“Shall we head to the lounge? I want you comfortable before we board, and we still need to review the talking points for Seattle.”
I could have explained then. I could have turned to them and given a full account of every ignored email, every dismissed work update, every time I tried to tell them what I was building and watched their attention drift elsewhere.
But I suddenly realized I did not need to convince anyone. Not anymore. I nodded.
“That sounds great.”
As we walked away, Brooke found her voice. “She didn’t tell us any of this.”
Grant must have heard her, because he glanced back with a small, knowing smile. “Some people don’t need to announce success,” he said lightly.
“They just live it.”
I kept walking. For the first time in my life, I did not look back to see whether my family wanted me to stay. The executive lounge felt like another world.
Downstairs, Gate 14 was all sharp voices, red cancellation notices, and anxious bodies pressed close together. Upstairs, the lounge was quiet, warm, and softly lit. Plush chairs sat in neat clusters near wide windows overlooking the tarmac.
Ceramic mugs clinked gently. A buffet displayed fresh fruit, pastries, yogurt, and coffee in polished silver carafes. A hostess greeted Grant by name.
“Good morning, Mr. Mitchell. Your section is ready.”
Then she turned to me.
“And welcome, Ms. Hayes. We’re honored to have you.”
My name sounded different in her mouth.
Clean. Certain. Like it belonged.
Grant gestured toward a seating area by the window. “Make yourself comfortable. I need five minutes with operations about the Vegas flight.
Coffee?”
“Black,” I said. “Whatever you’re having.”
“Good answer.”
He disappeared into a glass-walled side room with two executives and the operations manager. I sat slowly.
My hands were trembling. Not because I was afraid. The fear had passed somewhere between the priority rope and Grant saying your daughter.
This was something else. Release. Years of bracing, shrinking, explaining, pretending not to hear the word extra when it landed near me.
Years of telling myself I did not care whether they noticed, because caring gave them too much power. Then one public moment had shown me the truth. I had not needed to become worthy.
I had simply been surrounded by people committed to not seeing it. The hostess set a mug of coffee on the table. I wrapped both hands around it and stared through the window at aircraft moving slowly across the morning light.
Below, through a stretch of glass overlooking the terminal, I could see part of the rebooking line. My family stood near the middle of it. Tyler’s arms were folded now.
Brooke was not filming. Mom looked down at her phone, typing and deleting, typing and deleting. My phone buzzed.
Tyler:
What was that? Brooke:
Why didn’t you tell us you worked with the airline? Mom:
Honey, is that man really the CEO?
Are you important? I stared at the last question. Are you important?
It should have hurt. Instead, it clarified everything. They had never asked whether I was happy.
Whether I was tired. Whether I needed support. Whether the company I talked about at Thanksgiving was surviving or failing or changing an industry piece by piece.
Now they wanted to know whether I was important. Grant returned before I replied. He lowered himself into the chair across from me and set his tablet on the table.
“Mechanical issue,” he said. “The aircraft is out for the day. We’re rerouting as many passengers as possible, issuing hotel and meal vouchers where needed, and moving some through Reno and Los Angeles.
Not ideal, but safe.”
“Even my family?”
His mouth twitched. “Especially your family. We don’t punish people for poor social judgment.”
A surprised laugh escaped me.
He studied me for a moment. “You okay?”
I almost said yes automatically. Then I looked again at the terminal below.
“I think so,” I said. “It’s strange. I spent so many years wanting them to see me.
Then when they finally did, it happened in the middle of a cancelled flight.”
“Life is rarely elegant,” Grant said. “But it does enjoy timing.”
I smiled faintly. “They didn’t know what I did.
Not really.”
“Did you tell them?”
“I tried,” I said. “At first. I sent articles, updates, investor news.
They either didn’t respond or changed the subject. After a while, I stopped offering them pieces of my life to ignore.”
Grant nodded slowly. “My father thought the airline industry was a phase,” he said.
“When I got my first job loading bags, he told people I was taking time to figure myself out. When I became an executive, he started telling everyone he always knew I had aviation in my blood.”
“Did you correct him?”
“No,” Grant said. “But I stopped needing him to be accurate.”
That sentence stayed with me.
I stopped needing him to be accurate. My phone buzzed again. Brooke:
I feel awful.
Seriously. We shouldn’t have excluded you. Tyler:
Look, I was a jerk.
