I board my flight out of Mobile, still vibrating from three days with my mother and sister. Old grievances clawed back to the surface, things I had spent years burying. All I want is altitude, silence, and the mercy of sleep. I slide into my usual window seat.
The captain’s
voice crackles overhead, announcing a full flight. I observe the restless
choreography of strangers stowing bags, and a baby crying in the seat in front
of me. The only empty seats left are the two beside me.
As the door is
about to close, a large man lumbers down the aisle, flushed and breathing hard,
dragging a carry-on that bangs every seat it passes. The overhead bins are
jammed. The plane waits while attendants check his bags. A murmur of irritation
ripples through the cabin.
He drops into
the seat beside me like a collapsing wall.
I’m petite. The
instant he sits, his shoulder spills over the armrest, pinning me toward the
window. One long leg crowds into my space, trapping my knees. Then the smell
reaches me, stale cigarettes and sweat.
My chest
tightens.
Cigarettes and
leaving.
My father’s
smell the night he walked out when I was eight years old, saying he was going
for cigarettes and never coming back.
Why doesn’t he
take the aisle seat? It would give his shoulders room, his legs somewhere to go.
Doesn’t he realize half his body is already in my seat, that each breath presses
me harder against the plane’s curved wall?
I study him from
the corner of my eye. Thick through the chest and stomach. A neck swollen above
a wilted collar. Damp gray curls pasted to his temples. His face shines with
sweat.
I want to say
something simple: Sir, could you move over? Could you take the aisle seat?
The words stall in my throat.
My mother’s
voice lives there. Be pleasant. Be gracious. Don’t make a scene.
I smile. Reflex.
I live now in
New York City, where women speak up, where no one apologizes for taking space.
But the old Southern stitching holds. Manners sewn into the skin don’t come out
easily.
He turns toward
me, cheerful and winded, as if we are beginning a pleasant trip together.
“I’m Dr. Richard
Gumm. Phew. Didn’t think I was going to make this flight. I bought two seats. I
hate inconveniencing people with my size.”
He hands me a
business card: DR. RICHARD GUMM, Oral Surgeon.
I take a breath.
Count to three. Three hours. I survived a weekend of family interrogation
and casseroles; I can survive this. I arrange my face into neutrality and
practice being unbothered.
The captain’s
voice returns.
“Folks, we’re
delayed. A severe thunderstorm has veered into town. We’ll be waiting on the
tarmac.”
My stomach
drops. A short flight could stretch into hours of being trapped
Patience. A
book. A song. Wait it out.
“Hope you don’t
mind me talking. You look like a good listener. I’ve been trapped in a
conference for three days, nothing but room service and boring talks.”
Every instinct
screams no.
I nod anyway.
“You have no
idea—no idea at all—what I paid for this excursion into this backwater city.
Mobile. Nothing here but a submarine and a lot of ghetto. Food’s terrible…”
He doesn’t stop.
The words pour
out in a steady stream. Hotels. Towels. Waiters. Food. Prices. Everything
wrong. Each complaint another drop, another torturing drip
I hover at the
edge of listening. My mouth produces the right sounds. Wow. That’s crazy.
That must be hard. My fingers curl into my skirt.
His cheerfulness
is its own violence. A bright, oblivious rain that drowns everything.
Outside,
lightning splits the sky. Rain hammers the fuselage. Inside, his voice is a
buzz saw.
Each remark
lands, ripples outward. My father, my hometown, the weekend I just endured.
“Sorry folks.
Sit tight. Still waiting for clearance.”
The captain
tries to soothe. It lands like a match.
I stare at the
rain-streaked window. The pressure builds.
For a moment, he
pauses. Pulls out pictures of his wife, his children. A brief, fragile quiet
moment.
I compliment
them. A small reprieve.
Then—
“I just trained
in robot-assisted oral surgery. Incredible system. Cost me a fortune, so I’ll
have to charge more…”
And we’re off
again.
He drinks the
complimentary liquor. With each swallow he grows louder, looser, more certain
of his grievances. Soon I know far more than I want about crowns, lasers, and
incompetent colleagues.
I would happily
rearrange his teeth myself.
I smile anyway.
Three hours
pass.
The storm
clears, but the cabin resentment is growing. Babies cry. Seatbelts click.
Voices rise.
At last, the
captain again:
“We’ve been
cleared for takeoff. However, there are sixteen planes ahead of us.”
A collective
groan.
He seizes it.
“You can’t trust
anybody. Patients cancel. They ghost. They don’t pay. Insurance is legalized
theft—”
He rants himself
empty. Mid-sentence, his head falls back. Mouth open. A wet, grinding snore.
Silence.
I stare ahead.
Jaw tight.
For a moment, I
think I’ve been spared.
Then—
His hand drifts
across the armrest and settles on my thigh. Casual. Certain. As if it belongs
there.
Something
breaks.
Years of being
agreeable collapse in a single instant. Every silence mistaken for consent.
Every polite laugh. Every swallowed word.
Gone.
My pulse
hammers. I slap his hand off me. Hard. The crack echoes.
“I was
sleeping!” he snaps, eyes flying open. “Why would you do that?”
I’m on my feet,
forcing past him into the aisle. I turning back.
“Shut the fuck
up. I’m not your listener, your armrest, or the silence you’ve been talking
into for three hours. I should have stopped you an hour ago.”
He stares,
stunned into silence.
The baby
screams. Call buttons flare across the cabin. Flight attendants rush forward.
At the jet
bridge, airport police meet me and snap cuffs around my wrists.
For the first
time that day, I smile and mean it.
Bio:
Dr. Weiner has published a variety of professional articles and fiction
in magazines. His psychology books include Shattered Innocence and the Curio
Shop. Non-psychology publications are Across the Borderline and The Art of Fine
Whining.
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