My name is Bill. I'm middle-aged, married, and, mostly, respectable. But I have written a few stories here about unexpected, interesting encounters with women. Or at least I think they're very interesting - the encounters, and definitely the women. You might find my stories pretty tedious, and too wrapped up in my own doubts and anxieties. So be warned. But they mean a lot to me, and perhaps for other people in my situation.
This story began one morning as I was sitting in the back of a plane. I was thinking about the Road Warriors.
I fly occasionally for business. It happens enough that all the fun has gone out of it - it's mostly a nag. But I don't fly as much as the guys who I think of as the Road Warriors. They're the ones upfront in the business section, while I'm always in the cramped economy seats in the back. My firm doesn't cover business class, and my handful of flights is never enough to rack up mileage for upgrades.
So I sit in the crowds, waiting for my zone to be called, as I watch the Road Warriors cruise out of the club lounges and right onto the plane. They could be older or younger than me but it always takes me right back to the jocks at high school for whom everything seemed to come easy. They look so casual but sharp in their suits with no ties, laughing easily with each other; hair, teeth and builds always better than mine.
I know it's completely juvenile and insecure to think this way. I really do, and realize how pathetic I am sounding at the very start of this story. But yet it still eats at me every time, as I stand in the crammed lineup in the plane aisle, watching them relaxing in their large business-class chairs, while I fret about whether there will be space at the back to cram my carry-on. It's not that I really care about a bigger seat. I just want to be what the Road Warriors represent. Alpha Males. Conquerors. Men of Influence. Instead I'm Bill, squeezed in the back.
It was very early in the morning on a cold winter day. This would be about a two hour flight, on a small jet flying direct to my destination city. Pretty typical. I was visiting several clients and had meetings right away in the late morning and for the next two days.
The plane was small enough to only have two-and-two seating across. I was in the aisle, and the window seat wasn't yet taken. As always in that situation I had the same hopes: either that it would stay empty, or be occupied by a beautiful woman. My immature, juvenile mind at work again. Of course, neither ever happens. Usually it's filled by a guy who looks just like me.
The flight was filling up and yet the seat remained empty. I tried to read my magazine but kept glancing up to see who was coming down the aisle...not that fat guy, please...yes, that pretty girl... Stupid. Juvenile. Insecure. That's me.
The flight was nearly ready to go. Still no one. The attendant was closing the overhead lockers when suddenly a blonde woman came rushing down the aisle. She was breathing heavy and frantically comparing her boarding pass with the seat numbers. Finally she got to my row. Still frantic, she began to apologize for needing to get past me, all while while taking off her thick winter coat and looking for a place in the crowded slots to place it along with her bulky carry-on.
I stood up as gracefully as I could and told her it was no problem. I pushed my own carry-on over to make room for her coat and suitcase. She thanked me and moved to her seat, still jumpy. I sat back down while she began to fiddle with her things, trying to get everything right again.
In an attempt to calm her, I said, "Looks like you had to hurry, but you made it."
That only flustered her more. "I...the security took so long...I had to run and run. Why can't they make it quicker...I was sure I was late." She took out her phone. "I have to turn this off, right? I can't remember...oh okay..."
She was so flustered and distracted that I left her alone.
They shut the gate and the safety announcements began. The attendants ran through their pantomime while I watched my seatmate watch them. I began to relax. Compared to her, I felt for a moment like a Road Warrior.
The safety announcements ended but the plane still wasn't moving, which was a little odd. We kept sitting there. Even the attendants looked a little confused. Finally the pilot came on the address system. "Folks, it sure is a beautiful winter morning here," he drawled. "We're just waiting to move into the de-icing area...then we'll be ready to take off...just a little behind schedule..." He kept up the casual, unhurried drawl enough to make me realize the flight was sure to arrive late. I started to fret again, worried that I might not make my first client meeting.
I looked over my presentation but kept one eye on my seatmate. She had turned her phone back on and was making a call. I hoped she wouldn't be a loud yakker.
"Hi...it's me," she said. She was discreetly quiet, though it was impossible not to overhear everything. "I made it just in time...it was awful! The security was so long! And then I couldn't get my shoes back on!" She paused for the other person. "I know, it's all good. Thanks again. We are just waiting...they said there's a delay I guess...so I just wanted to call and say thanks again. I'm so glad I came." Pause. "Exactly." Pause. "I know. Worth the effort of the trip. I need to do this more. Bye." She hung up.
I kept looking at my papers but was now preoccupied thinking about my seatmate, and now I started to glance over a bit. The call had piqued my - you could call it curiosity or just nosiness, but I was naturally curious to know a little more about her. Admittedly, I probably wouldn't have been as interested if it had been a man. But it did help distract me from the delay.
She was somewhere in her forties, probably just slightly younger than me. She had long, straight blonde hair past her shoulders and seemed to have a slim build. She was wearing jeans and some sort of white cotton top. I had only brief glimpses of her face but she struck me as attractive, in a normal, modest way. I saw a wedding ring.
My nosiness complete, I went back to minding my own business.
We still hadn't moved. As happy as I was to have her beside me, I was getting uptight again, fretting about how late I would be. I took out a business magazine and tried to read it. My seatmate also had a magazine. It seemed to be about home decorating.
It must have been ten minutes before the captain came on again with another apology. "We're just checking the weather...planning the best flight path...sit tight and we'll be off as soon as we can."
I was getting really antsy, worried that we'd spend all day on the tarmac. I looked over. My companion was staring out the window. I decided to try striking up a conversation again.
"It's pretty ironic that you had to rush here and now you have to wait."