You sure about that? Cordelia had been, but now she wasn't so sure. It was just beer, right? Cordelia could drink beer. The glass in front of Danny was a yellow-amber, so, like, normal beer color, and clear through. And it wasn't like she and Freya Trickett had that much in common, anyway. "I'll be fine, Dan," she said, trying out another nickname on her tongue. It didn't seem to fit the cheerful man beside her -- he was definitely a Danny, not a Dan.
She sipped at her own glass while Danny and the bartender bantered -- it was only tasting a little bit like piss and hops, and was surprisingly inoffensive. "It's fine," she lied to Danny, taking a long sip. At least she was already tipsy. "What, twenty quid? Twenty knuts?" She hoped it wasn't twenty Galleons -- her advance was good for the book, but it wasn't break-the-bank-at-the-bar good. Her purse was tucked into her skirt pocket, inside a very handy but very fragile Extending charm. She stuck her hand in and fished around. "Don't tell Michael."
"Prophet's good," she said, sipping at the beer again (more and more tolerable with every sip, it was.) "Writing's good. All's good." All wasn't good -- she really needed to tell Michael about her book, it had been ages since Edith found out now -- but that was a tomorrow problem, or perhaps a May problem. Danny posed for her - Cordelia laughed. "Such a charming subject, how could I resist?" she teased, squeezing his arm affectionately.
She had half a mind to ask -- can I get a quote from you for my book about the war, then -- but bit her tongue. "I got a pitch for you when I'm sober, maybe," she said instead, tapping the back of his hand. "But you'll have to remind me."