The girl in seat 14A.
She had dark hair that went well past her shoulders, a patch of freckles under each of her eyes, and lips that were pouty and full. She wasn’t beautiful. She was exquisite.
And she had no idea at all.
In the forty-seven years I’d been alive, I’d learned something about women. There were those you couldn’t help but look at and those you just shouldn’t look at.
She was both.
That was rare.
“Yes,” she replied to the flight attendant, and then she looked at me.
Before all of the interruptions, she had asked why I was going to California. I finally answered, “Some work, some pleasure. And yourself?”
“Same.” Her eyelids narrowed. “Are you from Manhattan? I don’t detect an accent.”
I felt the paper in my hands and knew there was no way I could go back to it. Not yet at least, not with her fiery green gaze on me.
“When you’ve lived in New York for as long as I have, you tell people you’re from there. It’s easier.”
She laughed, and it caused me to keep staring at her. “I’ve been here a while, too, and I agree. Once New York becomes home, you seem to forget everywhere else you’ve lived.” She tucked some hair behind her ear. “Why is that?”
When I’d asked my assistant to book this flight, I hadn’t considered flying commercial would put me in a position for conversation, like the one she’d just started. I hadn’t thought much about the actual flight at all besides knowing I had to be on it.
But now that I was here, I had no idea what the fuck I was thinking.
I really shouldn’t be going to San Francisco at all.
I looked away from her to glance up ahead. The main door was closed, telling me it was too late to get off the plane. The only thing I could do at this point was get some air.
I excused myself, halfway to my feet, knowing we were minutes from leaving the gate and supposed to be in our seats, and I went down the aisle. “I’ll be quick,” I said to one of the flight attendants as she approached me, and I continued to the lavatory.
When I got inside, I locked the door behind me, guessing I had about thirty seconds before I heard a knock.
If I were in any other restroom, I would have washed my face, but I wasn’t going to do that with the water from a plane. What I needed from this tight, crammed space was to catch my breath.
Because all of it had been sucked out of me, and there wasn’t any air to be found in row fourteen.
I gripped the edge of the narrow sink, looking at myself in the hazy mirror. Early this morning, when I hadn’t been able to sleep, I’d shaved the edges of my beard and trimmed the length. I was wearing one of my favorite suits. The Windsor knot at the base of my throat was perfect.
Maybe I wasn’t ready, but I sure as hell looked it.
I pushed back from the sink and came out of the lavatory, immediately greeted by the flight attendant who had her hand in the air as though she were about to knock.
“Please take your seat,” she said.
I knew I should ask her if there was a first-class seat available that came with more leg room and less chatter.
By not doing so, I knew I was making a mistake.
“Nervous flyer?” the girl asked when I returned to my seat, securing the belt across my waist.
It was the sound of her voice that caused me to look at her.
That was my second mistake.
And whatever happened next would be the third.
SIX
BILLIE
I TOOK a drink of my coffee, turning a little more toward the man sitting next to me as he replied, “I’ll be all right.”
I’d asked him if he was a nervous flyer after he got up in the middle of our conversation to go to the restroom. It made the most sense since he’d stood so abruptly, breaking a stare I had felt all the way in my toes. Anxiety was something I knew how to handle, so when the plane began to back away from the gate, I lowered the shade. Not all the way, just enough that he didn’t have a direct view of outside, which would help if he didn’t like heights.
“How about a cocktail when we get in the air?” I suggested, facing him again. “After a few, I assure you, this flight and everything about it will feel perrrfect.”
He just looked at me.