I’m sorry. Mom:
Please call me when you can. I placed the phone face down.
Grant glanced at it. “If you need a minute—”
“I don’t,” I said. And I meant it.
A staff member approached. “Mr. Mitchell, Ms.
Hayes, your aircraft is ready for boarding.”
Grant stood. “Ready, partner?”
Partner. The word moved through me like sunlight.
“Yes,” I said. “Ready.”
We walked toward a private corridor leading to the jet bridge. On one side, a glass wall overlooked the main terminal.
The rebooking line stretched below, full of passengers clutching new itineraries. My family saw me almost immediately. Tyler raised a hand.
“Lauren!” he called, but the glass swallowed most of his voice. Brooke cupped one hand near her mouth. “Are you flying with him?”
Mom stepped closer to the glass, eyes wide, one palm lifted as if she could reach through it.
“Can we talk?” she mouthed. I stopped. Grant stopped with me, giving me the space to choose.
For years, I had run toward the smallest sign that they might want me. A softened voice. A last-minute invitation.
A seat added at the end of the table. A birthday text sent at 11:58 p.m. I used to think scraps were proof of love.
Now, from the other side of the glass, they looked less powerful than I remembered. Not small because I was above them. Small because I had finally stepped out of the role they wrote for me.
I met Mom’s eyes. Then Brooke’s. Then Tyler’s.
I smiled calmly and mouthed, “After my meeting.”
No anger. No performance. No begging.
Just a boundary. Then I turned and followed Grant down the jet bridge. The aircraft smelled faintly of leather, coffee, and filtered air.
A flight attendant straightened when she saw Grant. “Good morning, Mr. Mitchell.”
Then she looked at me.
“Welcome aboard, Ms. Hayes.”
She knew my name. Not because she loved me.
Not because she owed me. Because somewhere on a manifest, somewhere in a briefing, my presence mattered enough to note. That should not have felt as powerful as it did.
But it did. Grant gestured toward the first row. “Settle in.
We’ll review the announcement once we’re in the air. Honestly, your deck is better than ours, so I may steal half of it.”
“You may steal it with attribution,” I said. He laughed.
I lifted my carry-on into the overhead bin and slid into the wide leather seat. The space felt almost absurd compared to every cramped economy flight I had taken while building Wayfinder, knees pressed against a backpack full of cables, laptop balanced on a tray table, answering emergency messages over airport Wi-Fi. Through the window, I could still see part of the terminal.
My family remained near the rebooking counter. Tyler’s phone was in his hand, but he was not taking pictures. Brooke stood with her arms wrapped around herself.
Mom kept looking toward the jet bridge, even after I knew she could no longer see me. The plane door closed with a soft, final thud. My phone buzzed again.
Mom:
I didn’t know you were doing all this. Why didn’t you tell us? Brooke:
I deleted the story.
It was wrong. I’m so sorry. Tyler:
Love you, sis.
I know I don’t deserve an answer right now. Sis. I looked at that word for a long time.
It had appeared before in jokes, captions, birthday cards signed quickly at the bottom. But this time, stripped of performance, it looked both unfamiliar and fragile. The seat belt sign chimed.
The aircraft began to push back. I typed slowly. I’m not angry.
But I needed this moment for myself. We can talk when I’m back. And yes, we can start over.
I read it once before sending. Then I pressed the button. Three typing bubbles appeared almost immediately.
For once, they disappeared without a flood of excuses. Mom replied first. We love you.
Brooke:
We really do. Tyler:
I’m sorry. I placed the phone in my lap and looked out the window as Portland began to slide away.
Grant, seated across the aisle, glanced over. “You handled that with more grace than most people would.”
“I spent years trying to earn a place with them,” I said. “Turns out I had one somewhere else the whole time.”
He nodded.
“Success reveals people,” he said. “Not only the people around you. It reveals you to yourself.”
The engines deepened.
The plane gathered speed. The runway blurred beneath us, then dropped away. For the first time in my life, I was not the one standing in a terminal watching other people leave for a trip without me.
I was the one lifting into the sky. Above the clouds, the morning opened bright and clean. Grant and I worked for most of the short flight.
He reviewed the internal announcement schedule while I opened my laptop and adjusted the deck. We debated which metrics would matter most to operations managers, which examples would land with gate agents, and how to explain the algorithm without making it sound like a magic trick. “It’s not magic,” I said.
