@lautrui. flying to bogotá is something particular - eight hours, give or take from texas. no fancy private planes, no special treatment, extends the journey by another handful of hours to get through the airport. and it’s boring. flights are boring.
crowds and close quarters of a plane always put an itch in the back of alejandro’s teeth that he sees glimmer back at him from kate’s eyes, but he’s learned that if someone is going to kill you they won’t try it at an airport. no one person is important enough for the effort. the boredom these days usually saturates his bones, leaving him a half-asleep guard dog who is just looking forward to going home.
it’s stranger with kate in the seat next to him. the same feeling of a commute home at the end of a long day is punctuated by knowing that his dogs will be happier to see kate than they are to see him (they always are; he doesn’t blame them), by knowing that for the first time in a remarkably long time, his apartment will have more than one human in it.
it’s not anxiety. not exactly. it’s a kind of simmering neighbour to it, poking and prickling at his other, more inoperable neuroses. his elbow nudges against hers the whole time and wheels finally hitting tarmac is like letting a breath out - another breath in for unloading bags and getting through the airport. a breath out for moving away from el dorado and towards the inner city.
a breath in when he sees the facade of his apartment, shifting his bag up over his shoulder. he has a long list of particular opinions about american food and is thinking, as much as anything else, about his distinctly non-american home, with its locally sourced coffee, with its local beer from nearby microbreweries because soitude has afforded him time to become a snob.
he glances at kate and gestures up at the building, pointing it out as they approach from down the street. “you can smoke on my balcony. i have cigarettes in my kitchen.”