argo​:
who: open where: potion storeroom, slughorn’s christmas party, hogwarts when: 10th of december, 1945
Gillyweed. Knotgrass. No and no. Since when had Slughorn grown so boring with his wares? Argo pushed the brim of the large hat his sibling had forced upon his head and swiped various vile vials aside as he leaned off the ladder, the necklaces and chains he’d been bullied into wearing jangling with abandon, and into the deep shelves filled to the brim with cheap ingredients and nothing of value. He could have sworn it was around here somewhere. Or, it had been. Six months ago. Or so. Dusty shelves met his chest as he leaned further, covering his garments in a thick lay of grey specks. He removed one foot from the ladder, the other foot also clad in a heeled boot dangling precariously in the air
A loud squawk, right in his ear as if the problem so far for Argo had been hearing, nearly caused trouble. He gripped the shelves with a fervor, looking to his shoulder at The Bird who sat upon him. “No one’s forcing you to be up here.” Why couldn’t it have been Beryl who joined Aether and him tonight? She was much better behaved then this magpie Aether had insisted he bring.
He’s a conversational piece. He was a terror.
With a wince, that unseated The Bird, Argo reached farther into the shelf. Legs now fully off the wooden ladder below him. All the care Argo gave his usual accoutrements was given to his newly borrowed pieces, the cloak catching upon the outdated labeling system of rows and necklaces and rings scuffing against rotting and rough wood no longer polished or gleaming all the way up here. But there. His fingertips brushed it. Nearly! Huffing he hoisted himself forward and his flailing limbs smacked into the ladder below, sending it careening to the other side of the shelves (The Bird along with it) and leaving the intern half inside the shelf but with a bottle of Re’em blood in his hand.Â
A quiet latching from below. The sound of footsteps. “Can you get that?” Argo asked the newcomer to the storeroom. He couldn’t turn in his current position without ousting a mess of ingredients from their homes. “It ran away.”
Coming to the party tonight had seemed like a good idea at the time. It had been the only way Miranda had thought of to be able to help the repair efforts, whilst also getting to see inside a fancy event she’d normally have no hope of attending.Â
So far it’s been an awkward evening. She’s enjoyed a handful of conversations—and more than a few nibbled appetisers—but most of her time has been spent hovering on the peripheries of the crowd, unsure how to find her footing among the esteemed guests in attendance. Not for the first time, Miranda wonders whether coming was a mistake. It seems a shame to leave though, especially after the money she spent to get here. Maybe, she thinks, a break might turn things around. With her mind made up, Miranda discards her empty glass on a nearby table and begins to look for an exit.
Her search for a quiet spot leads her through a little door at the edge of Slughorn’s office. She’d been almost positive it led to the hallway outside, close to the potions classroom, but it’s soon clear that her memory of the castle has lapsed a little. Miranda enters into what can only be a storeroom of some kind, and not the secluded hallway she’d been hoping for. More alarming still than her wrong turn is that she doesn’t seem to be alone. There’s a figure above her, practically dangling from a ladder in a way that can’t be safe. As Miranda steps forward, aiming to do... something to help, the wix comes a little bit more into focus. From this angle, they almost look familiar. They almost look like—
“—Argo?”
“Is that— what are you doing?”











