Follow
Chapters
Share
The gap between me and the world Novel Cover

The gap between me and the world

One year ago, Ashley—my pilot boyfriend’s idealized ex—threw a tantrum mid-flight. She slammed her high heel into the cabin window, triggering a catastrophic decompression. As a flight attendant, I fought with everything I had to plug the breach, saving over a hundred lives. Afterwards, I insisted we call the police. Ashley was sentenced to nine years in prison. At the time, Louis held me and said he understood my choice, that he loved me. But later, on our honeymoon, Louis himself piloted the flight to Paradise Island. When the cabin depressurization alarm blared and passengers screamed, scrambling for oxygen masks, I rushed to the cockpit and saw a sight I would never forget. Louis was manually overriding the cabin pressure controls, his face utterly calm. “What are you doing?” His voice came through the intercom, each word a knife: “Stephanie, you sent Ashley to prison, ruined nine years of her life. I’m just making you pay with yours.” “Now we’re even.” When I opened my eyes again, everything had reset. This time, I was done playing the hero. Let’s see how they handle their own mess.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The line went silent for several seconds as Louis weighed his options.

Cabin depressurization. A shattered window.

Even with an emergency descent, every second wasted meant greater danger. He couldn’t afford to gamble.

“What are your terms?” His voice gritted out from between clenched teeth.

I watched the clouds whip past the window and spoke clearly, each word deliberate. “First, you, Louis, will immediately announce over the PA—to every passenger and the control tower—that due to your negligent supervision and mismanagement of personal relationships, crew member Ashley committed a critical safety violation. Then, you will voluntarily ground yourself and submit to investigation.”

“You’re out of your mind!” Louis exploded. “Stephanie, don’t push your luck.”

“I have a second condition,” I continued, ignoring his rage completely. “Make Ashley kneel in the aisle and bow in apology to every single passenger until this plane lands.”

The moment the words left my mouth, not just Louis—the entire cabin seemed to draw a sharp, collective breath.

Ashley shrieked like a cat with its tail stepped on. “You bitch! Who do you think you are! Louis would never agree to that!”

Her eyes darted desperately toward the PA speaker, as though Louis might materialize from it to protect her.

Louis’s voice crackled through again, thick with threat. “Stephanie, this is my final warning. Don’t test me. Remember, you’re on this plane too. If it goes down, you die with the rest of us.”

Using everyone’s lives to threaten me?

How familiar.

In my past life, he’d done the same—using over a hundred lives to force my hand, to make me forgive Ashley.

Too bad for him. I wasn’t that soft-hearted Stephanie anymore.

“Oh? Is that so?” I let out a scornful laugh. “Then let’s all die together. At least on the road to the underworld, I’ll have a decorated captain and his precious ‘momentary lapse’ to keep me company.”

I hung up again, pulled off my oxygen mask, leaned back in my seat, and closed my eyes.

A posture of pure, unbothered resignation: *Your move. I’ll wait.*

Time ticked by.

The cabin air grew thinner. The high-pitched shriek from the breach sharpened—a siren song from the reaper himself.

Passengers grew restless. Some began to cry; others scribbled what looked like final notes.

The fear of death settled over everyone equally.

Donna, the chief flight attendant, was sweating bullets. She directed the crew to stuff pillows and blankets against the hole, but the intense pressure differential sucked them straight out.

“It’s useless!” shouted a middle-aged man who looked experienced. “The pressure differential is too great! If we don’t seal that breach, this plane is going down!”

All eyes turned to me once more.

This time, their gazes held no accusation—only fear and desperate pleading.

Donna rushed to my side, her tone bordering on begging. “Stephanie, I’m begging you! The passengers are innocent! You can’t just sit there and watch everyone die!”

I opened my eyes and gave her a flat look.

Innocent?

In my past life, when Louis and Ashley teamed up to smear me—claiming I’d called the police out of petty jealousy over Ashley—how many of these “innocent” passengers had stepped forward to call me vicious and heartless?

Now they were scared?

“My terms,” I said, unmoved, “are exactly what I just stated.”

Just then, a young mother clutching her child—his face purpling from lack of oxygen—collapsed to her knees before me.

“Please! Save my baby! He’s so little!” Her sobs were raw, gut-wrenching.

I looked at the child, and my heart gave an inevitable, painful twist.

In my past life, I’d had a child too.

Louis’s.

But after a long-haul flight, exhausted, I lost it.

Louis had held me and said, *It’s okay. I’m enough.*

Now, looking back, maybe he was relieved.

Relieved that losing the child cleared the path for Ashley’s arrival.

My heart hardened to stone once more.

Looking down at the kneeling mother, I spoke slowly. “Let him beg Captain Louis. *He’s* the one who values his pride—and Ashley’s—over all your lives.”

My words were the match that lit the fuse.

The passengers’ pent-up fear and fury ignited.

