Rafferty's Apartment
Once inside, you see a short entry way with a small bathroom directly to your left. The wall on the right extends straight back, where it opens up into a single room divided into two sections, a kitchen and a bedroom. The far wall, opposite the door, is mostly comprised of a plate glass sliding door that leads to a medium balcony, artfully decorated with plants, and a small outdoor chair and table, which makes it unofficially the dining area.
The kitchen is separated from the bedroom by a short wall that doesn't quite reach the ceiling. Storage, boxes, a screen, a makeshift closet helps to fill the gap above. The kitchen is hardly ever used, but the refrigerator is useful, the sink is necessary, and there are a couple of small counters with cabinets to store an extremely modest amount of utensils, plates, and glasses.
The bedroom has room for the aforementioned closet, which is mostly a clothing rack inside a make shift alcove, a couple of end tables, a large comfortable looking bed against the left wall, and a dresser against the opposite right side wall. A handful of books sit on one of the end tables, accompanied by a lamp with a shade.
When the weather is warm, Rafferty spends most of his time on the balcony eating, reading, or watching the pedestrians below go about their business in the city. If he leans towards the street, he can see where it ends at a boardwalk by the ocean. The air is usually misty with salted sea spray that, often tucked in the clouds, hasn't yet been burned away by the sun. On the slow weekends, he feels energized sitting on his balcony in the late mornings absorbing the sun rays, sea breezes, and gentle sounds of a still sleepy city.