“She can’t even afford economy,” Dad muttered, his voice sharp enough to slice through the hum of the airport. My step-sister, Emily, let out a laugh—light, practiced, cruel. They turned away, boarding their first-class gate like royalty. I stood there, clutching my worn leather bag, trying to swallow the lump in my throat.
They didn’t even look back.
Dad had remarried five years ago, after Mom’s death. Since then, I’d learned how small a person could feel in their own family. Emily was everything I wasn’t—glamorous, connected, effortlessly adored. She ran Dad’s startup’s PR, attended galas, and called him “Daddy” with a sugary lilt. Me? I was the daughter from the “previous life,” the one who stayed behind to finish her aerospace engineering degree on scholarship.
I had learned to keep quiet.
Until that day.
The departure hall was sleek, filled with glass and white light. I was supposed to be heading to Houston on a commercial flight for an interview at a private aviation firm. My plane ticket—bought with savings from tutoring calculus—was for the back row, middle seat.
But fate, or maybe irony, had other plans.
“Ms. Taylor?” A deep voice interrupted my thoughts. I turned. A man in a navy uniform stood before me, cap tucked under one arm. “Your jet’s ready, ma’am.”
For a moment, I thought it was a mistake. I blinked, glancing behind me, expecting someone else to step forward. But his gaze held steady.
He nodded. “Yes, ma’am. Captain Reed. We’ve been instructed to depart as soon as you’re aboard.”
My father turned then—his boarding pass half-crumpled in his hand. Emily froze mid-laugh, her designer sunglasses slipping down her nose.
I smiled faintly, adjusted the strap of my bag, and walked past them. The uniformed officer led me through a private corridor. I could feel their stares burning into my back.
“Wait—what jet?” Dad called, but his voice cracked, thin and uncertain.
I didn’t answer.
Because for once, I didn’t owe him one.
The glass doors slid open, revealing the tarmac—sunlight bouncing off the wing of a sleek white jet bearing the logo of Artemis Aerospace, one of the top aviation firms in the country.
And just like that, the girl who “couldn’t afford economy” walked toward her first private flight.
Three months earlier, I’d been living in a cramped studio apartment in Pasadena, juggling two part-time jobs while finishing my senior thesis at Caltech. My passion for flight had started with paper planes Mom and I used to throw off our porch. She’d believed in me—told me that “gravity only wins if you let it.”
After she passed, the world felt heavier. But I never stopped looking up.
The Artemis Aerospace internship posting was a long shot. They specialized in private and commercial hybrid jets—clean energy propulsion, autonomous navigation systems, the future of aviation. They were the kind of company you dream about while eating ramen in your dorm.
When I submitted my design prototype—a concept for a mid-range electric propulsion jet—I didn’t expect a reply. But two weeks later, I received an encrypted email: “Confidential interview invitation. Houston HQ.”
