Mother Of Prevention. Lori Copeland
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“Is the plane going to crash, Mommy?” Kelli slipped into her backpack, staring up at me with Neil’s dark eyes.
“No, honey. The plane isn’t going to crash.” She’d overheard me talking to Mom on the phone last night, and I’d expressed my usual flying hang-ups.
Kris helped me load bags on a cart and we wheeled our baggage inside the terminal and headed for our airline counter. A long line snaked around the cordoned area. I checked the time and noted that our flight left in a little over an hour; we had plenty of time.
The line moved slowly. Once or twice a new window opened, but only long enough to check in first class or frequent flyers. The girls waited patiently; their behavior made me proud. Neil had always taken care of baggage and checked in when we traveled. Was it only last year that we’d stood in this exact line, happily anticipating one glorious sun-drenched week at Disneyland? The girls had chattered with excitement, and Neil had teased that I was looking forward to the theme park more than Kelli was.
I mentally shook off my thoughts. Stay focused, Kate.
By the time we checked in and the luggage cleared security, we had fifteen minutes. The boarding gate was F12.
The three of us broke into a trot when we cleared security and headed for the assigned gate. I lugged a heavy shoulder bag and my purse, Kelli had her backpack and Kris pulled a small overnighter behind her. Threading our way through the teeming crowd, we sprinted toward the gate with five minutes to spare.
Passengers were on their feet studying their boarding passes when we arrived. It looked to be a full flight this morning.
A woman’s voice came over the PA. “Passengers on flight 224 to San Francisco—there has been a gate change. That flight will now be boarding from gate F3.”
“F3,” I told the girls. I picked up the heavy shoulder bag, and we set off for the eight-gate jaunt.
Breathless, we arrived a few minutes before the other passengers. Kelli peeled out of her backpack and let the canvas sink to the tiled floor. I set the shoulder bag down and rubbed my aching shoulder. An old rotator cuff injury had flared up.
“Mommy, are we going to eat breakfast on the plane?”
“Kelli, there are no meals on shorter flights. Didn’t you eat a bowl of cereal this morning?”
My daughter shook her head. “I couldn’t see it.”
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