Ellie checked her phone for the
tenth time on the empty platform. 23:57. The last train was supposed to arrive
three minutes ago, but the digital board now flashed in bold red: CANCELLED.
She let out a frustrated sigh and sank onto a bench. Rain
dripped from the edges of the station’s canopy, slipping through the dim glow
of fluorescent yellow light.
“Missed it too?”
The voice startled her. She glanced up to see a man,
mid-thirties perhaps, standing a few feet away. He had an umbrella tucked under
one arm, water dripping from the ends of his dark hair. His suit jacket looked
expensive but thoroughly soaked.
“Looks like it,” Ellie replied, trying to sound polite but
distant. He didn’t seem to notice her tone.
“Brilliant, isn’t it? Last train, and it’s just… gone. Like
it never existed.”
Ellie gave him a thin smile, hoping it would dissuade
further conversation. But instead, he dropped onto the other end of the bench.
“Name’s Blake,” he offered.
“Hi,” she responded, reluctantly.
She knew she should get up and call a taxi. But, for a
moment, they sat in silence, listening to the rhythmic patter of rain. Blake
leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees.
“So, what’s your excuse for being here this late? Let me
guess—workaholic? Or maybe you’re running from a torrid love affair?” His smile
was disarming, playful without being intrusive.
“Nothing so dramatic. Just bad luck, mostly.”
“Bad luck? That’s vague.”
She shrugged. “Missed the earlier train because I was stuck
helping a customer. Retail life, you know?”
Blake nodded knowingly, though his tailored suit suggested
he probably didn’t. “I see. The worthy life of serving the public.”
“What about you?” Ellie asked, turning the question back on
him. “What’s your excuse?”
Blake’s grin faltered slightly, and for a moment, he looked
as though he were searching for an answer. “Work meeting ran late,” he said
finally. “Caught in traffic, then—well, here I am. Story of my life, really.”
“You sound oddly resigned to it.”
He chuckled. “Maybe I am. Or maybe I’m just tired of
fighting against fate.”
They fell quiet again, the awkwardness replaced by a curious
sense of ease. Ellie glanced at him out of the corner of her eye. There was
something strange about Blake, though she couldn’t quite put her finger on it.
His presence felt… familiar, as if she’d met him before in some dream she
couldn’t recall.
“You know,” Blake said suddenly, “there’s something almost
poetic about this. Two strangers, stranded together in the middle of the night.
Feels like the start of one of those rom-coms,
doesn’t it?”
Ellie laughed. “If this were a rom-com,
the train would magically appear, and we’d both realise it was fate.”
“Exactly,” Blake agreed. “Then there’d be some dramatic
twist—like, you’d be moving to Paris tomorrow, and this would be our last
chance to confess our undying love.”
“Undying love?” Ellie teased. “Bit much, don’t you think?”
“Not if it’s fate,” he said with mock seriousness. “Fate
loves a bit of drama.”
Ellie’s phone buzzed. She glanced at the screen: a
notification from her calendar. Mum’s anniversary.
“You okay?” Blake asked, his voice softer now.
She hesitated, then nodded. “Yeah. Just… tomorrow’s a hard
day.”
Blake studied her for a moment, his expression unreadable. “Want
to talk about it?”
Ellie shook her head. “Not really.”
“Fair enough,” he said. “But, for what it’s worth, sometimes
the hardest days turn out to be the most important.”
She frowned at him, puzzled by the weight of his words.
Before she could respond, the faint rumble of an engine echoed in the distance.
A train’s headlights pierced through the rain as it pulled into the station.
Blake stood in response. “Looks like our miracle train’s
here.”
Ellie rose too, suddenly reluctant to let the moment end. “Where
are you headed?”
Blake smiled faintly. “This is where we part ways, I’m
afraid.”
The train doors slid open, but Blake stayed where he was. Ellie
paused in the doorway, glancing over her shoulder.
“Hey, Blake?”
“Yeah?”
“Thanks. For the company, I mean.”
He nodded. “Take care, Ellie.”
She stepped inside, the doors closing behind her. As the
train pulled away, she turned to look out the window. But the platform was
empty. Blake was gone.
It wasn’t until later, as Ellie lay in bed replaying the night in her mind, that she realised something strange: she’d never told him her name.
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