"You should go, you know," Solstice said. "Charlie Weasley's still doing some splendid work with dragons there. My family has a summer home in that region, just close enough to hear the roars of the dragons and see their flames at night. I hear Charlie has done some apprentices in the summer for older students who do well with Caring for Magical Creatures. It's not for the faint of heart, though."
Well, the truth was, it was a lovely property that her grandfather had gotten for almost nothing because, she'd been told, muggles that lived there,could hear the dragons,were scared out of their wits, and refused to live there. Her grandfather was fine with letting them think he was a dotty old man. Still, it was a lovely place in the mountains, and it was a place that Solstice loved.
She led the way to the back of the clinic where almost the entire back storage area had been changed into a spotlessly clean animal clinic. She had an area almost right inside the door for making potions, and another for tending to the animals directly, with surgical instruments, an old hospital surgical table pressed into service now for animals, a whole cabinet full of bandages, splints and other supplies, and a well stocked inventory of all sorts of large animal tack, blankets, bedding, hay, straw, and food. She had a couple of small aquariums that stood empty, and a large terrarium that had a couple of newts, a large toad, and three turtles. The newts were swimming in the little pond, and the turtles were sunning under the warming light.
She glanced up to the top of the file cabinet and eyed a sad little bowtruckle still sitting by himself atop of a medical file cabinet near her potions table. He'd been with her for awhile now. He was sitting on a stack of books, with his face in his hands. The little fellow didn't need a cage. He just hung out in the clinic since she'd rescued him.
"Oh, come on, Mate," she said affectionately to the shy bowtruckle. "Cheer up. I'll find you another cherry tree. I promise. Look what I found for you." She opened a basket on the worktable and produced a perfectly ripe cherry for him. His eyes lit up a little and she handed it to him. He took a tentative bite and decided it was tasty. He looked at her like she might be an exception to his rule on humans and went back to eating the cherry. She smiled, glad he was finally eating something. "I knew you'd like them. They're good and sweet. There are more where those came from."
"He likes cherry trees, but some woodman cut his down for furniture," Solstice said. "He's been very depressed. I need to find him a decent sized, healthy cherry tree before the trees lose all their leaves or he'll be with me all winter, I fear."
She had a small cage of doxys that were dealing with various wounds from fighting with each other. She had a couple of blast ended skrewts, a golden snidget with a foot injury, a couple of hinkypunks, a youthful hippogriff and an elegant Abraxan--all amongst some nonmagical creatures and familiars.
"Feel free to look around. Just don't put your fingers in any of the cages," she said.
"I'd be careful about getting that crup if I were you," Solstice said. "He'll eat your jumpers, your trainers, your wellies, and anything else he can get his hands on--including your crab and your pygmy puffs. Crups sometimes have an issue with needing to eat everything that isn't nailed to the floor or the walls. They need bloody good training, those do. They're lovely pets--if you can honestly make them listen to you. Its one of the issues that Hogwarts don't let them in, I suspect. Cats, toads, rats, they're relatively much better behaved. Owls can be not just postal agents but also fierce companions if they're trained right."
She opened a pair of large wooden carriage house doors at the back of the room to reveal a large outdoor corral where the Abraxan and the hippogriff were outside enjoying the sunshine.
"Everyone gets a chance for some sunshine--unless its just too bloody cold to go out," she said.
A huge horned own flew in the carriage doors with a bundle of mail and dropped it on the potions worktable before landing on a perch nearby.
"Thank you, Jal," she said. "That boy's my owl. Had him since I was in school. He's brilliant, and he's definitely a fierce hunter. He's also a good friend."