For the next train fellow , the note said.
I stared. Then took the apple. Then laughed—because he was right. Because in all those wordless trips, he had been noticing. And so had I. His habit of tapping his ring on the armrest when the train crossed a bridge. The way he always saved a seat for someone who never came. train fellow 2
We rode together until his stop—three stations early, he got off with a wave. He left the other apple on the seat. For the next train fellow , the note said
“Maya.”
And that’s when I understood: a train fellow isn’t a stranger forever. Sometimes, a second crossing turns him into a companion. Not by plan. By mileage. By the slow, diesel-scented accumulation of small, shared silences finally breaking open. Then laughed—because he was right
There he was again. The man in the rumpled tweed coat, two seats down, same side, same slight lean toward the window as if the world outside owed him an explanation.