They were doing this on purpose.
Heaving a sigh, a tall Italian rocked back and forth on her heels as she absently watched people pass, her large deeply brown eyes flicking left and right lazily. She'd been waiting for fifteen minutes and what little patience she had was running out. Fast. They had her gold and she wanted it back. Sofia would be the first to admit that her dealings with certain things had been…less than legal but when it came to money, everything was done by the book. Having champagne tastes, she'd become accustomed to having money at her disposal and she'd like it back. As soon as possible.
Goblins were fine but they had awful customer service. Sofia had been sweet and polite and that just seemed to infuriate them even more, which was probably why it was taking so long.
She looked up at the large chandelier, admiring how the crystals twinkled in the light. "Where'd you buy that from?" The brunette asked one of the pointy faced goblins who sat high at one of the cashier desks, offering him a bright smile. The goblin scowled, narrowing it's beady little eyes at her.
"Madam," it began, speaking slowly and deliberately and the words dripping in acid.
"It wasn't bought," the creature scoffed.
"It was made by the finest goblin craftsmen. It is not something that you can simply acquire." Blinking quickly, she simply shrugged. "Shame," she said gently. "I wanted something similar for my living room." The mere suggestion seemed to anger the goblin so much that he slammed the shutter down with a loud
bang! that echoed through out the large marble room. These goblins were worse than a teenage girl having a door slamming strop. Pathetic. Feeling suitably pleased with herself, she took a step back and made a slow pass back along the room. Dressed smartly all in
red, Sofia's long glossy brown hair was tied back into a sleek, professional ponytail as she began to whistle in a rather unprofessional manner.
It was a regular grey old day in London town. Despite being mid-January, it was still damp. The foyer of Gringotts was pristine and bright but freezing and coming from a Mediterranean climate, every second spent in this awful city made her hate it even more. As soon as she was done here, she was hopping back to Tuscany and having a long hot bath.
A cough caught her attention and she turned, looking down at a smartly dressed goblin carrying a leather bound book that looked bigger and heavier than he was.
"Miss. Rossellini, everything seems to be in order," he replied in clipped, terse tones. She rolled her eyes. "I told you that, Bogrod," she said patiently as she stooped to collect her book. "If you would stop being so prickly, you wouldn't have wasted my time as well as your own. Bye then!" Sofia called out with a wave to the goblin's retreating back, snorting with laughter at how abrupt he'd been. It was usually
her trick, leaving mid conversation if she was finding things a bit boring.
With her book under her arm, she spun on her heel and strode towards the tall, heavy doors that lead back out and into Diagon Alley. Half of the day was wasted and she was hungry but she didn't eat here. She didn't often eat in her own bar in Knockturn Alley, either. No. Too much grease and too many poor quality ingredients. A pale hand reached out to grab the handle, letting out a grunt but managing to haul it open with relative ease. Sofia was a strong, sturdy girl. She ran, she enjoyed cardio, swimming was fine and she did it often.
Letting the door close, a frigid gust nearly knocked her sideways, sending her glossy hair fluttering behind her as a heady and expensive scent of her rose perfume caught on the wind. Wizards were milling about in coats and hats but she'd not dressed for the weather because like Hell was she sticking around longer than she had to.
Taking a step forward to descend the stone steps, what looked like something the size of a boulder came towards her, causing her to sidestep awkwardly and wobble a little, a stab of pain spreading from her ankle. "Excuse you," she said darkly, muttering under her breath as she straightened her finely cut blazer irritably. She didn't bother looking up, she'd already decided that whoever it was was a bit of a loser. "Take your big shoulders somewhere else and knock someone else over, would you? And try not to get wedged in the doorway." When he went grocery shopping, he must knock of the displays over but Sofia? Nah. She had people do her shopping for her.