He was utterly and totally lost.
This was a new town, a new city, a new beginning and he really didn't want to start it in an unappealing way. It came as a complete shock to Sam that he actually graduated, even more so when he found out his grades were certainly more than acceptable. The tall Swede has started a new job. He was working for the Swedish Ministry of Magic but he was liasoning with the London one. He was working as a translator, a special branch. He spoke six languages and at such a young age, his talent was spotted and snapped up straight away.
He made his way down the worn and uneven cobbled street, past the odd shaped, higgledy-piggledy shops that just looked so…funny to him. The entire thing was just utterly bizarre.
It was a new way of life here in Britain. Everyone was so darn rude. Dressed casually in a navy blue tee shirt and dark jeans, the warm air blew past and ruffled his shock of platinum blonde hair as his big blue eyes blinked from behind the lenses of his black square rimmed glasses. He was looking for a book shop. He'd been up and down this street three times that afternoon but he was too proud to ask for help. From previous experience, they wouldn't help him any way. The last person he'd asked for directions openly ignored him, pushed him out of the way and carried on walking.
Hm.
Rolling his eyes, he shoved his hands in his pockets as he turned around on the spot. His footsteps were light as he wandered back down the same street, absently wondering if this particular shop was even open on a Sunday. Everything seemed to stop on a Sunday. It was his own fault, though. Sam could have done it yesterday but he'd stumbled upon a night club. A night club with Aquavit. How on Earth was he supposed to turn down the drink of his nation? The night was a blur.
A voice stopped him suddenly. "Hm?[/I] He asked, eyes wide as he blinked a few times as he tried to process what was happening. She was asking him for tea. He paused and looked at her. The hair was the first thing that caught his eye. Wavy and decidedly not natural. Samuel tilted his head, his big eyes trailing unapologetically down over her dip-dye long hair, over her elegant neck, slender shoulders, his eyes drawn to her hips. Hips were sexy. She stood out like a sore thumb with her unusual shock of colour.
The cigarette was perched nonchalantly and he would have to be stupid not to notice the fluid curve of her impossibly long legs. Well, well, well, London. Just where had it been hiding this particular specimen?
Oh. Ha ha. She thought he worked there. He wasn't sure if he should be offended or not. He flashed her a smile, wide and bright that dimpled his left cheek cutely. He watched her fingers as they ran through her hair before he turned slightly to a girl carrying a tray. "Excuse me," he said softly, his English perfect but definitely accented as he reached out a hand to her.
"Hello," he said with a smile. "Could I please have a pot of ginger tea?" He asked softly, flicking his eyes to a discarded menu swiftly on a nearby table. "The lemongrass and ginger one, yes," he said with another smile as the girl left to fulfil the order he'd just placed. Amused, he turned back to the girl with both of his slim eyebrows arched. He wasn't at all offended by her assumption. It was the summer, he was a teenage boy, he could be working a low paid summer job for some extra cash.
Without wasting any time, Sam strode over to her table again, his big hands on the back of the chair opposite from where she was sitting and pulled it out, dropping to take a seat without an invitation. "She won't be long," he replied with a lopsided grin, positively tickled pink. "Don't worry, " he stated. "I'm not offended but I should be. It's nothing you can't make up to me over a late lunch," he commented playfully as he placed his elbows on the table and cradled his chin in both upturned palms as he watched her curiously.