[Aidan's marriage has been shattered by his wife's actions. Unable to cope with the thing she did, he boarded a plane and put as much distance between them as possible. Alone for the first time in years, he has to somehow start again.
The background to Aidan's story can be found in
Oxygen Games
by oneagainst, continued here with permission.]
---
THE GOD OF SECOND CHANCES
Aidan is dreaming, cuddled up with his wife together on the couch in their apartment in the dark. Rosa's hair tickles his cheek, her head shifting slightly against his shoulder. In the background, unwatched behind closed eyes, Aidan can hear the movie playing to itself. He has long since lost interest in it, as sleep claimed him. He is content to just sit, hovering now on the border between dreams and wakefulness, feeling the warmth of her next to him, her breath slow and steady in his ear.
His seat trembles beneath him, and Rosa stirs, but Aidan keeps his eyes closed, letting himself sink back down into sleep. The seat moves again, lurching, forcing him to surface with the first faint whispers of apprehension. Rosa is still asleep on his shoulder, but the couch lurches a third time, trembling beneath him. He tries to stir her, piecing together the situation as he rouses from sleep, but Rosa doesn't wake. The house shakes violently, giving him a moment of stomach-churning emptiness, and he realises that he needs to act.
He turns to his wife but whatever he does, she doesn't shift, slumbering on as the walls begin to creak and groan. He needs to pull her to safety, recalling things about seeking shelter under tables or in doorways, finding the structural strongpoints of the building. He tries to pick her up but she's too heavy, pressing him down in the couch as the apartment begins to fall to pieces around them. He calls out her name, hollering it into her slumbering face, but it's no use. He has to decide, right here, right now, whether he tries to rescue his wife, or he finds safety for himself. He's screaming at her now to wake up, panic setting in as the ceiling cracks like dried leaves, covering them in dust. The sound rumbles on and on like some titanic, unending thunderclap.
He's trapped. He can't leave her. He can't move her. He can't save her.
His eyes snap open, a jolt of adrenaline coursing through him, his vision swimming. Aidan focuses on the tiny screen in front of him, playing a car chase, relaying the music and the screech of tires to his ears via the headphones he wears. He blinks, disorientated, looking to his left to see a blonde head nestled against his shoulder, and beyond that, rows of people in seats. He looks to the right, out through a little oval window and down at a sprawling cityscape, a thread of silver branching through it like the spidery fingers of some giant hand, shining in the early morning sun. Clouds whip past the window and his seat lurches again before settling back down into stillness as they dip below the cloud-line into clear air.
He turns back to the girl's head, feeling the softness of her hair against his neck, watching the way her mouth shifts, answering someone in her dream. But she isn't Rosa, her name is Annalise, and suddenly a crashing sadness overwhelms him, as if it had just been yesterday that he had been sitting on his couch with his wife, sharing a moment with the woman he loved.
The movie freezes and a man's voice begins an announcement, interrupting his thoughts. They are coming in to land.
The blonde head lifts away from him as Annalise wakes up. She rubs her eyes, raking her fingers through her hair, rolling her shoulders. She crosses her tanned legs, revealed in denim shorts, and finally looks across to Aidan.
"Sorry. I must have dozed off."
Aidan smiles. "You went out like a light," he replies.
"How long have I been asleep?"
"About a movie and a half."
She frowns. "Sorry," she says again.
"No problem."
"Ah, worries," she corrects him with a little grin, "It's no worries. You're in Australia now."
Aidan laughs, but then the plane lurches as they pass through a cloud, and she clutches at his arm. He can feel her fingers digging in.
"Fuck," she hisses, "I hate flying."
Aidan covers her hand with his to reassure her. "Not long now. We're on final approach."
"Yeah, that's what I'm afraid of. The closer to the ground, the more there is to crash into."
She doesn't release her grip of his arm all the way down, spending the next few minutes in nervous silence until there is a jolt as the wheels make contact with the runway and the engines roar into life, reversing thrust to slow them down. Annalise slips her hand from under his and straightens up in her chair. The smile returns.
"We're here," Aidan says.
"Any landing you can walk away from," she replies, "Welcome to Sydney."
Annalise flashes him a brilliant smile and he finds himself looking into her eyes. The tension has been dispelled and now she's animated, talkative, beautiful.
"So, where are you planning on going first?" she asks.
"I haven't really thought. To be honest, this was all very last minute. I guess I just need to work out somewhere to stay first."
She nods. "Well, avoid Bondi. It's a shit pit. Full of pissed up backpackers, unless that's your scene."
Annalise smiles slyly.
"What?" Aidan replies.
"Just saying, you could probably cut a swathe through them. But God knows what you might pick up if you do," she laughs.
"So where?"
"Maybe try the Northern Beaches, maybe Manly. Same vibe, less hassle, fewer freaks. But then, I'm biased."
"How?"
Annalise grins conspiratorially, before replying, "I'm a North Shore princess, born and bred. We don't tend to mix with the rabble south of the Bridge."
With those words, she begins to gather her long blonde hair up into a ponytail, folding it back on itself into a little tufted bun before winding a hair tie around to keep it in place. She pops a make-up mirror out of her bag and begins to touch up her face.
"And how do I get there?" Aidan asks, captivated by the sight of her as she makes herself presentable.
"That's easy. Train to Circular Quay and then the Manly ferry straight down the harbour. You get to see all the sights. You'll love it."
---
They make their way through to the Arrivals hall, but Annalise peels off, flashing him a smile over her shoulder. Aidan watches her walk away into the arms of her boyfriend. He catches her up in a hug, lifting her off her feet and twirling her around. They kiss and then he sets her down again, grabbing her suitcase and wheeling Annalise away towards the doors.
Aidan finds himself standing there, an island in the flow of people emerging from the arrivals gate, each of them seeming to find someone waiting, everyone but him. For the first time since leaving his apartment, it's brought home to him: he's on his own, for the first time in years. The look of rapt attention in Annalise's face as her boyfriend swept her up twists something in his guts; Aidan stands, forgotten. Finally, he stumbles into motion, building up momentum with each step until he's striding away towards the train platform, as if he's fleeing the scene.
On a whim, he decides to take her advice, buying a ticket into the city and settling himself next to the window on the train, his suitcase braced between his knees as the train rocks back and forth. He's tired now, but it's more than just the flight. The blonde girl had been fun to talk to, the simple pleasure of a conversation, swapping stories, sharing terrible plane food, listening to her accent, watching her face. He screws his eyes closed, thinking about Rosa again, feeling the little gnawing feeling. He should tell her where he is. He should make contact. Aidan extracts his phone from his pocket, but stops. He stares at the screen, then eventually he slips the phone back into his pocket.