He ordered Earl Grey for Du Hunt and then glanced once more at the harmless looking old granny who appeared to be looking at some books in the window of Flourish and Blotts before going inside.
"Apparently, that old dinosaur didn't die. I was mistaken. She's got to be in her 70's now or thereabouts," Lorcan said. "However, when one has money and influence, they're often tossed together at social situations with people they'd otherwise not meet.
"That, my dear, is one Gwen Fawcett. Looks harmless, doesn't she? Not quite so. I met her, oh, maybe 5 or 6 years ago at some charitable ball I had no real interest in going to, and she was there. She's spent her years working in the Ministry as part of the ambassadorial attache. I doubt she's been on English soil in the last decade not even enough times for me to count on one hand.
"Here's the interesting thing. She is the sister in law for our Minister of Magic, much as she'd not admit it. She's not proud of it. She doesn't claim it for whatever reason. What I do remember from that party years ago is that Fawcett was doing her best to look quite poised and proper and to do whatever she could to erase or bury any familial connection to the Lupins or even that she knew them at all. She didn't even like England much anymore, she said. Was far more interested in living out of the country. Even then, she was a bitter, angry old crone."
He paused for a moment as the server delivered Du Hunt's Earl Grey to her and was about to lay the tab on the table when Lorcan took it from the server. "If you would be so kind as to add this to my tab, I'd appreciate it," he told her with a smile. The young little server blushed a brilliant strawberry red and seemed to gush as she looked into his good looks and dark eyes. Lorcan did understand that his half vampire side made it infinitely easier to get a woman whenever he wanted one--whether he was married or not. It was part of the seductive abilities of a vampire. Literally, it came with his DNA. He flashed a smile at her, and she nodded like a schoolgirl and took the tab back and left the table. Had Du Hunt been Zada, she'd look appropriately annoyed at him and follow with some sort of eye rolling, ending with, "Must you do that? They don't know you're just playing with them. For Merlin's sake at least flirt with someone who's a challenge to you." Zada wasn't here to nag, and Lorcan had been momentarily amused with his little 30 second game.
"However," he easily picked up the conversation again with Du Hunt without dropping a beat. "I haven't been around dark magic not to know dark intent and dark energies when I see them. Mark my words. That old woman should not ever be trusted any farther than one can spit her. I've been watching her, and she's been shopping today like a woman on a mission. She's got a mental list apparently, and she's trying to get the things on her list in a specific order. I've seen her go in and out of that book store no less than three times this morning.
"Now, why wouldn't someone in an ambassador's office be organized enough to make a written list. Should be just common sense--unless she didn't want any possibility of her accidently misplacing the list and having anyone else know what was on it? Rather like a chef without his mise en place, actually." He watched Fawcett come out again, and he spotted something.
"There," he said, even more keenly observant. He pointed to the basket the old woman carried "Right there. The book with the red cover in her basket--the one with the round gold seal on the cover. That's a dark arts spell book, one with lesser used, more archaic spells, not a book easy to come by. I somehow inherited a copy in the manor library from Lucius Malfoy, but I doubt he ever really used such complicated magic."
"I think," he said to Du Hunt, "if someone is tinkering with the dark arts on any sort of deep level, we really ought to know about it. Whatever she's doing, it isn't good, it certainly isn't any charitable work, and nor is it likely to be good for England. I think we ought to know what the devil she's up to, don't you?"