Brittany leaned in, emboldened by her circle of giggling friends. “Seriously, who invited you? My Kyle is up for Senior Captain this year. You should probably go refill the shrimp tower before someone notices.” I set my glass down. Slowly. “Kyle Whitaker?” I asked. Her smile faltered for the first time. “That’s my husband, yes.” I nodded. “First Officer Whitaker. I flew with him out of Newark in March. He spilled coffee on the throttle quadrant and tried to blame the jumpseat rider.” The blood drained from her face in real time. Before she could answer, the CEO stepped to the microphone. “Ladies and gentlemen, it is my absolute honor to introduce the first woman in our airline’s history to be promoted to Chief Pilot of the international fleet — Captain Hannah Reyes.” The spotlight swung. Every head in the room turned. I didn’t move. I just looked at Brittany, who was still holding her champagne like it might save her, and I said, quietly, “Tell Kyle I’ll see him at his performance review on Monday. I’m the one signing off on Senior Captain promotions this cycle.” The glass slipped half an inch in her hand. I walked past her toward the stage, and the crowd parted, and somewhere behind me I heard one of her friends whisper, “Brittany, what did you just do?” At the podium, I thanked the board, accepted the pin, and mentioned how important it was that our airline finally judge people by their skill and not by the dress they wore to dinner. The applause was thunderous. Kyle’s promotion paperwork crossed my desk Tuesday morning. I didn’t deny it out of spite. I denied it because his check-ride scores genuinely weren’t there yet, and now nobody could ever say otherwise. Brittany sent me a long apology email. I filed it the same place I file every turbulence report. Acknowledged. Logged. Closed.
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