She went back into her bag and pulled out another boarding pass. This one looked thinner, slightly wrinkled, like it had already had a rough life at the bottom of her purse. She walked over and dropped it into my hand.
Not handed. Dropped. “Here.” I looked down.
34E. Economy. Middle seat. Near the back. Chloe leaned close, perfume floating over me in a bright expensive cloud. “I figured you’d be more comfortable near the bathroom,” she said softly. “Should feel familiar.”
My father laughed. Actually laughed.
Vance took a sip of champagne and added, “We were being generous, really. Standby would’ve been more your budget.”
My mother made a small sound behind her glass. Not quite laughter. Not quite protest. That was her specialty—letting cruelty happen in a tone soft enough to deny later.
I slid the boarding pass into my jacket pocket and stood.
Chloe blinked. “That’s it? No fight?”
“Seat looks fine.” That answer bothered her more than a full argument ever could have.
My father shook his head. “You really should’ve tried harder in life, Harper.” I swung my backpack over one shoulder. “I did.” The remark passed right through him.
A boarding announcement crackled through the lounge. Chloe flashed her gold-edged pass at me like a final flourish.
“Priority boards first,” she said. “Coach is somewhere out there.” I nodded. “Good to know.”
The main terminal felt like a different country. Loud. Crowded. Honest. Kids sat on the carpet staring at tablets. A man in a Lakers hoodie argued with a gate agent about a carry-on. Somewhere nearby, someone was eating cinnamon pretzel bites, and the sweet buttery smell drifted through the walkway. It all felt more real than the lounge ever had.
At the gate, I stepped out of line and pulled out my second phone.
Government issue. Matte black. No logo.