Ah. So he had left only the unimportant keys, then. Tony's face twitched as he turned to climb the stairs. There were a hundred things he wanted to say -- wouldn't have left them if you hadn't snuck out or where's 'everywhere else' or can you show any bloody emotions, you tight-lipped git -- and he said none of them, just thought them rudely. Maybe if Michael wasn't here, he would be able to have out with all this. But maybe if Michael wasn't here, Tony wouldn't be so on edge.
He hadn't been on edge the last time he saw Kai, was the thing. He had been drunk, but sobering up by the end, and it had been soft and comfortable in Kai's arms. If it had just been Kai at the door, maybe they could have talked about that. Maybe. But it was Kai and Michael on his step, so the whole thing was out of the question. He could open up to one of them today, but only one of them, and Michael had nearly a decade of seniority here.
Michael slipped past him into the apartment. Kai didn't. The other man's fingertips lingered on his as he took the keys. Tony dropped his hand, stuffed it into his pocket where his wand rested.
Kai thanked him. Tony, knowing Michael was finally not looking at him -- Tony’s having kneazles, he heard over his shoulder, presumably meant for Zach -- let himself loosen his jaw. It wasn't a smile, but the corner of his mouth quirked slightly upwards. "You're welcome," he said, some artificial gruffness still in his tone.
I’m sorry, Kai said, the word dropping like lead in the pit of Tony's stomach. Lord, had Anthony really been waiting for an apology, still, after all this time? The one he had never gotten when Kai came to him like a confessor to church? Now? Fucking now he was sorry? Anthony let out a soft 'tch' under his breath. Probably not that -- Kai had a number of things to apologize for, now. Perhaps it was for leaving last time.
Kai continued -- Tony's face fell for a brief second before hardening again. Of course. Kai wasn't capable of looking back more than twenty-four hours, it seemed. "Or something," he echoed, spiteful. "Yes, you should have."
But Kai was looking at him, through him, into him with that heavy piercing gaze as he lingered. Tony cleared his throat. Some small self-sabotaging instinct wanted to invite Kai in, dare Zach or Michael to say something about it. He squashed it down, but when he spoke again it was softer, a touch kinder; "Do just -- write next time." He fought off the urge to say more, say anything any of the men in front or behind him could use against him. His eyes flickered over Kai once, stepped back over the doorframe. "Right. Cheers, then."
When the door finally closed, Tony slumped against the back of the wood, looking at Michael and Zach with some exhaustion. His hands went up to his eyes, pulling the skin down as he dragged them lower. "Fuck, Michael, what the bloody hell did he tell you?"