DoD_SYS_A12 He corrected it fast, but not before I saw an email header flash open. External domain. Not familiar. Not good.
Defense contractors do not connect sensitive work devices to public in-flight Wi-Fi unless they are reckless, stupid, or dirty. Vance was not stupid.
I kept my face blank and touched the phone inside my pocket without pulling it out. One command. Silent capture initiated. The plane jolted hard enough to rattle the overhead bins. Then harder.
The seat belt sign flashed back on. Nervous laughter skipped through the cabin in thin little bursts. Somewhere near row twenty, a baby started crying. A flight attendant’s polished voice came over the intercom.
“Ladies and gentlemen, please return to your seats immediately.” From first class, I heard Chloe rise above everyone else. “You can’t just leave us without information.”
My father joined in. “I want to speak to the captain.”
The plane dropped once—sharp, sudden—and a plastic cup skidded down the aisle. Vance half-closed his laptop and stood. He looked irritated, not frightened, which told me plenty.
Then the cockpit door opened.
A tall, gray-haired captain stepped into the aisle and moved past first class without so much as glancing at my family. Chloe actually reached out a hand to stop him. He ignored her. Vance started, “Captain, I’m a government contractor—”
Ignored.
The captain kept walking. Down the aisle. Past premium economy. Past row twenty-five. Past a man gripping both armrests so hard his knuckles had turned white.
Then he stopped beside me. The entire cabin went still. The captain straightened, brought his heels together, and raised a sharp military salute. “General, ma’am,” he said.
And from somewhere up front, I heard Chloe inhale like glass cracking under heat.
Part 2
When an entire cabin goes silent at once, you can hear the airplane itself.
The engines roared steadily beneath the floor. Air whispered through the vents. Somewhere up front, a half-secured service cart rattled. Beyond that, nothing. Not even Chloe.
The captain held his salute.