Falling at 30,000 feets

The air tightened like a drawn bowstring. Every breath in the room seemed to come harder, heavier.

Jenny's confidence flickered for just a second-her eyes darting away from Jane's steady gaze-but she recovered quickly, lifting her chin with practiced arrogance.

"My boyfriend's father is an Aurelia Airlines shareholder," she said, her tone sharp with pride as she looked directly at Jane, as if flaunting the connection like a trophy. "Arranging a lowly security guard position is nothing-child's play, really."

Her mother beamed immediately, reaching across the table to squeeze Jenny's hand. "Our Jenny found such a catch," Rosa added, nodding approvingly as she glanced around the table for admiration. "Handsome, rich-and useful to the family. That's how you pick a partner."

The grandmother leaned forward slightly, her wrinkled hands folded on the table as she looked at Jane with what might have been concern-if it weren't so heavily laced with judgment. "Jane," she began, "now that you're an airline captain-surely you have some influence you could use for the family..."

"Jane," another voice cut in, sharp and eager.

All heads turned to Lucia-Jane's mother's younger sister-who was leaning forward in her chair, her eyes bright with expectation. She wore a cheap polyester dress that wrinkled as she moved, and her nails were chipped despite her attempts to paint them neatly.

"My son has always dreamed of being a flight attendant," she said, as if this were news to everyone. "Now that you're a captain, you can arrange that for him, right? Just pull a few strings-tell them he's your cousin. They'll hire him on the spot."

Jane exhaled slowly, her fingers resting on the edge of the table as she kept her voice steady. She'd been through this conversation before-too many times.

"Flight attendants go through strict recruitment and training," she replied patiently. "It's not just about serving food-it's about passenger safety, emergency procedures, medical training. I can recommend a good training program for him-help him prepare for the entrance exams-"

Lucia waved her off with a dismissive flick of her hand, her face hardening with irritation.

"No, no," she said, cutting Jane off. "Why go through all that hassle? Can't you just hire him directly? He's a quick learner-he can learn on the job. How hard can it be?"

A ripple of discomfort passed through the table.

Jane didn't answer immediately. She just looked at Lucia, her expression calm but her eyes growing colder by the second.

Jenny's lips curled into a satisfied smile. She knew. Jane wouldn't do it-she'd never compromise safety standards for anyone.

"There's nothing difficult about being a flight attendant," Lucia continued casually, as if she were discussing grocery shopping. "You just serve meals, hand out snacks, smile at passengers... it's simple work. Anyone can do it."

Still-

Jane said nothing. Her hands were folded in her lap now, her knuckles white with restraint.

Her silence spoke louder than any refusal ever could.

"Aunt," Jenny chimed in sweetly, glancing at Lucia with faux sympathy, "I think Jane just doesn't want to help. She's too busy with her important captain duties to worry about family."

She flicked her fingers dismissively in Jane's direction, her nails clicking against the glass cups as she did so.

"Don't worry-I'll ask my boyfriend instead. His father can get your son hired without any of that tedious training."

Lucia's face lit up instantly, her eyes shining with gratitude as she reached across the table to pat Jenny's arm. "Jenny, you're so thoughtful," she said warmly. "Always putting family first. That's what matters."

Rosa nodded, smiling proudly as she looked at her daughter-then her gaze shifted to Jane, her expression hard with disapproval.

"Unlike some ungrateful wretch," Lucia added, her tone turning sharp as she looked at Jane-then shifted her gaze to Jane's mother, who had gone very still.

"Back then, when you were young and foolish," Lucia continued coldly, leaning forward as if sharing a secret, "she was abandoned by a man. Left pregnant and alone. We all had to come together to help raise her child-scraping together money for diapers, for formula, for school fees."

Her lips curled slightly into a sneer.

"And now that her daughter is successful... she looks down on us. Thinks she's too good to help her own family."

That was it.

The final straw.

Jane's mother's hands trembled as she gripped her fork, her knuckles white against the silver. She'd been quiet all night, taking the insults and the judgment-but this was too much.

"I begged you for help," she said suddenly, her voice shaking but rising, cutting through the room like a whip. "When Jane was born premature, when I had to take her to the hospital every week, when I lost my job because I couldn't work the long hours-"

Rosa rolled her eyes, leaning back in her chair as she muttered something about "drama."

But Jane's mother didn't stop. Tears spilled down her cheeks.

"You told me I deserved it," she continued, her voice breaking with emotion. "That I should suffer... that I should starve on the street for 'sleeping around'! You wouldn't even let me borrow your car to take Jane to the emergency room-you said I'd 'ruin the upholstery'!"

Her voice cracked completely, and she buried her face in her hands, shoulders shaking with sobs.

"And now you call my daughter ungrateful?"

"Mom..." Jane said softly, reaching out and placing a steady hand on her back. She could feel the tremble beneath her palm, could feel the years of pain and resentment pouring out in those tears.

Then-

Jane inhaled.

Slowly.

Deliberately.

The sound was quiet but deliberate, filling the silence left by her mother's sobs. She turned to face the table, her expression no longer controlled or restrained-but cold as ice, hard as steel.

"This dinner," she said, her voice low and even, each word measured and precise, "is clearly not meant for us. It's meant to judge us, to belittle us, to make us feel small so you can feel better about yourselves."

A pause. The room was so quiet you could hear the ticking of the clock on the wall.

"Then there's no reason for us to stay."

"What do you mean by that?" Lucia snapped, her tone rising as she stood up abruptly, her chair scraping against the floor. "We only asked for a small favor! You refused-that's fine. But can't we comment on it? Isn't family allowed to have opinions?"

Jenny lowered her head, laughing quietly into her hand-enjoying the chaos she'd helped create.

Jayden's jaw tightened, his hand closing into a fist on his thigh. He'd had enough of their cruelty, enough of them hurting Jane and her mother.

Lucia continued, relentless as a storm.

"Instead of helping your family," she said, pointing an accusing finger at Jane, "you're busy chasing men-marrying some unemployed nobody just to have someone on your arm!"

Something in the air snapped.

Jane inhaled sharply, her eyes flashing with a fire that made even Lucia step back slightly.

"The only courtesy we asked for," she said, her voice now edged with steel, cutting through the room like a blade, "was to have a peaceful dinner. To be treated like family, not like charity cases or punchlines."

Her gaze swept across the table-from her aunt's shocked face to Jenny's smug smile to her grandmother's disappointed expression.

"But clearly, even that is too much for you people."

Then-

She pushed her chair back and stood fully. The movement was sudden, sharp, making several people jump.

Her hand brushed the edge of the table as she stood-knocking over a ceramic coffee cup that had been sitting near her elbow.

Crash.

Porcelain shattered against the tile floor, pieces scattering across the room like broken teeth. Dark coffee spread in a sticky pool, seeping into the grout lines.

The sound echoed through the silent room like a gunshot.

Rosa flinched, her hand flying to her chest.

The room froze. Every eye was on Jane-on the fierce set of her jaw, the fire in her eyes, the way she stood tall despite her small frame.

Jayden turned to look at her-his eyes widened slightly with surprise.

He had never seen her like this before.

Not controlled.

Not restrained.

But fierce.

Unyielding.

And done holding back.

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