Khaat had come, with Marcus, into Diagon Alley for what she thought was a charitable cause. Michael Tremaine's two year old twins both had some sort of virus, and Michael was trapped at home with restless footstools, cranky toddlers, and much too little firewhiskey left in stock. It sounded to her like the virus was some sort of odd wizarding virus, which could flare up for wizards like colds and flu for muggles. It seemed to be something that wizards sometimes attributed to a standard flu, mostly because of muggle mythology, but given proper wizard medicine, it was much more easily treated. Michael, of course, had presume it was an old fashioned muggle cold that had struck his boys.
So, she'd come to Diagon Alley for new story books and more pajamas for the boys, fresh socks for the dogs so they wouldn't go hungry, more firewhiskey for Michael so he didn't lose what sanity he had left, and, hopefully, a new rare book or two for him to cut the frustration.
She had passed Knockturn and she had picked up the foul odor that was somewhere between wet dog and someone with a serious "allergy to soap." She didn't know too many people that mustered up to that description, and she'd drawn her wand and had rather unpredictably tried to ditch Marcus by spinning suddenly into Knockturn.
Yeah, Marcus wasn't that easy to lose or to fool. Her hunch had been right. It was James. There was his hulking, stinking, overbearing, egotistical self, and he'd obviously crawled out from under whatever rock he'd been hiding under. He was wearing not-so stylish worn out jeans, something that was supposed to be shoes, and a genuine artificial-leather muggle leather jacket in a couple sizes too small, the seams working hard to hold in his muscled form. Typical of a lot of werewolves to not spend much on clothes because clothes were always so disposable to a werewolf. He seemed to be stalking some petite young blonde. It infuriated her. He never quit, did he? Always hunting, and almost always blondes. It would have been so easy. There was a powerful warrant out by the Ministry to stop Blood, however anyone could make it happen--dead, alive, ashpile, whatever worked.
She raised her wand but some not-so-sober wizard who looked like he was in Knockturn much too often, stumbled between James and her perfectly aligned shot.--damnit. The best she could get to try to protect the little unsuspecting blonde woman was to perhaps try to wing James. Marcus reached to grab her arm to stop her shot, and she fired, with every intent of striking him in the head.
The shot fired low--way too low, and instead it set the mystery-plastic-muggle jacket on fire. The flames leaped much higher into the air than she expected. Wizards and witches around him screeched and fled.
"How about that?" she looked at Marcus. "Muggle cows burn pretty well."
"Go. Go, we've got to go," he sighed, irritated with her, "before sees you. Muggle cows." He rolled his eyes.
"Wait, where's the girl?"
"Slipped into the bar down there, I think," he said. "Come on. We need to go. Move. We need to get out of sight."
He took her by the arm and hustled her out of Knockturn and into one of the busiest places he could think of, looking for a good place to get lost in--The Leaky Cauldron.
"Well! Mrs Quinn," the bartender smiled, pleased to see her. "Long time no see. What can I get you? Something to warm up with perhaps?"
"Have you some top shelf stuff today?" she asked.
"Always," he smiled, pulling a fresh bottle of firewhiskey off the top shelf. She motioned to him to hand her the bottle. He handed her the bottle and four glasses, knowing she'd more than likely have someone joining her and Marcus.
"On my tab, please," Marcus said, picking up the stack of glasses while she took the bottle. The bartender nodded. "Over there," Marcus pointed to a table in the corner by the fireplace where he could keep an eye on whatever was going on out the window. They made their way there and took a seat, and Marcus poured them each a glass of firewhiskey. "Do tell me," he said quietly. "Do you have a death wish I don't know about, or do you plan on randomly risking my ass and yours just to see if I can keep up with your weird impulses?"
"Have a drink, Marcus. You're getting a bit surly."
"Am I? I hadn't noticed," he said.