Alec did eventually apologize to Dark for his comment about someone else raising him and for snapping, but it was a quick, concise apology, avoiding continued conversation around it. He did feel bad for his reaction, but he was also getting frustrated. Some people might have been ashamed of their parents, especially their blatantly Gothic parents and unapologetically witchy mother. Alec was not. Yes, he had asked them to dial it back to not scare off Emma on their first visit, but he fully expected that anyone who stayed with him would need to be able to accept his parents as they were. Maybe work their way up to it a little, but accept them. However, Alec found himself not just explaining his parents to his girlfriend and her parents, but also explaining his girlfriend and her parents to his parents and his brother. Whether or not he actually needed to, he felt like he had to justify dating someone "normal" and not somehow off-beat. This felt backward. According to media, he was supposed to be justifying his Gothic, weird girlfriend to his normal parents, not his normal, all-star student girlfriend to his Gothic, weird parents. It was exhausting. The only good news was that once Emma told her parents that Alec's parents were not "Crazy, insane" kind of weird, just "Fun, expressive" kind of weird, like artists or musicians, they'd calmed down and hadn't asked Alec too many questions when he'd dropped by for an hour on Thursday. None of this was helped by Xander's and Emma's active avoidance of each other. They didn't talk about it, just always had somewhere else to be when the other came around.
It was a relief to finally get to go do something fun as a family! Finally, a bit of fun that had nothing to do with anything tender or arguable. The worst would be having to listen to a song all but one person hated, if it came to that.
Tristan's place was an apartment in a small complex. It was a nice, higher-end complex that even had a pool, and it felt incredibly sleek and modern, especially compared to the Nacropolis. His apartment was on the ground floor not too far from the pool, and it overlooked the small patch of grass that passed itself off as a "lawn." That was one of the three approved places for pet owners to take their (under 20 pounds) pets. He opened the door before they could knock and smiled up at them in greeting.
"Welcome! Come on in!" he said, backing up and holding the door open for them. "I don't really have a shoe policy, but I just swept and mopped the floors an hour ago, so you're safe to take off your shoes if you wish."
"Thanks, Uncle Tristan!" Alec greeted him, stepping inside with care.
Inside, the interior of the apartment did hold much of the same sleek, modern lines as the exterior, but it was softened with bold colors mixed among the white walls. The front door opened to a small entryway with that led past the kitchen and the bathroom to the spacious living room. The kitchen area was a small area, set back enough so that a person could cook without standing in the entryway, but the cupboards and appliances only took up one short wall, making it only a little bigger than a kitchenette. Despite its small size, it had not been shortchanged in style. The lower cupboards were a rich, dark green while the uppers were natural, medium-toned wood. The backsplash was a colorful tile that looked almost like real stone. The walls were white in the living room, but wainscoating painted a dark, moody grey-blue color that echoed some of the colors from the kitchen backsplash went around the room. The bathroom had large, rectangular, stone-like tiles laid on the floor, and the mirror was flanked by interesting sconces, but the rest was regrettably white and mostly uninteresting. The door to the bedroom was closed, offering no peeks there. The unit had not been fully accessible when Tristan had moved in - except for the bathroom, thankfully, and spacing in the doorways - but after he'd lived there for a year without incident, he'd talked to the management and convinced them to allow him to renovate the space. They saw the benefit to being able to advertise a fully accessible unit in the future should he move out and agreed. Thus, Tristan had hired Cooger to install new, lower counters, new counter tops, lower light switches, and several other small tweaks that likely wouldn't even be noticeable. He did not have a kitchen table, preferring to eat at the counter just under the window. There were no rugs anywhere, allowing the vinyl wood flooring in its inoffensive neutral color to run uncovered throughout all the rooms except the bathroom. The space was small, yet roomy at the same time.
All around, plants on stands, bookshelves, and countertops peaked out, making themselves known in a warm, lived-in way, and not a "lost in the jungle" kind of way. Several were vining plants that had their own little hooks in the wall, holding them up and trailing them across various surfaces. In the living room, there was a sofa at the same height as Tristan's wheelchair, but also a regular, comfortable chair at regular height. That one looked somewhat new.
"I'm sorry I do not have very much seating," Tristan apologized. "I do not often get visitors."