If she had been paying attention to people’s physical presence, and not the increasing pressure inside her own head, Summer would certainly have retreated back to her original corner after getting a refill. Never mind that it was starting to swirl with more people as well; strangers were easier far to deal with than Tony Stark.
Well, in one way, anyhow. She didn’t tend to have crushes on random strangers, after all. But no, she’d walked right next him, screwdriver in hand, to lean her forehead against the wall in hopes that the coolth would help suppress her oncoming headache.
The minute he spoke to her, her feelings would probably be obvious to anyone with an eye.
It was a crime, really, that the person running the bar didn’t know what Death in the Afternoon was. He could surely use one, or seven. But he would have to stick with what the bartender knew, seeing as they wouldn’t let just make something for himself. They also followed the whole ‘no straight shots’ rule, he could tell. A splash of water just to make sure no one got too plastered.
Obviously they’d never heard of Tony Stark before.
Though he wasn’t expecting someone to just walk right up beside him without actually saying anything to him. That was definitely new.
Summer pressed her glass against her forehead at a particularly nasty throb. It was rapidly becoming clear that the only way to ease this headache was going to be to leave; the tension of shielding was just as bad as the emotions swirling among the crowd. She turned, meaning to set her glass down and seek the exit — and a roaring filled her ears, darkness overwhelming her sight. She felt the glass slip from her fingers as her knees gave way, both girl and glass crashing to the floor at Stark’s feet.