Noah pulled his bottom lip between his teeth, half-hiding a grin. “You’d probably still kick my ass,†he offered, hoping to distract her a little from wherever her thoughts had taken her.
“Yeah,†he smiled back at her. It had been a rhetorical question but he kind of liked that she was answering him anyway. He picked up another slice of pizza -- the fig and prosciutto one -- and munched on it while she spoke. Noah let her finish, then finished his mouthful before responding; “So your family still in—†he hesitated, if only to make it seem like he had to try and remember, “— California, wasn’t it?â€
He had some more wine -- noted that it was getting a little easier to drink with every sip. He glanced back at Kate. “I, uh— I haven’t been home yet, since moving here. Like I get letters and send them stuff back but...†he trailed off. “I get what you mean, the big change thing.†Except he’d had a breakup, not a divorce. “Sorta,†he added quickly. “I mean, the moving was… you know, the big thing. I’d never left the East Coast before.†Noah grabbed for his glass and had another gulp. “Cool that you’re sticking around though,†he said quietly, meeting her gaze before busying himself with putting some of the ingredients he’d used away.
“Already?†he all but complained. He was promptly sidetracked from his grief (the poor pizza, destined to be but a leftover) by her follow-up admission. Statement? Whatever it was. “Oh,†he said, mostly because he didn’t know what else to say. “Well, you’re welcome to hang out, you know, Emma will get home at some point.†He needed to stop mentioning Emma if he ever wanted them to have a standalone friendship. His eyes slowly panned across to the bottle that had somehow been depleted in no time at all. “Wow,†he breathed. “Uh, we’ve… probably got something here, if you want more?â€
He had turned to start rummaging in cupboards, but spun back to face Kate sharply when she suggested she walk home. “No—†he started, perhaps a little firmly, loudly, “I— just mean, no, you shouldn’t… walk,†he ended weakly. It wasn’t dark, but he definitely hadn’t made as much of a dent in that bottle as she had and he didn’t want her walking home alone drunk. Didn’t sound very cool and chill to say that though, did it?
He cleared his throat. “You’re not bothering me.†They stared at one another for a moment, then he’d reached his awkwardness quota and he went back to finding some more alcohol. “I think there’s a bottle of tequila here somewhere,†he murmured, mostly to himself, then made a triumphant “Aha!†noise when he found it, wedged behind the bag of potatoes. He emerged, holding the bottle aloft by the base, grinning widely. “Sà or no?â€