28 March, 1894 — Modiste, Hogsmeade High Street
Like his sister, Ezra had always appreciated a good puzzle. The Applegate siblings had more in common than most people realized. Hanna's puzzles were physical, pictures cut into odd shapes, while his were typically... well, Mysteries — but at the heart of it, Ezra thought it was much the same. Picking up a dozen disparate pieces and working through them, sorting them and fitting them together and trying different things until finally the whole picture was revealed. It was unfortunate for him that his curse didn't seem satisfied by just the experience of solving puzzles, the way hers presumably was, because otherwise his choice of career might have seen him happy and healthy and unbothered the rest of his days.
But he was having a good day today — not a shadow in sight — and his work had dropped a most delightful puzzle into his lap. They had equipment back at the Ministry for detecting incidents, and today there had been an incident — but anything more than that he positively could not say. Something, perhaps, to do with thought — his area of specialization — so off he went, notebook under one arm and rather more of a spring in his step than was probably warranted given that he was likely arriving to the scene of a magical disaster in progress.
As he closed on the address in question his eyes scanned the building. Nothing on fire, no enormous trees growing up through the roof, no one shrieking in dismay — he would not have minded if any of these things had been the case, as louder symptoms often made it that much easier to determine what was going on, but given the (supposed) nature of the incident he hadn't expected anything loud. Crises of the mind tended not to be very loud, until suddenly they were.
He slipped into the door of the modiste and used his wand to lock it behind him — a precaution to contain the incident until he'd gotten the measure of it. Then he cast a spell used to identify traces of certain types of magic left lingering in the air, and watched attentively to see whether the small cloudpuff that had emanated from the tip of his wand turned any particular color. He held the notebook poised to begin scribbling down the results, if there were any. Then he noticed that one of the shop's occupants was peering at him curiously.
"Hello!" he said brightly. "I'm Mr. Applegate, from the Ministry. I'm afraid you've been involved in a slight magical mishap," he explained. It was probably not slight at all, given that it had registered in the Department of Mysteries, but best to downplay the issue until he had more information, so as not to alarm them. "Have you noticed anything odd in the past — twenty minutes or so?"
For the people who responded to this plot!
But he was having a good day today — not a shadow in sight — and his work had dropped a most delightful puzzle into his lap. They had equipment back at the Ministry for detecting incidents, and today there had been an incident — but anything more than that he positively could not say. Something, perhaps, to do with thought — his area of specialization — so off he went, notebook under one arm and rather more of a spring in his step than was probably warranted given that he was likely arriving to the scene of a magical disaster in progress.
As he closed on the address in question his eyes scanned the building. Nothing on fire, no enormous trees growing up through the roof, no one shrieking in dismay — he would not have minded if any of these things had been the case, as louder symptoms often made it that much easier to determine what was going on, but given the (supposed) nature of the incident he hadn't expected anything loud. Crises of the mind tended not to be very loud, until suddenly they were.
He slipped into the door of the modiste and used his wand to lock it behind him — a precaution to contain the incident until he'd gotten the measure of it. Then he cast a spell used to identify traces of certain types of magic left lingering in the air, and watched attentively to see whether the small cloudpuff that had emanated from the tip of his wand turned any particular color. He held the notebook poised to begin scribbling down the results, if there were any. Then he noticed that one of the shop's occupants was peering at him curiously.
"Hello!" he said brightly. "I'm Mr. Applegate, from the Ministry. I'm afraid you've been involved in a slight magical mishap," he explained. It was probably not slight at all, given that it had registered in the Department of Mysteries, but best to downplay the issue until he had more information, so as not to alarm them. "Have you noticed anything odd in the past — twenty minutes or so?"
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