
After His Mistress Faked a Pregnancy, He Tried to Drown Me
Chapter 3
Celeste found me first.
I was sitting in the break room at the crew scheduling office, pretending to look at my phone, when she came through the door and shut it behind her with the particular care of someone who doesn't want to be seen doing what they're about to do. She was still in her uniform. The top button of her jacket was undone, which for Celeste — who ironed her epaulets — meant something.
"Fifteen minutes," she said quietly. "Then I have a briefing."
I put my phone face-down. "Okay."
She sat across from me and looked at her hands for a second. Celeste Vann had been flying for eleven years. She was the person you wanted in a rapid depressurization. She did not get rattled. So when she looked rattled, I paid attention.
"They're saying you're unstable," she said. "Not loud. Not officially. But Perkins pulled me aside after Tuesday's debrief and asked if I'd noticed any — " she made a small gesture — "behavioral irregularities. His words."
I felt something move through my chest. Slow and cold.
"Who's saying it."
"It's not coming from one place. That's the thing." She met my eyes. "It's already circulated. It's that stage where you can't find the source because everyone's heard it from someone else." A beat. "Damien's been talking to supervisors. I don't have names. But two people told me separately, and one of them doesn't gossip."
I looked at the wall behind her. There was a safety notice pinned to the corkboard. Monthly fire drill schedule. A reminder about updating emergency contact forms.
*Unstable.* The word sat in my mouth like something I needed to spit out.
"I don't have witnesses," I said. More to myself than to her.
"I know."
"To any of it. The café. The night — " I stopped. "Any of it."
Celeste nodded once. She looked like she wanted to say something else and was making a choice not to. I recognized that look. I'd worn it myself often enough.
"I just wanted you to know," she said finally. "Before it gets worse."
"Thank you."
She stood up. Buttoned her jacket. Paused at the door.
"Sutton." She didn't turn around. "Be careful."
Then she was gone.
I sat in the break room alone and looked at my hands on the table. They were still. I thought about what careful looked like from here — what it had looked like for the past three years — and I thought about how careful had not, in the end, protected anything.
I picked up my phone and texted my lawyer.
---
I didn't see Giana that week.
She was in the penthouse — I could tell by the small signs, the brand of shampoo in the main bathroom, a coffee cup left on the wrong side of the sink — but we moved around each other like weather systems that hadn't yet made contact. Damien slept in the main bedroom. I slept in the guest room. We had not had a real conversation since the café.
I told myself this was fine. I told myself I just needed time and a signed retainer and then I could start moving pieces.
I did not think about Giana specifically. I should have.
---
I don't know exactly when she went to the hangar.
I've reconstructed it since, in the way you do when you're trying to understand how something got so far before you saw it coming. Someone she'd cultivated — a ground crew contact from the months she spent embedded in our household, learning the names, the schedules, the small favors that opened doors in the aviation world. She was good at that. Patient. She never rushed.
She would have known the window. She would have known which aircraft, which panel, which specific overhead compartment assembly had been flagged for a routine inspection that kept getting rescheduled. She would have worked methodically — I know this because the investigators couldn't find obvious tampering at first, only anomalies. She touched only what she'd planned to touch. She photographed nothing.
She left no trace of herself.
She left only the result.
---
I wasn't on that flight.
I'd traded shifts with Celeste two weeks earlier — she'd needed a Thursday off for something personal, I had no reason to say no, the swap was routine and filed properly. I was home when it happened. I was sitting at the kitchen table with my laptop and a cold cup of tea, going through the lawyer's intake questionnaire, when my phone started buzzing.
First a news alert. Then a colleague. Then three numbers I didn't recognize in quick succession.
I read the alert twice before it landed.
*In-flight equipment failure on regional carrier. One crew member injured. Emergency landing. Investigation underway.*
Celeste.
I called her. It went to voicemail. I called the airline's crew welfare line. I called a colleague who knew her schedule.
It took forty minutes to get anything real. Fractured collarbone. Severe concussion. Lacerations. She'd taken the full weight of the overhead panel. She was stable but she'd needed emergency intervention on the ground.
I sat with my phone in my hands and stared at the table.
The shift trade was on file. My name was on the original roster. Anyone looking at the paperwork would see my name first, then the amendment, and if they were already inclined to look at me a certain way — *unstable, Damien had told them, behavioral irregularities* — they would need to decide how much they trusted an amendment filed by a woman who was currently in the middle of a messy separation.
I already knew, before anyone called me, what shape this was going to take.
The airline's investigator reached me that evening. His voice was neutral and careful, the tone of someone following protocol.
Was I familiar with the aircraft? Yes. Had I been in the hangar recently? Not that week. Could I account for my schedule over the past ten days?
I answered every question. I kept my voice level. I had been a flight attendant for six years and I knew how to give nothing away in my face while the thing I'd been handed was getting heavier in my hands.
When I hung up, I pressed my thumb against the inside of my ring finger.
Then I stopped.
I opened my laptop. I went back to the lawyer's intake questionnaire. I typed a new entry under *additional context* and I kept typing until I had documented everything I could put into words — the café, the rumors, the names Celeste had given me, the shift trade timestamp, all of it.
Outside the window, Seattle was doing what Seattle does. Gray sky. Wet streets. The city utterly indifferent.
I saved the document. I attached it to an email.
I hit send.
Then I sat in the kitchen in the quiet and waited to see what came next.
You may also like





