Victoire watched in the mirror angled towards her in the window as the young sales assistant looked up from what he was doing and glanced in James’ direction. Gotcha, she thought, imagining the surge of glee that undoubtedly flashed through the Potter man. There he was, all of them trapped in his web, and even Madam Malkin – so fond of his father – was too enamoured to reproach any of her staff for attending him so closely.
She could have smacked James in that moment – not least because the longer he made an exhibition of himself, there more likely one of them would let the Prophet know he was there. The photographers followed him like hawks as it was. In truth, it was a miracle they had made it to the shop without him being mobbed in the first place.
The bell ringing over the door tugged Victoire from her thoughts. She glanced briefly in the direction and watched as a woman entered whom she felt certain she had seen before. James paid little notice, having fully moved on to charming solely the tape-measure-boy. The other girls huffed and moved off, returning to their tasks, one even offering the new woman a “hello” before returning to folding jumpers.
Victoire envied this mystery woman profoundly as she moved over to the racking. Why Victoire had felt the need to treat herself, she would never understand. Partly it was at James’ goading and his offer to buy lunch but her first and second pair of robes had been off the racking, ill-fitting, in truth, and hadn’t lasted long. She had wanted something more durable – something that could survive being singed in a duel. Now she was wondering just why she hadn’t decided to put up with it.
“Alright,” Madam Malkin sighed affectedly, disapproval inched into the lines in her face.
“Alright?” Victoire echoed, looking down at herself.
“What colour did you want, again?” The woman asked, creaking to her feet.
“Purple, please. Dark purple, if you can.”
Madam Malkin sniffed derisively. “Of course I can. Go, pick your boots. Carla will ring you up. You can pick the robes up on Monday.”
With a flick of her wand, Madam Malkin ripped the robes from Victoire’s shoulders and her mirror image was restored, once more, to the pale blue dress she had donned that morning. Victoire hopped off the stool quickly, before the older woman changed her mind, and picked up her jacket, intent on making herself as scarce as possible as quickly as possible.
“Potter, come on, we’re off.” She groused.
“In a minute,” he said, not even bothering to turn around before resuming his conversation, “As I was saying…”
Victoire rolled her eyes and ignored the desire to jinx her wayward cousin. She instead moved off in the direction the other woman had gone. They had a myriad of items in that section and, in particular, she wanted a new pair of dragon hide boots. That’s how they’d ended up in the shop in the first place.
“Stay away from the black robes with the phoenix branding,” she whispered to the woman as she passed, “they’re awful. Didn’t last five minutes for me.”