He was
so cute.
She smiled at him encouragingly. She liked this Dori. He was shy and sweet and not at all pretentious. That was one thing she admired about him; he was always true to himself. And it was so attractive. She smiled again. In Beauxbatons, the Delerues had always been a sort of surrogate family for her. She sometimes had Sunday dinners with them in the school holidays and even once, she visited on Christmas day. They were all so kind and so lovely and so utterly generous that Eloise often looked back and felt terribly guilty.
She couldn't help but feel as though she'd thrown all of their kindness back in their faces when she accidentally hurt Dorian. She'd stopped getting Christmas cards from his parents years ago and the thought still stung more than she was willing to admit.
"Good," she said with a grin, snorting softly about the socks. The Delerues were good people. The best, really. She looked down at the bar, some of her long curls slipping over her shoulder as she followed suit and picked up a grape. She was no longer that hungry but he'd been so nice as to make her something, she just popped it into her mouth and chewed gently. "How's your dad? And Thomas?" She asked quickly, wanting to hear everything about them. She cried just as much about losing them as she did about losing Dorian. "Has he married his girlfriend yet?" She enquired. If Thomas had, it wouldn't surprise her that she didn't receive an invitation.
"Thank you," Eloise said. She was sure he was just being nice, maybe making small talk. It just felt a bit…
odd. They'd been so close and yet grown so far so really, they were just trying to learn how to be around each other again. "Of course I would," she was quick to reply with wide eyes as though having him pay for anything was just absurd. "I'd never make you pay," she said quietly. It was adorable when he was younger how he was dead set on paying for coffee or anything but she was a big girl. "When I make my big break, you can have front row seats," she joked with a smile before looking down. Looking so put together all the time was just so exhausting.
"N-now?" Eloise stammered, looking utterly shocked as her head jerked up in surprise. Oh wow. She blushed quickly, caught totally off-guard as she paused. She couldn't say no, this was her job after all. "I --" she began, internally panicking. It would be just him and her. No one else. No bright lights, no backing music, no other people. Just them. Stripped back totally. A capella. How utterly and completely terrifying. "Alright but don't laugh," she chided him playfully, downing the rest of her wine glass for a bit of Dutch courage.
She took a quick breath and looked at her bare feet, fingers interlinked loosely as she swallowed. Suddenly, she looked very much like the old Eloise; shy, quiet and uncomplicated. And she began to
sing. Her voice was clear but lacked the extra wow factor it had when she was on stage some hours earlier and she didn't meet his eyes. Why? Because it was about him and she felt horrifically awkward looking at him. It was best he didn't know anyway. It'd only complicate things even more. They were in a pretty good place now. She carried on, always waiting in case he stopped her.
There was a palpable shift.
It was tangible. Did he feel it too? A frisson. Eloise stared back at him, feeling a shot of excitement thrill down the length of her spine. She was longing for him to touch her, yearning really. She'd never seen him look so handsome, all tall and lovely, dressed in black. The candlelight highlighted the planes in his face and she really wanted to touch his cheekbones. His hair, his arms, his hands, something,
anything. It was all confirmed in that fleeting moment; he was the one for her.
When Dori didn't respond to her touch, she smiled weakly. That was okay. Maybe now she could try and move on, maybe find herself a nice Parisian boy who would take her to galleries and buy her coffee and flowers and take her on picnics by the Seine. When he backed off, she could take a breath. She hadn't realised she'd actually stopped breathing for a little bit. She took another sip of wine and didn't meet his gaze, hoping he didn't notice the faint shroud of awkwardness that had now settled over her. She suddenly felt a bit sad.
"Oh," she whispered. "Wednesday, I think?" She asked, figuring he meant when was she here again. She was at vet school almost every day but she had a break from this place for a few nights. "So I have a few nights off," Eloise responded. "So I'll probably put on a fuzzy sweater and watch the light show from my balcony," she remarked, thinking back to a few months ago when he asked if he could come with her. They still hadn't done that. She offered him another smile as she placed her wine glass back on the bar. Maybe she was laying down the ground work for seeing him again. "Excuse me," she said gently, trying to move around him, holding her body stiffly as not to brush his chest as she walked around the other side, the bar acting like a barrier between them.
Sat back on her stool, she quickly grabbed her battered old shoes and slipped them back on. "You're done working here now, aren't you?" She asked, knowing that Dorian's time here wasn't permanent and that Russell, the usual bartender, would be back soon. "Well I hope you liked Paris," she commented cheerfully, her little fingers scraping back her hair and securing it into a ponytail with an elastic she had around her wrist. "I wonder how the nightlife compares with London." Urgh. Why did she ask that for? She didn't want to talk about work but it seemed safer somehow.