“Fuck off,†Harlan swatted down Davies’ hand where a flame extended from the end of his index and thumb fingers that he’d pulled together into a pinch. It was an attempt from the man to make a joke, try and light his captain's eyebrows on fire when igniting the cigar, but Harlan had seen right through it. The laugh that escaped his mouth pushed out hot air that manifested as steam under the freezing air and falling snow. They were outside of the safe barrier of the warming charms placed around the threshold but they’d had enough to drink that it didn’t matter.
It was good-natured, he and his teammates' spats, one of many that night so far. And they still had at least two hours to go until the clock struck midnight. Well, they had the last time Harlan checked. “Would you come off it, you prat,†He puffed at the finally proffered cigar with a shake of his head, inevitably tensing in the cold.
Chamonix was unbelievable. It was so unlike anything he’d seen before. It was the kind of winter wonderland only read about in fables. From the chateau, they overlooked the whole town, a distant peppering of lights half-visible through the cover of trees, secluded in the mountainside and just as he had hoped for. And the home itself was sublime. An indoor heated pool, more rooms than countable, and large open living space with floor to ceiling windows and everything draped in furs.
“Try not fall over, would you?†Harlan said over his shoulder with a grin as he turned to go inside, the large sliding door automatically gliding open to reveal the lush interior, soft music pumping from somewhere, a handful of faces. Inevitably, though he thought not obviously, he found himself looking for only the one. Bérénice knew the team and their plus ones (some fresher than others), but not all that well. She was amiable. She knew how to hold her own in social settings. Better than most.
Making his way to the kitchen, Harlan spotted the familiar back of her head as she worked over something on the counter island. “F— Merlin,†Harlan instinctively dodged a knife that flew past the side of his head. He had practice with objects such as that trying to take him out, but he hadn’t been expecting it. “Trying to kill me?†He asked as he sidled up to the counter more hesitantly than he entered, venturing a glance over.