Nathalie stood before the grimy stained mirror in the woman’s bathroom at the end of the Ministry’s third floor. She hoped to Merlin it was empty, because she was talking to herself.
“And therefore, the Ministry assures the Wizarding British public that it will . . .” and she paused, leave no stone unturned? “. . . leave no stone unturned in the . . . “ battle? fight? “ . . . struggle for justice and, most importantly, lead the drive towards . . . a . . . fair and just society for all of the witches and wizards that dwell within her borders.”
Her voice trailed off. It was rubbish. With a sigh she screwed up the little sliver of parchment upon which she had scrawled her points and threw it at the mirror, from which it bounced off and fell into the sink. It had been a trying few months within the corridors of the Ministry. The protests that had started on the continent had, like some kind of virus, slowly made their way to London, and quite a few of the Ministry’s staff had been all too keen to take part in the agitations. And just when things in the Ministry had been grinding to a halt; when for a moment it had looked like absolute chaos was about to break out any day; surprisingly a deal of sorts had been reached - and after this detente, day by day, the Ministry returned to a semblance of normality. However, now the fallout remained. People wanted to know how this could happen; how the Ministry could become such a hotbed of discontent - and how close British magical society had come to a complete failure of governance. Such nonsense was alright for the French; they were a revolutionary people. But in Great Britain? Well, that was simply unacceptable. It just wasn’t cricket. Thusly, the Ministry’s Public Information Services were on red alert; issuing articles and decrees and directives each and every day about how, as a matter of fact, all the stories had been blown out of all proportion, and everything was really now okay, thanks for asking. Of course, Nathalie knew it was all an elaborate lie; something to make the people think that those who worked in the Ministry actually knew what the hell they were doing, when the opposite was in fact clearly the truth to anyone with half a brain.
And now it was her turn to be fed to the wolves - in this case, Witch Weekly magazine. This was, on the face of it, not the worst assignment that she could possibly have been given. Her boss, Francesca Vardy, had two weeks previously given an interview with the Daily Prophet on a similar topic where she had been referred to as both the Ministry’s “Propagandist-in-chief” and its “professional liar”, which, naturally, caused the aforementioned Miss Vardy to explode with rage and threaten the paper with legal action. Witch Weekly, on the other hand, was not known for having hot-shot political journalists with aggressive truth-seeking agendas within its ranks, and hence Nathalie assumed that they probably required nothing more than a few soothing sentences so that its readers could continue doing whatever it was they did (which Nathalie assumed was mostly knitting) in the tranquil contentment of eternal trust in their government.
She was late, and so tidied her self up as best she could, all the time chatting to herself potential answers to theoretical questions, whilst she brushed her hair and applied lipstick. She wore a short-sleeved navy business dress, and kept her hair down, in the off-chance that she’d have to deal with a man and therefore could spend the whole afternoon flicking it about herself, smiling at him vacuously - anything to make him not ask her awkward questions.
—————
It was one of those nondescript modern cafe’s that Ministry-folk would frequently congregate in before, during, and after their allotted work hours, and thus to Nathalie it was largely home-turf, which was an added bonus. At least she would feel comfortable during this grilling. A few calming sentences, lots of confidence, keep saying assure, affirm, guarantee. Everything was good. The future was bright. All problems had been solved, are being solved, will continue to be solved. All parties were now hugging and dancing and there was so much bloody love flowing through the corridors of the Ministry that they’d probably all choke on it.
And therefore, when she turned away from the door and her eyes adjusted to the shadowy interior of the cafe, and the figure of Parvati Patil was standing there, talking to her, in fact claiming that she herself would be the journalist; well the blonde stopped sharply in her tracks. It was Patil, in the flesh, certainly; but she was different - older, more adult, looking stunning in her dress, soaked in confidence. A professional. No longer a student violating curfew. No longer a subversive.
Their eyes met. Nathalie swallowed hard.
Just play the part. Professional.
“Yes . . . thanks . . . thank you . . .” she mumbled, taking her assigned seat. Her grey orbs never left the woman opposite her, wide as saucers. The rest of the cafe, bustling and noisy with its afternoon clientele, simply vanished into nothingness. It became irrelevant. It was just the two of them. Nathalie felt her mouth dry. She may have ordered a coffee, she couldn't be sure. She surely needed something stronger.
She racked her brain, searching for all the incidents; all locked away safely before now, and not meant for reappraisal. Not like this, not in a cafe in the middle of bloody London. The girl had such arrogance, and Nathalie had wanted nothing more than to rip it from her; to teach her servility. And the blonde had loved the chase, with Parvati the righteous rebel. She had felt just in her actions; she had felt vengeance and truth and when she had the chance to pin Parvati against the wall of the dungeon and press her wand against her cheek and laugh in her face, it had felt right. It was natural for Parvati to fight back, and natural for Nathalie to put her back in her place. It was thrilling; at least for those few halcyon months. Before the end, and then the arrival of the shame with which they were supposed to self-immolate, now and forever more.
And so they sat together; two former foes across a small table in a quaint little cafe in central London. Nathalie cleared her throat.
“So . . . I suppose you’ll be wanting to ask about the Ministry?” she asked hopefully. Right now, discussing the ongoing troubles at the Ministry was the very least of her worries.