At one of the arching entrances to the pool deck, a tiny clamour of activity occurred. The boss had appeared, at first just standing idly on the tiles with his hands tucked into his pockets, thoughts hidden behind dark aviators, until his contemplative observation led him to catch sight of a life guard. One hand jumped into the air, waving the girl over, and her trepidatious approach earned her a wide, welcoming grin and the glasses plucked from Tony's nose. After a greeting and a few quick questions that only had her blushing and staring at the floor shyly, eventually she could nod, all business, and try to sidle away while she radioed his request. She was caught with another question and beaming smile, though, and was still there when the pair of technicians arrived. Their comfort and boisterousness with Tony leading to loud laughs and rapidfire chatter only made her blush more, hunching her shoulders until Tony squeezed her against his side and she could have cried. This, Tony either didn't notice or ignored, but by the time he was done gesturing with the glasses still in his hand to the great, glittering glass case of the pool deck, keeping the fierce desert winds from slicing across the waters this high up, and the technicians were nodding and ready to scamper away, she had relaxed and barely wiggled when Tony murmured another question. And all of a sudden, he was gone, and she was left with a card to hold dreamily, not sure what had just happened.
By the time he had crossed the deck, the windows had taken on a barely perceptible green tint, and the light glinting off of the pool's surface making the swimmers squint was gone. Without any customary greeting, Tony dropped onto the chair next to those perfect, long legs he loved, the arm of his sunglasses between his teeth so he could run a hand up her skin and hold it just around her knee, making him mumble when he said, "So I guess I can't ask you if you need anything else in your room yet." He smiled at Wanda around the glasses, though, appreciating that he had clearly made the right choice. She obviously couldn't wait to get started doing nothing again.