Ellen's flight touched down in the last of the evening light, the wind hurtling sheets of rain against the window she'd been staring out of for hours. Her mind elsewhere, it came as a shock to feel the plane's wheels hit the pavement in a wet thud before it quickly slowed to taxi towards their gate. An unintelligible voice came over the loudspeaker, largely ignored by the other passengers as they began preparing to disembark. Unlike Ellen, the other passengers were mostly the usual fare, dressed to the nines in business suits and dresses, now rumpled from their long and turbulent journey. They were probably used to flitting about the country, Ellen thought as a quick, wistful smile curved her coral lips.
Donning her coat in the cramped quarters, Ellen patiently waited for her turn to head off the plane, somehow managing to retrieve her carry-on from the compartment above without causing any bumps or bruises. One by one, the other passengers filed out into the walkway, its meager walls unable to keep out the damp wind that rattled the short passageway. There was more than one relieved smile as they dispersed, the sea of faces blending as they rushed past.
Ellen herself was at a hesitant standstill, cold-numbed fingers fiddling with the buttons of her coat as she wished yet again that she'd thought to bring something warmer. Biting her lower lip, she pushed her gold-tinted brown hair behind her ears and watched as the last of the passengers, pilots and attendants swept past her. At last, she willed herself to move, her neglected baggage trailing behind her, all but forgotten as she wandered past gates, noises, signs and travelers unnoticed, her eyes distant as for the thousandth time that day she wondered what she was doing here.
She slowly made her way to the rental car agency and made quiet small talk with the attendant who seemed all too happy to help her to her car. While smiling on the outside, Ellen thought with dry amusement that the boy couldn't be a day out of high school, if that. Still, the attention was certainly nice. She pressed a nice tip into his eager hand while making sure she knew where to return the car when she was done with it. If she noticed his roving eyes while she set her suitcase in the back seat, there was little sign of it.
Once alone inside the quiet of the small sedan, she leaned forward and rested her head on the steering wheel, eyes shut tight as even here in the shelter of the garage she could feel the wind whip around the car, hurrying on its way. "Always hurrying," she murmured, her voice loud within the silence of the car. With a small laugh she sat back and started the engine, waiting a moment for it to warm as she reviewed her directions one last time and buckled herself in. Within minutes she was speeding down the road into the night, her destination as uncertain as her reasons for being here.
Finding parking proved to be harder than finding her way to the pub, its exterior causing a feeling of both appreciation and nervousness seated in the very pit of Ellen's stomach. She reached for her umbrella only to remember a moment too late that it was still in her apartment back home, but wasting little time with trivialities she rolled her eyes and ducked out into the night, the wind and cold drizzle whipping the bottom of her trench coat around her legs. Hesitating only one moment longer outside the door, she straightened and went inside.
The atmosphere of the pub immediately drew a warm smile as Ellen wandered slowly inside, laughter and music all but drawing her as waiters swirled past and patrons glanced her way. Choosing a booth against one wall, she took advantage of the dark corner to survey the room, eyes roaming towards the stage where a woman was singing, she and the band obviously having a good time of it. Ellen's dark hazel eyes darted from the stage to wander over the audience nearby, relief flooding her face as she spotted the one familiar face out of the group.
Willing her hands to lie still in her lap, she waited as patiently as she could until the performers began to disperse to take a break. Ellen seized the moment and got to her feet just a tad quickly, her heart fluttering as she tried unsuccessfully to calm her nervous breathing. Moving by a force no longer her own, she shuffled towards that one face, only the barest instinct stopping her from colliding into those around her.
"Kathleen?" she asked, surprised that her voice could sound so steady; it should be trembling from the reverberations of the heart pounding within her chest. An intense urge to run rattled Ellen so hard she was sure her knees would give way. The only thing keeping her there was the stubbornness that was a part of her very soul.
The slightly taller woman turned from those she'd been chatting with, a rather blank look on her face as she answered with a short, "Yes?" in a voice already familiar.
Hope and fear battled with Ellen's senses, but she smiled in spite of it as she held out a slightly trembling hand. "Fancy meeting you here," she commented in a stab at humor as she hoped recognition would dawn in those eyes of silver blue, hoping even more that her presence would not be an unwanted surprise. It occurred to her that traveling three thousand miles was one hell of a risk, more than she'd really considered.
Kathleen blinked once, surprise evident as she took the woman's hand in hers, stunned silence hanging between the two of them in a heady aura until she smiled, disbelief warring with that of pleased amazement. "My god... Ellen. What are you doing here?" she asked with a laugh, quickly moving to embrace, to Ellen's profound relief. It was all she could do not to hang from her friend's shoulders as a wash of adrenaline left her close to powerless.