She figured that she probably should have wanted to back away from him, but there was something about the way he held himself that made her want to know more, made her drawn to him. Perhaps there was something about the fact that he encompassed so much of the unknown, and simultaneously seemed to offer her both fear and comfort - something she couldn’t recall experiencing much, if at all, before. “Oh, well, that’s a relief.” Lydia offered a cautious smile. “I’ll do my best to be as efficient as I can be! I like to think I’m good at keeping things neat and organized, so…” she trailed off. “Unless you’ll be done then, and just want to have a drink or something with me, for some reason?” She could feel her voice rise, making the already-existing question all the more obvious. “Which I mean, thanks for, it means a lot, and I do like to be kept busy, so…” she shrugged, doing her best to offer him a smile back, even if hers couldn’t quite match the feeling of his.
“Other than one leather jacket I had briefly my first year of university, I can’t say I’ve ever had much experience with it, but to be fair, my brother’s far better at the whole ‘fashion’ thing than I am, so he’d probably be able to tell you if I pulled off the look, or if I should stay with dresses and pants and sweaters.” Lydia made a small face, “I don’t know how well it’d work for cleaning, as I’m certain it’s not the easiest of materials to wash, but…” another shrug as her posture stiffened, following his finger’s movement with her peripheral vision. “I trust you and your thoughts on the matter - I mean, you’re the one of us who’s the business owner and all…”
“I - well, I haven’t had any tonight - and I -” she started, again, biting her lip. “You mean like you kissing me?” Lydia felt her cheeks flush, “I’m sorry, that is horridly presumptuous of me to even say, so please - tell me what you might mean, given that I could easily see it as ‘this will taste better off of your tongue - as in, far away from it’, right?”
Lambs led to slaughter never get their fair share of blame. No one questions why they followed so easily, trusting so absolutely, eyes wide shut. It's universally accepted that they are willing victims. But Lydia's not wrapped in a wool coat, and he's no shepherd, only a man who was tailed by a wolf, a smile as lupine as the beast itself. Volunteer replaces victim, a label more attractive than its crimson counterpart, fit for a princess.
"Don't have to convince me any," he told her before she could put up a resume for him, head tilting to have a look at her beneath him. "Can picture you right now polishing away." And that was before her voice could raise an octave, have it flit back up to him, smile of hers in tow. "Another drink? Didn't get your fill with that one?" he prodded her with the tease, a glance given to what was already in her hand before he could put everything else in the conversation through a sieve.
A brother was caught in the web, a speck, and yet it didn't trickle out like the rest. A piece of information that was pinched at to keep instead of discard. Intuition told him so. "Reckon he'd get a different eyeful of it," he went on, pocketing what was already gleaned. "Wouldn't want him throwing you up a tower, yeah?"
Isn't that what happens in little girls' fairy tales? Be a good girl and wait for a kiss. Mal's grin spread, teeth baring, the sight of blood rushing up to cause rosy cheeks enough to nearly make him laugh. A short hum was given instead while his finger left her page, trading paper for skin, lifting beneath her chin. "Had something else to taste off of?"