
Husband's Flight of Madness
Chapter 3
Jennifer Chen appeared at the end of the aisle, her face tight with the kind of reluctance that comes from following orders your gut tells you are wrong. Another flight attendant flanked her—younger, less certain, his eyes darting between Jennifer and me like he was hoping someone would tell him this wasn't happening.
"Mrs. Alexander." Jennifer's voice carried that professional neutrality I'd heard a thousand times in my flying days. The tone that meant bad news delivered with mandatory courtesy. "I need you to come with us."
"Jennifer, listen to me." I kept my voice low, urgent. "I'm a former commercial pilot. Ten years with Regional Express before I left the industry. I know what I'm seeing. That descent rate is wrong. The pitch angle is wrong. Gabriel is allowing First Officer Martinez to fly this aircraft in a manner that violates every safety protocol—"
Gabriel's voice cut through the cabin speakers, smooth as silk, perfectly calibrated to project calm authority. "Ladies and gentlemen, we're experiencing some minor weather turbulence and making a few technical adjustments to ensure your comfort. Please remain seated with your seatbelts fastened. We'll have you through this shortly."
The bastard. He sounded like every competent captain anyone had ever trusted. And I sounded like a hysterical wife.
Jennifer's jaw tightened. Whatever doubt had flickered in her eyes vanished, replaced by the iron certainty of following the chain of command. "Ma'am, I'm going to have to ask you to cooperate."
"There is no weather," I said, desperation creeping into my voice despite my efforts to control it. "Look outside. Clear skies. This is deliberate mishandling. He's training her on a live flight with passengers—"
The younger flight attendant produced zip ties from his pocket. The sight of them sent ice through my veins.
"No. No, you don't understand—" I tried to pull away, but Jennifer's grip on my arm was firm, professional, immovable.
"Please don't make this harder than it needs to be." Her voice dropped to a whisper, meant only for me. "The captain has authority over this aircraft. I have to follow his orders."
The plastic bit into my wrists as they pulled the ties tight. The click of the lock mechanism sounded obscenely loud over the drone of engines. They led me back to my seat, and every passenger I passed looked away, embarrassed witnesses to what appeared to be an unhinged woman being restrained.
Lily's face when she saw my bound hands would haunt me forever.
They deposited me in my seat with a firmness that left no room for argument. Jennifer lingered for a moment, her eyes meeting mine with something that might have been apology, before she moved away to reassure other passengers.
I stared at my bound hands, plastic cutting into skin, and forced myself to breathe. Think. I couldn't afford panic. Couldn't afford the luxury of falling apart.
The aircraft shuddered again—not weather, but the aerodynamic protest of being pushed beyond proper parameters. I closed my eyes and let my pilot's mind take over, cataloging every sensation with clinical precision.
Descending at approximately fifteen hundred feet per minute. Too steep for this phase of flight. Engine noise indicated reduced power settings inconsistent with Gabriel's announced "technical adjustments." The pressure in my ears built steadily, confirming the rate of descent. Outside the window, no other aircraft were visible in airspace that should have been busy with traffic—meaning we'd deviated from our assigned route.
They'd taken us off the grid.
My eyes snapped open, heart hammering against my ribs with a new and terrible understanding. This wasn't just dangerous incompetence or Gabriel showing off for his mistress. This was something worse. Something planned.
"Mommy?"
Lily's small hand touched my bound wrists, her fingers trembling. Her face had gone pale, freckles standing out like paint splatters on white canvas. She looked younger than her seven years, small and terrified and trying so hard to be brave.
"Mommy, why did they tie you up?" Her voice cracked. "Why is Daddy being mean?"
The question shattered something in my chest. I leaned toward her, awkward with my hands bound, and pressed my forehead against hers.
"Baby, listen to me." I kept my voice steady through sheer force of will. "Mommy needs to fix something very important. Something that's wrong with how the plane is flying. But I need you to be brave for me. Can you do that?"
Her lower lip trembled, but she nodded, and I saw steel beneath the tears. My daughter. My beautiful, brave girl.
"I'm scared," she whispered.
"I know, sweetheart. But Mommy's going to make everything okay. I promise."
A promise I had no idea how to keep with my hands bound and the cockpit locked against me.
Jennifer passed our row again, moving toward the galley. I caught her eye and spoke quickly, precisely, using the language that might penetrate her doubt.
"Senior flight attendant." I pitched my voice to carry authority without volume. "Current rate of descent violates FAR 91.13—careless operation. Pitch attitude inconsistent with autopilot parameters for this phase of flight. Hand-flying at cruise altitude with paying passengers violates company Standard Operating Procedures and creates unnecessary risk exposure. The aircraft is being deliberately mishandled, and as a crew member, you have an obligation to ensure passenger safety that supersedes the captain's authority when that authority is being abused."
She froze mid-step. Her eyes widened slightly—not much, but enough to tell me the technical precision had registered.
"You need to check the cockpit," I continued, holding her gaze. "Document what you observe. Because if something happens, you'll be asked what you saw and what you did about it."
For a long moment, she stared at me. Then she glanced toward the cockpit, uncertainty written across her features.
The aircraft dropped again, harder this time. Overhead bins rattled. A passenger gasped.
And in the cockpit, through that narrow window, I saw Gabriel's hand still resting possessively on Sarah's shoulder.
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