Oliver knew his name; he was smiling infectiously enough that Michael decided this was a good sign. He took a while to get around to using his girlfriends’ names behind their backs -- once or twice he’d had a breakup and consequent rebound that Tony had thusly not noticed until a month later. Oliver had made it weird, though, by already knowing his name mid-introduction; it made Michael feel like he had to contribute something else, but he didn’t want to pretend he went by Mike, and he already knew Oliver’s name (it was on the programme).
Michael took his cue from Oliver and gave the other man a once-over too, for reciprocity’s sake. "It’s a work thing,†he said, in Cordelia’s defense, and grinned. “Journalistic -- summat.†He didn’t really know. He followed Oliver’s gaze over to a floppy-haired contemporary, who was confirming that Cordelia was not out back.
“Nah,†he said, turning around as well to look out at the sweaty, sleepy crowds enjoying the sunset. There was rather more leg than Michael typically liked to see in a crowd, so he scratched his chin and squinted at the (admittedly picturesque) horizon. “Now, if I were Cordelia,†he said, “Where would I go?â€
He and Cordelia hadn’t gone to big events of this kind often enough for him to know if it was like her to ditch him -- he wondered if she’d ditched Oliver at any of the fancy California parties she’d accompanied his band to -- but it did seem like her to make a pit stop while she was out of the tent, and to continue to make them for forty-five minutes; they just had to figure out what pit stops would have appealed to her, at a massive event full of diversions.
Cordelia didn’t like whisky, which eliminated a fair few. “Finger food,†Michael suggested, a little doubtfully.