Ivy L. James
Jun 30, 202112 min
Updated: Oct 1, 2022
APRIL
TheHistoricMariana:
This is going to be AWESOME. Less than a day!! đ„łđđ
Santi17:
Iâm looking at the plane ticket now and still canât believe it!
Santi17:
[sent an attachment]
TheHistoricMariana:
Whatâs with the Post-it?
Santi17:
So I donât lose it lol. You would do the same thing. Donât judge me.
TheHistoricMariana:
Nah, Iâd attach them to a cool keychain or something. Like an adult.
Santi17:
I need to finish packing.
TheHistoricMariana:
Wait, what time is it there?
Santi17:
Past midnight.
TheHistoricMariana:
Try to get a little sleep before your flight, okay?
TheHistoricMariana:
Sweet dreams, Santi.
Santi17:
Dulces sueños.
Mariana Mitogo scanned the faces filtering through both the escalator and the stairs into the Arrivals area of the airport, hoping Santiago de los Reyes MartĂnez hadnât changed his appearance since his last selfie. She had assumed he wore his glasses all the time like she did, but did he? Maybe they were only for the aesthetic. What if he didnât have them on, or he cut his hair, and she didnât recognize him? What if his plane had come in somewhere else and this wasnât even the right flight?
Announcements squawked over the speakers; conversations murmured around her as a fresh wave of people came from the gates. The crowds swirled, heading to the luggage conveyors and the restaurants and the exit. She sidestepped travelers on their phones. She almost passed over the man who stepped off the escalator nextâand then she couldnât look away.
Thick, mussed black hair curled over the edges of his ears and down the nape of his neck, too long to look professional. His naturally tawny complexion had darkened with exposure to the sun, and she could see those big, dark eyes from here, even with his oversized hipster glasses. The edges of him were soft, not harsh with muscle, but something about the angle of his shoulders and the way he filled out his simple T-shirt and jeans scrambled her insides.
Please donât be him, she prayed, ready to barter her health and wealth against her need to not have to deal with a cute guy friend. She hadnât been interested in anyone since she was sixteenâshe didnât want to start now. Life was simpler that way.
As she stood there, appalled at her potential bad luck, he turned to meet her gaze, and he pulled back. No wave, not even a smile. He just pushed his glasses up the bridge of his nose, shoulders tense, lips pressed together.
Her throat prickled. Of course I look different. Cheeks hot, she smoothed her palms over the front of her yellow dress. I guess I didnât expect toâŠto disappoint him.
He hadnât even waved yet. She swallowed her embarrassment and, with a smile, did jazz hands.
A grin split his face, and it clicked.
Sheâd seen that grin in enough goofy selfies.
Damn it.
Santiago raced to her, dropped his suitcase, and swept her into a bear hug. For a split second she froze, not having expected outright affectionâbut then she relaxed and hugged him back, and her concern about attraction faded.
This is him, her heart and mind seemed to sigh, this time in relief. This is Santi. They already knew each other inside and out. Having him here in person, at long last, fit a piece into place she hadnât realized was missing.
When he finally let go, she tapped him on the chest. âIâm not sure I know how to talk to you face-to-face. Letâs go sit somewhere so we can text.â
He snorted with laughter, as sheâd hoped. âMaybe we can turn around and pretend to talk to our phones.â The lilt of his native language softened his English, prettier than her own slight Virginian drawl. Poor guy, having to practice his second language with a Southerner. He was going to end up with two different accents blended into one. Not to mention a propensity for the word yâall.
âHow was your flight?â It seemed like the appropriate first question to ask.
He shrugged and rubbed his butt. âIt was fine. Long.â
She grinned.
This response, though, made his forehead crinkle. âI said that right, didnât I? Sorry about my accent.â
âYeah, you said it fine.â She bounced on the balls of her feet. âDo you want any coffee or anything before we start the drive home? Itâs gonna be another two hours until we get there.â
Santi glanced around the waiting area, probably looking for a coffee shop.
