He’d been to her place once before. She’d avoided making extra contact with him or inviting him over or anything like that, mostly because Emily believed that if he wanted to see her, he’d talk to her first, and he’d done that. However, she didn’t know how much that really meant to him. She wasn’t stupid and she knew that he’d been with plenty of women much prettier than her -- that much she’d witnessed when she’d walked in on him with a big-boobed petite little blonde. God, she regretted that. Sorely. She could’ve just been the first person he’d thought of for an easy date. Someone that didn’t have much of a life, at least, not much of one that he knew about, and someone that would say yes… she’d half considered declining, but her horrible crush on him had prevented that. There was no denying that Emily wanted to attend this Ministry Ball with Leifr Trickett, whether he liked her or whether he was just using her like a human prop.
God, that sounded so desperate.
And it kind of was. Emily had a boyfriend already. One that got her nice things, took her extravagant places, and was, as a general rule, a boyfriend that most girls would kill to have. Handsome, older, wealthy, and she was still going on a date with a rugged, undeniably sexy barkeep with a billion family members. Did they breed like rabbits? She didn’t exactly know, but she’d definitely witnessed his battalion of cousins at the wedding she’d gone to with him and been a little spooked out of her wits. She came from wealth, too, where there weren’t many children involved, so Em supposed that she couldn’t relate on a spiritual level to that kind of closeness. She hadn’t been able to since her mother died and since Elaine had become so close with Eva.
Sliding the last bobby pin into place, Emily evaluated her appearance. The
dress she was wearing definitely hadn’t been meant for this event. She could never have afforded it on her own, and it was lucky that she’d even been able to afford the shoes she was wearing. She was thankful that they were sandals and not heels, at least -- she was worried about tripping on the dress as it was. It was beautiful, that much was obvious, but Emily’s insecurity wasn’t something that just went away with a beautiful dress. She was reluctant to tell John that most of the time, as she knew he tried hard to make her feel otherwise, but sometimes he contradicted himself. That was where the confusion had its place.
It felt kind of wrong to be going on a date, if it was that, with someone else in the expensive dress her boyfriend had bought for her, but it was a formal event and she hadn’t been able to buy anything else in a pinch. Emily would have had to save for awhile in order to purchase something like this, and as long as she refrained from spilling wine on herself, John didn’t have to know that she’d worn it at all.
A soft knock at her door snapped her out of her thinking reverie, and Emily made sure to close the bedroom door behind her as she went to answer it. She didn’t want him to see inside her bedroom, not when John had some clothes there and she had some.. other things that were inappropriate for her
friend’s eyes. Why was he even nice to her? She’d been a total bitch their first couple of meetings. He didn’t owe her anything. He could’ve taken someone that would go back to his flat with him after the event, but he’d chosen to ask her instead. It was just… weird. Really, really weird. As large as her lexicon was and still expanding, Emily couldn’t have thought of a better term for the feeling in that particular moment.
Her slender hand reached for the doorknob and she opened it with a tight smile already prepared, nodding her hello. “Hi.” She said softly, and kicked herself internally. She could hear the nervous undertones in her voice already.
You can do better than that. “You look… really great.” She distantly remembered the last time he’d picked her up for a formal event. She’d said something painfully similar to that. Why was it that her usually precise word usage seemed to disappear whenever this man was involved? He was like a human vocabulary obstruction. “You can come in for a minute, if you’d like to.” The dark haired witch held the door open wider so that he could step inside, and then promptly shut it behind them.