edinburgh // 4 may 2004
She kept thinking she saw him, ever since she had talked to Bérénice for all of ten minutes, but it always
wasn’t him. Honey was just trying to avoid him, she was telling herself, if he was even there at all. There was no reason he’d be at a Ministry gala, even one that was auctioning off books, so unless he was someone’s plus one… The champagne probably wasn’t helping with her optical illusions; there weren’t any men in the room that even really
looked like him, so she had no business thinking it was him.
Until, of course, it was. Honey drained her glass and turned, determined to avoid Harlan as planned. But-- Honey turned again, holding the skirt of
her dress just off the ground as she took a few steps forward through the crowd. If he was here with someone, it shouldn’t bother her. It
didn’t bother her. She had worked through all of that the last time she had seen him, just after his birthday, when he said they couldn’t be friends. (She was choosing to ignore that last detail.)
And did she want to be seen with him? Maybe, just a little.
Honey smiled--it was something that bordered on a smirk--as she got closer, lifting her hand in a small wave after stepping around another guest. The Griffins had lost their last four matches, and Honey considered saying
something to that effect, but she didn’t think that would help her cause any. (And she didn’t know what her cause was, here, maybe just getting things back to their pre-dating versions, able to have a conversation without wondering about a million
what if?s.)
“Hi,†she said, happy to find him between conversations. “Here for the books or the free drinks?†It was probably the lamest line she could think of, but it had been so long since she had tried to make genuine small talk with him, she was a bit underprepared.
@Harlan Bellamy