distracted
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2008
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A red flag to me is the fact that the roommate said the door was ajar. No woman would leave another woman, sleeping and vulnerable in the middle of the night, and not close the door behind her! No way. Good Lord...anyone could have walked right in that room. I know even if I was just going down the hall, I would pull the door closed if someone was sleeping inside the room!
Either way a scary scenario. My wife and I are nearly the same age as KG and both of us travel periodically for work. We’ve both freaked the other one out before by not returning texts or calls in a certain amount of time. Thankfully both times (once each), it turned out to be an innocent thing where phones were on silent, didn’t notice the message, etc. but even for that short period you feel totally helpless being thousands of miles away. Don’t want to imagine what her husband feels.
If she went anywhere near the water she would have been snatched up by one of the many thousands of hungry alligators that feed in the dark. People going to Florida often do not realize the danger. Sharks too. Do not swim at night in Florida. I hope she is found safe.
Most hotel rooms close automatically with a loud “clang” - difficult to leave open.
I’m thinking she went to get ice/soda/snack and instead of looking for the room key (maybe no pockets in pajamas) decided to pull the door latch across the door so she could get back in. I have done that before if I’m only going down the hallway but never if I leave the floor I’m on.
She was staying with a friend in a hotel? Is this a co-worker friend?
Wouldn’t her job pay for a hotel room if she was out of town working?
I’ve stayed with a friend at their home while traveling with work and have shared a room with coworkers but it was under emergency (hurricane) situations.
Most hotel rooms close automatically with a loud “clang” - difficult to leave open.
I’m thinking she went to get ice/soda/snack and instead of looking for the room key (maybe no pockets in pajamas) decided to pull the door latch across the door so she could get back in. I have done that before if I’m only going down the hallway but never if I leave the floor I’m on.
She was staying with a friend in a hotel? Is this a co-worker friend?
Is it common that a company asks coworkers to share a room?
JMO
Geez. I’ve only been asked once (under normal circumstances) and that was 10 years ago. I would refuse too!Unfortunately yes. I always refuse