Honey raised an eyebrow. Slumber parties. “I tried but—“ she relaxed her face and shrugged one shoulder— “Stephen didn’t seem too keen on the idea.†She was fully implying that any slumber party would involve Audrey’s husband. (Never mind that Audrey had never once crossed her mind, let alone her husband, or maybe it had once but she was trying to cut down on her number of friend’s siblings or sibling’s friends.)
But there was gin. “Good.†She liked gin, liked Harlan on gin, liked forgetting that just a few minutes ago she had decided that staying sober was the best idea. He gestured in a direction away from the crowd and Honey cast a brief glance around the room—no one seemed too interested in them—before she turned. A second later she felt the familiar sensation of his hand on her, though it was higher than she was used to; she didn’t want to read into it but it was hard not to think about it being purposeful. She shouldn’t have wanted it to be any different, she reminded herself after a couple more seconds.
The hallway was quiet save the sound of her shoes but she didn’t feel the need to say anything to break the silence. It was familiar, almost.
Honey peeled away from Harlan as they entered the room at the end of the hall, letting herself play the snooping tourist for a beat. There was an uncomfortable looking desk and plenty of books—why did everyone own so many books?—and nothing that really jumped out at her.
She turned back to Harlan at his question, a soft smirk on her lips; if things had been different, if they had been different, it’d be an easy answer. But things were the way they were and any gin was probably a bad idea, never mind just a little less. “Soda, too.†She was close to saying that she didn’t have anyone to mind her, which she needed if she was going straight for the gin, which would just be her saying that he could mind her without actually having to say it— “I don’t want to be the only one having fun.†Until everyone else found the bar in an hour or so, apparently.
He’d made her enough drinks that she didn’t think she needed to walk him through making this one; she turned back to her slow circuit of the room, trying to be as sneaky as possible about putting a little space between them.
Don’t— Honey’s gaze was already on the small framed photos—Valerie, all of them—and she slid it farther past the shelves and to the wall, to the bigger family portraits, Bellamys throughout the years. “Don’t think anything could be worse than that one at your parents’,†she said, smirking though her back was to him. He knew the one she was talking about, too, thirteen- or fourteen-year-old Harlan, that awkward in-between age. Never mind that she had her own family photos around her flat, or that the Flumes were traditionally late bloomers (though some were later than others), or that there was a nice mix-in of muggle photos from her grandparents’ farm rather than these formally posed and moving family portraits.
There was another photo of the family a few years later and she looked at it for a couple of seconds—again she decided that she would have had a minor crush on him had she really known he existed—before she turned back around and gave him an involuntary once over. “Thanks for risking a scandal just to get me a drink.†She took the glass from him, careful to let her fingers brush his as she did and regretting it almost immediately. She had a large sip to distract herself.