Josh very nearly laughed. Which thankfully he hadnât because he was pretty certain if heâd started he wouldnât have been able to stop. But it was easy not to laugh when he. Saw how she looked. Now he just felt bad for her. âThatâs not what the Prophet does,â Â he told her plainly. âThe best you can hope for is some sanitized version of your story that is nearly unrecognizable compared to what you submitted, which was already a sanitized version of what you wanted to submit, in the back of the paper wedged between ads for cauldrons and fungal budge.â He might be a tad more jaded about all of this then heâd realized. Josh sighed and ran a hand through his hair, he was definitely going to have to talk things over with Cene tonight. That always made him feel better. Maybe he could figure out what he was going to do since the last few months had drained out any hope he had about making any kind of difference here at the Prophet. Maybe he should just let this bird shoot her shot and find out for herself. But she seemed so optimistic, at least till Josh talked to her.
He let the conversation move on to where she knew him from. âMm heâs a great bloke,â was all Josh said. He wasnât the type to go all mushy to a stranger, not even about Cene. Even if Cene did make it extra hard not to. Once again he nearly laughed, only this time it wouldnât have been as mean. âNo. Thatâs Stu, you definitely wanna stay away from Stu,â he added since he knew how Stu could be around new females. âCene helps out with a self defense class trying to help people be more prepared for Death Eater attacks. I met him when I was doing a feature on the class.â A feature that was stuck in the back but meeting Cene more than made up for it. There was definitely some pride in his voice when talking about what Cene was doing when they met. Â âI normally cover the Ministry. Not the Minister but the normal stuff going on there.â He didnât elaborate on how it was mostly boring press announcements that were stuck on page eleven because no one cared about cauldron thickness regulations. Or how sometimes the Ministry tried to sneak other things in because almost no one attended them and they were so boring that the few who did were usually struggling to stay awake. Instead he thought about how she had come here with her folder of clippings and a head full of ideals thinking she could change the Prophet. âListen, about what I said earlier. I know I probably sounded harsh. Itâs just the editor has no desire to change. Maybe heâll hire you. But I promise if he does itâs going to be covering filler pieces unless youâre willing to go full shock and write stuff just meant to sell papers. Iâm certain whatever youâre doing with your life right now is a billion times better than working here.â He talked softly hoping not to be overheard. While he wanted to talk things, like his future here, over with Cene, what he didnât want was to have to go home to Cene and tell him he got fired.
Thatâs not what the Prophet does. He sounded so sure of it Dawn felt even more stupid. Of course it wasnât what they did. That was why she hadnât wanted to work here. Of course there were other people whoâd tried to get articles about serious stuff -- and real stuff, not sensationalized garbage -- published before she showed up. âOh,â was all she could think to say to that, especially because heâd been so specific she couldnât help think heâd been trying the same thing she showed up hoping would work. And Dawn was not so pretentious she thought sheâd have a better chance at actually doing it than someone who looked older and sounded like he was actually from London and clearly knew how things worked around here.Â
So she tried to focus instead on where she knew him from, feeling a bit better that she wasnât going completely mad. Maybe if they just had a pleasant conversation and she learned more about what this bloke did here it would give her some insight as to whether things were as bad as he made them sound. Maybe he was just jaded. Maybe there was still a chance this could work. Though it didnât start off great, with a warning about someone else at the Prophet Dawn should stay away from. But -- a self-defense class? For Death Eater Attacks -- and this bloke whoâd just told her what she wanted to do was hopeless had actually written a feature about it for the Prophet? Or was that what had been sanitized? Before Dawn could ask the bloke was actually circling back to what heâd said before. Her brows furrowed. She nearly blurted out a question about what had happened to the article on self-defense classes he wrote, but the last thing he said stopped her. Iâm certain whatever youâre doing with your life right now is a billion times better than working here.Â
Dawnâs face fell all at once. That was the thing though, wasnât it? Dawn was here -- the last place she wanted to be, a place where just stepping inside felt a bit like she was on the way to making a deal with the devil and hoping not to get played -- because she didnât know what she was doing with her life right now. In a much broader sense than just not being satisfied with working at the tea shop. Sheâd been in London for a year and she could only remember bits and pieces. Sheâd come here on a mission to do good, only she couldnât remember what her plan had been or when and how sheâd strayed from it. She was here at the Prophet because it felt like the only fathomable way to put together what little bits and pieces she had to work with -- and now she felt even less certain than before that it was the right choice. She hadnât been all that certain to begin with. Dawn was a fighter; she worked hard, she persevered, she listened to her gut, she got answers. But sheâd felt lost for -- she wasnât sure how long. Everything was so fuzzy. What was wrong with her? She felt unsteady, uncertain whether staying and ignoring this blokeâs warnings was the choice that made her not a quitter, or whether going with her original instinct and leaving was the right call. She looked down at the folder full of crumpled news clippings; it felt fitting somehow. It was also a reminder that she was not alone and now was not the right time to have another freak-out about what was wrong with her.Â
She took a breath and looked back up at the bloke. âUh. Right. I mean, I havenât quit my other job yet so I guess I could justâŚ.itâs just I thought maybe I could make a difference, but --â But that was stupid, and the Prophet wasnât the answer sheâd been looking for. Sheâd known that, really, even before she showed up. With a bit more confidence she straightened up. âYeah, um. Youâre right. This isnât -- thereâs a better way to --â A better way to help, but she was rambling and she didnât even know this blokeâs name and he probably thought she was a giant idiot. âMaybe Iâll just start my own newspaper,â she said in a quiet voice, then let out a flustered laugh. That was not better. âUm. Right, Iâm just gonnaâŚ.go, then.â