Honey rolled her eyes, not returning his smirk. “Why would I?†She hadn’t been planning to travel on foot the last time she had asked where his new flat was. Besides, apparating didn’t require directions (and never mind that she had convinced herself she had never asked for directions in the first place). She caught up to him as she shrugged again, making her point, but maybe walking with a little less space between them than there’d been a minute before.
They walked in silence for a couple minutes, but it was nice to not have to be constantly on the defensive, or the offensive, or whatever she had recently decided to be; she was still figuring it out and the alcohol wasn’t helping, or it was; she was still figuring out that, too.
“Who, Fergie?†She shrugged. “He says a lot of things.†Honey knew that wasn’t what he meant and that her brother was one of their only ‘safe’ topics of conversation, but for once she wasn’t trying to linger in their safe space. “His ‘he’s married’ argument doesn’t really work these days.†She shrugged again, hoping that might prove to be a distracting thought (and that it might be the last Fergie mention for a while), but then again: she couldn’t remember if she had mentioned that particular argument to Charlie before, realizing a second later that she definitely hadn’t. It’d really only crossed Fergie’s mind when she had needed to explain away the Charlie mentions in that article.
This probably wasn’t the best time to mention that Fergie knew about her seeing Charlie (once) while he was kind of — though not technically — dating his now ex-wife, which had also led to her telling Fergie not to go to his stag party — something told her that no, she hadn’t mentioned it, any of it -- and Honey shrugged again, brushing all of it off. “He has really high opinions of us,†she said with a glance his way. “Your new album helped,†she added with a smirk before looking forward again, effectively moving any (and all) blame for Fergie’s opinions to Charlie.
Charlie motioned to some stairs and Honey started down them without hesitation, surprised he’d moved into a basement flat; maybe the divorce had gone worse than the papers made it out to be, which, admittedly, was already pretty bad. She made it down the stairs -- slowly, hand gripping the handrail tightly -- and blinked a few times when she realized this was the tube. And not just because Charlie implied she’d never been on it before. “Sure I have.†Once, when she was eight, and she and Fergie had tagged along with their aunt and uncle on what was supposed to be an ‘educational adventure’ but was really just a boring three days at museums.
She hadn’t had to do anything then, though, was more or less just shepherded along with her cousins. “I’ll just—“ she looked around, spotted a sign that said TICKETS, and tilted her head toward it. Charlie raised his eyebrows and she took that to mean, ‘Yes, obviously buy a ticket’. She waited for him to move toward the machines so she could copy whatever he did but he beat her to it: After you. She rolled her eyes and walked over to the nearest one, staring at it blankly for a second before turning back around and seeking Charlie out, hoping her (very real) excuse would keep her from making it clear she had no idea what she was doing. “Yeah, I don’t have any money.â€