If one more healer asked her what had happened Linnet swore she was going to slap someone.
It had been two weeks since she had returned from her involuntary morph to find herself naked on the earth of the Madin shrine, barely able to remember how to breathe, let alone walk or talk. But that had already been far too long for the young woman who had never asked to be the centre of attention anywhere. From what they'd said, and what little she could remember, someone had poisoned her at the Hogwarts end of year feast the previous year. She'd morphed into her elemental form almost reflexively, her body reacting in an effort to save her life. everyone had assumed she'd been transfigured and Ministry specialists had tried all kinds of magic to bring her back, before someone from the Council - she hadn't found out who, but assumed it was Ms Grey - had had her transplanted inexpertly to the Madin shrine.
Inexpertly, as evidenced by mutilated toes and a slight limp which well-meaning healers kept twittering that she would "learn to live with". Linnet didn't want to learn to live with a limp or weird-looking toes or hair that was turning grey far before her time. She wanted to be a tree again. She wanted the peace and tranquility of the shrine, or just somewhere she could be alone to dream the rest of her life away. So she had walked out of the Council buildings early that morning, claiming she wanted some time alone, in a tone of voice so sharp that it brooked no argument. She'd gotten good at that in the past couple of weeks. Still speaking exclusively Council gaelic - not even sure she could remember any other language - Linnet had left the Council and walked. Find a forest, walk into the centre, and stay there.
Immediately she'd started to wonder the sense of her plan. Her family thought she was dead, and strangely that didn't bother her, aside from her grandmother who she'd always been closest to. Linnet assumed the woman was still living in Chatoeil. Maybe she should go there, explain that she wasn't dead, she just wanted to be a tree now, and... okay, maybe that plan needed thinking through a bit more. But if she just walked into the forest, they would find her, try to drag her back again...
She walked until she found the town of Inverness itself, a place she had never been. Clad in council robes, soft slippers and a borrowed cloak; carrying nothing she attracted her share of stares as she wandered the streets, hoping for the telltale signs of a wizarding area, or even a shop, an owl office, anything... A man, taller and much broader than she, well-dressed but clearly not well bred, made an off colour suggestion as she passed. With an almost casual gesture she made a patch of grass grow up the middle of the street, sending him sprawling. Casting her hood over her hair, she walked until by sheer chance she saw another cloaked figure, followed into an unfamiliar street. Some of the words...the memory was returning. Floo network...yes. That was the way to travel. She pushed the door, went in, stood and stared as five or six other people went about their business. Someone mentioned a portkey; two elderly witches were standing next to a battered kettle, and she remembered that, too.
So it was that she had grabbed onto the kettle at the last possible moment and been transported to the outskirts of London, not even speaking when the old ladies asked who she was and what she thought she was doing. The air here was less clear, not somewhere she wanted to transform, but at least she was hidden. They wouldn't find her...she wasn't even sure who or what she was hiding from. So she walked, or at least limped, the soft shoes on her feet doing nothing to protect her from the hard pavement. She had no money, not until she'd stopped to admire the display outside a florists and the strong leaf of a calla lily had snaked into a pocket, providing her with a paper note with £10 written on it. That meant something, she knew... It was getting cooler now, evening drawing on and there were more people. Her feet ached, she was exhausted, and she wanted...
She didn't want to go into a pub full of muggles, but somehow she ended up doing that anyway. Someone asked if she was there for the quiz night and she nodded, not taking her hood down. They said something about a team, and she frowned, they said something about food and a special offer, and she nodded, remembering the piece of paper. She handed it over, was given some coins in exchange and a large glass of something brown and a plate with some sort of food. She held them as if they were alien creatures, saw an empty corner, and walked towards it. A table with a single chair...the group at the next table must have taken the rest for their party. Linnet picked a piece off the piecrust and put it into her mouth, staring at the group. There was something familiar about them but...this was a muggle pub. There was no way she could know them, was there?
[OOC: We accepted the invite...]