was smug when she accepted his offer, and even more so at the demanding way she had done so. "I'll have what the lady is having, then." The wizard said to the bartender, his eyes locked with hers. If they were drinking, then, of course, they would be drinking only the very best. He'd noticed the way her eyes ran over him greedily, and since that was what he hoped for, Reed was careful not to interrupt the show as he passed her drink down to her. "Did you come straight here from a finance meeting?" She had asked him, and Reed brushed it off with a laugh and a blatant, mysterious non-answer. "Funny," He replied, holding his drink up as a toast.
"I did," Reed answered before bringing his cup to his lips and taking the first sip. It wasn't top shelf, but he hadn't expected it to be. Honestly, he was surprised they weren't drinking straight from the bottle, though the red solo cup wasn't a far cry from it. Expensive tastes aside, Reed hated the way the plastic crinkled under his fingertips.
A part of him wanted to tell her that he had seen a few of her races and that he'd picked up on the way she kicked out the tail of her broom in the last corner to steal the updraft from her opponents, but he didn't. Instead, he took another quiet drink from his cup and shrugged. "It is my job to know." He was being purposefully vague now and amusing himself endlessly. "Did you know they had you up against ten to one odds? Hmm, what a spread." How the bookie had believed he'd make money off of the other racer, Reed would never know. Ace was lightning fast, she had a killer broom, and she was a lock if she got the holeshot.
"I wonder why they would do that?" Reed said innocently, but the wicked look on his face suggested something else, and he wondered if she got part of the take. It wouldn't have been legal, but it wasn't as if these events were ministry sanctioned.