The Mocked Woman In Seat 9A Was The Pilot’s Last Hope-Teptep

I didn’t know the woman in seat 9A… until the commander’s murmur came over the interphone, and the whole aircraft realised the silent passenger they had mocked might be the only reason we survived.

Camille had taken her seat without ceremony.

She had not asked anyone to move a bag, had not sighed at the queue in the aisle, had not fought for armrest space as if dignity could be measured by three inches of plastic.

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She had simply folded herself into 9A, placed a small cloth bag between her feet, and rested both hands over it.

Her hair was dark and loose around her face.

Her glasses were thin and practical, the sort a person keeps pushing back without thinking.

Her jumper was anthracite grey, neither stylish nor shabby, and her trainers looked as if they had already carried her through too many long corridors.

Nothing about her said look again.

That was why most people did not.

The cabin had that familiar smell of a flight already delayed in everyone’s nerves.

Fresh coffee sat over recycled air.

A faint sweetness came from someone’s opened packet of sweets.

Wet coats steamed slightly beneath the overhead lockers, because half the passengers had boarded through drizzle and hurried across grey pavement before reaching the aircraft.

There were small domestic sounds everywhere.

A buckle clicking.

A plastic tray snapping shut.

A child being promised that the clouds would look like sheep once they were above them.

A man in a navy jacket telling someone on the phone that he was already seated and no, there was nothing he could do about the meeting now.

People become oddly formal on planes.

They say sorry when a sleeve brushes another sleeve.

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