A woman was in my seat, faking sleep behind big sunglasses as the plane boarded. She ignored me until I showed my boarding pass. She then gestured for me to squeeze past.
I said, “I’m not the one getting in, you are!” She flinched and slid to the window seat. Right after takeoff, to my shock, I felt her head lean gently onto my shoulder. It was subtle at first—like when someone’s half-asleep and just loses control of their posture.
I let it go. I figured the turbulence or the angle of her headrest made her drift that way. But a few minutes later, it became clear.
She wasn’t asleep anymore. Her breathing had changed. She was awake… and crying.
I looked down at her. She had her face tilted away, chin slightly tucked, but I could feel the tremble in her shoulders. Soft, contained sobs.
I froze. Do I say something? Offer a tissue?
Or just pretend I didn’t notice? After a few awkward seconds, I reached into my backpack, pulled out a slightly crumpled tissue, and offered it without a word. She took it, still not looking at me, and whispered, “Thank you.”
We flew like that for about twenty minutes—her silent, me pretending to watch a movie I hadn’t even started.
Then she spoke. “I’m sorry I took your seat. I just… didn’t want the window.”
“It’s okay,” I replied.
“I like the aisle.”
Another pause. “My name’s Karina,” she added, almost like she needed to remember it herself. “I’m Theo,” I said.
She nodded but didn’t say anything more. We landed in Denver just before sunset. I expected that to be the end of it—just another weird travel story I’d tell my friends.
But as people stood up to grab their bags, she turned to me. “Would you mind walking with me through the terminal?” she asked. I blinked, a bit surprised.
But something in her voice—something fragile—made me nod. “Sure.”
We walked quietly past the gates, both of us with just backpacks. I asked where she was headed.
“I don’t really know,” she said. “I just needed to leave New York.”
That answer stuck with me. It wasn’t about where she was going, but where she couldn’t stay.
We ended up at a small coffee shop near the baggage claim. She bought me a tea. I didn’t ask for details.
I figured if she wanted to talk, she would. And she did. Eventually.
Karina had just broken off an engagement two weeks before the wedding. Her fiancé, a doctor named Marcus, had been everything her parents dreamed of—successful, charming, reliable. But a month ago, she’d found messages on his laptop.
Long, emotional exchanges with someone named Dana. A nurse from his hospital. When she confronted him, he didn’t deny it.
He just said, “I didn’t think you’d find out.”
No apology. No emotion. Just cold resignation.
She’d moved out of their shared apartment three days later. Her parents didn’t take her side. “You’ll never find someone like him again,” her mother had whispered.
“I hope not,” Karina had replied. I listened. Didn’t interrupt.
Just let her talk. And somewhere between sips of tea and pauses of silence, we became… not quite friends, but something close. I walked her to the ride-share zone.
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