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Ran Away From His Sky
Ran Away From His Sky
Author: Palma W

Chapter 1

Author: Palma W
Ethan Cole had been flying for ten years, working his way up from first officer to captain.

I'd been by his side for seven of those years, and on the ground for every single one.

That evening, I packed his flight bag the way I always did.

Antacids in the side pocket. Noise-canceling headphones fully charged. A spare tie rolled up and tucked beneath his uniform. The bag had been with him for years, and I knew every compartment better than he did.

When I unzipped the innermost pocket, my fingers brushed a small velvet box.

It wasn't his.

Inside was a custom solo wings pin, with an engraving on the back.

"For Lark's first solo."

Beneath the words was a date. Three days ago.

Under the pin sat a flight school tuition receipt. The payer was Ethan. The student was Skyler Hayes.

Below that was a printed photograph.

Skyler was in the left seat of a small training aircraft, her hand on the control yoke. Ethan sat on the right, his black-gloved hand resting over hers, his head tilted slightly toward her.

On the back was his handwriting.

"Lark, don't be afraid. The sky will catch you."

I stared at those words for a long time.

It wasn't that Ethan didn't know how to encourage someone learning to fly.

Seven years ago, I had been one step away from my first solo, too.

I'd already earned my student pilot certificate and finished my takeoff and landing practice. Even my instructor said the next time the weather was right, I could go up alone.

But Ethan kept talking me into stopping.

He said flying wasn't something both of us could do. Someone had to keep things running at home.

He said he was more talented and closer to securing an airline career.

He said once he was settled, I could fly as much as I wanted.

Every word was gentle, and every word sounded like it was for my sake.

Eventually, I canceled my lessons, closed my logbook, and started organizing my life around his flight schedule.

When he flew red-eyes, I'd prepare his breakfast the night before.

When he flew long-haul, I'd research time zones and plan his meals.

The day he made captain, everyone said I was lucky, sticking with a man through the hardest years until he earned his four stripes.

No one ever asked whether I had once sat in the left seat, too.

I put the wings pin, the receipt, and the photograph back exactly as I'd found them. I didn't even shift the angle of the velvet box.

As I zipped the bag shut, a faint pulling sensation flickered through my lower left abdomen. I'd been crouching too long.

My hand went to the spot instinctively.

There was no wound there, but my body still remembered that night.

I pulled my hand away and stood up.

The next morning at six, I ironed Ethan's uniform the way I always did.

Steam rose from the iron. I smoothed the collar of his white shirt flat, and the four gold stripes on his epaulettes caught the morning light.

Ethan came out of the bedroom, saw me, and frowned.

"Didn't sleep again last night?"

"Not well."

He walked to the dining table and took a sip of the water I'd poured for him.

"Those dark circles are getting worse. Stop making yourself look so exhausted all the time. People will see you and think I'm the one putting you through hell."

It sounded like concern. It also sounded like a warning.

I handed him the freshly ironed shirt.

"Do you have plans next Tuesday?"

He took it, glancing down to check the cuffs.

"Next Tuesday?"

"Yeah."

"There's a route evaluation at work, and I might have to do a debrief with a new hire. Why?"

"No reason. Just asking."

Next Tuesday was our seven-year anniversary.

It was also the day he'd held me outside that small airfield seven years ago and promised that once he made captain, he'd take me flying himself.

I'd laughed at him back then.

I told him I could fly on my own. I didn't need him to take me.

He said that was different. He wanted to show me his sky.

Now he had shut me out of the sky, then opened it for someone else.

Ethan changed into the shirt and picked up his flight bag.

At the door, he looked back at me.

"Don't just sit around the house all day. When you've got nothing to do, you only end up overthinking."

"Okay."

"I'm flying to Dubai. Back in four days."

"Okay."

He seemed satisfied with my compliance. He gave a brief nod and walked out the door.

After the door closed, the house was quiet for a long time.

I stood outside the closet, staring at a full row of his uniforms.

For seven years, I'd believed it was life that had kept me on the ground.

It wasn't until today that I admitted the truth. It wasn't life.

It was me, believing his "it's for your own good" over and over, shrinking myself a little more each time.

I walked into the bedroom and pulled open the bottom drawer of the nightstand.

Inside lay a logbook covered in dust.

Beneath it was an ultrasound report, creased from being folded too many times.

Eight weeks. Single fetus. Heartbeat detected.

The date was a month and a half ago.

I slipped the report between the pages of the logbook and placed them both in the suitcase I'd just opened.

Then I logged into the website of a flight school in Bend and filled out a new student application.

Name: Nora Bennett.

Flight experience: pre-solo training completed.

In the box for reason for applying, I wrote a single line.

