Super Bowl Buttonhole(closed)
Feb 1, 2011 21:30:15 GMT -5
Post by Joshua Bernstein on Feb 1, 2011 21:30:15 GMT -5
ooc: this takes place the 6th
bic:
Josh did not keep up with sports. It wasn't that he particularly disliked them so much as his energy and enthusiasms were spent elsewhere and he had little time left for such trivialities as football scores. He would, however, gladly attend sports related functions when invited, if only because sports related functions tended to involve three of his favorite things: friends, beer and finger foods. So it was with great delight that he had accepted the invitation from Ben Rhodes to come over and watch football with a few of the guys.
He neither knew nor cared which teams were playing; the opportunity to spend time with his friends and with Riley's cheese dip was more important than sports rivalries. Besides, this was the Super Bowl: as far as he was concerned, the only reason people watched was for the halftime show and the advertisements.
He had, as usual, procured a ride from Sean. It had been almost four weeks since his friend had called him up in distress and requested his company for a night of drinking until they passed out. That had been an awkward evening; Sean was rarely that outwardly fragile and he wasn't sure he did a good job of being supportive. His friend had been oozing guilt, but whatever he was feeling guilty about remained a mystery. He'd attempted to absolve his friend; he didn't know what had happened (he had been privy to a rant, but the only thing Josh had been able to make of it was that the women who had attacked him were threatening Hammel or Sean or both. Why Sean would feel guilty about this rather than terrified was beyond him) but he did know that the other man tended to blame himself for things beyond his control. That was all he needed to know to reassure Sean that he wasn't to blame.
A short, laughter-filled trip later and they had arrived at the house Ben shared with Yulia. "Thank you, Jeeves." He grinned at his friend, hopping out of the car and up the walk with more limberness than he'd had in weeks: it was so nice to have unbroken ribs and a system not stuffed full of pain killers.
The door swung open almost as soon as he knocked. "Hello, hello!" He greeted his friends as he and Sean were ushered inside, out of the cold, and divested of coats and gloves. "It's nice and warm in here!" He commented cheerily as he followed Ben into the living room. And almost instantly his good mood dissipated, replaced by a sense of wariness: the somber expressions on the faces of his friends seemed rather out of place at a football party.
"Ummm. So. Umm. What happened? Did we miss the game?"
bic:
Josh did not keep up with sports. It wasn't that he particularly disliked them so much as his energy and enthusiasms were spent elsewhere and he had little time left for such trivialities as football scores. He would, however, gladly attend sports related functions when invited, if only because sports related functions tended to involve three of his favorite things: friends, beer and finger foods. So it was with great delight that he had accepted the invitation from Ben Rhodes to come over and watch football with a few of the guys.
He neither knew nor cared which teams were playing; the opportunity to spend time with his friends and with Riley's cheese dip was more important than sports rivalries. Besides, this was the Super Bowl: as far as he was concerned, the only reason people watched was for the halftime show and the advertisements.
He had, as usual, procured a ride from Sean. It had been almost four weeks since his friend had called him up in distress and requested his company for a night of drinking until they passed out. That had been an awkward evening; Sean was rarely that outwardly fragile and he wasn't sure he did a good job of being supportive. His friend had been oozing guilt, but whatever he was feeling guilty about remained a mystery. He'd attempted to absolve his friend; he didn't know what had happened (he had been privy to a rant, but the only thing Josh had been able to make of it was that the women who had attacked him were threatening Hammel or Sean or both. Why Sean would feel guilty about this rather than terrified was beyond him) but he did know that the other man tended to blame himself for things beyond his control. That was all he needed to know to reassure Sean that he wasn't to blame.
A short, laughter-filled trip later and they had arrived at the house Ben shared with Yulia. "Thank you, Jeeves." He grinned at his friend, hopping out of the car and up the walk with more limberness than he'd had in weeks: it was so nice to have unbroken ribs and a system not stuffed full of pain killers.
The door swung open almost as soon as he knocked. "Hello, hello!" He greeted his friends as he and Sean were ushered inside, out of the cold, and divested of coats and gloves. "It's nice and warm in here!" He commented cheerily as he followed Ben into the living room. And almost instantly his good mood dissipated, replaced by a sense of wariness: the somber expressions on the faces of his friends seemed rather out of place at a football party.
"Ummm. So. Umm. What happened? Did we miss the game?"