She didn’t look back at the lounge. Not at the coffee cup abandoned on the side table, not at the window where she’d sat and watched the afternoon bleed into evening.
The agent’s fingers paused over the keyboard. “Destination?”
The woman leaned in, lowering her voice as though the word might vanish if spoken too loudly. “Lisbon.”
A blink, a nod, the rhythmic clack of keys. “We have one seat left on tonight’s flight. It leaves in forty minutes.”
“I’ll take it.”
The agent quoted the price without flinching. The woman handed over a credit card that looked as if it had been pressed flat inside a wallet for years. No hesitation.
When the ticket slid across the counter, she took it like a verdict and slipped it into her coat pocket. Then she walked—not rushed, but purposeful—through the ebb and flow of travelers: families juggling strollers and juice boxes, businesspeople muttering into phones, couples debating gate numbers.
Past Gate 12, a man in a navy suit spotted her and froze. For a breath, his hand lifted as if to call out. But she didn’t see him. Or maybe she did, and chose not to.
Her steps never faltered.
At security, she removed her shoes, her belt, the small gold locket around her neck. The guard glanced at her, maybe wondering why her hands didn’t shake. She’d already done her waiting.
Boarding had begun by the time she reached the gate. A few passengers glanced up, their eyes skimming over her without recognition. No one noticed the way her gaze brushed over the boarding door like it was a threshold into a different existence.
Inside the jet bridge, the air grew warmer, close. She could smell the faint tang of jet fuel. Each step felt lighter, as if the weight she’d carried in that lounge had been left in the seat she’d occupied for eight hours.
She didn’t know what she’d find in Lisbon. That wasn’t the point. The point was that no one had told her to go there.
She’d been told to wait.
She’d waited.
And then she’d chosen.
As she stepped onto the plane, sliding into a window seat that looked out over the runway lights, she allowed herself the smallest of smiles.
By the time anyone realized she was gone, she’d already be crossing the Atlantic.