With hardly a backward glance, John climbed onto the train at York station and slumped into an empty seat. In the back of his mind he had known it was going to be a bad idea to go and revisit Katrina six months after, and the sullen weekend together had just confirmed that. He was glad to be back on the train heading south, back to his empty college room. From his bag he pulled out "The Road to Oxiana" and picked up where he had left off on Friday evening, smiling to himself at the author's droll descriptions of 1930's travel around Persia. Soon he was lost in the book, not noticing the daylight fading outside, or the passing of the journey once so familiar and once so eagerly anticipated: Doncaster, the slow crawl up the Don valley to Sheffield, Derby, Chesterfield with its crooked spire, Burton with the huge brewery warehouses ...
At Birmingham, he had to change trains for Oxford. The new train was already in the platform. John checked his seat reservation and looked along the train. One carriage was dark with its lights faulty; sure enough that was his carriage. Still, he didn't mind a dark journey home, it would give him time to think. Climbing into the carriage, he saw it was empty except for one person, sitting in - his seat!
"I think you're in my seat," he said, oblivious to the array of empty seats all around.
"No," she replied, in a California drawl, "I got a reservation – here look, seat 21B."
John looked again at his ticket – seat 21F. Facing the engine. Rather than backing... He took his proper seat opposite her, a little abashed at his apparent ungallant attitude, and started to get out his book.
"They sure make life complex," she said. John looked up with a start. Until that moment he hadn't really looked at the girl opposite him.
"Hi! I'm Lauren," she continued. She was quite slight, with dark features and long wavy hair that fell in an uncontrolled mass over her shoulders. In the half-dark carriage, her eyes sparkled with the reflected station lights. Her bare arm stretched across the table between them, her slim hands and long fingers casually toying with the pages of her book in front of her.
"I... I... I'm John," he stammered. "Look, er, sorry about my comment earlier. My mind's elsewhere at the moment, I didn't mean to be rude."
"Not at all," Lauren replied. "What's that you're reading – something by Byron?"
"The Road to Oxiana - Robert Byron. Not the poet – a distant relative I think," John replied. "It's sort of about the author's quest for the roots of Islamic architecture – but in between also a very funny travel book. A bit of light relief from physics, in any case."
Lauren looked slightly quizzical. "I'm doing a doctorate in physics," John added quickly. "I'm just going home after a weekend visiting a girlfr.. ... er.. an old friend." Inexorably John found himself being drawn into conversation with this chatty young American.
"That's so like weird," said Lauren. "I'm right there too – Worcester college. I'm reading for a DPhil in English. 'English romantic poets and the notion of the Abyss' ." John smiled at the thought of the future of the English language in the hands of someone who used "like" every fourth word. Precision in English - precision in everything – normally mattered to him. Strangely, he found himself letting it pass; he was just intoxicated at the sound of Lauren's voice.
Leamington, Banbury, the canal, Port Meadow ... The familiar landmarks sped past in the gathering gloom, but John didn't notice any of them, captivated as he was by the witty, erudite Californian in front of him. Their conversation ranged widely and easily, from gossip about dons and porters to history and literature. John meandered down little alleyways about the philosophy of science; Lauren explained her studies. The notion that the greatest pleasure occurs on the edge of disaster: just one step from the abyss. Soon, too soon, the train drew to a halt at Oxford station. John got up and slung his light rucksack over his shoulder, then helped Lauren off the train with her bag.
"Let me carry this back for you," he said, suddenly emboldened. "I'm going that way in any case" – a lie, but a white one. Lauren didn't stop him, and together they walked the short distance back to gates of Worcester college. John hesitated, unsure about going any further, but not wanting to leave just yet.
"We should, er, meet, ... er.. look, if you want a coffee or anything you can get me through pigeon post. I'm at New College." He put her bag down onto the pavement: as he did so his hand brushed hers. For a fleeting second she squeezed his fingers.
"Sure," she said, "That sounds kinda cool." And with that she turned and disappeared into the forbidding walls of her college.
John walked back through the warm night air, his mind a tumult of conflicting emotions and signals. Was she for real? Had she really laughed at his jokes, hung on his every word? Had she really agreed to meet up? Had she really held his hand for that fleeting instant?