Brian saw a string of drunks leaving Eli's, barely taking notice. They went in semi-sober and staggered out some time later in little strands of sloshed up witches and wizards. He was used to hearing the slurred speech and smelling the foul, stank odor that sometimes seemed to leak out their pores. Just another weekend night in Diagon Alley that was not so unlike a weekend in a muggle pub.
And then there was this new little bit of oddness. He watched her come out, not staggering yet that he noticed. But then again, he hadn't paid attention to her much at first. Not until she'd shinnied up the lamp post to take roost there. Whatever she'd been drinking, he hoped she didn't do much more of that. Unless she was just generally weird, but there was all sorts of quirkiness in his family, so he wasn't particularly bothered by it. For Brian, this was just a whole new weird, and in its own way, it interested him.
He looked around. No one seemed to be paying much attention to her up there. Oh well, what the hell, he thought. He went to the lamp post beside hers, put the cigarette in his mouth and climbed up the post and similarly wound himself around it.
He paused, taking a drag off his cigarette and looking around. He did rather like the looks of the glow of the lights in the streets and the dim night lighting in the Diagon Alley shops. Now that--that was something that Brian thought was magical all on its own, without any spells behind it. The plain rooftops and chimneys, well, not so much.
"Crappy view," he said. "If its a night time view of Diagon Alley, I can find you a different one." There were some great views of London from the Owlery in St. Mungos, from the top floor of the Ministry, and, there were much better views from the newly reconstructed Sparks--from the roof where Lizzie was now growing her cooking herbs in a rooftop garden.
He heard several wands crackling as people arrived. Some of the aurors arrived to his page. They walked down the street with a determined stride, like a military platoon, and one of them caught sight of him perched beside the brunette on the lamp post.
And of course the one that saw him first was an arrogant piece of work named Delmont. Brian hadn't gotten along with Delmont since some other auror at a training exercise had made a horses' arse out of Delmont, quite deservingly or so Brian thought, but
Delmont had always believed Brian had been the culprit. The only disappointing piece in the whole affair had been that Brian hadn't thought of the prank first. Had he actually thought of it, he might have actually followed through. But he wasn't disappointed that Delmont had a permanent dislike for Brian. The feeling was mutual.
"Quinn," Delmont rolled his eyes and sighed with distaste, calling out sarcastically, "I don't care who your family is. You still need to show some respect." Brian saluted. "Smartass," he said. "Where's the dead guy?"
"In the alley," Brian gestured behind him.
"You kill him?"
"Oh, you betcha," Brian was highly annoyed. "I did it with a candlestick in the library, Inspector Lestrade, and then just called you so you could have the pleasure."
"No need to be snide," Delmont said, glaring.
"My mistake. I didn't think I started it. Why don't you go interview the victim?" Brian gestured towards the death scene. He was quite sure the dead guy wouldn't enjoy spending any more time with Delmont than Brian did.
"And, Quinn, do get the kid off the lamp post before she embarrasses us," Delmont said, gesturing to the brunette as if Brian didn't know who Delmont could possibly be referring to. Rude buggar.
"Heaven forbid," Brian mumbled, tempted to rather strategically drop the cigarette butt into the brim of Delmon's pretentious looking leather fedora with the odd looking handpainted hippogriff feather in the band, as he passed. He poised the cigarette over the hat, calculated it carefully, and then at the last moment, sighed and changed his mind, flicking the butt down into the brick street. It wasn't the hat's fault that its owner was a prick. Brian watched Delmont and the others walk past into the alley out of sight.
"Idiot," Brian sighed. He glanced at the brunette. "Ignore him. I do. He eventually goes away."