[s9e5]: Leave Your Emotions At The Cabin Door
“Airspeed’s decaying,” his co-pilot, Miller, whispered. Her knuckles were white on the yoke. This was her first trans-continental flight since her father’s funeral, and Elias could see the tremor in her hands.
Elias reached over and switched off the master battery. The cockpit went dark. [S9E5] Leave Your Emotions at the Cabin Door
The plane hit a pocket of dead air, dropping five hundred feet in a second. Screams erupted from the cabin. Oxygen masks tumbled from the ceiling like yellow plastic ghosts. “Airspeed’s decaying,” his co-pilot, Miller, whispered
Behind them, in the galley, the lead flight attendant, Sarah, was doing the same. A passenger in 4B was hysterical, screaming about a mechanical sound he thought he’d heard. Sarah didn't comfort him with a hug or a soft word. She stood over him, her expression unreadable, and gave him the only thing that would save him: a set of precise, icy instructions. Elias reached over and switched off the master battery