Behind each very real person there was a very real story, often leading to sadness whether or not there was a great deal of happiness mixed in somewhere as well. For Keiran, it had been more of the latter until three years ago, when his life had become anything but, mainly. Sure, he had bright moments of lights, brilliant lines from brilliant people drawn on the pages here and there. But a lot - a lot - of sadness.
And regardless of the fact that he had once been astoundingly good at hiding that sadness, it was all catching up to him, interrupting his ability to focus like the redhead interrupted his attempts to.
Keiran had been staring off at nothing, his gaze glossing over as he let the world blur before him. But then a stranger was there, clearly talking to him, and he had to remind himself not to be taken aback by the endearment. It wasn't one that meant anything, most of the time, but for three years it had defined him, that word. His perceived failure to deserve it, created by the one person he thought had given it to him, meant that his eyes snapped back into focus, landing directly on her.
He imagined that he could come off as quite cold and hard, particularly when he was struggling internally. And this woman undoubtedly had no idea about that, so he tried to temper how sharp his gaze probably seemed. In fact, he glanced down at his hand where it rested - perhaps foolishly - on the top of the bar. Then he frowned, realizing suddenly that his friends had already gotten drinks and were apparently talking amongst themselves. Weird. He wasn't sure when that had happened, but perhaps that was why they were drinking already and he was talking to this Scot.
Or, well, she was talking, and he was still five steps behind.
"I don't know," he confessed after a moment, shaking his head. "I haven't lately cared much for what drink it is."
It would have been easier for Keiran if he'd walked into a pub in the middle of nowhere. He could've admitted that as long as it dulled, he hardly cared what it tasted like. And he genuinely, truly wasn't a man verging on alcoholism. But that didn't mean he wanted to actually think about the sort of man he had become. It was too soon after her leaving for him not to. And it wasn't that he wanted her back, or loved her in the correct way only to have her reject him. It was that neither of them loved each other enough, and he felt guilty because he could've been better and he had failed.
When they'd met, she had been crazy, yes, but she had been genuine and herself unabashedly. Now she was a shadow of a shell of the version of herself that he had come to love. It wasn't enough, it wasn't the same, and it wasn't fair to her.
"Why don't you pick something for me, instead?"