Lost in London
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Lost in London

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Lost in London Empty Lost in London

Post by Guest Fri Apr 30, 2010 11:53 pm

Rain was lightly hitting the window of the express train that had thundered along the rails towards London for the last hour or so. Phaedra’s silver eyes were following the water droplets dancing down from the top window pane down to the bottom. She had one leg slung over the other and a book was resting in her lap. She’d been reading it for the entire journey up until the rain began to fall. Phaedra was determined to find out everything she could about the country she was moving to. She had spent a lot of time in Spain and France but not an extended amount of time in the two countries. She wanted to permanently live in Britain and begin a new life of her own creation; not one ruled by her parents. She was excited but she was also worried. Moving to another country was a big thing for her and moving to one that had some serious political issues was even more disillusioning. She was scared she’d do something stupid but she knew she’d get a good grip on their culture once she lived it for a while.

The train begin to slow and the pace was lessoning. Finally the train pulled to a stop in the station and the patter of rain could be heard over head as it hit the tin shelter that had been made. Phaedra got up and heard the train’s breaks go on. She glanced out of the window and saw some people hugging on the platform. She looked sad for a few seconds as she watched the exchanged but quickly shook herself out of it; reminding herself that she’d find the companionship that humans sought in each other. She’d already promised that she’d be a little more social but she wasn’t sure how much. She was still getting used to being in the real world. It had been a year since she was safely tucked away in her school and things had changed dramatically. She just needed to immerse herself in something that she loved.

Phaedra got up, making sure to put her book on the seat beside her and reached up to take her duffle bags out of the overhead compartment. She put them down on the seat she had been sitting on and slipped her book into the zippy pocket of the first one she put her hand to. Phaedra put one on each shoulder and grasped the other two in each hand. She walked to the open doors of the train and stepped out onto the platform. She looked around and bit her lip. No one was around which meant she was pretty much stuck if she couldn’t find her way out of the station. Phaedra looked around. Okay, so the platform was called Platform 9¾. That was fine. She could deal with that. How would she get back onto the non-magical platform though?

Sighing, Phaedra watched as the train left the station to fetch other travellers or commuters. There went her ride back to Dover. Phae looked back, her eyes taking in every detail of the station before her. She decided it best to actually plan a course of action before she attempted anything stupid. Phaedra walked over to one of the benches and deposited her duffle bags on the green wood which didn’t seem to welcome the weight of them. Phaedra put her hands on her hips and looked around again. She did wonder why the platform was empty but her clothing must have scared everyone away. She didn’t really see what was wrong with it but she wasn’t exactly the style guru at that moment in time.

She was wearing a grey, baggy shirt which was definitely two sizes too big even with the added bagginess. She had a blue blouse on top, left open and a pair of high waisted trousers on with some strange colourful print on them. Then lastly she had some lace up shoes checked with random bits of colour. She looked like she’d fallen out of a bad eighties movie. Either that or she was some kind of colour-blind artist. One or the two. Phaedra didn’t particularly care though. She was comfortable and that was all the mattered. The only problem was that she had to get a room somewhere and she didn’t really know where. She hadn’t thought this all out further than actually getting to the country.

Phaedra bit her lip and pushed the duffle bags along the bench. She sat down and felt the bench groan. It really didn’t like the duffle bags but it didn’t look particularly strong anyway now she thought about it. She looked around again before pulling her book back out from her bag. She smoothed it out and bent the spine a little before beginning to read. She had no idea what she was going to do but she figured it was best to distract herself and worry about it later. If crunch came to crunch she’d have to try and Apparate somewhere in London. The only thing she could think of was that big clock but she doubted that she could get to that. It would all just have to be based on luck then it seemed.


Last edited by Phaedra A. Mariatos on Mon May 03, 2010 8:38 pm; edited 1 time in total
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Lost in London Empty Re: Lost in London

Post by Calvin S. Ransom Sat May 01, 2010 1:38 am

Calvin shrugged into his brown jacket as he listened to his voice messages on his phone,
holding the small muggle device between his shoulder and his ear. He fumbled with the
zipper and pulled it up half-way before taking the cell phone in his hand again. “You need
to catch the earliest train or you’ll be late,” the voice of Calvin’s employer spoke clearly in
the message, giving him the information he would need for his next assignment. A muggle
had witnessed a brutal murder by magic and Calvin’s job was to come up with some witty
story that would explain why some man had come up to another man with a stick held in
hand, that suddenly produced a bright, green light, that killed him. If he failed to convince
the witness of his story, an Auror from the ministry would be sent out to erase the muggle’s
memory of any events during the past three months. That was something Calvin would not
allow to happen to an innocent citizen.

