@lightsnevercomingdown
He shifts awkwardly in his seat, trying to look at anything but her. She would be a welcome distraction from the turbulence and numerous questionable noises that Katinka makes as she takes them over the water back to Alaska. But Murray watches them like a hawk and, if his breakdown the year before had been anything to go by, Hop knows the man's gloating would be unbearable.
Still, he can't resist, subtly letting his pinkie brush against Joyce's leg as she sits beside him, a hint of a smirk on his lips as he keeps his focus out the window. It can't be long now...
They hadn't had a moment alone since that moment in the church. Always accompanied by Murray, or Yuri or Antonov. Knowing that they'll spend a night in Alaska is the only thing getting him through this flight.
xXx
They arrive sooner that he had expected. A car awaits them at the airfield, driving the five to a nearby hotel. By now, he's beginning to anticipate having a real bed to sleep in more than anything. When they arrive, they find that a room has been booked for each of them. That'll keep Murray quiet.
He waits around fifteen minutes before leaving his room, making his way to the floor below and knocking lightly on Joyce's door. When she answers, its clear she's about to take a bath, and he doesn't blame her.
"If you want me to leave, I get it..."
Nothing fills the air save for the sound of heavy breathing as they both slowly return to reality. Perhaps it had been the fact they were in the motel or their exhaustion, but the night they spent together in Alaska had been nothing compared to this. It was as though all thirty years of pent-up feeling had exploded tonight.
"I uh..." it wasn't often that Jim was lost for words, but he found himself entirely incapacitated. All he could do was chuckle.
She knew he wasn’t exactly laughing at her. Perhaps it was just where they found themselves after all this time. She took a moment to listen, to make sure the kids hadn’t come back. Then she rolled over to hold him and to be held. To soak up the moment. “Yeah,” she whispered. “Yeah.”
He wraps his arms around her, kissing the top of her head. He can't remember the last time he'd felt this content, as if all the fears in his mind had been silenced for only a moment.
"We should send the kids out more often," he smirks.