You may also like

After Discovering His Three-Year Affair, I Became His Boss Novel Cover
9.1
My heart hammered against my ribs as the elevator climbed toward Ryan's floor. Eight years of love, of sacrifice, of waiting—all culminating in this moment. I twisted my grandmother's silver bracelet around my wrist, a nervous habit I'd developed since she'd given it to me before she passed. The small velvet box felt heavy in my coat pocket, the diamond ring inside representing not just my savings, but my complete faith in our future together. I'd rehearsed this moment countless times during my flight from Seattle to Los Angeles. The proposal wasn't traditional—a woman asking a man—but then again, our long-distance relationship had never been conventional. What mattered was that after eight years, I was ready to make it official, to finally close the gap between Seattle and LA. "You can do this," I whispered to myself as the elevator dinged at the twelfth floor. "He loves you. He's going to say yes." The hallway seemed longer than I remembered from my previous visits.
After My Husband Made Me Kneel to His Girl, I Aborted Novel Cover
9.8
At six months pregnant, Thomas Montgomery had his friends over for some gaming. I prepared a meal and served it to them, only for Blaire Clark to burst into tears, accusing me of trying to upset her. All because I had mistakenly added some parsley she despised to the dish. Thomas and his friends demanded I apologize. "She's just sensitive; try to accommodate her," Thomas said coldly. I refused, and he pushed me down to my knees in front of Blaire. "Apologize to her, you're out of line!" Humiliated, I quietly scheduled the soonest possible appointment for an abortion that day. But when I truly decided to leave, Thomas went into a rage. I leaned against the cold wall as I made my way out of the hospital. The sky had turned dark, and snow was falling heavily.
Ditched Before the Wedding Novel Cover
8.5
The night before the wedding, Wayne slipped me a sleeping pill, allowing his childhood friend to cut my long hair. When I awoke and saw my reflection, I was devastated. Maya, with her hair styled in playful curls, feigned remorse: "Oops, my hand slipped. You’re not mad at me, are you?" "It's all my fault for making Evelyn Robinson the ugliest bride ever!" Wayne teased, playfully tapping her nose, excusing her behavior: "Just throw on a wig. The veil covers everything; no one will outshine you." The room fell silent as everyone waited for me to react, expecting a tantrum like before. Instead, I calmly removed the engagement ring from my finger and placed it in Maya's hand: "Why go through the motions? Just switch brides; the veil hides everything anyway." My unexpected response took them by surprise. "I only wanted to give you a new hairstyle, Evelyn, but it just slipped... Please don’t be upset," Maya pleaded, leaning into Wayne, her eyes brimming with crocodile tears. The others avoided eye contact, mumbling attempts to ease the tension: "You’re misunderstanding, Evelyn.
Healed by True Affection Novel Cover
8.0
The church was a vision of white roses and silver ribbons—exactly as I'd dreamed since I was a little girl. Sunlight streamed through stained glass windows, casting kaleidoscope patterns across the aisle I'd walked down ten times before. Eleven was supposed to be our lucky number. This time, Talon and I would finally be husband and wife. "Isabel Howell, do you take Talon Dixon to be your lawfully wedded husband?" The pastor's voice echoed through the cathedral. I gazed up at Talon—tall, impossibly handsome in his tailored tuxedo, his dark eyes holding mine with what I believed was love. Five years of my life I'd given him. Five years of postponed weddings, of explanations to embarrassed guests, of tears dried in private. "I do," I whispered, my voice stronger than I felt. My hands trembled slightly in his grasp.
His Ninety-Nine Betrayals, My Freedom Novel Cover
8.0
My fiancé, a Navy SEAL Commander, postponed our wedding 99 times for my manipulative sister. For our 100th attempt, I put my foot down. This date, or no date. He called two weeks before the wedding to cancel again. But this time, he threatened my career to force my compliance. Then I overheard the truth. He was planning to marry my sister-a "temporary" arrangement to get her into an exclusive therapy program. After he divorced her, he'd come back to me. I was his "certainty." His backup plan. My own mother supported it, slapping me when I refused to play along. "You will be a proper wife," she hissed. I had spent five years as a placeholder, my life put on hold for their drama. I was done waiting. I hung up the phone, canceled the wedding permanently, and volunteered for a three-year, off-the-grid assignment. But first, I took my wedding dress and a pair of scissors.
The Secret Genius Ex-Wife's Cold Revenge Novel Cover
9.8
I spent three years playing the role of the perfect, invisible wife to Dillard Bentley, the billionaire heir of Manhattan. While he graced the tabloids with socialites, I stayed in the shadows of our penthouse, waiting for a man who treated me like a piece of furniture. One rainy night, the facade finally shattered. Dillard came home smelling of another woman’s perfume, and I handed him the divorce papers he never expected. But before the ink could dry, a violent pain ripped through me during a family lunch, and I collapsed in a pool of blood on the pristine marble floor. While I was being rushed to the hospital, Dillard’s mother dismissed my agony as a manipulative trick, and Dillard chose to believe her. He didn't follow the ambulance; he went to a gala to protect his mistress instead. I woke up in a cold emergency room only to be told I had lost the baby I didn't even know I was carrying. Because of the toxic "vitamins" his mother had been force-feeding me, my blood wouldn't clot, and I had to undergo surgery without a single drop of anesthesia. I bit down on a leather strap, feeling every agonizing scrape as they cleared the remains of my child, while my husband laughed at my pain over the phone. "Stop the drama, Erica. Tell her the divorce terms are non-negotiable. I'm busy." He hung up, leaving me to scream in silence. I realized then that the man I had once loved was the same man who let his family poison me. The "vitamins" weren't supplements; they were a death sentence for my unborn child, and he didn't even care enough to show up. Dillard thinks he’s divorcing a penniless nobody, but he’s about to find out that the world-renowned medical genius he’s desperate to recruit is the wife he left to bleed alone. I walked out of that hospital, threw my wedding ring in the trash, and reclaimed my true identity. Dr. N is coming to the global summit, and I’m not there to save the Bentley empire—I’m there to burn it to the ground.