Charlie's lip twitched upward in a small smirk, at artist. Cordelia managed to keep herself from overtly frowning at that, but only just. Was that so hard to believe? That reporters were artists too, creating a window into a story that was clear and evocative despite how complex the situation might actually be? She felt defensive of her chosen profession, of her work, of her goddamn invitation to that party in California that Charlie was now taking a moment to also mock. Cordelia might not care for Kate Baker, but with the woman's ex-husband in front of her, the divorce made more and more sense. "And yet you pull my work in progress out of my hands," Cordelia settled on commenting dryily, ignoring the rest except to commit responses to memory.
You want names and addresses? A joke - the smirk made it clear. "If you're handing them out. Your Gringotts account, too, while we're asking for impossible things." A touch of frustration crept into her voice, but it wasn't like Charlie was going to respect her any more if she managed to keep her tone level. Every successive moment seemed to bring her a little lower, in his eyes.
He was burning holes into her dress with those same eyes, which made her feel uneasy, mostly. A touch flattered, despite herself. A short-lived therapist said that was a trauma response, once, during what quickly became their last session. Her mouth felt dry, but in her haste to put some distance between then Cordelia had abandoned her glass near Charlie. Her eyes flickered over to it -- well, it wasn't as if she had really left it unattended, right?
Charlie set his glass down. Was he rattled? Cordelia stilled the urge to reach for the quill. She could remember this much without notes, at least. Still Liam, Charlie said, after a pause far too long for that to be his own thought on the matter. I suppose I took it as a shitty friend. At this Charlie Baker smiled at her, thinly, in perhaps the most honesty his face had shown this whole while. "It's a hard thing to reckon with, even when you don't have other things flying at you," Cordelia said, half comforts spilling from her tongue easily. She hadn't been particularly supportive with Ollie, now had she? Though she couldn't remember Oliver ever coming out -- he had just been, well, Ollie, the whole time, with easy kisses flying in any direction regardless of who the lips were attached to.
Not that she would have noticed, if Ollie had come out to her sometime in 1999. She had been, in the words of the man in front of her, going through her own shit.
The urge to write this down and the urge to drink were at war within her; after a moment the wine won. She scooped up the notebook, just to have it in hand, before making her way back to the abandoned glass on the low table, besides Charlie once again. She raised her glass slightly, her own smile thin and wane. "To failing our friends, then," she said, dark as anything, and took a huge gulp.