Author's Note: Once again I want to thank Techsan for taking time from his busy schedule to correct my spelling and punctuation errors for me
Please provide feedback. It is the only payback we authors get for our efforts. Thanks
It was a Friday night in mid-June and I was sitting at gate 56 in Terminal 5 at Los Angeles International Airport trying to get some work done as I waited for flight 1426 to Atlanta. The flight had already been delayed three hours when I happened to look up at the departures screen just in time to see the status of my flight change from delayed to canceled.
"Shit!"
Apparently there was a large system of thunderstorms passing through the midsection of the country delaying flights in and out of Dallas and St. Louis. This had the effect of backing up flight departures all over the country and caused several flights out of Los Angeles to be cancelled that night, leaving many passengers stranded at LAX.
It was 7:10 PM and I had already been at the airport since two o'clock that afternoon and I had no idea when I would be getting out of LA. They had not made the public announcement that the flight had been canceled yet so I jumped up and moved quickly over to the Delta check in counter. I arrived just as the gate agent picked up the microphone to make the announcement.
"Delta Flight 1426 to Atlanta has been cancelled. If you are holding a ticket for this flight please see the agent at gate 56 for reassignment."
Thanks to my good timing I was first in line. After ten minutes of the agent banging away on her keyboard, I was given a seat on the next available flight to Atlanta. The good news was that the seat was in first class. The bad news was that the flight wasn't leaving until 11:55 PM. I was going to have to wait almost 5 more hours. I went back to my uncomfortable seat and fired up my laptop again.
I had been working for about an hour and was just about finished updating my project plan when I heard someone say my name.
"Jim Patterson?"
The question made me look up from my laptop. I didn't know anyone in LA so I certainly wasn't expecting to run into anyone I knew at the airport that night. The man standing in front of me was tall and thin and had light brown hair. Although I hadn't seen him since graduating from high school twelve years earlier, it took me only a few seconds to recognize him.
"Kevin?"
"I'm surprised you remembered me," Kevin said.
"How could I forget my best friend?" I replied.
Kevin Murray and I grew up in Cortland, New York and had known each other since kindergarten but we hadn't seen or spoken to each other since we got out of high school.
"Best friend? If I was your best friend why haven't I heard from you in the last twelve years?" he asked.
"That works both ways," I said. "I lost track of you when you joined the army right after high school. But you never tried to get in touch with me either."
"Pretty stupid, huh?" Kevin said. "Where you headed?"
"Atlanta. What about you?"
"I'm on the red eye to New York. Have you got time for a drink before your flight?" Kevin asked.
"Actually I have a few hours to kill. A couple of beers would help pass the time"
Kevin laughed and said, "Let me guess: your flight was delayed. Right?"
"Cancelled. What about you?"
"I am on the red eye at 12:05. That gives us some time to catch up."
I shut down my laptop and put it in my briefcase and then we headed off to find a bar. There weren't many places to go without leaving the Terminal 5, which would mean having to go through security again when we returned so we opted to join the crowd at Malibu Al's.
"So where are you living now?" Kevin asked as the bartender delivered our beers."
"Atlanta."
"How did you end up in Atlanta?" Kevin asked.
"My job."
"You like it down there?"
"Yes, very much. Especially in the winter," I said.
"You married?" he asked. "I remember that you always used to say you never would."
"Been married seven years," I said. "What about you?"
"Me? Divorced. No kids, but I met someone recently and I think we might be headed to the altar," Kevin answered.
"Another sacrifice to the marriage gods."
"Wow. Is that a condemnation of marriage?"
I smiled and said, "No, just a little joke. Kate and I have a great marriage."
"Does your wife know that your flight was canceled?"
"No. I wasn't due to get home until late tomorrow afternoon. I finished my work early and thought I'd try to get home earlier. Kate didn't know that so there is no need to tell her my flight was canceled."
"Have you been back to Cortland lately," Kevin asked.
"I haven't been back there in about three years. Kate and I are planning on going up there next month. Have you been back?"
"I was there last year."
"You stay with your parents?" I asked.
"No. They sold their house and moved into a small apartment. I stayed at the Holiday Inn out near the route 81 interchange."
"Why didn't you stay at the Hampton Inn?" I asked. "It's a lot newer."
"The Hampton Inn doesn't have a bar, the Holiday Inn does," Kevin responded.
"Ah, good point. So how are your parents?"
"They're great. My father has some back problems but still manages to play golf. My mom has some arthritis but she keeps busy. What about your parents?"
"They're doing good. Still in the old house," I said. "Did you run into any of our old friends while you were there?"
"Yeah, I had a few beers with Bob Harold. I didn't see anyone else from the old gang." Kevin said. "So, what are you doing in LA?"
"The company I work for is involved in a large city wide project out here and I am one of the project managers," I said. "We're managing the installation of a fiber optic communication system to all Los Angeles county government buildings and schools. My company makes the control boxes for the network."
"How long have you been out here?"