Diagon Alley was bustling with activity but never more so than when Valentine’s Day loomed. Millie wasn’t exactly loved up but she wasn’t bitter about the day because of that. She adored the colours, the reds and the whites and the gorgeous pale pinks of the early spring flowers that could be bought in bouquets at the florists. Millie wasn’t quite as bothered about the couples as she had been earlier in the week. She wasn’t observing them. Her mind was not weighted with anything in particular. No instead, she could enjoy the fact that everyone was in twos, swanning lazily up the cobbled streets with gifts tucked under one arm and the other curled around each other’s. Millie was content by her lonesome. She did wonder where Trent was but she’d find out later when she returned home. From there, she’d no doubt harass him with tales of her day. The only problem was that it was early morning and though Diagon Alley was busy, she didn’t really have any tales yet. There was still plenty of time mind you; and so, Millie got to work.
The first thing the little blonde did was get some breakfast in the form of a cake from Sparks. From there, once she’d gobbled it up, she headed to the tattoo parlour. Not to get a tattoo, but to say hello to the man that had done her wings. He insisted on seeing that they’d healed properly as she hadn’t exactly turned up again for him to do so. He offered her another and though she didn’t fancy getting anything presently, she told him she’d hold him to it before whirling out of the shop and heading straight for Weasley’s Wizard Wheezes where she stocked up on everything needed to make the Slytherins’ lives hell.
The paper bags were of a bright green that clashed perfectly with her outfit that was already getting some strange looks from witches and wizards shopping around Diagon Alley. Millie didn’t mind, though. She knew that she looked absolutely find for the right people and those people were of course, naturally, herself, Trent, Sevastian, Byron, Roxi, Spencer...and many more of those she considered friends. She was herself. That couldn’t be helped. She wasn’t going to live up to other people’s expectations. She’d rather live up to her own; and don’t be fooled - she most certainly did. She was as bright as ever. There were no signs of the upset and negative thoughts that had plagued her since the Felix incident. They were no more. She was happy.
A little after noon, Millie grew weary and looked for a place to sit down in the winter sun. She picked the ice cream shop and took a seat outside underneath a blue and white parasol. She set down her bags, the green ones now accompanied by bags that were all the colours of the rainbow, and pulled the menu towards her, hunching over so as to read it. There was everything there that the mind could conjure. All kinds of flavours from the classic vanilla to the exotic dragon fruit. Yum.