mid january 2002
Muggle participants in a bar brawl required obliviation due to wizard’s use of both the jelly-legs jinx and his fists. Wizard required treatment to stop laughing, not our Department.Edith reread the description in the middle of the form for the tenth or eleventh time. She had inherited the paperwork from a coworker who had just left on maternity leave, so she hadn’t participated in this particular obliviation. She just got to read about it and do all the tedious work about it. And read about it again. She had, rather recently, been in a similar situation. Of course, Edith had only used her fists (she clenched and unclenched her right hand subconsciously as she read), didn’t even have her wand on her. Only the muggle police officers were concerned with her, and the muggles involved weren’t really any worse for wear. Anyone that was familiar with Edith’s lack of upper body strength could see just how little damage she could do.
She reread the sentence again before setting the parchment back on her desk and sliding it away from her, drumming her fingers to fill the silence. It wasn’t silent though, not really. It was considerably more quiet in the office than it had been in December, the month long Christmas prank party extravaganza having been wrapped up after the holidays, but Edith’s mind was filled to the brim with thoughts as she jumped from one to the next.
Twenty muggles in that pub. Edith sighed again. Patsy just loooved when she got to obliviate large groups of muggles; Edith could hardly believe she would take maternity leave and miss more opportunities to do so.
This case would have been one of those that Edith might have ‘conveniently’ not concentrated hard enough on her obliviation. Of course, she was always precise enough to only mess with the magical memories in question, but for some of the more harmless cases, she left in one or two details, nothing more than the residue of a really fantastic daydream.
Those muggles in the pub probably lost their memories of the football match they had been watching. Patsy was careless like that, had no respect for the things that happened on the edge of the magic, those things that people might want to hold onto.
The fact that she, or anyone in the department, had any control over which memories to take, which to replace, which to leave… it was too much.
As Edith stood up from her desk, she realized this wasn’t a new idea. It had been sitting there in the back of her mind for a while, at least since returning for the Dome, but probably since the first day she had obliviated a muggle. She had been accused of stealing magic (by people that had sat in this very building), yet wanted nothing more to fit into both worlds. Still, she was part of the problem, the hypocrite muggleborn that couldn’t leave the minds of muggles alone.
She glanced down at her watch. Quarter to four. He should be in his office. Even if not, she’d just leave a note. If she didn’t do this now, surely she never would. She didn’t look at any faces as she passed cubicles and desks, knowing that if she caught the wrong look she might turn around and get back to work.
Coming to a stop at her Department Head’s open office door, Edith gave a knock out of protocol more than any concerns of invading privacy. As ever, he looked busy, but she took a step into the office anyway, though she didn’t stray too far from the doorway, her hands stuck awkwardly into her pockets. “Hey, er,” she started, pausing to clear her throat. “So, I quit.”
@Percival Ignatius Weasley