The Passenger Everyone Dismissed Became The Only Man Who Could Land Flight 447-eirian

“Falcon… is that you?”

Captain Williams said it like a prayer he had not expected to survive long enough to use.

My fingers tightened around the cockpit frame. The metal felt hot under my palm. Red light slapped across his face, then mine, then the empty co-pilot’s seat where a headset hung loose and one oxygen mask swung slightly with every shudder of the aircraft.

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“Tom,” I said.

His eyes flicked once toward the instruments, then back to me.

“We lost first officer guidance six minutes ago,” he said. “Autopilot kicked off. Left hydraulic system is gone. Backup is bleeding pressure. And I need another set of hands before this thing starts making decisions for us.”

The flight attendant behind me made a small sound, not quite a gasp. The cockpit smelled like scorched plastic, coffee, and human sweat trapped under recycled air. Every alarm had its own voice. One chirped sharp and fast. One pulsed low and angry. The stall warning stayed quiet, which was the only mercy in the room.

Williams pointed at the right seat.

“Sit down.”

My body moved before my fear caught up.

The seat swallowed my hips wrong. Commercial cockpit, not an F-16. Heavy yoke instead of a side stick. Panels full of systems I had studied years ago but never trusted as much as my own hands. The aircraft dipped, and the horizon line on the display tilted a few degrees left.

Williams shoved the spare headset at me.

“Ever fly anything this fat?”

“Simulator hours,” I said. “Military transport transition, years ago.”

“Good enough tonight.”

I pulled the headset over my ears. The rubber cup was warm from someone else’s head. My thumb brushed the cracked screen of my phone in my hoodie pocket as I leaned forward. Maya’s voicemail still sat there unopened.

Do not look at it.

Not now.

Williams tapped the panel. “Number two engine is stable. Number one is giving us vibration warnings, but she’s still producing thrust. We took a lightning strike, then an electrical cascade. First officer passed out trying to reset the bus tie. Possible cardiac. Cabin crew has him on oxygen.”

I glanced back.

Through the narrow gap, I saw two attendants kneeling beside a man on the galley floor. His shirt was open at the collar. One attendant counted compressions under her breath. Another held a medical kit with both hands like it was full of glass.

Williams lowered his voice.

“London is forty-one minutes out. Shannon is closer, but weather is trash. We’re heavy. Fuel load still high. Landing overweight risks gear damage. Staying up risks losing what little pressure we have.”

The aircraft trembled again. My teeth clicked once.

“What’s our souls on board?” I asked.

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