“Thanks,” I smiled, feeling charmed and connected.
“I’ve got a thank-you present for you,” he said with a jovial glint in his eyes. “Close your eyes.”
The childish part of my brain hoped that maybe it was something as simple and romantic as a kiss. I closed them.
He placed something cold in my hands. I opened my eyes to see a shiny new iPhone sitting in them.
“What?” I beamed. “You didn’t have to—”
“I kinda did. And I kinda wanted to. Now you can return my crazy texts at all hours of the night,” he winked. “It’s more for my pleasure than for yours.”
I squeezed the phone in my hand and put my arms out to hug him. He embraced me wholeheartedly.
Until his own phone started to ring. He broke away and looked at it. I could see on the screen it was Jennifer.
“Sorry, I have to take this,” he said apologetically to me and patted me hard on the shoulder. “Have a safe flight. I’ll call you soon.”
I nodded awkwardly as he put the phone to his ear and said, “Hey, babe.”
He talked to her, sincerely engrossed in the conversation. I turned around, feeling a bit stupid, and walked away toward the ticket agent. I looked behind at him, hoping to catch him watching me. Instead, he was still talking and walking back to his car, his lithe figure cutting through the crowd.
I felt pretty small as I walked to my gate and waited for the plane to arrive, but somehow pushed those thoughts out of my head. If I could just get over these feelings that I had for him then I would be OK. After all, it was just a stupid girl crush that I had. What was really important was the fact that I was about to embark on a journey unlike any I’d ever been on before.
I looked around the busy gate area, at the nameless people sitting about and decided I should probably use the bathroom before I got on the plane. Though it was a short flight, I didn’t have an aisle seat and I hated having to climb over people just because I had to go pee.
I walked down the hall, past the gift shops, bars and a few more gates before I found the restroom.
It was surprisingly empty, which was a nice change from what airport bathrooms usually look like. There was only one woman in a stall down near the end. I noticed her red patent Mary Janes and old lady stockings. I went into the nearest stall to the front.
I hung my bag up on the sturdy coat hook, noting how damp the ground looked, and proceeded to sit down. As I did so, I heard the stall door at the end open and the woman slowly walk out. I didn’t hear her flush, which was pretty gross but expected in public washrooms. I swear, women were just as bad as men in these scenarios. It must have been some sort of internal rebellion mechanism, like “I don’t live here so I don’t have to clean; instead, I’ll act like a fucking monkey.”
As I was thinking that, I noticed how precise the woman’s footsteps were as she walked down the aisle toward me and the sinks.
Heel, toe, heel, toe, heel, toe.
It was slow enough to be creepy and creepy enough that I had too much stage fright to even go. I just sat there, holding my breath and waiting for her to walk past.
But she didn’t.
Heel, toe, heel, toe. And then it stopped somewhere outside my stall.
Heel, toe, heel, toe.
It was like she was walking toward me.
What the fuck?
Heel. Toe.
And then it stopped, just as the round toes of the red Mary Janes were visible beneath my stall door, facing directly towards me.
This crazy bitch was standing right outside my fucking door!
I didn’t know what to say or do. I didn’t want to move, but I was on the fucking toilet seat. This was the most vulnerable position ever.
I kept my eyes on the toes, thinking at some point they’d move or maybe the woman would say something. But neither of those things happened.
There was a large enough crack between the stall doors, though, usually the bane of every public washroom.
I slowly moved my head over so that I was looking through the crack. Maybe I could get an idea of what she was doing.
And through the crack I saw an eye. A heavily made up, aging eye staring right back at me, face pressed up to the door.
I screamed. I couldn’t help it.
I screamed and jumped off of the toilet, yanking up my pants far enough and flung myself out of the bathroom stall, fully ready to confront whoever the fuck was out there.
But as I stumbled out of the stall, the door banging loudly, I didn’t see anyone. There was no one there. I was alone in the washroom, and the woman at the end of the aisle was gone.