My last day there Ader took the day off from work and we went gallivanting around ridiculously priced stores but only bought 5€ worth of really fancy really yummy caramels. Then he helped me pack and we went to the Gare de l’Est together and--this is a major advantage of train travel over flying—we made faces at each other through the window until the train pulled away, and then we talked on the phone until we went to sleep. I had a row to myself so I slept, not very soundly, until we got to Munich at seven the next morning. I caffeinated up and went to class.
Then last Thursday night I flew to Vienna and spent the night in the airport which is, by the way, the second coldest airport I’ve ever been in. Friday morning I flew to Belgrade as the sun was coming up. At customs, mercifully, the only question was “Have you ever been to Serbia before?” I was afraid it would appear suspicious or at least bizarre that I was coming to a country that virtually no tourists visit, where I knew no one, for only ten hours, but I guess not. My bus ride into the city only cost, in Euros, 1.40. Sure, it was on an old school bus donated from somewhere in Western Europe, but still a bargain compared to the 11€ it costs to get to the Munich airport. I still had some time before I was supposed to meet Stefan, a law student from Belgrade whom I had contacted on couch surfing to show me around, so I got a coffee for 80¢ and tried to stay awake and not be bothered by the smoking which is, apparently, allowed everywhere.
We met in the main square under the statue of Prince Mihailo. There were various new reports being filmed while I was waiting. I tried to stay out of the shots, but I may have been on Serbian news that night. Stefan and I took another bus that went past all the foreign embassies and some buildings that were bombed in the 90s and haven’t been reconstructed since. We got out in front of what I thought was an abandoned factory and went inside. Okay, that seems like a suspenseful enough place to stop. I have laundry to fold. More tomorrow.
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