Honey asked about the bonfire and he couldn't help but let out a short laugh. Her not judging him was a nice feeling. Had his mother found out, she'd say he was being "over dramatic" and "childish" and maybe he was but his feelings - whatever they were - were surely justified and valid. "Of course you can. We'll get a take away and make a night of it," Will joked only to shut right up at her next comment.
"You're kidding." She wasn't. He wasn't. No one was kidding. "Oh fuck, Honey, I'm sorry," he blurted out, his handsome face creasing as the guilt washed over him. Yikes. Here he was, bleating about his ramshackle relationship when her very real one had disintegrated. Will let out a heavy sigh and shook his head as though he couldn't believe it, flicking his eyes up to glance at her as she explained.
"What an absolute dickhead," he muttered darkly, lips pursed in an uncanny impression of his grandmother. Now, he didn't like Harlan. He'd never liked him. There was something about him that Will just couldn't quite put his finger on, a vibe sort of. Of all the news stories he'd read written about the Quidditch player, the less he felt sympathetic towards him. It was probably all tangled up with the feelings of resentment he'd indulged himself in after Honey left him because he was the reason for his previous tailspin.
But Honey was the be-all-and-end-all, wasn't she? She wasn't someone who was replaced. After all, why would her ex throw away a diamond and pick up a pebble? Will had firmly been in love with Honey and a very small part of him might still possibly be but she'd be fine. She was always fine. If he ever needed a reason to plough his fist through the Quidditch player's face, this was it.
He frowned again before offering her a small smile. She probably didn't want (or need) to tell her that she was too good for him because she knew. A latent anger was bubbling and he couldn't work out where it was coming from, whether it be from Bérénice lying to him for however long or from Honey suffering. Either way, Harlan Bellamy was definitely implicated. "Absolute twatwaffle," he mumbled again, only realising now that his hands were balled up and into fists.
Oh, there was gin.
"Was it?" Will asked Honey quickly, wondering why she'd ever need an excuse to come and see him. They clinked glasses and he picked up the spare one, tapping the bottom of his glass against the side of her other one to complete the ritual. "I think it's a pretty good reason to see me," he offered before taking a gulp and forgetting it was gin, only to be reminded almost instantly.
"I am good to talk to," Will told her quickly, just in case he decided to leave. "Usually," he frowned. "Without all of this going on," he added, gesturing to his face in an attempt to encapsulate this trainwreck of a day as he drank his gin. "Do you want to talk about it?" He ventured gently, not really sure if he wanted to talk about his own relationship, either. It was too fresh. The image of Bérénice's face as she closed the door after being told to leave was haunting him but he refused to apologise for his behaviour this time. If he had time to process everything, he might have realised that he wasn't blameless but for now, both his ex and her ex were vying for position of enemy number one. Honey needed to stop him from sending flowers by way of an apology.
"Mm?" Will asked, distracted, but looking up as Honey spoke again. He smiled, genuinely this time. "Yeah," he nodded, both thrilled and alarmed that she might want to look back into this. He hated that word, closure. It was too American and it sounded plastic-y. "But you'd still be unhappy," he reminded her lightly, tapping his index finger on the back of her knuckles once. He'd come to terms with not being "The One" for Honey but it had taken a bloody long time.
"Where do you reckon we'd be by now if we were still together, then?" He queried, wondering if he was opening Pandora's box. He didn't have anything to lose. He was already two pints and half a glass of gin down now. "If you say that you hadn't decided to name a fudge after me, I'd be mad we hadn't broken up sooner," he quipped with a dimpled smile to show he was only kidding.