Harlan still hadn’t moved, and Honey hadn’t made any more efforts to leave, her eyes still on his, as if eye contact could convince him to convince her to stay. (It wasn’t a very sound logic.) But then-- he really was trying. Honey didn’t know what to say to that, a little taken aback; there was the hint of a smile there, too, and was he talking about what she thought he was? She had been trying, too, had said that numerous times while they were dating. She had never tried so hard at a relationship before him, nor since, probably wouldn’t any time soon. But it was… something, hearing it from him. It wasn’t nice--if that had been him trying but they had still ended like they had--but maybe it was hopeful? Maybe they could--
To leave her alone, he clarified, and Honey blinked. She had gotten ahead of herself, reading into things, interpreting her words to fit her narrative. But this set things back on the path of realism, deflating things a bit. “I know,†she said, unsure if she had known until he told her. It made sense, if she thought about it; it had been four months since she had asked him to leave her alone, four months of silence on his part, four months of her wondering if that had been the right choice. But she didn’t want it to make sense.
She nodded once, shifting off the stool until one foot met the floor, timed perfectly with what Harlan had to say next. They couldn’t be friends, and she must have known that, but she let it sink in for a few seconds before replying. “I know,†she said again, more sure this time, as much as she didn’t want to admit it. There wasn’t an inbetween for them, there never had been; the social intimacy came with the physical.
He had said she didn’t have to--leave, she assumed--when she had finished her drink, but she didn’t think she wanted to risk it, didn’t think she would like what he would say if she tried to stay any longer. She wasn’t sure when she got like this, or why she let him get to her like he did, but-- “Right.†At least she wasn’t about to apologize again. She blinked a couple times before she stood up the rest of the way, moving her glass toward him an inch. “I’ll see myself out.†He hadn’t moved by the time she turned toward the door, and she didn’t think he moved to follow after her once her back was to him.
[out]