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Chapter 8 The Takeover

The conference room door swung open with force, slamming against the wall with a sharp bang that made several crew members jump.

"Michael Torres, First Officer, reporting for duty."

His voice was firm, confident-cutting cleanly through the thick tension like a hot knife through butter. He stood in the doorway for a moment, his broad frame filling the space, his uniform crisp and immaculate, a small duffel bag slung over his shoulder.

Jenny shot to her feet immediately, anger flashing across her face so fast it was almost a physical thing. Her coffee cup clattered against the table as she slammed her hands down, splashing dark liquid across the polished wood. But Michael didn't even glance at her. His attention went straight to Jane, his eyes crinkling at the corners with a warmth that seemed completely out of place in the tense room.

"Captain Harley," he said with an easy smile, stepping closer and extending his hand. "I've heard great things about your leadership. Looking forward to working with you."

Jane held his gaze for a brief moment-assessing him, measuring his sincerity-then gave a small, professional nod and shook his hand. Her grip was firm, confident.

"First Officer Torres," she replied. "I trust you've completed all pre-flight checks."

"Every single one," he confirmed, his smile never fading. "Even the ones some pilots think are 'optional.'"

Across the table, Jenny's carefully constructed composure cracked completely. Her face flushed red with fury, and she pointed a shaking finger at Michael.

"Impossible," she snapped. "I'm the First Officer for this flight. Reuben-Director of Crew Assignments-assured me personally no replacement would be available this close to departure. He said every qualified pilot was already deployed."

Jane turned toward her, her expression calm but unyielding-like steel wrapped in velvet. She'd had enough of Jenny's games, enough of her attempts to undermine authority and safety.

"Jenny Burrows," she said, her voice clear and carrying across the room, gesturing firmly toward the door. "This is an internal crew meeting for Flight GC2711. You are no longer assigned to this flight."

A pause. The weight of her words hung heavy in the air.

"Please leave."

The dismissal was clean. Final. No room for argument, no space for negotiation.

Jenny's eyes hardened to chips of ice. She shot Michael a cold, venomous look-one that promised retaliation-before turning back to Jane, her glare sharp with resentment and something that looked almost like fear. For a moment, it seemed like she might argue further, might try to rally the crew to her side.

Then she walked out-deliberately knocking her shoulder into Michael's as she passed, hard enough to make him stumble slightly.

He barely reacted. Instead, he simply steadied himself, brushed off his uniform jacket, and turned back to Jane with his signature grin intact.

"Sorry about that," he said lightly. "She seems... passionate."

Jane allowed herself a faint smile in return before shifting back into command mode, her posture straightening, her focus sharpening like a lens coming into focus.

"Time is tight," she addressed the crew, her voice carrying across the room with clear authority. "We depart in twenty minutes. Complete all final preparations immediately. Maria-update passenger services that we're back on schedule. Marcus-double-check the landing gear indicators one more time. Thomas-confirm cargo securement with ground control."

Chairs moved. Papers shuffled. Laptops and tablets came to life with quiet clicks and hums. The room snapped back into motion, the earlier tension replaced by focused efficiency. Everyone knew their role, everyone knew what needed to be done.

Jane sat at the head of the table, flipping open her notebook again-her handwriting precise and neat as she made final notes on fuel consumption projections and weather patterns. Focused. Precise. Unshaken.

Elsewhere – A Mistake

Jayden stepped into a conference room-Crew Three's meeting space, by the look of the whiteboard covered in flight plans for a Chicago route.

Empty.

The room was silent save for the faint hum of the overhead lights and the distant roar of aircraft engines on the tarmac below.

"...Jayden Blackwood, First Officer for Crew One, reporting for duty," he said automatically-his voice carrying the practiced cadence of a pilot making his report-

Then stopped.

Silence answered him.

His brows furrowed, a deep crease forming between them as he looked around the empty room. The table was clear, chairs pushed neatly under it. No crew members. No flight equipment.

Wrong room.

He'd been so focused on getting to Crew One's briefing that he'd walked into the wrong conference room entirely. A rare mistake for someone as meticulous as he was.

His phone buzzed in his pocket-three quick vibrations that meant only one person.

Michael.

He pulled it out, his jaw tightening as he read the message on the screen:

Jayden, I know you only took the First Officer role to protect Aurelia's reputation-and let's be real, you hate working with women anyway. Don't worry, I'll handle this flight. You can go back to your paperwork and your boring board meetings. I'll even invite you to my wedding feast after I charm the captain into saying yes.

Jayden stared at the screen, his expression darkening. The message was typical Michael-playful, teasing, completely oblivious to how much it annoyed him.

"Michael Torres..." he muttered under his breath, his voice low and dangerous.

A dangerous calm settled over him-the kind that usually preceded him making someone's life very difficult.