âNot here. Thereâs a Starbucks a couple miles down the highway.â
He half grimaced at the word miles. âAnd thatâsâŠ?â
âOh.â She struggled to remember the correct ratio of miles to kilometers. Two to one? One to two? Ugh, math. She gave up. âAbout five minutes.â
They both stared at each other, looking a little blank, until they shared a self-deprecating laugh, and he picked up his suitcase. âYes, letâs get some coffee. Iâll still be able to sleep when we get home.â
*****
All the signs were in English units, not metric, as they blew down the highway in the evening sunset. This threw him off more than the Spanish-to-English switch itself. Whatâs a half mile? This is supposed to mean something to me? Americans always have to be special. The rest of the world uses the metric system, like sensible people.
No, Santiago liked America, at least so far. It had its cultural quirks and problems, but it wasnât all bad. And everyone was so friendly. Anytime you look at someone, they smile and nod at you. Even strangers. It was weird. Nice, but weird.
They stopped at the Starbucks. Energy. Caffeine and sugar. He ordered a coffee and a brownie, but before he could fish his wallet out of his backpack, Mariana handed the cashier her credit card. âIâll have a triple-shot medium mocha, and thatâll be it for us, thanks.â
After the cashier left to make the drinks, Santiago nudged Mariana. âI can pay you back for that.â
She shook her head. âI got you. Youâre fine.â
Neither of them was fine with money, but he was here and they were together for the first time and he was interviewing for a job that might keep his mom alive. He thanked her and dropped it.
He picked up their order from the counter, and she pulled out her phone, a frown tugging at her full lips. He glanced at the screen as he passed her cup to her.
A banking app. Two credit cards maxed out. Three big loans. His own cup of coffee burned his hand before he could set it down.
âAnywayââ Mariana slid her phone into her purse and gestured toward the door. âWe should head out. But tell me about the flight! Were there any screaming babies?â
They chatted with enthusiasm for the first half of the drive, but after that, jet lag hit him hard, and he drifted off almost midsentence. He woke when she parked outside her apartment complex, and he stayed sentient long enough to drag himself and his suitcase inside and collapse on the blankets sheâd spread over the couch. He wasnât sure if heâd closed the door behind him.
She must have closed the curtains for him while he slept; the sun never broke through his dreams. Stirring naturally, he tried to register the foreign surroundings. His hostessâs one-bedroom apartment framed an eclectic mishmash of the old and the newâan armchair topped with a lace doily, a framed print of the American Declaration of Independence hanging beside a floor-to-ceiling mirror. He wasnât much for interior decorating, but it captivated him. It fit her. So many years into their friendship, and he finally had a chance to learn details like this.
He liked it.
Shrugging off the giant quilt sheâd draped over him, he pushed himself to his feet, slipped on his glasses, and dragged himself into the bathroom. His entire body creaked from the long flight followed by the long nap. What time is it? The analog clock on the wall read 7:45, but the hour and minute hands werenât moving. The second hand twitched occasionally, like a death rattle. Broken, then. Not helpful. Unable to summon the energy to care, he turned on the sink water, then puddled some in his hands and splashed it onto his face. The shock of cold startled him into full consciousness.
Wiping away the wet with a yellow hand towel, he smacked his lips and grimaced at the sour taste of morning breath in his mouth. Where did I stick my toothbrush? He wandered back into the living room to rummage through his suitcase and found it in a weird bottom pocket. Why did I put it there? He went back to the bathroom and had just started scrubbing with foamy toothpaste when the other door to the bathroom opened. In the mirror, Marianaâs sleep-glazed eyes widened.
âIâm shoââ He almost sprayed foam on the sink.
She held up her hands as he quickly finished and spat. âNo, itâs fine! Youâre the guest.â
He swiped a hand over his mouth. âNo, itâs your home.â
âI can wait.â
âIâm already done anyways.â To prove the point, he set his toothbrush on the counter. Then he picked it back up, in case leaving it was presumptuous. âI can do my hair in the living room.â
She let out a long breath and relented. âOkay. If you need anything, come on in. I shouldnât be long.â
He had no intention of initiating another awkward you-first-no-you-first bathroom encounter. Heâd stay on the couch until she was done. âOkay, thank you.â Taking his toothbrush with him, he retreated to his suitcase to attempt to tame his tangled mess of hair. To pass the time before food, he pulled out his phone and checked the Internet for nearby barbers.