He closed his phone and stuffed it in his pockets, fallowed by his hands, and walked out
of the front door of his (and his roommate’s) apartment into the rain. Calvin shivered when
an icy wind tossed his hair and a few of his papers back. “No!” he hissed and snatched for
the file, but missed, causing it to fall to the rain-drenched sidewalk. “Perfect,” he mumbled to
himself as he pulled the piece of paper up off of the ground and shook it off in a futile attem-
pt to dry it. The tiny, printed text was smeared and he knew he had no other choice but to
throw it away; it was nothing but useless, soggy paper anymore.

“Twenty minutes,” Calvin stated when he checked his watch for the time, he had ten minutes
to make it to the train station, which was plenty of time if he ran. He looked down at his sne-
akers to make sure the laces were tied before darting forward, running as fast as his feet
would carry him through the puddles and potholes, to get to King’s Cross.

An angry man in his car slammed his fist down on his steering wheal, sending a loud, blaring
honk through the air. Calvin jumped in surprise and fell to his knees in the middle of the cross-
walk with wide eyes as more people began to honk. “Sorry! I truly am!” he called to them, hold-
ing his hands up defensively as he clutched his paperwork and fistfuls of his jacket tighter to
his chest. He straightened up and made his way over to the sidewalk quickly. Well, at least the
rain was easing up, and at least he was there.

Calvin read the large sign hanging from the roof of the train station and exhaled, he had time,
the huge clock that hung there on the wall told him so. He shook his head rapidly, sending rain
drops everywhere, and continued on, grinning to himself. “I have ten minutes yet,” he muttered
to himself, looking around for a bench to sit on. As far as he could see, only he and one or two
other people were there, which surprised him considering the fact that it was the middle of the
weak and people usually had places to be at that time. He spotted a rather old looking bench not
far from where he stood and nodded, one other person was sitting there, but he was sure she
wouldn’t mind.
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Lost in London Empty Re: Lost in London

Post by Guest Sat May 01, 2010 9:29 pm

It wasn’t that the theory of Muggle-Magical relations wasn’t an interesting read; it was just that most of it was based on fairytales and wishes by both parties. She did understand why the Wizarding world in Greece was kept separate though. It was only the mainland they couldn’t charm because the area was too big. All of the islands were charmed so Muggles couldn’t see wizards or witches and vice versa. This did make quite a bit of trouble for the witches and wizards who were Muggleborn but they were taken from their homes and their parents were Obliviated. It was all very crude but oddly effective. No one wanted someone with lesser blood to know nothing about Pureblood-Wizarding culture. It probably explained why they were only accepted into school when they were eleven. No doubt they needed the extra years to refine, tame and practice some of their magic as well as learn about the Wizarding world. No one was underprepared otherwise both their foster families and they themselves would have hell to pay.

She was very fortunate but she could never see it that way. She was the pale girl – the one as white as snow – the one whose real genetics had been speculated about since birth. She was no Greek as far as they were concerned. That was fine by her, though. She could live with not having dark skin, dark hair and chestnut eyes. She would have rather been snow than ... trees? Maybe if her brother dyed his hair green then perhaps yes, trees, but she was definitely no Greek – she was a tourist attraction; not exactly what her parents wanted in a child. Perhaps it would have been better if she was some strange child that had been put there by Zeus or something equally insane. Phaedra doubted it would have made much difference though apart from more tourists coming to visit the demi-god version of herself.

Phaedra snapped her book shut despite the protests of the worn spine. She’d read the book a few times, trying to understand some of the discussions inside, but she hated when dark thoughts crept up on her like they just had. It was cruel. She tucked the book back into her bag and wondered how she was going to get a bookshelf that would fit all of her books. She’d been carrying around 1,000 since she’d left Greece and had bought quite a few more during her travels. That was probably why the bench was complaining so. She didn’t exactly weigh a lot but probably enough to give the bench a hard time. Scowling a little to herself, Phae pushed the duffels off of the side of the bench, onto the floor by her feet.

