He wasn’t saying anything, which only proved Honey’s point -- that he was mad at her -- more. She watched him drink, still avoiding her gaze, and she rolled her eyes and sat back, determined to stare at the pool just as much as he was. But then he said something -- or made a noise, more like -- and Honey turned to look at him again.
“Er--†she felt a bit caught out until she reminded herself that she had done nothing wrong; it took her another second to realize what he was implying. She held back her fuck off but only because she thought their mother might be within earshot. “The usual,†she said instead, crossing her arms across her chest, moving her gaze forward again. “He couldn’t live up to my impossibly high standards.†She rolled her eyes before she glanced back at him with the fleeting urge to tell him what had actually happened.
She looked back to the pool as she decided that having a fourth person know -- after Harlan, Grace, and Will -- would only raise the chances of everyone knowing and who wanted that?
“Could you just--†lighten up, she was going to ask, but the sound of music from the open patio door distracted her. “Oh, fuck off,†she muttered (finally-- it felt good to say) under her breath, as she recognized the song. She slid down in her chair a couple inches and pulled the brim of her borrowed hat a little lower. Banshee, while she was dealing with this, Fergie’s thinly veiled tantrum.
Charlie had come by the shop a couple weeks ago, dropping fun bombshells and seeking relationship advice; he hadn’t been gone for more than half an hour before his brand new song played on the WWN because he’d managed to pick his album drop date as the day to stop by and try to make her jealous, or something. And Fergie had gone and introduced their dad to his music, which he was so into, happy about his son’s talented friend, or something.
(Honey had scratched the last album’s Honey track because that was the last thing she wanted her dad bopping about to because bless his heart, he still thought the name was a coincidence).
“You should ask Charlie to sign Dad’s record,†she said, not looking at him, on the brink of her own thinly veiled tantrum.