I will take back everything that is mine, and dedicate the rest of my life to my own career.
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  • Ran Away From His Sky   Chapter 10

    The rain in Bend had stopped.At six in the morning, I put on a faded old jacket and drove to the airport.The sky wasn't fully light yet. The mountains in the distance were just a gray outline.Rachel was already waiting outside the hangar.She glanced at the weather, then at me."Today's good."I nodded.I didn't say thank you. I didn't ask myself whether I was truly ready.I had completed every checklist.That was enough.For the first takeoff and landing, Rachel sat in the right seat.I taxied, took off, turned, approached, and landed by the book.The tires bounced lightly when they touched down, but the plane settled quickly.Rachel had me taxi back to the ramp.She unbuckled her seatbelt and put away her headset."This next one, I'm getting out."I held the control yoke and didn't move.Seven years ago, I'd heard those same words.That day, Ethan had stood outside the fence and told me not to go up yet.He'd said to wait a little longer. Wait until his exam was over. Wait until t

  • Ran Away From His Sky   Chapter 9

    After Ethan returned to Seattle, he flew his regular schedule for two weeks.He didn't take sick leave, and he didn't explain to anyone what had happened in Bend.But the right seat began to take on a weight he couldn't ignore.The first time was during recurrent simulator training.When the first officer sat beside him and reached to adjust the seat, Ethan suddenly thought of Skyler's hand on the control yoke, and then of me signing my own name in the ER over a month ago.The examiner reminded him to check altitude. He was two seconds late.The second time was while supervising a new hire on approach.The young first officer asked whether to continue the descent. Ethan stared at the right seat for a moment before giving the instruction.After landing, he voluntarily filed a report and requested to be removed from training duties.His supervisor asked why."My attention isn't where it needs to be for instructing.""Do you need to be grounded?""No.""Would you be open to a psychologica

  • Ran Away From His Sky   Chapter 8

    The day Ethan arrived in Bend, I had just finished a crosswind landing drill.The wind was strong. Three consecutive approaches had been unstable.Rachel had me go around twice before I finally landed on the third.When I returned from the airport, my arms were still sore.When I pushed open the cabin's gate, Ethan was standing at the bottom of the steps.He wore a dark gray coat, a briefcase at his side.No flowers. No gifts.He looked like he'd come for a formal negotiation.I stopped."How did you find this place?""Your lawyer provided a document delivery address.""That wasn't meant for you.""I haven't done anything illegal."He answered quickly, as if he'd rehearsed it."I'm just here to resolve things."I glanced at the briefcase."I didn't ask you to come.""Ten minutes.""Ethan.""Nora, I've already taken care of everything I can."He pulled documents from the briefcase."The property will be transferred to your name. I've set aside enough to cover all your training costs in

  • Ran Away From His Sky   Chapter 7

    The next morning, Ethan went to work as usual.He finished the pre-flight briefing, checked the weather, reviewed the route. No lateness, no mistakes.No one could tell he'd sat on the floor until dawn the night before.After finishing his duty in the afternoon, he went back to the office and began drafting a solution.First: cancel all future training expenses he'd been covering for Skyler, while keeping the courses she'd already completed so her training wouldn't be affected.Second: revoke the personal key, vehicle access, and non-work contact permissions.Third: transfer the Bellevue property into my name.Fourth: cover all my flight training costs in Bend.Fifth: settle the ER and surgical costs from over a month ago, and arrange a gynecological follow-up, a physical, and counseling.Sixth: compensate me for the professional flying opportunities I'd given up.He wrote out each item in detail, noting the person responsible and the deadline.As if he were handling a serious but mana

  • Ran Away From His Sky   Chapter 6

    Ethan held the phone, ignoring Mia's sarcasm."Where's Nora?""You already tracked her down, didn't you?""I'm asking for the exact address.""She doesn't want to see you."Ethan stood in the empty living room, his voice still steady."She's emotionally unstable right now. Running off to a strange city alone to learn to fly is risky. I need to make sure she's safe."Mia laughed again."See, even now you still dismiss every decision she makes as an emotional reaction.""Mia, I don't have time to argue with you.""Then don't. I'll tell you a few things, and once you've heard them, you can decide whether you have any right to worry about her safety."The line went quiet for a few seconds.Mia spoke first. "Did you know Nora was pregnant with your child?"Ethan said nothing."Eight weeks. Already had a heartbeat. The night you were taking Skyler through the clouds, Nora was alone in the ER having a miscarriage. She signed the D&C consent form herself."Ethan's hand froze around the phone.

  • Ran Away From His Sky   Chapter 5

    The drive from Seattle to Bend took roughly six hours.The farther south I went, the less it rained.The gray of the city gave way, little by little, to mountains and pine forests. Dry grassy hillsides began to line the road.By evening, I reached the cabin by the river.The landlord had left the key in the lockbox by the door, along with a bottle of milk and a note in the fridge."Welcome to Bend. It gets cold at night. Remember to close the windows."The cabin was small. One bedroom, and a living room with a fireplace.I set the two suitcases down. The first thing I reached for wasn't my clothes. It was the logbook.The next morning, I went to the flight school.The instructor who met me was named Rachel. She was in her forties, spoke quickly, and wore her hair pulled back in a short ponytail.She went through my old logbook, then had me take a basic knowledge assessment."You've been out for seven years," she said."Yes.""A lot of your records can't carry over. You'll need a new me

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