Why didn’t she just stay in Dover and do something else? Why did she have to get a train? If she was honest it was her curiosity and thirst for knowledge that got the better of her. It was that thirst and curiosity that put her here on the platform on a bench that felt like it would break any second. Things weren’t going well but they were better than they could have been. She could have been in Greece somewhere being married off. By all accounts things were going better than she had thought but right now things seemed pretty grim.

She looked up and saw someone actually on the platform. She was pulled up short by this; a few minutes ago the place had been empty. She supposed the rain had stopped people from arriving but she was glad someone was there. He was definitely older than her and very, very English looking which meant he’d probably been out of Hogwarts for a while. He was probably used to the real world and seasoned by it. She was twenty-two and was still getting shocked by how rude and inconsiderate some people were. She especially had problems with the French during her stay in Lyon but she soon asserted herself after a lot of yelling in multiple languages. Most of those in the area had backed off after her outburst and all she could hear in the small tavernas was “don’t anger the Greek girl, she’s an angry one.”

Phaedra took a different book out of the darker green duffel and set it on her lap. She figured that reading up on the conspicuous capital would have been more practical than grabbing a map and stuffing it into her pocket, only to lose it later. She’d wasted money that she couldn’t afford to waste and it irked her slightly. Why she hadn’t spent time learning about England and London in particular prior to her departure from Laganas she had no idea. This irritated her as well. Not only would she firstly have to escape the platform but secondly she’d have to find that department store that hid the location of St. Mungo’s and apply for a job. She truly had not thought things through and was starting to get angry with the slight impulsive streak that seemed to run through her personality like a delta that joined onto the main flow of the river seemingly from no where.

She smiled at the man looking her way and gestured with a pale hand to the space beside her that he could take up if he so wished. She pushed the duffels under the bench with her feet and opened up her book. It was an encyclopaedia of Muggle technology and one she particularly enjoyed. It was charmed to be weightless and it would update every time there was a technological breakthrough in the Muggle world. Phaedra didn’t know why they called non-magical folk Muggles but perhaps it was best not to question it. It just made them seem like little creatures which they really weren’t. They were genius’ – almost to the point of lunacy. She admired them and their advancements. They used their science as a safety net because Magic was not something they could manipulate themselves. Instead they did things equally magical. Phaedra smiled at the man again and her eyes drifted down to her book and to the page that held the details of a new speaking device by... Apple? How odd. What a name.


Last edited by Phaedra A. Mariatos on Mon May 03, 2010 8:38 pm; edited 1 time in total
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Lost in London Empty Re: Lost in London

Post by Calvin S. Ransom Sun May 02, 2010 6:21 pm

Calvin walked forward when the women gestured for him to come and sit, his usual,
dorky smile on his face. As he neared he could see her features more clearly, and
found himself examining her with interest; her hair was a shade of blonde he had ne-
ver seen before, and her skin tone was different then most in London, perhaps she
wasn’t from England? Or maybe she was a shifter who chose such distinguishing
features to be unique.

“Greetings,” he said and sifted on the spot, standing there for a moment before sitting
down on the bench, which groaned when he took a seat; Calvin was an oddly thin man
and hardly weighed much at all, but when both it was a rather old looking bench to begin
with, and was probably quite a few years old.

He dropped his many folders and loose sheets of paper on his lap and leaned against
the back of the chair. He looked down at the sleeves of his favorite jacket, there were
droplets of water clinging to the fabric from the rain he had had to run through just mo-
ments prior. He frowned and shook one arm at a time, sending the rain drops flying off
of him. Calvin nodded to himself and folded his arms over his chest awkwardly as he
waited for the minutes to pass by.

Going over his story in his head, Calvin stared at the wall in front of him and sighed; he
hated lying, he wasn’t any good at it and everyone who he had ever lied to knew that,
but these lies kept innocent muggles from having there minds swept of all memories
from the past month or so. It was an easy enough job if you were someone who could
handle telling lies, but if you didn’t possess that talent, you were pretty much doomed.