“It’s decision support. The system organizes chaos faster than a human can, but humans still make the calls.”
“That line,” Grant said, pointing at me. “Use that.”
I added it to the speaker notes.
He showed me the slides his team had prepared. They were polished, expensive-looking, and slightly lifeless. I tried to be diplomatic.
“They’re clean.”
“They’re boring,” he said. “Yours are better. We’ll use your deck.”
“Just like that?”
“Just like that.”
I waited for the catch.
There was none. He was not testing whether I knew my own company. He was not asking who had helped me.
He was not making me prove twice what a man would have needed to prove once. He was listening. That alone felt almost luxurious.
When we landed in Seattle, the plane rolled toward a private arrival area near the Skyline Air side of the airport. A black car waited on the tarmac. The driver held a small sign with both our names printed neatly.
Grant Mitchell. Lauren Hayes. “Feels a bit like prom,” Grant joked as we stepped into the morning air.
“I didn’t get invited to prom,” I said before I could stop myself. He looked over. “Seriously?”
“Long story.”
“We have a thirty-minute drive,” he said.
“I like long stories.”
So I told him part of it. Not every slight. Not every birthday where I felt like a guest.
Not every dinner where Tyler and Brooke shared childhood memories that carefully excluded the years after I arrived. But enough. I told him about moving into a house where everyone already had a place.
About standing on the edge of photos. About laughing at jokes that hurt because objecting would have made me “sensitive.” About learning to read a room before entering it, because sometimes there was space for me and sometimes there was not. Grant listened without interrupting.
The car moved through Seattle traffic under a pale blue sky. American flags hung outside office buildings. Coffee shops opened onto sidewalks.
In the distance, aircraft climbed above the city like silver commas. When I finished, Grant was quiet for a while. Then he said, “The industry needs people who have had to build their own place at the table.
They notice who gets left standing.”
I looked out the window quickly. “Thank you.”
Skyline Air headquarters rose near the edge of the business district, a curved glass building designed to resemble a wing. Inside, the lobby buzzed with controlled motion.
Screens displayed live flight paths across digital maps. Employees moved with badges, tablets, coffee cups, and the quiet urgency of people whose work affected thousands of travelers before noon. A banner stretched across the main atrium.
Skyline Air Operations Summit. Below the keynote section, printed in black letters, was my name. Lauren Hayes, Founder & CEO, Wayfinder Systems.
I stopped walking. Grant noticed. “First time seeing it like that?”
“Yes.”
“Take a second.”
So I did.
I stood in the middle of that bright lobby, suitcase beside me, looking at my name on a program inside a company that once would have felt impossibly far from my life. I thought of the twelve-year-old girl on the stairs. I thought of the woman in the airport priority lane.
I thought of the word extra. Then I looked at my name again. Founder & CEO.
Not extra. The announcement took place in a large auditorium filled with operations managers, engineers, customer-service leads, station supervisors, and corporate staff. The lights were bright enough to make the front row vanish into shadows.
A microphone waited at the podium. Behind it, my first slide glowed on a wide screen. Grant introduced me.
“This is Lauren Hayes,” he said. “She and her team built the system that helped us recover during one of the most difficult disruption windows we’ve faced this year. She understands operations because she respects the people inside them.
Please treat her like one of our own.”
The applause surprised me. Not because it was loud. Because it felt unforced.
I stepped to the podium and adjusted the microphone. “Hi,” I said. “I’m Lauren, and I’ve been obsessed with flight boards since I was tall enough to see over my mother’s suitcase.”
A ripple of laughter moved through the room.
Good. I breathed. Then I began.
I talked about delayed flights, missed connections, crew limits, weather cells, passenger stress, and the invisible labor gate agents perform while being yelled at by people who do not understand what can and cannot be fixed. I showed them how Wayfinder processed disruption data and translated it into clear next steps. Not replace the Denver crew.
Hold twenty-three passengers for the Seattle connection. Offer hotel vouchers for Group C before the counter line doubles. Move families with minors before single travelers with flexible connections.
Escalate medical travel passengers immediately. The room leaned in. That was the moment I knew they understood.
This was not technology built to impress executives in glass offices. It was built for the woman standing at a gate counter while a hundred tired passengers stared at her like she personally controlled the weather. After the presentation, questions came quickly.