Yikes. The closest one was half an hour away. His city life had had its advantages.
Mariana emerged from the bedroom in a pastel-blue off-the-shoulder blouse and white short-shorts that showed off her dark skin and thick thighs. Her close-cropped curls gleamed, and a touch of pink glossed her full lips. Her soft, round cheeks had been cute for as long as heâd known her, but in person, she was all curves, full and rounded and way too tempting.
More than cute. Sexy as hell. That hadnât come through on social media, and Santiago hadnât been prepared for it. That first look in the airport had almost killed him.
He forced himself to look away. âI need a haircut before my interview.â
Her gaze darted to his unkempt hair long enough for him to feel a flicker of the embarrassment that thirteen hours with the lip-curling white guy in 12C had failed to elicit.
Averting his gaze from her casual perfection, he held up his phone. âIs there really nothing around here?â
She shrugged. âNah. I warned you that Iâm outânâmilânowhere.â
He leaned in and squinted, as if that would help him hear better. âYouâre what?â
It registered in her face how quickly sheâd run through the phrase. âSorry. Out in the middle of nowhere.â This time, she slowed down and enunciated more clearly, and he was able to pick out the individual words. He knew the phrase itself; heâd just never heard it so blurred before. âWe can take a trip up into town before your interview. You wanna go today or tomorrow?â
He scratched his ear where a tuft of hair tickled sensitive skin. âToday, if we can do that.â
She cracked that familiar grin. âYeah, I think we can manage that. I canât believe you let your hair get that long to begin with.â Ruffling his hair, she sat beside him on the couch.
He snuggled up against her, but she stiffened. Oh, right. Americans. So weird about touch. He straightened up and tilted his phone toward her again. âDo you know any of these places? Where should we go?â
She took it and scrolled through the options. âUmmmâŠThis one.â
âOkay. I trust your judgment.â
âWell, you shouldnât. This is the place that helped me dye my hair pink in college.â
âI thought the pink was cute!â
âIt was adorable, but thatâs not the point. I could totally be tricking you into messing up your hair right before your interview.â
âYou wouldnât do that to me.â
âOh, wouldnât I?â Mariana winked and stood. âWhen can they take you today? I can make some eggies for breakfast if you want.â
âThat sounds good, thanks. Scrambled?â
âCan do.â She draped an apron over her head and tied the red ribbons behind her back. The pattern looked likeâŠa bunch of old white men striking silly poses in historical costume.
He followed her into the kitchen and tugged at the fabric. âWhatâs on that?â
âThis thing?â She laughed. âItâs some of the presidents. Washington, Jefferson, LincolnâŠuh, MadisonâŠâ She pointed to each one as she named them. âI got it for my birthday a few years back from my mom. I think she hoped that appealing to my actual interests would make cooking more fun. It did, but not enough for me to become a cook.â She pulled a dozen eggs out of the fridge, cracked them into a cup, and added salt and pepper to the mix.
Basically twiddling his thumbs, Santiago sank into a seat at the small, round kitchen table. It was weird to let someone else do the cooking, even if he was only visiting. âIs there anything I can do to help?â
He didnât expect her to say yes, but she jerked her thumb toward the refrigerator. âIf you want, you can peek through there and see what fruit you like. I have a few different kinds of berries, and bananas and apples are on the counter by the pantry.â
âBerries are always good.â He especially liked them with oatmeal, although he wouldnât say so at the risk of making it sound like he was ungrateful for the scrambled eggs, which he also liked. He opened the fridge and pulled out a container of strawberries, which he rinsed off in the sink. âIs it okay if I cut them up?â
âGo for it.â She pulled a knife out of the block and passed it to him handle-first. âThe cutting boardâs right there on the counter.â
He set about slicing the berries into quarters, happy to have something to do with his hands to help.
