Spring 12, 507 AV
Late morning
The Office Dr. Philomena Lefting, Zeltiva University
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It was the sort of semi-gale that in a different city might have been considered a storm - in Zeltiva it was simply a spring day in which one need not water one's plants. The wind blew irritably down the streets, catching loose shutters, spitting rain at the pillars of the university. It crowed in a wet crackle across the roof of Minnie's office.
Minnie herself was bent over a desk, scribbling in a cramped hand, so minuscule she could have written her full name on the space of her narrow pinkie-nail. She hated the desk - it was a great wooden monstrosity from days before yore, with piles of wooden filing materials, and a roll-top over it, all of which ended up getting in her way. If the beast were not so blasted huge, she would have had it removed, but looking at it, she felt a pity for whatever porters they commandeered to move it, and simply dealt with her annoyance.
None of this, though, inhibited her now, for Minnie Lefting was, today, burying herself. There are three ways, perhaps, to be intent upon one's work: there is simple passion, there is fear of a deadline, and then there is fear of thought. This third is the most destructive, for it means that work must continue, because if it stops, the mind will collapse into other rooms, rooms with monsters in them that must not be faced. It exhausts the worker in the name of protecting them, and eventually, leaves them in the same position, but exhausted. Nonetheless, it is this third that was ground into the lines of Minnie's face: the taut lip, the clench-ached jaw, the hyperfocused eye, the tightly sprung fingers on the quill, the way she impaled the ink pot instead of simply dipping into it.
The bells rang leaden in the rain, and her mind, without requesting the consent of her consciousness, counted them. It started her out of herself: class-time. The spring term had begun the week before, and now she had her first session with a new student. She sat, unmoored, and set her pen aside, moving her papers to look at the schedule that would reveal who it was that she would be sharing an hour's conversation with. He would likely knock momentarily: they were always on time at the beginning, until they grew disdainful of her.
//'Arkale Benaeford'… how does one even pronounce that? Rich name, that one, I know I've heard o' the clan on the circuit before… I'll have to watch my accent. Damnit, why don't I look these damned names up ahead of time? What is he taking? Survey of Zeltivan Literature - ugh. The choice of them what don't care to think of something specific.//
She sighed, and tidied up the desk. She stood then - the action, denying her the benefit of the chair her legs had swung freely from before, made her just slightly shorter. She pulled her heap of books from the armchair she kept for students, then a stale mug of Kelp-tea from the table she kept beside it. She opened a drawer, to look for her outlines, and waited for the door to knock.