mccdyalstr:
Alastor hadn’t even been sure there were other customers sitting down with him. He’d been so caught up in what he was doing before - and then the sign completely washed all his focus away - that he only noticed the comings and goings. He felt almost guilty that he was disturbing others. Almost. And when he saw it was Fawley that really went away. He could handle it. “I didn’t notice you there,” he said flatly. “Perhaps because I’ve been so consumed by the absolute chaos this faulty sign is causing.” He was being a bit melodramatic, but lately everything felt like the end of the world; perhaps because it felt like they were facing it at every turn. He dug his fingernails into the palm of his hand. “What are you doing here? Reading that? At this hour?” Moody cared about the other Aurors, even if he wouldn’t admit it out loud. Rather, he’d keep tabs on their personal lives and demand information from them to make sure they weren’t killing themselves. It felt too late for him, but not for these young kids. “It’s been doing that for an hour. I’ve been very polite about it until now.”
“i said a whole ‘hi, hello, how are you, how’s the family’ before i sat down. it‘s not my fault you were too preoccupied with a bloody sign to reciprocate.” he crossed his arms in indignation, but it quickly gave way to a tired laugh. danny took another drink of coffee, waiting for the moment the caffeine would kick in. “why don’t you just fix it yourself? or break it. either way, problem solved.” he set down the paper, knowing he wouldn’t get any reading done now that moody had noticed him. not that he’d retained anything before. “in order: getting coffee before work. reading is a strong word, i couldn’t even tell you what the headline was without looking. and i was planning to get an early start this morning.” danny neglected to mention that this was a far earlier start than he had intended, but he couldn’t sleep. he hadn’t been sleeping very well since the quidditch finals. it made him sick to his stomach to think about poor wilkes. he’d been feeling uneasy about that order of the phoenix for a while, but this proved it in his mind: they were no good. “it concerns me that you’ve been having a one-sided argument with that sign for a full hour.”














