Tick… tick… tick… tick…
It was strange, but Oogie found comfort in the soft noise the stopwatch in his breast pocket made in the silence. Without it, he had no assurance that time was passing. How long had he been sitting within these four walls, staring at numbers and parchments on his long mahogany desk as the outside world slowly went to bed around him? Without the ticking of his watch, he might think that time had frozen and he was stuck in this silent existence—poised and coiled like a predator in the shadows where few dared to wander. Oogie was a nocturnal creature, rising from his grave just as the sun dipped low over the horizon, most active in the dark. He hadn’t meant to become like this, but it had become his routine many years ago when he took control of this wretched city. He had no business being awake during the day anymore.
He leaned back in his chair, dark eyes surveying the files laid out on his desk. Among them were pages from a journal—observations. There was also a personnel file watermarked in the top corner with the mark of St. Mungos, as well as dozens of pictures of the same blonde woman scattered about the pages. He took a breath, a curl of fragrant white smoke swirling like fog over his lips and into the air. His mind was brought back to a report Rohan had given him the day before. It seemed that their potions store was running low. Not the medical potions, that order had been fulfilled just last week. It was there poisons that needed replenishing. Oogie had a few potioneers working under him, but his last poison expert had gotten caught with his hand in the coffer and needed to be put down for his trouble. That left a job opening, and considering how important silent killers were to his business, Oogie decided it was time to fill it.
Oogie stood up from his desk, taking his suit jacket from the back of his chair and putting it on. It was about two in the morning, well into the night. Most people would be in bed by now, and the people who weren’t were likely to be in the same business as him. He’d probably waited long enough. As Oogie buttoned his jacket, and there was a loud crack! as he disappeared in a flash of smoke. Suddenly St. Mungos loomed against the cloudy sky in front of him. The brick and mortar gave it a very sturdy feel, which Oogie liked. Oogie walked around the building to a small door on the side wall. He tapped the door once with his knuckle, and a second later it opened to him. The man in healer’s robes looked at him and stepped aside as he walked in.
“Good evening, Mannix. Slow night?”
“Seems to be, sir. Unless you plan on sending some poor bastard my way later.” The tall Irish man closed the door behind Oogie. “The Doc is in the middle of an autopsy right now, but I can let her know you’re here.”
Oogie waved his hand at the mention of the ill-tempered morbiwizard. “I’m not here to see Dr. Holliday tonight, but thank you,” he said, as they walked down the dimly lit hall. They came to an intersection in the corridor and Oogie turned to the other man. “Thank you Mannix, those doors are always a little tricky to deal with. That will be all. Apologies for taking you from your work.”
Mannix tipped his head. “Not a problem, sir.” With that he went in the opposite direction, his large shoulders filling the doorways as he walked through them.
Oogie made his way up to the third floor, pushing open the double doors to the Plants & Poisoning ward. He could hear the light tapping of his black wingtipped shoes echoing in the empty hallway as he came up to the front desk. Whoever was supposed to be manning this desk was gone, which he supposed was convenient because he didn’t feel like explaining to some poor nurse or trainee why he was here only to obliviate them a second later. He lingered at the desk, reading a list of rooms on a paper on the other side. Her office was…
He looked up when he heard someone walking down the hall, greeting him. Ah. How nice of her to meet me here.
The woman’s name was Varvara Stepanovna Zakharova. Russian. 37. She was among the six local potioneers he had investigated for this job position, but the only one who met his standards. She was a skilled potioneer, but more that, it seemed she was quite masterful with poisons-- top-tier, if her body of work was even half true. And she wasn’t without her vices. Oogie always preferred to have employees who specialized working with him, especially if they weren’t weighed down by something as ephemeral and petty as morals. Poisons, by their nature, fell right in the grey area. There was always a place for someone like that in his business.
“Pain,” Oogie repeated, the black and white teeth on the sides of his mouth slithering up the ridges of his face into an inky smile. “No. No pain at all, I’m afraid.” He folded his bony white fingers behind his back. “In fact, I’m here to seek an audience with you, Ms. Stepanovna. My name is Oogie.” He dipped his inked head in a half bow. “I have a business proposal that you may be interested in hearing. Perhaps somewhere more… private?”