Despite the long tanned fingers that were exploring the fabric over his chest and lower back, Harlan could not focus on anything but the door of the bar that he had inhabited for the early evening as the birthday festivities unfolded. Liam, a trainer for the Griffins, had turned forty, and it was enough excuse for someone to throw him a lavish get together in the city, chalk full of the finest quidditch players in the professional league and their decided plus ones. Said establishment was buzzing with enough activity to distract Harlan for a lifetime but he nonetheless could not tear his conscience away from the very last person that he wanted to waste another moment on. Honey Bea Flume. Chocolatier, red haired woman, and likely the bane of his very existence.
Things had started innocently enough between the two of them. Harlan, conditioned by his less than reliable relationship history, assumed that their affair would have ended weeks ago after having first slept together, but that was not the case. Honey, true to being the absolute thorn in his side, had simply stuck. Two nights turned into ten and before he knew it, the notoriously closed off wizard slowly exposed himself to her. Nights spent in her flat were filled with conversation that Harlan had typically reserved for only his closest friends; talks of his family, his shortcomings, and even a few of his fears, had left him more vulnerable than he ever cared to be.
The high of the exposure was short lived, of course, as most things in his life where. One particular night, when Harlan returned from practice, he found various postings from the social section of the Prophet plastered to his Captain's quarters, detailing the many nights and photos of Honey with a mystery brunette later to be identified as William Dasher. The name was familiar to Harlan but he forgot it almost as soon as he saw the man's bespectacled, toothy grin. In a moment, he had jumped to a thousand conclusions; the first being that this was what Honey was looking for, and the second being that he would not let the injustice go forth unnoticed.
Harlan, too, had seen other women throughout the weeks that they had been together, and they were by no means exclusive, but he couldn't fight the feeling that her situation was vastly different to his own. She was consistently seeing someone else. He wondered if the Dasher fellow had divulged his inner thoughts to her as well. When he learned of Liam's birthday, of which Honey had been invited, Harlan knew exactly how he would dole out his revenge.
Ana Luiza Souza, a Brazlian model who had only recently broken into the European market, would be the perfect distraction for the night. It couldn't hurt, of course, that there was no way that Honey wouldn't notice her. At just about six foot, fifty percent legs and clad in a small black dress, there wasn't a chance that anyone would miss her, to be honest.
Just as Harlan relaxed, a familiar hue of red hair crept under the heads of the crowd of people. Harlan paused his sentence, making sure this wasn't another false alarm before he casually draped an arm over Ana's shoulders and leaned into her perpetual half-embrace. Honey's face spoke a thousand words but the man found that none of them were the words that he was looking for. There was no doubt she was surprised, disappointed even, but he realised it was far less gratifying than he had imagined the thousands of times before the night had commenced.
"Honey," He spoke up, prepared to introduce her to the group when she abruptly looked for her exit. This had certainly not gone in his favour. "I'll take you," He suggested, excusing himself from the group and leading her away. "You didn't even take credit for the dessert," Harlan commented nonchalantly, his hand now resting on the small of her back, his free one pointing to the corner of the room where their destination was. "Very unlike you," He spoke into her ear from behind and cut through the noise of the crowd. "No Mr. Dasher tonight?" The blond wasted no time in getting to the point of the entire charade. If there was something that Harlan Bellamy was, it was certainly not diplomatic.