Compliments stop getting thrown back like they are embarrassing

“No I don’t.” “This thing is ancient.” “I barely got ready.” He has heard every version of a compliment being thrown in the trash before it can do anything.
Then she stops doing that. He says she looks good, and she does not argue with him. Maybe she glances down at what he mentioned. Maybe she only says thanks and reaches for her drink.
It changes the room by a few degrees. The next compliment does not feel like harmless manners anymore. If she is not pretending attention is embarrassing, a man starts wondering what else she might let stand.
Her friends start watching her instead of watching him

The friend gives it away first. Not him, not the room, not some dramatic reaction. The woman beside her sees the look last too long and suddenly stops watching the guy entirely.
Now she is watching her. Eyebrows barely up. Mouth trying not to smile. Maybe she goes quiet. Maybe her phone appears under the table and a message gets typed with one thumb.
That is the confirmation he was looking for without meaning to look for it. Someone who knows her caught the same thing: the slower answer, the hand left on the glass, the outfit not being corrected back into place.



