central squad offices, midday | open
If there’s anything Riva truly despises, it’s bureaucracy. Paperwork and formalities don’t just bore her, she feels like they sap the life out of her. You’d think, since MACUSA insisted on giving her a full medical evaluation when she arrived & as a result knew about her particular... condition, that they’d spare her every minute they could. But no, instead she had just spent the whole morning... in meetings. She can handle them short-term of course, especially if they’re related to her cases, but she doesn’t do interviews. And although she’s only just met him, she can already tell that no one can handle more than a span of a few minutes talking to Ben Eames.
So as she arrives, at last, at her desk for the first time it’s with an overdramatic sigh and an eyeroll that could clearly kill a weak enough man had she directed it at him. She just wanted... she didn’t know what she wanted. She wanted coffee... and a beer. (And she didn’t even like beer.) She wanted to dive headfirst into a case, but they’d told her to “take the rest of the day” to “get used to things”, whatever that was supposed to mean. So instead she occupies herself by mindlessly opening and closing drawers, snooping. (But does it count as snooping when it’s your own desk?)
Riva notes that they generously supplied her with paper and pens, how nice. Somehow the sight of it makes her want to scream. Instead she closes the drawer, perhaps a little too solidly, and reaches for another. But when she pulls it, the middle desk drawer doesn’t open. Not even after she yanks, and then violently rattles it. And you see, this is why being bored is a dangerous thing for Riva. Because this setback instantly frustrates her enough that her eyes alight with some kind of spark and with no more warning than half a step backwards, she uses her wandless magic to rip it out of the desk with a huge bang.
She doesn’t actually realize she’s caused the whole room to go silent, busying herself with winding an ever-growing chain of paperclips around her pinky finger with another tendril of magic. Only once she has replaced all the supplies in the desk drawer, picked it up, and put it back on its tracks smoothly does she realize that someone is looking at her with a certain kind of look on their face. She puts on the most innocent face she can (one that has won her many free candies) and half-shrugs.
“Fixed,” she says simply.