Quentin watched, surreptitiously, over the top of his book as the girl in the red sweater flicked through the rack of CDs for sale. He waited, still watching, for her nimble fingers to miss a CD or fumble a flick, but she seemed to have made an art form of it and didn't skip a CD as she deftly flipped them forwards so she could see the next one. To someone concentrating as closely as Quentin was it seemed almost hypnotic, the plastic cases clattering slightly as they fell like dominoes. He reached for his camera, it was an unconscious motion, as he lined it up on her, adjusted the shutter speed and pressed the shutter button firmly down.
She turned to glare at him as she heard the distinctive clunk of a camera taking a photo, she didn't want some strange, creepy little man photographing her, but her mum was trying to move her towards the exit and she didn't want to confront him. Quentin smiled to himself as he put his camera back on the floor under his chair, that photo would be just for him. He had a collection of pictures at home that wouldn't have meant anything to anybody but him, a bizarre congregation of face and body parts of complete strangers all getting on with their day to day lives, unaware of the observer with the camera.
He often spent Saturdays in this library, it was a good place to watch people quietly without drawing too much attention. The librarians had been wary at first, but he stayed out of their sight when he was taking pictures and he seemed harmless enough. Quentin was always careful never to photograph the small children he watched, despite the fascinating games they played that he loved to observe. It was one thing to make a record of events that adults got up to, the worst that could happen was an official police warning, but he had no desire to be had up on a count of paedophilia.
He stayed in the library till 5pm, then walked home past the station, stopping to take a couple of photos from the bridge as the sun dodged between clouds, leaving the elegant historical buildings lining the banks in picturesque silhouette. It wasn't artistic, it wasn't even, to him, very interesting, but he knew what sold and he needed the money from the pictures he managed to sell at the local art galleries and tourist shops.
It was late before he got in. He had detoured by the city centre on the way home, hoping to get some more of the photos he delighted in of young couples on their way out to dinner and groups of young people and teenagers in their finery heading for the nearest bar at the beginning of a long night of drinking and clubbing. He had a telephoto lens with him and he knew how to be discreet, and managed to get some candid shots of a rowdy bunch on their way to an even rowdier night spot. The girls were showing acres of bare flesh and the boys couldn't seem to believe their luck.