Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Case Studies in Modern Life - 20. Safety Information
It was my thing. Whenever I flew, I’d always try to sit in a seat on the exit row, next to the cabin door. It wasn’t that hard to do; I just made sure I always got to the airport in plenty of time and then it was easy to get the seat I wanted.
It was easy to sweet-talk the check-in staff. I flew a lot with my job and this was my thing when I did.
Sitting there was great for getting off when the plane lands. I could just get straight off, and I didn’t have to stand in the aisle like an idiot as everyone pushed at once, but it’s more than that. You see, I wanted that seat in case something happened to the plane. If it did then I’ll have my chance. I’d jump up and open that door and be able to get people out of there. I’d get my chance to be a hero.
I studied what to do. I knew how to open the door, how to turn the handle and unlock it. I knew that the inflatable chute opens automatically when the door does. I knew how to get people through the door in an emergency; if someone stops you push them forward. I’d be the perfect hero if anything happened to the plane.
It was exciting, when I flew, the idea that I could be a hero. I mean, my life is so pathetic. My job is no more than a glorified courier; I take different prototypes and packages and even people around Europe. I’m on my own since Kerry walked out on me. So I have this fantasy; it’s harmless and it could have saved people.
Then I had to get a flight to Edinburgh. It was a Friday and the weather was turning bad. I was taking this designer, Lawrence Young-Hall, up there, and he was a dick. I’d wanted to leave early, but he dicked around with all his paperwork and samples and we were an hour late leaving the head office. I wanted to take the train; it’s easier and quicker if you’re going to Heathrow from Central London. This Lawrence Young-Hall said we had to drive because he’d got a driver, some poor Polish slob who he shouted at all the time. Even if we’d left on time driving up there we’d have barely made it, but we were late. Then it started to rain when we got on the motorway. It’s bad enough in good weather, but in rain it was gridlock.
Young-Hall was shouting at his driver, the weather was turning into a real storm, and we’re stuck on this bloody motorway. I just sat back in the car, I knew we were going to miss the plane, and if we did this Young-Hall would give me the blame. I was also thinking that I was going to be stuck getting this dick to Edinburgh.
When we got to Heathrow the wind was so bad it nearly blew me off my feet; the rain soaked right through my jacket in seconds. I finally got Young-Hall to the checking-in desk, ages after it had closed. He had this screaming fit, until the woman there threatened to call security. It was left to me to arrange seats on the next flight and to calm everyone down that Young-Hall had shouted at, because he’d gone off to the bar.
We never made the next flight. Not long after we’d arrived, the storm turned into a hurricane and all the planes were grounded. Young-Hall took himself off to one of Heathrow’s hotels, and I was supposed to wait for when the planes started flying again; then I was to get him.
I was sitting in the Departures Lounge when I saw it on the TV news. The plane we were supposed to be on had crashed in the bad weather, not long after take-off. As I sat there, that night, I watched the news. I wanted to know everything that had happened. But all I could find out was that it had crashed in a field and more than half the passengers had managed to escape before it caught fire.
The next day Young-Hall didn’t want to fly anymore, so he got his driver to take him home. I got the train home.
When I got home it was all over the news. They called him “The Hero of Flight 274”. He was called James Mills and had been sat in a seat on the exit row. He’d got the plane’s door open and had got many people out before the fire started. Even when the plane was on fire he’d stayed and got more people out. He died in the fire. He was a hero.
He’d been sat in the seat I should have been in, and he’d had the chance to be a hero that should have been mine. That was my one chance, and I’d lost it because of that Young-Hall dick. My stupid life was over. I was always going to be this no one forever.
I didn’t go back to work because I couldn’t fly in a plane again. Everyone at work thought I was afraid of flying because that plane had crashed. I couldn’t tell them the truth, I’d lost my chance to be a hero, instead I let them think I was afraid of flying; it was easier that way.
My sister said I had “a lucky escape,” but she knows nothing.
This is the last story in this collection.
I will be creating a new collection soon, of different stories. Follow me to find out more.
If you enjoyed reading these stories, you can get a copy of them as an e-book here. There are some new stories in this collection and some of them have been re-written.
Happy reading
- 6
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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