cool heels

cool (one's) heels

To wait, sometimes so that one becomes calmer or more composed. You need to cool your heels for a minute and stop yelling at the staff—they didn't do anything wrong. We were excited, but we had to cool our heels when the release date for the new game got pushed back.
See also: cool, heel
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

cool one's heels

Fig. to wait (for someone); to wait for something to happen. I spent an hour cooling my heels in the waiting room while the doctor saw other patients. All right, if you can't behave properly, just sit down here and cool your heels until I call you.
See also: cool, heel
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

cool (one's) heels

Informal
To wait or be kept waiting.
See also: cool, heel
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

cool one's heels, to

To be kept waiting. Presumably this saying comes from the fact that one’s feet become warm in the act of walking and cool off when one sits or stands still in the act of waiting. It dates from the early seventeenth century and was common enough by the 1630s to appear in several sources (William Rowley, Thomas Dekker). A century later, Henry Fielding wrote, “In this parlour Amelia cooled her heels, as the phrase is, near a quarter of an hour” (Amelia, 1752).
See also: cool
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • cool (one's) heels
  • cool one's heels
  • cool your heels
  • cooled out
  • cool out
  • cool someone out
  • hard on (one's)/the heels
  • hard on your heels
  • hard/hot on somebody's heels
  • on the heels of (someone or something)