Calvin clapped his hands together a couple times and looked around at nothing in parti-
cular, he usually tried to avoid eye contact when he was around a stranger, it was just
one of his habits. He noticed the women was reading something and couldn’t contain his
curiosity. He leaned sideways a couple inches and took a peek at the page she was re-
ading from. Calvin’s eyes lit up when he spotted words such as “Apple” and “Technology”;
his favorites out of all of the different products Muggles used had to be technology, the
systems were just so advanced and fascinating. He opened his mouth to state his opin-
ion but stopped when he realized how nosy he would sound.

He brought his legs up and crossed them, resting his elbows on his knees, and then his
chin on his knuckles. A man with a raspy voice announced that Calvin’s train would be
arriving in five more minutes, just as Calvin began searching for his train ticket in his stack
of papers.
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Lost in London Empty Re: Lost in London

Post by Guest Sun May 02, 2010 9:00 pm

The book repeatedly called this item a ‘Mobile’ or a ‘Phone’ and Phaedra was beginning to realise that it was a newer version of some of the many ‘Phones’ the Muggles had produced in the past. She knew Nikos used to have an Apple product but she didn’t know if he’d owned a phone specifically made by them. She knew it played music but that was about it. She wasn’t that familiar with Muggle technology but seeing as Britain wasn’t put into magical/non-magical segregation like the Greek islands were she thought it best if she learned a little about Muggle culture. Plus, she’d gotten the encyclopaedia a while back and it was about time she took advantage of its brilliance. She could probably have a small conversation about it but it couldn’t be too in-depth. She’d spent a lot more time on the science of things, not on what the science and brain power produced. This just showed really how much time she had on her hands while travelling. Well, she hadn’t had much time in Italy because she was too busy trying to get away from Greece but she’d spent quite a bit of time reading there; just not as much as she had in the other countries.

She looked up at the sound of someone’s voice and she realised it was the man that she had invited to sit with her. He had a sweet voice; a kind one and it was nice to hear. He did have a strange smile on his face though but it suited him. She smiled softly and her hand went to the line she had been reading, her index finger marking where she had been. “Kali- uh...Good Morning.” She said awkwardly once she’d caught herself speaking Greek. Her accent was quite thick. She didn’t really want to be speaking in her native tongue on top of the accent. It wasn’t that she didn’t want anyone to know about her place of origin but she doubted that this man knew how to speak Greek. She wondered if she’d had been pleasantly surprised if she went on to say Kalimera but she doubted it. The most the British ever learned in the way of languages was French or Spanish and occasionally German. She knew all of those but she wasn’t one to boast. She needed to learn it as she needed to be able to communicate with anyone from Europe. She knew a few other languages but she didn’t have a huge language base.

Phaedra turned the page of the book and a large illustration of the mechanics inside the phone appeared. She smiled a little to herself and began to read the annotations to see how it worked. The screen was apparently touchable or something. She guessed that just meant you could navigate without a number pad. That made things easier no doubt but she didn’t that it would be so easy if you were to drop it into a glass of water or a puddle by accident. Phaedra felt something begin to vibrate against her ankle and she looked down. It was either one of her Care of Magical Creatures books beginning to wake up or that stubborn little kitten from Lyon had stowed away in one of her duffels. She expected both. No doubt the book would start to attack the poor unsuspecting animal soon and she’d have to rescue it. But until then she’d just wait and let both cat and book purr to their hearts content.

She felt the man slide over a little to look at her book. She didn’t know how or why but she’d always been particularly sensitive to people reading or looking over her shoulder at something. It was probably why she liked to read alone. She hated the scrutiny she always used to get from her Professors and her parents. She got it all of the time, on her essays, on a little bit of research – anything. That really put her on edge. She hated it. It wasn’t a phobia or anything. She liked spending time looking up the phobias for her fears; it was fun. But no, this wasn’t a phobia it was more like something that made the blonde hairs on the back of her neck stick up.

She looked over the man and smiled a little shyly. She watched him search through the papers on his lap; obviously looking for something. He had a lot of paper with him yet no bag. She religiously carried her quilted messenger bag. Although right now it was in one of the duffels so this time didn’t really count. But she never went anywhere without it. Usually it didn’t match what she was wearing but she had an odd clothing style anyway. It was probably because she catered for the sun, not for the cold weather England had but she was glad it was getting closer to the summer. That meant there would be a bit more warmth around in the air.

