Things were going incredibly well for Phaedra lately. She expected she was going to get hit by the Knight Bus as luck usually wasn’t on her side. She’d found the English to be incredibly welcoming but some of their habits were rather odd. She’d chosen not to comment on many of them but the tea obsession she just couldn’t leave alone; it was too weird. But then again they could have said the same about the Greeks and Ouzo as they drank far, far too much of it.
Phaedra had decided to take a trip into London to look for some things to furnish her home with. She’d bought it on a whim, deeming it too good to pass up. It was near the Leaky Cauldron and was surprisingly very nice. It was a tall redbrick building with a slate roof and old Victorian railing separating it from the other houses in the area. The bricks had darkened with age and weather exposure and the window panes needed a lick of paint but to her it was beautiful and worth every pound she paid. But she’d underestimated how much furniture it actually needed. The carpets had been old but had been charmed to keep for however long they’d been down there for and the wallpaper/paint much the same but the house had been empty except from a large, white piano in the sitting room that had been covered with a sheet.
She’d gotten a few paintings from some dealers and a few other bits and pieces for the kitchen and other rooms but most of the larger furniture had been put on order and they’d promised a delivery within the next few days. Phaedra couldn’t wait, she’d gotten the bed linen, curtains etcetera but it would soon feel like a real home when it had furniture in it. She likened it all to a dolls house and it was her turn to do things her way. It made her feel like a child again.
Of course, she hadn’t missed out on the opportunity to explore London’s bookshops. She’d bought a few large hardbacks and the weight of them in the flimsy paper bag was beginning to take a toll on her arms. She spotted a small, intimate café across the road and quickly looked both ways before jogging across the road and on to the pavement opposite. She stopped outside the shop and took a quick look at the menu that had been stuck to the window with two blobs of blue tack. It all looked really good but she only had so much money left and she really didn’t want to go to the bank just so she could have lunch.
Phaedra glanced in her purse; twenty pound had to be enough for lunch. She opened the door of the café and stepped inside. She picked a seat by the window and put her bags underneath the table. She sat down and took a menu from the holder so she could properly peruse it. She slipped her jacket off and hung it on the back of her chair as she read, her eyes expertly darting from word to word. She looked up, wondering idly when the waiter or waitress would come over.