The cabin lights dimmed for pre-flight and the forward door hissed open one last time. Heavy shoes on the carpet — four sets. I recognized the first pair by weight alone. Captain Aaron Boyd, twenty-two years in the left seat, the man who used to bring his daughter to my rehab sessions after the fire because she wouldn’t speak to anyone else. Behind him, the airline’s Chief Operating Officer, our head of accessibility, and a woman from legal with a tablet. Vivienne straightened her collar and beamed, assuming the VIP welcome was for her. Captain Boyd walked straight past her row, crouched in the aisle beside me, and gently placed my cane back into my hand. “Dr. Marchetti,” he said, loud and clear, “the whole crew’s honored to have you on the inaugural. Roman too.” Vivienne’s smile cracked. The COO turned to her next, calm as a closing door. “Ma’am, the woman you’ve been speaking to designed the cabin accessibility system on this aircraft. Her foundation funded the scholarships that put half our new hires through flight school. She is also, as of last quarter, the majority stakeholder in the holding group that owns this airline.” The legal aide tapped her tablet. “We reviewed the cabin audio from the last eleven minutes. Under our zero-tolerance harassment policy, you’ll be deplaning with your husband before pushback. Ground staff are waiting at the jet bridge.” Vivienne opened her mouth — no sound came out. Her husband was already unbuckling, face the color of wet paper. The man across the aisle suddenly remembered how to make eye contact. I reached down, scratched Roman behind the ears, and finally smiled. “Captain,” I said, “please tell the crew I’d like to personally thank every passenger in coach after we reach altitude. Starting with row eleven.”
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