- Messages
- 3,812
- OOC First Name
- Anna
- Blood Status
- Mixed Blood
- Relationship Status
- Interested in Somebody
- Sexual Orientation
- Bisexual
- Wand
- Straight 11 1/2" Flexible Cypress Wand with Veela Hair Core
- Age
- 42
Sam rarely felt the urge to travel these days. Fully content with his home in France, the thought of leaving never crossed his mind any more. His home was all his, a private little corner of the world close to the people he loved. It was a place he felt entirely comfortable being himself. He seldom received invites to parties outside of France, so when he got an invitation to brunch in London he couldn't refuse. Leaving was a queer thought indeed, and despite every urge he had to stay home this was an opportunity he could not pass up. He always thought these parties were pointless. They were so dull, full of small talking pretentious men that had nothing better to besides talk about themselves over champagne. Albeit he was one of them, at least he was aware how pretentious he could be. Everyone else in the room seemed to turn a blind eye to it all. From the beginning he knew what he was getting into when he wanted to be a professional artist, and parties like these caused him to regret the decision entirely. Before art was his career it was first and foremost his hobby. He only chose to make a career out of it because he failed to see himself doing anything else. Art was a passion of his that would never change, and it would always be a means for him to express himself. The only thing that had changed about art was the process of everything. Lately he had been making art not out of inspiration, but instead out of obligation. It was the business side of things that affected it so much.
He left the party verging on noon, excusing himself to find a cafe so he didn't stay a minute longer than he needed to. If he gritted his teeth any longer he was sure his brain would implode. They were the most elitist, exclusive group of people he had ever met and he hated having to waste his time tolerating them. He knew if it weren't for their little group he would still be a 'starving artist', but that failed to convince him it was all worth it. Many others would kill to be invited in his place, and at this point he was happy to let them take it. Dealing with those people alone was enough to turn his hair grey. By now he desperately needed a cup of coffee. Noon hadn't even passed and he felt exhausted, like those people had sucked the life out of him. He was usually so finicky when choosing a cafe, however today he made an exception. In a careless huff he darted into the first place he saw, slightly surprised at how empty it was this time of day. Assuming the place would be packed in a few minutes, he quickly made his way towards the counter and ordered. After spending the past few hours around other people's egos he just wanted to get this over with and apparate back home.
He eventually noticed the scarf draped on the counter and cringed. As if neon green and pink weren't terrible enough alone, they had to be combined with a print too? On any regular day he would have ignored the hideous thing and gone on his merry way. Today however, his sense of entitlement got the better of him. He felt like it was his duty to call out this abomination, never mind how rude it would be. With a quick scan of the room he found the girl immediately and approached her table, coffee in one hand and scarf in the other. "Ya'll need jesus." He tossed the scarf in front of her. "That thing belongs to the devil." He didn't know much about the magical part of London, so he naturally assumed she was muggle and knew what he was talking about. He sat down across from her, taking every liberty to help her realise the bad fashion choices she was making. He was fully aware how rude he was acting towards someone he barely knew, but he was in a bad mood and didn't really care. Being polite wasn't on his list of priorities right now.
ooc: so rusty. i'm sorry.
He left the party verging on noon, excusing himself to find a cafe so he didn't stay a minute longer than he needed to. If he gritted his teeth any longer he was sure his brain would implode. They were the most elitist, exclusive group of people he had ever met and he hated having to waste his time tolerating them. He knew if it weren't for their little group he would still be a 'starving artist', but that failed to convince him it was all worth it. Many others would kill to be invited in his place, and at this point he was happy to let them take it. Dealing with those people alone was enough to turn his hair grey. By now he desperately needed a cup of coffee. Noon hadn't even passed and he felt exhausted, like those people had sucked the life out of him. He was usually so finicky when choosing a cafe, however today he made an exception. In a careless huff he darted into the first place he saw, slightly surprised at how empty it was this time of day. Assuming the place would be packed in a few minutes, he quickly made his way towards the counter and ordered. After spending the past few hours around other people's egos he just wanted to get this over with and apparate back home.
He eventually noticed the scarf draped on the counter and cringed. As if neon green and pink weren't terrible enough alone, they had to be combined with a print too? On any regular day he would have ignored the hideous thing and gone on his merry way. Today however, his sense of entitlement got the better of him. He felt like it was his duty to call out this abomination, never mind how rude it would be. With a quick scan of the room he found the girl immediately and approached her table, coffee in one hand and scarf in the other. "Ya'll need jesus." He tossed the scarf in front of her. "That thing belongs to the devil." He didn't know much about the magical part of London, so he naturally assumed she was muggle and knew what he was talking about. He sat down across from her, taking every liberty to help her realise the bad fashion choices she was making. He was fully aware how rude he was acting towards someone he barely knew, but he was in a bad mood and didn't really care. Being polite wasn't on his list of priorities right now.
ooc: so rusty. i'm sorry.