Good questions. Hard questions. Operational questions from people who knew exactly where systems usually failed.
“What happens if crew legality changes midstream?”
“How does it prioritize passengers with separate reservations but shared last names?”
“Can station managers override the suggested sequence?”
“What if the hotel block is full before the feed updates?”
I answered all of them. Grant stood off to the side, arms folded, smiling slightly. Afterward, people came forward in clusters.
A senior gate agent with gray hair and kind eyes shook my hand. “I’ve been doing this job for twenty-five years,” she said. “Last month was the first time a disruption tool actually made my life easier.
I got home before midnight three nights in a row. My grandkids thought I had retired.”
Emotion pressed behind my eyes. “That means more to me than you know.”
“It should,” she said.
“You built something useful.”
Useful. That word felt better than impressive. By late afternoon, my voice was rough from meetings.
My badge hung from my blazer like it had always belonged there. My inbox was full of follow-ups. My LinkedIn requests had multiplied.
Grant’s team had already scheduled integration workshops, training sessions, and a media strategy call. When I finally reached my hotel room, Seattle had turned silver-blue outside the window. I took off my blazer, kicked off my shoes, and sat on the edge of the bed.
For the first time all day, there was nothing to do. No slide to revise. No executive to convince.
No family member standing in front of me with shock written across their face. Just quiet. My phone buzzed on the nightstand.
FaceTime from Mom. I stared at the screen until the second ring. Then the third.
My thumb hovered near decline. I did not owe them immediate access to me. That realization felt new and strong.
But I was not afraid of the conversation anymore. I accepted. Mom’s face filled the screen first, too close to the camera, eyes shining.
Behind her, Tyler and Brooke were squeezed together on a hotel bed under harsh lighting, a crooked lamp visible over Brooke’s shoulder. They were not in Vegas. “Sweetheart,” Mom said.
“Hi.”
“Hi.”
Brooke lifted one hand weakly. “Hey.”
Tyler cleared his throat. “Hey, Laur.”
I leaned back against the pillows.
“How’s Vegas?”
Brooke grimaced. “We’re not there yet.”
Tyler looked embarrassed. “We got rerouted.
We’re overnighting in Reno.”
Brooke added, “The hotel has carpet that looks like a rejected casino pattern, and the vending machine ate my card.”
Despite everything, I laughed. The tension broke slightly. Mom smiled, but it faded fast.
“Lauren,” she said. “I need to apologize.”
The room on their side went still. “I should not have let them call it a bio-kids trip,” she continued.
“I should not have explained it away. You are my daughter. Not almost.
Not extra. My daughter.”
I looked down at my hands. For years, some younger version of me had wanted those exact words.
Wanted them at the airport. At Disney. At graduations.
At every dinner where I felt like a guest pretending not to need an invitation. Hearing them now did not erase what came before. But it mattered.
“Thank you,” I said. Brooke leaned forward. “I deleted the story,” she said.
“The ‘real ones only’ thing. It was awful. I thought I was being cute, and I wasn’t.
I was being cruel.”
Tyler rubbed both hands over his face. “I was worse,” he said. “I know I make jokes and act like they’re nothing, but they’re not nothing.
I’ve been doing it since we were kids.”
“You have,” I said. He looked up, startled by the directness, then nodded. “Yeah.
I have. I’m sorry.”
No defense followed. No “but you know how I am.”
No “you’re too sensitive.”
Just sorry.
I let the silence sit for a moment because I needed them to feel its shape. Then Tyler asked quietly, “Why didn’t you tell us?”
Brooke shot him a warning look. “No,” he said.
“I don’t mean it like that. I mean… the company. The airline.
The CEO. All of it. We had no idea.”
I looked at the three faces on my screen.
“You had some idea,” I said. “You just didn’t pay attention to it.”
Mom winced. I continued, carefully but without softening the truth.
“When I got our first investor, I called during dinner. You put me on speaker, and Tyler started arguing about football before I finished the sentence. When we got our first airline pilot program, I sent a long email.
Nobody replied. At Thanksgiving, I tried to explain what Wayfinder did, and Brooke asked if I could build her a booking app for influencer trips.”
Brooke covered her face. “Oh my God.”
“I stopped telling you things,” I said.
“Not because I wanted to hide them. Because offering you parts of my life started to feel like dropping letters into a mailbox no one checked.”
