The game Oliver had come up with, to keep up to speed with Charlie Baker's drinking, was growing increasingly harder as the night went on. He tried not to watch too deliberately as the other man took a sip, then another, before he mimicked the action. At some point, he wasn't sure when, he felt the familiar heat across his cheeks, drunk, leaving him smiling and moving to the sound of the music that mixed with the conversations around them.
There was an electricity in the bar—one that the next morning Ollie would ascertain had been tequila driven—but at the moment left him feeling high.
"S'alright," Oliver reassured, his smile only hinting at his bewilderment. In no world did he think that Charlie would be concerned with the timeline of his recording, given all that he imagined that he had on. In fact, it felt like he was in some kind of alternate universe, casually having margaritas with him and talking about life, about Liam, about his record and everything falling into place.
"I hope so, anyway," The younger man shrugged. He didn't want to jinx it. This thing that he'd spend his whole life dreaming of, to the point that he'd never actually tried to excel at anything else, felt so tangible now that the prospect of losing it was terrifying.
Reaching over the bar, Oliver thanked the bartender for the tacos and greedily took one before offering the plate to Charlie. You trying to insult me? The question sounded distant but stood out over the sounds of the bar. Ollie stopped, mid-bite. He held up a finger in thought, thankful that he had the time to think things through as he chewed. He'd never been so happy that speaking with his mouth open had been so ingrained in him from his mother as a mortal sin.
"Sorry?" He finally asked, setting down the taco and turning to face Charlie as much as he could given the bar. He expected him to smile, to laugh as he had earlier in the evening when he had pulled a joke on him. "No—" Oliver began nervously, the moment enough time had passed for it to be serious. In hindsight, Rochester probably wasn't the best example, given the man's current status. "—I just," He wiped his mouth with his damp cocktail napkin and folded it up.
"I don't know what I meant," He confessed finally with a shrug. It had been a one-off comment, something he hadn't even given a second thought to.