave Alice pause. She busied herself with the lilies all the same, wondering if she could change up the office bouquet a little bit to add some much needed vibrancy and improve her mood while there. However, when her fingers touched the staining pigment, she felt something a little queasy settle within her. It was an odd sort of feeling, one she couldn’t place. Suddenly, though, her shoes felt very tight and the flowers seemed further away, she found herself forcing off her rings feverishly, stuffing them into her pocket.
Pain lashed through her and she closed her eyes against it, wishing it away. The witch laughed, a high, cold, shrill laugh. Alice’s eyes snapped open and her hands seized forward to steady herself on the cart. She grunted but the sound was off, making her do a double-take. It wasn’t high pitched. It was low, almost guttural. The witch looked at her wryly and Alice opened her mouth to protest but with the witch, the cart disappeared as though it had never been there in the first place. Without the support, Alice hit the floor, thudding awkwardly onto the cobbles, managing to graze her arm on a jagged piece of stone.
An unfamiliar face came into view above her. “Oi-oi – do you know what you look like, mate?” The man laughed.
Alice scrambled to her feet but the seizing pain and instability made her stumble and she fell against a shop front, bracing herself against the wall. She looked down at her feet, astounded to find her toes poking through the fronts of her shoes. But they weren’t her toes. They weren’t her feet. They weren’t her legs. She looked at her hands: Merlin, they weren’t hers either. The witch hurriedly pulled off her shoes and darted down a side alley, following its length until she was in the quiet. She pressed her back against the cool stone and took a few steadying breaths, her panting tone deeper, as deep as the grunt.
“What’s happened to me?” She uttered, running her hand across her face.
Her hand was enormous, she registered blithely. Only as an afterthought did that concern her but she was more interested in her nose, her firm jaw and, Merlin, her voice. She grasped at her throat, trying to rationalise, trying to make sense of this. Her eyes squeezed shut as dismay poured into her, flooded into her veins. She shook her head and dropped her hand before reaching into her pocket for her wand. It felt small and impractical in her large paw and she did an experimental flutter, transfiguring a nearby bin into a dove which fluttered away. It still worked, at least, even if the dove was an ugly shade of recycling green.
She left the side alley, walking determinedly, albeit barefoot, down through Diagon Alley, somehow blending with the crowd. She needed to find Ollie. She needed him to identify what had happened and then – for this was the crux of the matter – reverse whatever it was. She’d never imagined she was allergic to lilies. The funny looks she was getting made her think she was, though, and her clothes were increasingly growing uncomfortable. She hadn’t put on any weight – though maybe this was part of the swelling. She hoped she wouldn’t pass out from any of the effects. The last thing she needed to do was go to St. Mungo’s when she had all that work to do.
Alice burst into The Fried Newt, the place they’d decided they wanted to try that afternoon. There were no newts on the menu, mind. The waiter at the podium looked up nonchalantly but immediately her eyes widened to gargantuan proportions. She managed to keep her cool as Alice and her broken shoes clumsily made her way up to her, fluttering out her words – something about a reservation under Connolly. Seats for two. A booth or something. By the window? The waiter clarified. Alice exclaimed the affirmative and the waiter gestured across the restaurant. Alice half-ran.
“Ollie!” She exclaimed, falling into the chair opposite the writer. “You have to help me,” she gushed at him. “Please. I just … I was looking at flowers and I was going to get some for work and I touched the pollen and then I was in all this pain and now I’m all swollen and I’m terrified and look at my shoes!” She dropped them on the table mournfully, covering her oddly chiselled face with her scarily large hands, running off a dismayed sob. She wasn’t swollen, though. And none of what she’d become was really that odd. It was quite handsome, actually, minus the dress. But that was it: handsome, not beautiful.