Mariana drizzled some oil in the skillet as it heated on the stove. âWhat are you most excited to do while youâre here? Besides getting hired for a job that would make bank, of course.â
âDonât jinx it! I havenât even interviewed yet.â
âYeah, but youâre the best. You deserve the position.â
âThanksâai!â He nicked his fingertip on the knife blade when his hand slipped. The cut stung. Blood welled up, and he stuck the wound in his mouth.
She froze. âOh, shit! Are you okay?â
He shrugged, not pulling his finger away.
âLet me grab you a bandage.â She set aside the egg mixture and rummaged through a drawer on her other side. Triumphantly, she pulled out a white box with a red cross on the front. âI knew I had it in here.â
He lowered his hand and showed her the cut. Not deep, but it stung in the air conditioning.
Mariana pulled a Band-Aid out of the first aid kit, peeled away the backing, then wrapped the bandage gently around his fingertip. It was nice to feel taken care of, he had to admit. Her hands were warm and soft as she fixed him up, her touch gentle. It was almost worth cutting himself like an idiot.
âSana, sana, culito de rana,â he said under his breath without thinking. Heal, heal, little frog bum. Some habits died hard; heâd lost track of how many scraped knees heâd cleaned up as a kidsâ soccer coach.
She processed the translation and came up with âWhat?â
âSi no sanas hoy, sanarĂĄs mañana.â He finished the rhyme as if that would answer the question. If you donât heal today, youâll heal tomorrow.
She stared at him. Shook her head.
Right. If she didnât know the shorthand, the long version wouldnât make any sense either. âUhâŠI donât know. Itâs what we say to kids when they hurt themselves.â
âAw, youâre saying youâve got a boo-boo,â she teased. âPobrecito.â
He nudged her playfully. âYou called the toilet âa pottyâ last week. Donât talk to me about baby talk.â
âI was being ironic!â
âYou were not. You said potty because itâs fun to say. Donât lie to yourself.â
She huffed. âRude. I donât think I like you in person after all.â A smile tugged at her lips though.
âAww, that hurts my feelings.â He wrapped one arm around her shoulders. To his surprise, she was almost as tall as he was, not as short as she looked in pictures. âCome on. You love me.â
Her arm went around his waist in return, a display of affection he hadnât expected but was delighted by. âYeah, okay. Maybe so.â She stretched her free hand toward the stove to pour the eggs into the skillet. âAre you okay to finish cutting up the strawberries, Mr. Frog Butt?â
He stuck out his tongue and released her so she could finish cooking. âIâm injured, and youâre bullying me.â
As the eggs firmed up in the heat, she layered a handful of shredded cheddar cheese on top and stirred. âSo is that a no?â
âItâs a âyes but just so you know, Iâm wounded.ââ He sliced the last of the strawberries, with more caution than before his slipup.
She stirred, stirred, stirred. âYouâre pitiful. Do I need to scoop you up some ice cream to soothe you?â
Santiago brightened. âIce cream would definitely help me feel better.â
Mariana patted him on the cheek. âYouâre precious. Never change.â Once the cheesy scrambled eggs were done cooking, she spooned them onto two plates and passed him the one with a bigger portion. âHere. Theyâre eggs-cellent.â
He laughed despite himself. âNo. Thatâs horrible.â
She grinned, and he loved it. âIâve done better, but it wasnât half bad. Donât eggs-aggerate.â
âStoooppp.â He added some strawberries to his plate as well and then dug in. He didnât really mind the puns, but she got a bigger kick out of them when someone hated them. He was happy to oblige because her smile was the sun. Heâd thought he knew that when they were only internet friends, but now that heâd seen it in person, he was worried about what heâd do to bring that smile out.
Meeting Mariana had messed with his head. At least heâd only be here for a few days. Once he got back to Spain, the distance would sort him out again.
At least heâd have to hope so.
Border Ctrl+Esc is a lighthearted contemporary marriage of convenience between LGBTQ+ Internet friends (a demisexual woman and a bisexual man). It came out August 9, 2021, with NineStar Press!
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