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Chapter 2: The Badge The silence lasted exactly three seconds. Long enough for every passenger to stop recording. Long enough for every heartbeat in the cabin to sound louder than the engines outside. The grandmother slowly opened the leather wallet she had pulled from her coat. Inside was a silver federal badge. Not a cheap replica. Not an old souvenir. The polished emblem reflected the overhead cabin lights. "My name is Eleanor Hayes," she said evenly. "Retired Special Agent. Thirty-six years with the Federal Bureau of Investigation." A collective breath caught inside the cabin. The flight attendant's face emptied of color. "Y-you're retired," she whispered. "I am," Eleanor replied. "Which means I no longer have to worry about promotions." Her gaze never left the attendant. "But I still recognize theft." The little boy clutched her sleeve. "Grandma..." She gently squeezed his hand. "It's okay, Noah." Then she looked toward the passengers. "Has anyone here been recording since this started?" Nearly twenty phones rose into the air. "I have." "So do I." "I caught everything." One businessman stood. "I recorded her taking something from the elderly gentleman in Row Twelve before she grabbed the food." Every eye turned. Row Twelve. An unconscious middle-aged man lay slumped against the window, his wife desperately rubbing his shoulder. "My husband has severe heart disease," the woman cried. "His medication disappeared ten minutes ago!" Noah's small voice broke the silence. "I saw her put the bottle in her pocket." The flight attendant stumbled backward. "He's lying!" But her confidence had vanished. The captain emerged from the cockpit. "What is going on?" Before anyone answered, Eleanor calmly pointed. "Ask your crew member to empty her pockets." "No." The attendant's answer came too quickly. Too loudly. The captain frowned. "I didn't ask." Cabin security stepped beside her. With trembling hands... She reached into her pocket. A prescription bottle slid into her palm. The cabin exploded with gasps. The elderly woman from Row Twelve burst into tears. "That's my husband's medicine!" The captain stared at his employee in disbelief. "What have you done?" But Eleanor wasn't looking at the medicine anymore. She was looking at something much worse. A thick envelope protruding from the attendant's handbag. Cash. Lots of it. And suddenly... The entire story became much darker. / Chapter 1 / 2 167

Chapter 3: The Hidden Scheme

Chapter 3: The Hidden Scheme

Airport police boarded the aircraft within minutes.

No passenger was allowed to leave.

The captain personally apologized to everyone onboard.

But Eleanor remained seated.

Watching.

Waiting.

She had spent decades reading faces.

The flight attendant wasn't afraid of being fired.

She was afraid of someone else.

An officer opened the handbag.

Bundles of cash.

Three expensive watches.

Multiple prescription bottles.

Several wallets.

None belonged to her.

"This..." the officer whispered.

"...is organized."

The attendant finally broke.

"I wasn't supposed to hurt anyone!"

The words echoed through the cabin.

The officer looked up.

"Who told you to do this?"

She hesitated.

Then tears filled her eyes.

"They call themselves the Turbulence Crew."

Passengers exchanged confused looks.

She swallowed hard.

"They target crowded flights."

"They steal medication from elderly passengers..."

"...wallets from distracted families..."

"...and expensive jewelry during boarding."

"The chaos makes everything disappear."

The captain stared at her in horror.

"You've been doing this on my flights?"

She nodded.

"For almost a year."

The entire cabin fell silent.

Noah looked toward Row Twelve.

The elderly man had finally swallowed his medication.

Color slowly returned to his face.

His wife sobbed as she hugged the prescription bottle.

"If we'd taken off..."

Her voice shattered.

"...he would have died."

No one argued.

Everyone understood.

This had never been about a sandwich.

It had been about creating distraction.

Eleanor closed her eyes briefly.

Thirty-six years of instincts.

Still working.

Airport investigators soon confirmed similar thefts had occurred on six previous flights.

No arrests.

No witnesses willing to speak.

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Until today.

Until one hungry little boy noticed something no adult had seen.

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