And then, you see them . Las chicas.
The message is clear: You can look. But you’ll never be this warm.
You notice the light first. It isn’t the hazy, white-washed sun of Miami Beach, nor the cruel, sharp glare of midtown Manhattan. This light is aged . It filters through the awnings of bodegas and the steam rising from a cart selling arepas con queso. This is the light of 8th Street, the spine of Little Havana, where the air smells of café leche and tobacco, and time moves at the pace of a domino slapping a plastic table.



