Iris hesitated once more just outside La Trattoria Venezia, a part of her afraid to commit herself to sitting with him inside the cute little restaurant. After telling herself she could leave at any time, though, she stepped into the place, her eyes scanning her surroundings. The place had a very warm and comfortable feel to it, small yet large enough not to get too crowded too fast. If it had been any larger, any more crowded, she probably would have been edgy, expecting an ambush from any one of the numerous kids who bullied her.
Then she realized Warren had moved to one of the tables, and she hurriedly followed him, keeping her hands stuck firmly in the pocket of her hoodie. This time her hesitation was barely a moment as she slid in across from him, unsure how to act. She'd never really been one-on-one with someone before, not unless she was at home with one of her parents. The part of her that was trained never to have her hood up in school had her pulling back the fabric to reveal her dark hair, the movement causing a bit of hair to fall in front of her face.
Once again she was mindlessly biting her lip as she sat across from him, unwilling to look him in the eye as he talked. Instead she just looked around the restaurant, admiring the mural along the back wall. With a hint of surprise, her gaze flicked back to him as he mentioned he had been in New Hampshire before looking away again.
She saw the server coming so she looked back to the table, allowing her not to have to look at the woman, her hands resting nervously in her lap. Briefly glancing up at the server when the attention turned to her, "I'll just have a chai tea?" She said, ending more on a questioning note than a final one. Orders weren't something she typically gave. If anything she was on the receiving end. Always.
When the woman departed, she looked back at Warren, meeting his gaze only briefly. "New Hampshire?" She asked simply, curious what he was doing here but not really willing to specifically ask. She wasn't one of those girls that was all questions. She had questions she didn't want to answer, so she wasn't the type to pry herself.