Amy Osmun assumed she'd never see Mike Gilberstadt again. They'd met only 10 hours before. Now they were standing in Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport , facing one another, both putting off the farewells.
But time was ticking. They were both set to catch connecting flights – Amy to Scotland, Mike to Greece. "I guess we have to say goodbye," said Amy, reluctantly.
In a gesture of farewell, Mike leaned in to hug Amy. He kissed her, briefly, on the cheek. Then Mike readied to leave, adjusting the bag on his shoulder.
He was about to turn away when Amy spoke: "Is that all I'm going to get?" she said, smiling. READ MORE: Top 10 reasons Aussies are 'scared' of travelling Even as she said it, Amy knew this was a moment she'd remember. "That's when he gave me a real kiss," Amy tells CNN Travel today.
"It was absolutely electric." For a moment, Amy and Mike stood, kissing, amid the crowds of travellers at the airport. And then it really was time to say goodbye.
Mike took Amy's number, writing down her details on a scrap of paper. Then they went in different directions. As Amy walked away from Mike, she tried to make sense of what had just happened.
She never usually spoke to strangers while travelling, let alone kissed them. And she couldn't figure out how her airport embrace with Mike fit into the wider context of her life. Was Mike just a stranger she'd quickly forget? Would this become a funny story someday? Would she always wonder what could have been? Or would she look back and feel.