Harlan's hesitation was all she needed to agree that yes, this was a monumental fuck up. She smiled at him quickly as she sipped at her whiskey, not mad exactly, because she'd asked for it but more...disappointed. Farley wanted someone in her corner. At this point, she'd take anyone telling her that she'd be okay.
She gave a short laugh. "And I thought I was starry-eyed," she joked, avoiding his gaze as she felt his on her face. She shrugged. He'd tempered his answer and she appreciated it. It wasn't an outright no. Her big dark eyes slid to the tray on Simon's desk where her resignation letter sat, momentarily wondering if she could destroy it. If he asked what she was still doing here, she could feign ignorance and blame it on his heavy workload and say he might have imagined it. But she wasn't happy here. She'd never been happy here. She liked filing and organising and she was good at her job but it wasn't exactly life-fulfilling.
Farley blinked back into reality. "Oregon," she answered quickly. "Home of microbreweries and coffee houses," she joked. She didn't blame her home on her intense caffeine problem but a lot of the state had a dependency. "I love it," she sipped from her mug. "I didn't think I'd ever get homesick but," rather than answer, she shrugged again. Besides, there weren't any mountains to climb in London.
"You're wondering why I'm here, aren't you?" The petite brunette grinned, unoffended. "I followed my boyfriend here. Ex boyfriend," she tacked on and she and Ethan hadn't been doing anything for a long time now. "He got a transfer. I followed. A month in, he met someone new at work," she sighed, though it didn't sting as much now. "My fault," she said, pressing a hand to her chest. "I should have realised that if he wanted to keep dating me, he would have made time. So now I'm stuck," she explained, wiggling her toes. "The contract doesn't end until the New Year so I'm probably gonna screwed when I get home but hey-ho."
Harlan mentioned LA and she involuntarily wrinkled her nose in distaste. "Too busy," she dismissed it with a wave of her hand. "The air quality sucks," she told him, as if he hadn't experienced it himself. It was too hot and too crowded and Farley loved the forest, not the beach.
Over her cup, she surveyed him. He'd suit West Coast living. Farley could see lots of people's jaws hitting the floor as he sauntered past. "Did you like it?" She asked, interestedly. He must travel a lot with his job but she hadn't heard of him back home before she started working for his brother. "You could make a lot of money across the pond," Farley offered. With his pedigree, American teams would bite his hand off. "You can still play when you're forty," she joked as she slurped at her drink.