Mom’s eyes filled. “I am so sorry.”
“I believe you,” I said.
“But I need you to understand something. Today hurt, but it did not hurt because I needed you to think I was important. It hurt because you reminded me that you still had a category for family that did not include me.”
Brooke cried quietly.
Tyler stared at the screen, jaw tight. Mom whispered, “You’re right.”
I had expected someone to argue. No one did.
That was when I felt the first small shift. Not forgiveness exactly. Not yet.
But possibility. We talked for another twenty minutes. Real talk.
Messy talk. Mom asked what my company actually did, and for once she listened through the whole answer. Tyler asked how the system handled weather patterns and crew limits, then surprised me by understanding more than I expected.
Brooke asked whether Wayfinder had a communications team and whether she could help with social content if I ever wanted it. “Not as a favor,” she said quickly. “I mean professionally.
And only if your team thinks it makes sense.”
That made me smile. “Ask my PR lead,” I said. “She scares everyone equally.”
“Perfect,” Brooke said.
“I respect her already.”
When we ended the call, the hotel room felt different. Not healed. Not magically repaired.
Just less haunted. I set the phone down and walked to the window. Seattle glittered below, lights moving along streets and across the water.
Somewhere out there, planes were landing and leaving, each one carrying people toward reunions, work, vacations, emergencies, beginnings. I pressed my palm lightly against the glass. For most of my life, I had wanted my family to make room for me.
Now I understood that I had built rooms of my own. A few weeks later, I flew back to Portland for a weekend. Tyler offered to pick me up from the airport.
I almost said no out of habit. Then I said yes. He was waiting at the arrivals curb when I stepped outside, leaning against his car in a clean jacket, not scrolling, not rushing me by text, not telling me to walk three lanes over because airport traffic stressed him out.
He took my suitcase before I could reach the trunk. “I saw a Wayfinder mention on one of the departure screens,” he said as he loaded the bag. “Customer assistance powered by Wayfinder Systems.
I took a picture.”
“Did you?”
“Sent it to the group chat.”
“And?”
“Mom cried.”
I laughed softly. “Of course she did.”
Tyler closed the trunk and looked at me over the roof of the car. “I’m trying,” he said.
“I know.”
“I’ll probably mess up.”
“Probably.”
He smiled a little. “Fair.”
Brooke took me to coffee the next morning at a place with terrible parking, excellent pastries, and exposed brick walls covered in local art. She wore sunglasses on her head and looked nervous in a way I was not used to seeing.
Usually Brooke filled silence immediately. That morning, she let it breathe. I told her about the Seattle summit, the next integration phase, and the pressure of scaling support while keeping the product human.
She listened. Actually listened. At one point, she stopped me and said, “Wait, explain the gate-agent part again.
That’s the emotional center.”
I blinked. “What?”
“The people at the counter,” she said. “They’re the ones taking all the stress from passengers.
Your system helps them not drown. That’s the story.”
I stared at her. She shrugged, suddenly shy.
“I do know some things about storytelling.”
“Yes,” I said. “You do.”
Her face softened. “I wish I’d paid attention sooner.”
“Me too.”
She nodded, accepting it.
No excuses. Progress, I was learning, did not always arrive as a grand apology. Sometimes it looked like someone finally sitting still long enough to hear the second half of your sentence.
Sunday dinner at Mom’s house was the real test. The house looked almost the same as it always had. White siding.
Green shutters. A porch swing Dad had installed years before and never used. The American flag near the front steps was slightly faded at the edges.
Inside, the dining room table had hosted a thousand small hurts. That night, it held roast chicken, mashed potatoes, green beans, salad, and a bottle of wine Tyler had brought after texting me to ask what I liked. Mom hugged me too tightly at the door.
Brooke arrived early to help set the table. Tyler did not make one joke about me being fancy now. During dinner, Mom asked about my schedule, then waited for the answer.
Brooke passed me the potatoes before Tyler. Tyler asked whether I thought airline travel would get easier with better data, and somehow the conversation turned into a genuine debate about infrastructure, weather, staffing, and passenger expectations. It was not perfect.
At one point, Mom started to say, “When you kids were little,” then stopped and corrected herself. “When Tyler and Brooke were little, before you came, we used to…”
She looked at me. I nodded.
