They Mocked The Flight Attendant Until Fighters Answered Her Call-heuh

They called me “just a flight attendant” while a Boeing 747 dropped through a storm with more than 300 people strapped inside it.

The captain was unconscious.

The first officer was unravelling in front of the controls.

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Passengers were screaming, praying, bargaining with God and one another.

And when I finally put my hand on the radio and spoke the call sign I had kept buried for ten years, military jets hundreds of miles away broke radio silence.

That was the moment every person on Flight 728 understood the woman in the navy-blue uniform was not who they thought she was.

The flight from Seattle to Los Angeles had begun with nothing remarkable enough to remember.

That was usually how people remembered me too.

Not remarkable.

Helpful, perhaps.

Polite.

The sort of person you thanked without looking at properly.

I moved down the aisle with a rubbish bag tucked under one arm and a practised smile on my face, gathering empty cups, folding napkins, helping a man force his overstuffed case back into the locker.

The cabin smelled of coffee, warmed plastic, recycled air, and perfume that appeared suddenly whenever someone passed too close.

A child in the middle row had dropped a toy under the seat, so I crouched, found it near a trainer, and handed it back before his mother had finished apologising.

“Sorry,” I said automatically, though I had done nothing wrong.

It was an old habit.

On a passenger aircraft, being invisible can be useful.

People feel safer when the crew look calm.

They feel looked after when we do ordinary things in ordinary voices.

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