All those tiny houses, crammed together, packed as if they were afraid of flying.
Someday we'll live in one of those houses, I told myself, as I watched them fly by outside the train's window.
There was a simple romance, an unremarkable sweetness about believing that.
I was alone on the train - it came from the side of the tracks where people don't have office jobs in the city, and I came from the side of the morning that no one likes.
I liked being alone on this train. It meant I had time to be romantic without having to be hopeless.
The sun was too tired to rise just yet, sending instead a half-hearted glow over the little sardine shelters that scrambled past my sleepy window.
For now, I left my fear of flight unhoused, taking trains between here and where then and how, now and there. Finding bits of work in between, celebrating victories far smaller than those little houses.