She saw something flutter out from the papers and land on the floor by the man’s feet. She put her thumb in her book and flipped the cover over so it was closed but the page still kept. Phae leaned down and plucked the piece of paper off of the floor. She realised it was a train ticket, probably something he’d need later. She straightened back up and held it out to the man. “Are you looking for this?” she asked, looking down at the ticket and then back up at the man’s face. She still didn’t get why he didn’t have a bag. Shuffling through the papers like that....it made him look horribly disorganised but in a sweet way. She smiled a little and opened her book again with her other hand so she could continue to read it once he had taken the ticket from her.
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Lost in London Empty Re: Lost in London

Post by Calvin S. Ransom Tue May 11, 2010 5:15 pm


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.
Calvin S. Ransom
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Lost in London Empty Re: Lost in London

Post by Guest Thu May 13, 2010 9:45 pm

Was that easy to see through her? Evidently it was. Although Phaedra had made no move to correct his assumption at first after a seconds of thought she nodded slowly. She put her bookmark into her book, marking the page and closed it with a small snap. She wasn’t sure what made it so obvious. She thought that if she was in England then she could blend in instead of sticking out like a sore thumb in Greece. Obviously that wasn’t the case. She couldn’t blend in anywhere but she wasn’t sure what made her features so distinct. That was what aggravated her the most. She liked the way she looked but it was annoying when people automatically assumed she was from elsewhere. The French did it and so did the Italians but she could mask her accent there. Here she could not and that frustrated her even more. “No.” She said finally. “I am from Greece.”

His second comment caught her off guard. Phaedra looked down and saw her bag moving from side to side in awkward movements. She put her book down between them on the bench and reached down to open up the duffel. The little kitten from Lyon sprang from inside and jumped up onto the bench. Phaedra hastily closed the bag before the books started escaping and lifted the kitten onto her lap. She smoothed the fur and the animal instantly began to purr from the attention. She smiled a little to herself and scratched the cat between its ears. She had no idea how it got into her bag but she was sort of glad it did in the end. The animal glanced up at the man beside her and she smirked, clearly the kitten was uncomfortable around other people but it seemed harmless enough and he was deemed ‘appropriate’ after a few hesitant sniffs.

She nodded to him when he took the ticket and smiled softly. She wasn’t sure where he was going but it wasn’t as if it really had anything to do with her. Phaedra smoothed the fur down the cat’s back and picked her book up. She opened it back up on the page she’d been reading before and soon found the line she’d left off at. She wasn’t really holding up her end of the conversation well but she wasn’t a conversationalist – she wasn’t a gossip monger, she was a researcher and, basically, a bookworm. She hated having to really converse with people. She found the whole meeting process horribly awkward. The only one she truly felt safe and happy around was Nikos and he was...how many miles away? A fair few no doubt.

She heard the sound of a train rolling into the station and a few people got off of the platform, making their way to a wall. Phaedra turned slightly and watched as they disappeared through it. She sussed out that it was probably the barrier that lead onto the Muggle platform. That definitely saved her a little bit of worrying. At least she knew now she’d be able to successfully get out of Kings Cross in all due time. Phaedra felt the bench shift and looked up to see the man run after the train, shouting out and asking it to stop. It was all in vain though, Phaedra could see that already.

She bit her lip and watched as he made his way back over. He looked sullen, defeated and Phaedra couldn’t help but question why. Trains, although important, were always coming and going. He could always take the next one. But she didn’t question it. She just smiled apologetically and closed her book once more. “I’m sorry. Perhaps you could get the next one?” she suggested.
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Lost in London Empty Re: Lost in London

Post by Calvin S. Ransom Sat May 29, 2010 7:39 pm



“N-no, I needed to be on that train in order to get to the Ministry on time and now the Mini-
ster is going to rip my paycheck in half and throw it away, and kill me!” he croaked, bury-
ing his face in his hands. His brown hair fell over the back of his hands, hiding every pa-
rt of his face that his hands weren’t already. He had his legs pulled up to his chest as he
sat there on the old wooden bench, his papers lying beside him, a few of the papers es-
caping to litter the train station. They were important files; information about muggles who
had witnessed magic-related killings, along with letters that he was to deliver to several
different aurors within the Ministry when he was to arrive- though, he wouldn’t be arriv-
ing as scheduled anymore.

