The pay raise alone, man. My wife is going to cry when I tell her. Caleb put his hand on Danny’s shoulder. Then go home and tell her, and tomorrow, come back and do the best work of your life. Dany nodded fast, his eyes shining. Yes, sir. By Friday, the transformation was visible. The maintenance bay had been reorganized. New tool carts had been ordered. The deferred hydraulic issue on the Gulf Stream was repaired and signed off. Both pilots with expired medicals had been grounded until they completed their renewals.
And Caleb had personally conducted evaluation flights with three of the five pilots, including Garrett. The flight with Garrett was the one everyone watched. They flew in a Citation 10 for 2 hours. Caleb put Garrett through engine failures, emergency descents, instrument approaches, and simulated low visibility, and a cross- wind landing that Garrett handled with genuine skill. When they landed, Garrett sat in the cockpit for a moment before speaking. “You’re good,” Garrett said. “I hate admitting it, but you’re really good.
You’re not bad yourself. I could have been better if someone had pushed me like that years ago. You’ve got the hands, Garrett. You’ve got the instincts. What you need is discipline and humility. And I’ll be honest with you, those are harder to learn than any maneuver. Garrett looked at Caleb. The hostility that had been in his eyes all week was gone. In its place was something raw, something that looked almost like gratitude. I want to get raided on the global, Garrett said.
Can you make that happen? If you put in the work, I’ll get you in the left seat of a global inside 6 months. Garrett extended his hand. Caleb shook it. No words were necessary. The handshake said everything that two proud men couldn’t say out loud. That afternoon, Caleb sat in his new office, a small room on the second floor with a window overlooking the ramp. It wasn’t much. A desk, a computer, a phone, and a framed photo of Owen that Caleb had brought from home.
He was reviewing Torres’s training plan when his phone buzzed. A text from Owen. Dad, are you coming home? Mrs. Patterson made cookies. Caleb checked the time. 3:15. He’d almost lost track. He grabbed his bag, locked the office, and drove home in 14 minutes. When he walked through the door, Owen was at the kitchen counter with a cookie in each hand and chocolate on his chin. Dad, you’re wearing fancy clothes again. I had a different kind of day.
Did you fix planes? Sort of. I fixed how we take care of planes. That sounds boring. Caleb laughed. It kind of is, but it matters. Did you fly? Caleb paused. Yeah, buddy. I flew. Owen’s eyes went wide. For real? Like in the air? In the air? In a real jet? In a real jet? Owen set both cookies down and his face transformed into something between awe and hurt. Why didn’t you tell me you could fly? There it was.
The question Caleb had been dreading. Not from Victoria, not from Frank, not from Garrett or Torres or the Colonel, from his 9-year-old son standing in the kitchen with chocolate on his face and betrayal in his eyes. Caleb pulled a chair out and sat down so he was at Owen’s level. Come here. Owen didn’t move. You always said you were a mechanic. I am a mechanic. But you’re also a pilot. That’s a big secret, Dad. I know. Why didn’t you tell me?
Caleb took a breath. He had rehearsed this conversation a hundred times in his head over the years. And none of those rehearsals prepared him for the look on his son’s face right now. Because a long time ago, before you were born, I was a pilot in the Air Force. I flew very fast airplanes for the government. And I had a friend, a really good friend, who flew with me. His name was Marcus. Owen’s expression shifted. The hurt was still there, but curiosity was creeping in.
“Fly This Jet—Then We’ll Talk!” CEO Mocked Single Dad — One Takeoff Exposed His Shocking Past…-hongtran
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