- Messages
- 10,626
- OOC First Name
- Claire
- Blood Status
- Muggleborn
- Relationship Status
- Single
- Sexual Orientation
- Asexual
- Wand
- Straight 9 1/2 Inch Rigid Walnut Wand with Thestral Tail Hair Core
- Age
- 1/1999 (64)
As a rule, Monty didn’t set aside much time for fiction; the books that filled his shelves were all but half a dozen factual, and the novels he did own gathered more dust than fingerprints. Of course he appreciated a well-written story, but there were only so many hours in a day, and only so many days in a week, and so on; and since his reading list was ordered such that fact took priority over fiction, and continually added to and re-ordered thus, he simply never got around to reading anything else.
Theatre, on the other hand, could be enjoyed independently of the numerous projects fighting for monopoly of his desk and therefore appealed to him a more convenient form of entertainment. Yet he had not crossed the doors of a theatre for almost ten years. There were few places that activated more of his anxieties all at once. Being hot, trapped, and surrounded by people, as one was guaranteed to be at the theatre, described the basic premise of half of his nightmares. But he was resolved to confront these fears; and the announcement of a new magical production, Chronicle, inspired him to purchase two tickets for the opening night. Unfortunately, nobody that he invited was able to come, and so he returned the next day and handed the spare to the person at the back of the queue.
He kept the other. Introspective by nature, he was equally happy to go alone as with a friend, and in fact felt some relief at the removal of obligation to a second person. If he wanted to leave half way through the first act, he only had to worry about getting to an exit, and not about disappointing his company.
As it turned out, he did strongly consider leaving during the first act, but not because of anxiety. The show was, to put it politely, rather uninspiring. It began with an account of the trials of Quellings, the struggling editor of a fictional wizarding newspaper called The Daily Chronicle, and lumbered awkwardly into various conflicts between the staff, a rival newspaper editor, and a disgruntled seer. The story had potential but the writing was clumsy and trite. On several occasions Monty realised he had stopped paying attention to the show and started thinking about what he was going to do when he got home.
At a lull he pulled out his pocket watch to check the time. As he did so, he inadvertently nudged the lady beside him with his elbow. “Sorry,” he said benignly. Not for the first time, it made an impression on his mind that this was the lady from the queue. He had been feeling gradually more sorry for inflicting his spare ticket upon her. But perhaps she was enjoying herself? He attempted to catch her eye - to search, with some hope, for that look - the look of a person who had paid nothing for their ticket and still wanted their money back.
Theatre, on the other hand, could be enjoyed independently of the numerous projects fighting for monopoly of his desk and therefore appealed to him a more convenient form of entertainment. Yet he had not crossed the doors of a theatre for almost ten years. There were few places that activated more of his anxieties all at once. Being hot, trapped, and surrounded by people, as one was guaranteed to be at the theatre, described the basic premise of half of his nightmares. But he was resolved to confront these fears; and the announcement of a new magical production, Chronicle, inspired him to purchase two tickets for the opening night. Unfortunately, nobody that he invited was able to come, and so he returned the next day and handed the spare to the person at the back of the queue.
He kept the other. Introspective by nature, he was equally happy to go alone as with a friend, and in fact felt some relief at the removal of obligation to a second person. If he wanted to leave half way through the first act, he only had to worry about getting to an exit, and not about disappointing his company.
As it turned out, he did strongly consider leaving during the first act, but not because of anxiety. The show was, to put it politely, rather uninspiring. It began with an account of the trials of Quellings, the struggling editor of a fictional wizarding newspaper called The Daily Chronicle, and lumbered awkwardly into various conflicts between the staff, a rival newspaper editor, and a disgruntled seer. The story had potential but the writing was clumsy and trite. On several occasions Monty realised he had stopped paying attention to the show and started thinking about what he was going to do when he got home.
At a lull he pulled out his pocket watch to check the time. As he did so, he inadvertently nudged the lady beside him with his elbow. “Sorry,” he said benignly. Not for the first time, it made an impression on his mind that this was the lady from the queue. He had been feeling gradually more sorry for inflicting his spare ticket upon her. But perhaps she was enjoying herself? He attempted to catch her eye - to search, with some hope, for that look - the look of a person who had paid nothing for their ticket and still wanted their money back.