“Lucky me,†she repeated, almost meaning it, half a goofy smile on her face. It hadn’t been luck that they were an item -- it took a lot of work on her part and, if he was to be believed, on his as well (and she was choosing to believe him) -- and it wasn’t like either of them were settling for the other; it had just made sense, and it was working, mostly. Honey chose not to share the inner workings of her mind with this woman, though, offering her another smile instead. “Maybe I will.†She doubted she’d be allowed back in a Griffins box after this match, but she couldn’t deny that she’d enjoy getting to watch Portree and Harlan all at once, again. It’d be awful when Harlan lost, but she’d worry about that later.
Honey nodded, nearly genuinely interested in finding out more about her. “Been there,†she said with a laugh, reminiscing for a second -- her ex had been the same, more into books than sports; he was a publisher, too -- “Is it too soon for him to pretend to be into sports for you?†Really, she meant if it had been too long, because that seemed to be the thing as time went on in relationships; people stopped pretending as they got more and more comfortable. Honey hadn’t found herself there, ever; she hadn’t let a relationship last that long to find out.
She nodded again, glanced back to the pitch in some vain hope that play had resumed so they could stop talking, but the time out was continuing. She was here for Harlan -- for Honey’s beau -- and he had failed to mention that he had invited anyone else (not that she thought he needed to, but it would have been different if his guest was ugly). “Oh, right; forgot he said you’d be here,†she lied. She decided not to focus on how she seemed to be more his type -- brunette, for starts -- than Honey was (and more Honey’s type, if she was being honest), never mind the small fact that she had literally just established that he was dating her, Honey.
Did this count as irony because friends seemed to be such a contentious issue lately (thanks to Honey) but-- no, she wasn’t going to let herself think about all that again. She’d already decided for herself that she and certain other folk (Charlie) couldn’t be friends and she wasn’t about to tell Harlan to make the same decisions for himself. She was making assumptions about her, anyway, assuming they had a past (because that’s where her mind had jumped, wasn’t it?). Besides, she was a family friend, probably Simon’s age. Mature.
Harlan hadn’t mentioned either of them to each other, it seemed, but Honey tried not to dwell on it. “Honey,†she said, introducing herself as she wiped the bottle’s condensation on her jeans and held out her hand to the other woman.
She had a swallow of her new drink, nodding along. The lounge, after the match— Honey thought her being at Harlan’s match implied spending time with her but if he had other plans she could always just ‘go to work’ (or some other equally made up excuse) after the match instead. She was well aware that he’d by busy after but this wasn’t the sort she had anticipated. Interviews, team things… not other women; she was just going to make herself mad if she thought about it anymore or if they talked about Harlan anymore and Honey was doing her damnedest to be supportive so that was the last thing she needed.
“So are you in publishing, too?†She looked more into books than sports. “You’re dressed so smartly.†Too smart for watching quidditch, anyway.