Anger is fire. Anger is an opponent. Anger is an oppressor and a destructive force. And Anger does funny things to men like Simon Marek.
It doesn't wake the reactionary monster within him; it forces him to close himself off and back away. Despite how typically outgoing and smooth he usually was, he knew how to shut that down. After so many years of hatred turned upon him - both by Simon himself as well as by others - he just wasn't sure if he had that fight left in him anymore. He isn't sure that his monster is anything more than a sad hamster that could do with a bit of a jog on that stupid wheel but has, really, just grown tired of the thing.
He's always liked animals, you see. They usually have issues with him because he's so naturally abrasive and they can likely sense the frustration that clings to his clothes and his skin. That falls off of him like a stray hair or raindrops or dirt when he's brushed it away. Distancing himself? That hasn't been hard for him - not since he was released seven months ago. Even before then, really, he was learning to master it. He was becoming an artist of evasion, painting a reason why each individual should avoid him, even if they didn't know the truth, because it was easier to convince himself that they didn't like him than that they would forgive him later on when they found out.
People who did were an anomaly. They were probably lying, too.
That's why Simon kept to surface-level relationships. Why he quite liked flirting and putting on a friendly face, only to turn around and offend someone just enough. Just to the point where it sounded like a joke, looked like a joke, and thus - as the saying goes - must have been a joke. Except something in his eyes or his tone or his stance or his smirk proved them wrong.
Of course, people knew him from one of two headlines. Or, perhaps, both. The first, a great deal more pleasant than the second, reading: NEW UNITED SEEKER REACHES GREAT HEIGHTS. He was, understandably, quite proud of that one. The second one, not so much. MAREK INCARCERATED, UNITED SEEKING REPLACEMENT. It was good that playing professional Quidditch did not required all that much speaking from him. A few interviews after matches, a couple fan events perhaps. But it was difficult to recognize his accent, particularly after the attempts he had made to rid himself of it. That had failed, unfortunately, but it was much better than it used to be. He could say words that had previously made him stumble, or had come out in strange mockeries of the actual ones.
Photogenic, for example. The emphasis had always been wrong, when he said it. And he had always loved that word, because it applied directly to him. Regardless of how much of a cad he clearly was, he was nothing if not good-looking. Charming, if you will. Most of the women he spoke to would agree, so really, he was just being honest.
There was one woman in particular, however, that he wasn't sure about. He didn't know if she would agree, though obviously it would be in her best interest to do so. If she wanted to be honest, that is, as he so often tried to be. Tried, being the key word.
People had started to forget his face, which was helpful. If they didn't like United, especially, it was simple for them to just walk on past. But those who did recognize him? Simon actually allowed a shudder to roll through his shoulders and down his spine as he walked, but he dispelled it, thinking instead about his goal for the day.
Step one: Spot the lady.
Step two: Run directly into the lady. Scatter anything she's holding, if applicable.
Step three: Profit.
So it was down towards Flourish and Blotts that Marek went, having caught her eye in the area a few times. Perhaps she was really into books. He could work with that. Why she interested him, however, wasn't a question, really, so much as a liability. He was breaking his number one rule: Never get attached. Doing so only led to betrayal or abandonment, and neither of those were good things. Obviously.
But she hadn't recognized him. He was pretty sure she had smiled at him at least twice over the past couple of weeks. Or had he told himself she had? It didn't matter. He wanted to actually meet her, if only because he was about to go mad from doing nothing and sitting in his flat by himself. She seemed nice enough, and perhaps friendly enough. Hopefully not naive, as he had been a few years back, though. Those girls had never appealed to him, much. No, a challenge was much more fun, and so far speaking to her had been quite a challenge in itself.
So, clearly, they were already on the right track.
And, Merlin, was she pretty. In a sort of waify, endearing kind of manner. She was blonde, which wasn't necessarily a type of his, but her hair suited her, so he appreciated it nonetheless. He only hoped she was as clever as he imagined she would be.
As he approached the storefront, he didn't really intend to go in. It would be much easier to make a mess of things without getting in trouble if they were outside. He just had to hope that he had picked the right time, the right day, the right-
He had done. She was there, inside, browsing the shelves. He hesitated in his movement across the cobbled path, but decided to pass by and reroute. He could come back as she was leaving. But then she looked up. He caught her eye and lifted the left side of his mouth in a half-smile that he knew was rather friendly but also pretty attractive. Or so he'd been told. Simon lifted a hand, intending to wave at her - or something - but he never got the chance.
True to form, he had stuck to the plan. Except the lady in question was a brunette, with dark brown eyes to match, and Simon was crashing into her even as the blonde one watched, her mouth falling open.
Yeah, Marek. Real bloody charming.