Saturday 31st March
5:55am
Platform 7½, Kings Cross, London“
Do you know how to kill a French vampire?”
“Hmm…”“
You have to drive a baguette through its heart. Sounds easy, but the process is painstaking.”
“Merlin that’s awful. Thank my wand that’s the train.” It was the end of Auror Pinn’s Friday to Saturday nightshift, and she had been almost home and dry before the report had come in. A train travelling to London’s platform seven and a half from across Europe had sent an emergency message ahead from northern France before negotiating the English Channel. It had been short, but surprisingly used the word ‘please’, albeit in another language.
URGENT: Vampire dangereux. Arrivée 5h55 Platform 7 ½. Assistance s.v.p.
The message had then hurtled to the Ministry, in more colloquial English. The wizarding government in turn ejected the decidedly weary Nadine onto the scene. Nothing about the incident was bearable so far. Not the time, the terrible jokes from the platform porters, and especially not the mention of
vampire.
Nadine disliked vampires. They should have their teeth removed, in her opinion, though she was wise not to share such views out loud. Last time
[1] she had suggested anything contrary to Penny Pickler’s Perfect Perceptions of these beings, she had ended up on one of Pickler’s courses
[2] learning said alliterative list of essentials. The only
pleasant part of this
particular platform was the lack of
pesky Tristan Vaillancourt, the ‘vampire consultant’ who had made a complaint to cause Nadine and Head Auror Pratt to sit the remedial course.
She and
Bailey readied themselves as the train pulled in, hissing and clunking along the platform edge. Several windows were down, faces peering out already. None of them looked panicked, just curious to see two red robed aurors with the porters.
Then with a sigh, the train came to a stop, and there was a terrific rattling as the doors sprung open of their own magical accord. Passengers with trunks and bags began to step out in all manner of fashions and states. Many of them were still rubbing sleep out of their eyes from the early start. Nadine scanned the crowd, but everyone just seemed sleepy.
The porter with the terrible jokes whistled out. He was busy unloading a stack of trunks but pointed his arm without a wand to a tall, brunette witch in similar navy blue uniform with red epaulets and hat, alighting the platform. She acknowledged the aurors with a raise of both hands and a visible
Oh! as if she’d forgotten to post a letter, rather than just remembered they’d summoned aurors in an urgent message.
“
Thank you, thank you fo’ coming. Ih’ was qui’e the ‘larm[3]. But we …” She wave a hand, lost for the word, “
…with her.” The witch had a strong French accent to her English. Nadine’s French wasn’t quite up to conversing about vampires either, and she doubted Bailey’s was any better.
“You contained it?” Nadine asked, then tried another way, “caught it?”
“
Oh non, non, non,” more hand gestures from the witch on the train. “
Flew away! Off le train.” She mimed a bat, interlocking her thumbs, and waving her fingers as wings. “
Désolé!”
“
Think you’ve got this one Pinn.” Bailey announced, shrugging, pulling seniority to dump her just before shift change. He gave her a double thumbs up and popped neatly out of sight. Nadine didn’t know whether to curse him or the witch before her. Perhaps she ought to instead thank her lucky stars she wouldn’t have to deal with a vampire after all.
“You could have told us sooner,” Nadine scolded, only to make herself feel better, as the witch curled her top lip, sucked air through her teeth and alighted the train again shaking her head, and a job to do. But the next passenger off seemed likely to make Nadine’s morning all the better.
“Hester!” She exclaimed, and threw open her arms to greet her friend.