"You're dead meat," he said quietly, slipping his phone back into his pocket.

He turned sharply on his heel and strode out of the empty room, his steps purposeful and fast as he headed for the correct conference room-only to find the door closed and the room empty.

Asking a passing ground crew member, he learned they'd already moved to the aircraft.

His jaw tightened further. He'd missed the briefing entirely.

In the Cockpit

Michael sneezed suddenly-three quick, loud bursts that made him fumble with the throttle controls for a moment.

"Who's cursing me?" he joked, adjusting himself in the first officer's seat and rubbing his nose with the back of his hand.

Jane didn't respond. Her focus was absolute-her eyes moving across the array of screens and instruments in front of her, her hands resting lightly on the yoke, ready to take control at a moment's notice. The cockpit of the Boeing 787 was spacious and modern, with large display screens replacing most of the traditional analog gauges.

"Check hydraulics," she instructed, her voice steady and clear through her headset.

Michael straightened immediately, his playful demeanor vanishing as he shifted into professional mode. His hands moved across the controls with practiced ease, checking readings and flipping switches in precise sequence.

"Hydraulic power-stable at 3,000 psi," he reported, his eyes scanning the primary flight display. "Cross-check circuits closed and confirmed. All control surfaces responding within normal parameters. Ready for climb."

"Cabin temperature?" Jane asked, her eyes still focused on the runway ahead as they waited for clearance from tower control.

"Twenty-three point five degrees Celsius-exactly as requested," Michael replied, checking the environmental control system readouts. "Increasing fresh air flow by fifteen percent as a precaution-some passengers can get anxious during takeoff, and better air quality helps with that."

Jane nodded slightly, adjusting her headset to ensure clear communication with the tower. She'd been impressed by his attention to detail-something many pilots overlooked in favor of focusing solely on the technical aspects of flying.

"First Officer," she said, a faint smile touching her lips for the first time since they'd entered the cockpit, "we are coordinating perfectly. You're a skilled pilot."

Michael grinned, his earlier playfulness returning just slightly.

"Captain Harley, your style reminds me of my partner," he said, his hands moving to complete the final pre-takeoff checklist. "Though... he's far less approachable than you. He's the kind of guy who makes you feel like you're being graded even when you're just having coffee."

Jane raised a brow slightly, her interest piqued.

"Working with someone like you," she replied, her eyes finally leaving the instruments to meet his for a brief moment, "he must be exceptional. It takes a certain kind of person to keep up with your energy."

"Absolutely," Michael said proudly, his chest puffing out slightly. "He's the best pilot I've ever worked with-maybe the best in the company. After we land in LA, I'll introduce you. I think you two would get along great-if you can get him to stop talking about safety protocols for five minutes."

Jane allowed a small nod, turning her attention back to the controls as the tower finally gave them clearance.

"Deal."

Her hands moved smoothly over the controls, adjusting the flaps and setting the thrust levers to takeoff position. Every movement was deliberate, practiced, confident.

Moments later-

The aircraft taxied down the runway, gathering speed with a steady roar of engines. Then lifted smoothly into the air-clean. Precise. Controlled.

The flight had begun.

Elsewhere – Ground Level

From a quiet corridor overlooking the main runway, Jenny stood by the floor-to-ceiling glass window, her hands clenched tightly at her sides.

Watching.

The plane ascended into the sky, its silver wings catching the morning sun as it banked gently to the west. She watched it climb higher and higher, growing smaller and smaller until it was just a speck against the blue sky.

Her eyes followed it-cold, calculating, filled with a resentment that had been building for years. She'd been passed over for promotion three times now, each time watching someone younger or less experienced get the position she felt she deserved. And now Jane Harley-someone who'd only been a captain for six months-had humiliated her in front of her crew, had taken away the flight that was supposed to be her chance to impress management.

She pulled out her phone, scrolling through her contacts until she found the one she wanted.

Dialed.

The call connected on the third ring.

"Jane climbed over me to rise," she said softly into the receiver, her voice carrying none of the anger she'd shown earlier. "She ruined my promotion-again."

A pause. She listened to the voice on the other end, her lips curving into a slow, cold smile.

"After all these years... help me get the tower to teach her a lesson," she continued, her gaze never leaving the spot where the plane had disappeared into the clouds. "Make her think she's losing control. Make her look incompetent "

The voice on the other end responded-low, indistinct, but clearly agreeing to her request.

Jenny's smile deepened, her fingers tightening around her phone.

"Good," she said. "Make sure it looks like an accident. Like she made a mistake."

She ended the call, slipping her phone back into her pocket. Then looked back at the sky, where only white clouds remained.

Her expression darkened into something satisfied, something dangerous.

Something had just been set in motion. And Jane Harley had no idea what was coming.

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