A look of confusion crossed Calvin’s face. He had already guessed that this women wasn’t
from around London, but when she almost greeted him in another language, well, that was
quiet a shocker. Calvin had never been outside of London, for he hadn’t the money or time to
travel, but he had always wanted to, and so, he found himself interested in this women and
where she had come front- perhaps it was just his curiosity getting the best of him once mo-
re, “Not from around here, huh?” he asked, crossing an imaginary line that probably shouldn’t
have been crossed. He was making himself sound very nosy without actually meaning to.
“Looks like your bag is hungry,” Calvin said with another of his lopsided grins, he could be su-
ch an oblivious fool sometimes. He noticed the women’s unease when he looked over at his
book, he had forgotten that some people hated that- which was a pet peeve that Calvin had
never really understood. He sent an apologetic look her way and looked back down at this
papers. He really did need to get more organized. He ran his fingers along the corners, caus-
ing the papers to shuffle, making the same sound as a deck of cards being shuffled. He sigh-
ed, he was feeling a little impatient; if he were to do anything wrong today, he would only an-
ger the Minister further, and after the last fiasco he had caused, that would be a very, very
bad thing
Calvin hadn’t even noticed that he had dropped his ticket, and therefore, was extremely grate-
ful when the women handed it to him. “Yes! Thank you, that would have been a disaster!” he
exclaimed, fallowed by a bit of laughter. He had a rather bubbly personality, but sometimes, it
appeared as if he had had too many cups of coffee, and then had added extra sugar to his ce-
real. The thought of food made him hungry; he hadn’t had enough time to eat breakfast that mo-
rning due to the phone call he had received, and had had to rush out the door only seconds
after his alarm clock went off. He rubbed his stomach, he would be able to grab a bite to eat
once he arrived at the Ministry,- which would be only after he sold his story to the eye witness
- he just had to wait until then.
Humming, Calvin looked at the ticket in his hands, studying every aspect about it. He was bored,
clearly. He got so bored so very fast, and yet, the smallest things could catch his interest- whi-
ch was rather confusing if you thought about it long enough. He flipped the small piece of paper
over in his fingers a couple of times, just thinking to himself.
If he had been paying more attention to his surroundings, he wouldn’t have ended up missing
his train, but, in order to change that, a time machine was needed, or a time turner- which were
two things that Calvin did not have. The whistle had blown, and he hadn’t heard it for he had be-
en distracted. Only when Calvin’s train started up and the wheels began to push the large hunk
of metal forward, did he realize what was going on.
“Wait!” He screamed, jumping up, dropping several sheets of paper in the process. He darted
forward, running beside the train as if there was actually a possibility of still making it on the
train. It accelerated, and before he knew it, the train was too far away for him to see. “no, no,
no, ooooh, no!” he whined, dropped to his knees, looking utterly broken. “The Minister is going
to have my head!” he cried in a shrill voice, looked up at the ceiling, trying to think of some oth-
er way to get there on time. Apparation was not an option; Calvin was terrified of apparating
ever since his father told him about the time someone lost their hand because they didn’t do it
right. Besides, even if he wanted to apparate, he had never actually learned how.
Calvin stood up, his head hung low, papers clutched to his chest. He walked back over to the
bench, dragging his feet loudly as he went.