(Author's note: This story is a fantasy, interlaced with a bit of humor here and there. It's a bit long and takes a little while to get going, but I'm a firm believer that story makes the read more enjoyable. It was inspired by the many times I've heard someone say they'd "do anything" in order to achieve a goal. Do they really mean "anything?" I decided to take a familiar situation and explore it down an alternate path. Enjoy the read.)
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"Please," I begged the man behind the counter. "Please, there MUST be a flight to St. Louis tonight."
The man looked embarrassed. As well he might, I suppose, as I'd been trying to find a flight for the past twenty minutes, and he was probably getting tired of this scene. I know I was.
"I'm sorry, ma'am, but it is Christmas Eve and all the flights are booked." He started tapping keys on his terminal. "We can get you a ticket for tomorrow night..."
"No," I interrupted him crossly, "that's Christmas day. I have to be home before then!"
"I'm sorry," he was visibly cringing a bit at my expected eruption at what he had to say next. "I can get you a hotel room for tonight..."
My voice was rising in both volume and pitch. "I don't want a hotel room. I want a flight out of here." I saw his face close down and made a final effort to be persuasive. "Look, you don't understand. Our family flew to Rome for the holidays, but we accidentally left our eight-year old son behind. I have to get home so he won't be alone on Christmas day!"
He seemed to understand, but it didn't matter. "I'm sorry, but the best I can do is a hotel room..."
I lost it. "Young man, I have been awake for 23 hours. I've flown from Rome to London to... to... where the Hell am I?"
"Pittsburgh."
"Pittsburgh? Okay then, to Pittsburgh. I have to get home to my son, and I am not leaving this airport unless it is on a plane to St. Louis!!" I took a deep breath. "As God is my witness, I will do whatever I have to do in order to get home in time. Please, isn't there anything you can do?"
Someone tapped me on my shoulder, and I turned on the interloper sharply. "What?"
He was a fair looking man, I suppose, possibly a bit older than I, and dressed in a heavy coat with a scarf wrapped around his neck. With the weather outside, I didn't blame him. My own attire was not quite up to a snowstorm in Pennsylvania, but it would have to do. My husband and the other kids had opted for a later flight out of Rome, but there was no way they could arrive home in time, and I wasn't about to wait around. I would NOT fail my son in this.
I simply don't have the words to express how I'd felt when I'd realized that we'd left our son behind. We were halfway across the ocean, and I had no choice but to sit helplessly until the plane landed in Italy. I felt extremely guilty. I was a terrible person and a horrible mother, my son was all alone, abandoned, and it was my fault. I'd tortured myself with guilt ever since, and the only thing I could do now was to get home as soon as possible, both to save my son and redeem myself in my own eyes.
Damn it, he needed me; I was going to get there no matter what it took.
And now this man was pulling me away from the ticket clerk who might, if God himself smiled down on me, help me get home.
"What do you want?"
He smiled at me. "I'm sorry, but I couldn't help hearing your problem. Maybe I could help." He put his hand on my elbow and pulled me away from the desk. "Can we just talk over here for a minute?" Behind me, I heard the ticket clerk call out "next!" in an extremely relieved tone of voice.
I stumbled a few paces away with the stranger, then planted my feet and yanked my elbow away.
He smiled again. "My name is Tom, Tom Kincaid." He said it like I should have heard of him. I shook my head, mutely. "Kincaid polka band?" What? "We're big in the Midwest, and were just out east to do a recording. We're real big in Oklahoma and..."
I couldn't hold it in. "I'm sorry, did you say you could help me?"
He shook his head ruefully. "I'm sorry, here I am, rambling on." He pointed over to the vehicle rental desks. "You see that guy over there, in the blue muffler? Well, our flight was cancelled, so he's renting us a van so we can drive to Kansas City." He hesitated. "I hear you have some trouble with your son?"
I nodded. "Yes, my son. He's... home all by himself." I didn't want to open up too much to this stranger. "I don't want him to be alone on Christmas, and I'll do anything I have to in order to get home tonight."
He was sympathetic. "Geeze, that's terrible." He motioned back to the vehicle desk. "We're getting a van, and we'd be happy to take you to St. Louis... it's on our way."
Relief flooded through me, and I smiled. My husband tells me that my smile can brighten a room, and I saw this stranger respond slightly as my face lit up. "You'd do that? You'd let me come with you?"
"Well, yeah, sure. I mean, it's Christmas and all." He glanced away, then looked back at me and smiled nervously. "It should only take nine or ten hours, once we get started, so you should be home sometime early-morning."
"Oh, thank you, thank you!" I hugged him impulsively, letting my relief show as I squeezed him tight. Then I let him go. "Just let me get my luggage. Hang on!" I hurried away, and when I returned with my two cases a few minutes later, I saw him standing around with three other men, apparently arguing softly about something. They were surrounded by large cases, presumably for their musical instruments; Polka band, I think he said. Who listens to polka music anymore? Does anyone?
As I arrived they fell silent, and Tom introduced his friends. Mike was tall and skinny, older than me by a decade or so. Since I was in my early 40's, this put him in his 50's. Joe was fat and about my age, but he had a pleasantly round face. The final man was named Jacob, one of those middle-aged men with a rugged face and graying temples.