The correction mattered. After dinner, we looked through old photos because Brooke wanted to find something for Mom’s birthday collage. I braced myself without meaning to.
There they were. Tyler at five. Brooke at two.
Dad holding them both. Mom smiling in a red sweater. Then later photos, after I arrived, where I hovered near edges, half-turned, sometimes included, sometimes absent.
Brooke paused on one from a summer barbecue. I was maybe eight, standing at the edge of a group shot, holding a paper plate, my smile too careful. “I never noticed how far away you were standing,” she said.
“I did,” I replied. Her eyes flicked to me, full of regret. Tyler leaned over her shoulder.
“Can we scan that one?” he asked. I frowned. “Why?”
“Because you’re in it,” he said simply.
I looked at him. He looked embarrassed but did not look away. “Okay,” I said.
Later, as I packed my bag in the guest room, my phone lit up. The siblings-only chat. Brooke had renamed it.
All Siblings. Then she wrote:
Sibling trip, round two? All siblings this time.
Thinking Seattle. Tyler replied:
I hear there’s a certain airline we should be loyal to. Mom reacted with three hearts.
I sat on the edge of the bed, staring at the screen. For years, that chat had felt like a room where I was allowed to stand near the door. Now it felt like someone had finally pulled out a chair.
I typed:
We’ll see. I have a few meetings to run by my business partner first. Tyler:
Fancy.
Brooke:
Love you. This time, the words did not sting. They did not feel like consolation prizes or late payments on an old emotional debt.
They felt like a bridge. Small. New.
Maybe strong enough if everyone stopped pretending it had always been there. That night, Tyler drove me to the airport. He pulled up at departures, put the car in park, and got out to lift my suitcase from the trunk.
“You know,” he said, “when we were kids, I think I liked feeling like there was a club you weren’t in.”
I looked at him. He shut the trunk. “That’s not an excuse,” he said quickly.
“It’s just true. I was a kid, then I kept acting like one because nobody made me stop.”
“I tried,” I said. He nodded.
“You did. I didn’t listen.”
The airport doors opened and closed behind us, releasing gusts of warm light and rolling suitcase noise into the night. Tyler shoved his hands into his jacket pockets.
“I’m proud of you,” he said. “Not because of the CEO thing. I mean, that’s wild.
But because you built a life where you didn’t need us to finally clap.”
Something in my chest tightened. “Thank you.”
He stepped forward awkwardly, then stopped. I hugged him first.
He held on carefully, like someone handling something he had already dropped once. Inside the terminal, I checked my bag and walked toward security. This time, there was no family watching from the wrong side of a rope.
No cancelled flight. No dramatic reveal. Just me, moving forward.
At the priority entrance, the agent scanned my boarding pass. “Have a good flight, Ms. Hayes.”
“I will,” I said.
Beyond the windows, a plane waited under bright white lights, its tail marked against the dark sky. People moved around it with practiced purpose. Bags loaded.
Fuel connected. Doors checked. A whole system preparing to lift.
I thought about what Grant had said. Life is rarely elegant, but it does enjoy timing. Maybe that was true.
Maybe sometimes the moment that looked like humiliation was actually a door. Maybe the people who tried to leave you behind were only proving you had outgrown the place they kept saving for you. My family had not become perfect.
Neither had I. There would be awkward dinners, old habits, corrections, apologies, and probably a few painful conversations still waiting somewhere ahead. Love did not erase history.
It did not magically repaint every old room. But something had changed. They saw me now.
More importantly, I saw myself. Not as the extra chair. Not as the almost daughter.
Not as the bonus kid standing at the edge of a photo, waiting for someone to wave her closer. I was Lauren Hayes. Founder.
Sister. Daughter. Partner.
Builder of systems. Survivor of small exclusions. Writer of my own itinerary.
When my boarding group was called, I picked up my carry-on and stepped into line. My phone buzzed once. A message from Brooke.
Send a plane-window pic when you take off. Mom wants to make it her wallpaper. I smiled.
Then Tyler added:
All siblings trip soon. No exceptions. I looked through the glass at the aircraft waiting outside, bright against the night, and felt peace settle over me in a way revenge never could have.
They had tried to leave me behind. Life had lifted me forward. And as I walked down the jet bridge toward the soft hum of the plane, I knew one thing with a clarity that felt almost like flight.
I had never been an extra. I was the main character in my own life. And this time, I was boarding first.
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