Sam had come out of the lavatories and found, to his dismay, that Graeme Beaker had already taken the stage. Beaker was a good friend of his dad’s, but Sam didn’t like him much -- he had bad breath and a tendency to ramble. So, Sam had lingered in the doorway, peering over the shoulders of a few waitresses until he could ascertain that his date (his sister) was, indeed, trapped at their parents’ table until Beaker finished talking.
There was nothing that could be done to save her, so Sam abandoned Caitlin and skulked off to the bar.
He was not the only person to have this idea; as he was edging behind a group of the staff muttering amongst themselves, he spotted another man, probably intent on staying at the bar for as long as he could. Sam pulled up at the bar, drummed on it with his palms as quietly as he could, got a beer.
Merlin, fuck. Sam laughed under his breath. “Every time I talk to that bloke I think he’s got to have run out of things to say by now,†he said, quietly -- he’d been right once or twice, too, he’d heard the tale of the old bloodhound and the bludger about five times now. Sam slouched back against the bar, took a long sip of firewhiskey. He glanced sideways again -- oh, hell, this was Harlan Bellamy.
“Oh, hey,†he said. “Good season.â€