It wasn’t until after listening to the silence for a while did Calvin realize he had just talked
about the Ministry of Magic out loud when a muggle was sitting right next to him- or, at le-
ast, he assumed she was a muggle. “Oh gosh darn it! WTG” he scolded himself, dropp-
ing his hands to his lap to reveal his face once more. He looked frazzled, “Forget I said
anything, please, or I will lose my job for sure,” he begged, pleading the women with hi-
s eyes to keep his mistake a secret.
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Lost in London Empty Re: Lost in London

Post by Guest Sun May 30, 2010 2:00 am

Phaedra raised a slender eyebrow. Wasn’t the Ministry of Magic meant to be a secret? That was another thing she had yet to read up on although it hadn’t really occurred to her that she needed to. That was completely amiss of her though as well as neglectful and she made a mental note to read up on them a bit later. She closed her book and put it down beside her. The kitten meowed and Phaedra ran a slender hand through its thick fur before glancing at the man who seemed genuinely worried about losing his job. She didn’t know if the Minister was as fierce as the man portrayed him but Phaedra didn’t doubt that she’d find out eventually. Phaedra scratched the kitten under its chin and the small animal began to purr. Her eyes followed a piece of paper dancing in the light breeze that drifted around the platform. She shook her head and glanced at the man. Was he normally this worried? It was infectious though and Phaedra found herself getting a little bit antsy for a reason unknown to her.

She laughed lightly and smirked at him. “Are you not fond of Obliviating people?” she asked pleasantly. If he didn’t want to lose his job then he shouldn’t really have been talking about Magical Organisations to just anyone. She could have been non-magical or some kind of exiled half-breed looking for revenge. Although granted she was neither but it was a possibility. He definitely needed to be more careful if he didn’t want the Muggle world to find out about magic. “But nether less I will keep your ‘secret’” she smirked. “Although, the Ministry of Magic isn’t the biggest secret Britain keeps as it is widely known by the magical community unless one has been living under some sort of stone...” she said thoughtfully. “But that is neither here nor there. I will not tell a soul that you cannot keep your tongue around strangers Mister...?”
Anonymous
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Lost in London Empty Re: Lost in London

Post by Calvin S. Ransom Sun May 30, 2010 3:04 am


“Thank you, you wonderful person!” Calvin exclaimed, throwing his arms around the wo-
men, suffocating her in a hug- it didn’t really register in his mind that he could be scaring
the women with his enthusiasm, for he was usually slow in that area. Being so close to
her now he could see clearly just how blonde her hair was; it was almost a white! Her
skin was very pale, but it suited her well. He blushed and released her, one of his dorky
grins visible on his lips, “You’re a witch. That would have been good to know a second
ago,” he admitted with an awkward laugh; it sounded as if he had choked on a squeaky
toy, though he usually did sound that way. Calvin shifted slightly so that he was sitting
straight once more, his legs stretched out before him. He put a hand on his forehead, a
stress headache was brewing there, he could feel it, and he knew nothing would get it
to go away other than a nice muggle videogame or an hour or so of admiring his
collection of muggle artifacts.

Calvin loved nothing more than his collection. It consisted of various things that he loved
most about the none-magical folk, such as a vinyl records, comic books, old computer ha-
rd drives, bottle caps, and more until he had successfully filled a whole bedroom & a sma-
ll closet. Calvin’s collection irritated his roommate to no end, but he had let him keep it
nonetheless. Calvin would lose his collection if he lost his job. The idea caused the dull
headache to transform into a throbbing pain beneath his skull.

“I am not usually so unwise,” Calvin said in a rather defensive tone, but when stopped to
think about, he realized he was wrong and decided to correct himself, “OK, so maybe I a-
m, but I don’t usually reveal the Ministry of Magic to muggles- in fact, my job is to prevent,
well, not prevent”- Calvin looked at the women for a moment and realized he was babbli-
ng- “never mind,” he finished with an overdramatic nod of his head. “Calvin Ransom, well,
actually, its Calvin Secundus Ransom, but you can call me Calvin, or Cal- my friends call
me Cal,” he replied, smiling.
Calvin S. Ransom
Calvin S. Ransom
Graduate
Graduate

Number of posts : 389
Occupation : Ministry Member - Muggle Dept.

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