Part 1 — Option B
The gunshot came before anyone realized there was a gun.
One second, first class was full of tight smiles, clinking ice, and the fake calm of people pretending not to notice trouble. The next, the cabin exploded in screams as a bullet tore through the window panel beside me, spiderwebbing the glass so hard the whole row ducked on instinct.
My name is Autumn Riley, and if you had looked at me that morning in Atlanta, you probably would have guessed exactly what the flight crew guessed: tired woman, traveling alone, probably upgraded by luck. They had already questioned my seat twice, skipped me for a pre-departure drink, and treated me like I’d wandered into the wrong section. But when the shot rang out over Texas and everyone dropped their masks of politeness, I was the only person standing between an armed man and the cockpit.
The attacker cursed and grabbed for the weapon he’d nearly lost when I smashed his wrist with a coffee pot from the service cart. Hot coffee sprayed across his sleeve. The flight attendant who’d been policing me minutes earlier stumbled backward so hard she crashed into the galley drawers. Across the aisle, a man in a navy suit shouted for everyone to get down, but no one was listening now. Panic had taken the cabin.
Then the plane pitched.
People slammed into armrests. A child cried somewhere behind the curtain. The attacker lunged for the cockpit door just as an alarm began blaring overhead, sharp and mechanical, nothing like the usual seatbelt chime. I saw his face clearly for the first time — no rage, no fear, just focus. Like he had done this in his head a hundred times already.
I grabbed his jacket from behind. He spun, elbowed me in the ribs, and sent me crashing into seat 1C. Pain shot through my side. He raised the gun again.
And that was when the woman across from me — the elegant silver-haired passenger everyone had ignored because she looked half asleep — opened her eyes, pulled a federal badge from her handbag, and shouted, “Homeland Security! Drop it!”
For one breathless second, everything stopped.
Then the man smiled.
“Too late,” he said, and reached into his pocket for a black device with a blinking red light.
Part 2
The gun skidded under seat 2C, but nobody moved for it. Every eye locked on the blinking red light in the attacker’s hand.
“Don’t!” the silver-haired woman shouted, her Homeland Security badge flashing in one hand, a compact pistol in the other. “Put it down!”
The man only smiled wider. Blood ran from his wrist where I’d smashed it with the coffee pot, dripping onto the carpet like a metronome. “You’re already behind,” he said.
Then he pressed the button.
Nothing exploded.
No fireball. No decompression. No heroic movie-ending disaster.
Instead, every screen in first class flickered black at once. The overhead lights dimmed. The Wi-Fi routers reset with a low electronic whine, and from somewhere deep in the aircraft came a mechanical groan so wrong, so unnatural, that the cabin fell into a new kind of silence — the silence people make when they realize the real danger is invisible.
The Homeland Security agent lunged first. She drove the man into the bulkhead while I dropped to my knees and reached under the seat for the gun. My fingers brushed cold metal just as the captain’s voice cracked over the speakers.
“This is the flight deck. Remain seated immediately. We are experiencing a systems disruption.”
Systems disruption.
Not turbulence. Not a passenger incident. Not a medical problem.
A man in 3A, the same navy suit who’d barked orders a minute earlier, suddenly stood up and yelled, “He’s not alone!”
I looked back.
Two rows into business class, another man was on his feet, shoving people aside, heading for the rear galley. A woman near the aisle pulled a phone from her purse, but she wasn’t calling anyone — she was filming. No, not filming. Scanning. Her screen showed lines of code and a pulsing map of the aircraft.
The navy-suited passenger vaulted the divider with surprising speed and tackled her before I could even shout.
That was the twist that split the moment open: this wasn’t a hijacking in the old sense. No manifesto. No screaming demands. This was a coordinated cyberattack in the sky.
The Homeland Security agent finally pinned her suspect, but he started laughing. “You think stopping us matters? The package is already in the network.”
I grabbed the gun and crawled backward. My hands were shaking, but my mind was suddenly cold, focused. I remembered the weird glances at boarding. The repeated scans of my ticket. The gate agent whispering when she saw my name. I hadn’t been treated badly because I looked out of place.
I had been identified.
The silver-haired agent looked at me, and whatever she saw in my face made hers change. “You’re Riley?”
I stared at her. “You know who I am?”
Before she could answer, the cockpit door opened three inches and the co-pilot shouted, “We need her in here. Now!”
“Her?” I said.
The agent grabbed my arm. “Move.”
Passengers pressed themselves against the seats as we rushed forward. Inside the cockpit, warning lights pulsed across the panels. The captain looked pale, furious, and terrified all at once.
On the center screen was a message in red text:
AUTHORIZATION REQUIRED — RILEY OVERRIDE KEY
I stopped breathing.
The co-pilot turned toward me. “Ms. Riley, somebody used your family’s security protocol to lock down core flight controls. If we don’t clear it in under eight minutes, this plane will divert automatically to a private airstrip in the Mojave.”
I stared at the screen. My family’s security protocol.
Only three people on earth should have had access to that system.
Me.
My late father.
And my older brother Mason — the man I buried eleven months ago.
Then the radio hissed.
And through the static came a voice I knew better than my own.
“Autumn,” Mason said calmly. “If you want these people to live, do exactly what I tell you.”
Part 3
For half a second, I forgot the alarms, the blood, the gun in my hand, all of it.
My brother was dead.
I had stood over an empty grave in Charlotte while rain soaked through my black dress and strangers told me he’d died in a sailing accident off Catalina. Closed casket. Coast Guard report. Condolences. Finished.
And now his voice filled the cockpit like he had never left.
The captain slammed a hand against the console. “Ms. Riley, do you know this man?”
I swallowed. “Yes.”
The radio crackled again. “Tell them to stop trying to break the lockout. Every failed attempt cuts your options in half.”
I leaned toward the mic. “Mason?”
A soft laugh. “Good. So you do still know my voice.”
The Homeland Security agent stood in the cockpit doorway, one hand on the frame, the other on her weapon. “We traced the signal through the cabin relay. He’s remote.”
“Of course he is,” I said, because that was Mason. Even as a kid, he never wanted the spotlight — only control. I looked at the screen again: RILEY OVERRIDE KEY. Then it hit me, not as memory, but as pattern. Our father had built private aviation software for executive continuity flights — systems meant to reroute aircraft in a national emergency, hidden inside legitimate aerospace contracts. After his death, Mason had insisted the project was buried. I believed him because grief makes liars easier to trust.
“Mason,” I said into the radio, forcing my voice steady, “why?”
Silence, then: “Because Dad built something governments would kill for, and you were going to hand it to the airline board in Los Angeles like it belonged to them. It belongs to us.”
There it was. Not revenge. Not politics. Ownership.
Everything snapped into place. The merger. My undercover review flight. The hostile scans at the gate. Somebody inside the airline had flagged me because this specific aircraft carried a live prototype server tucked into the avionics stack, disguised as part of the post-merger upgrade package. Mason hadn’t targeted the plane randomly. He had targeted me.
“You faked your death to steal Dad’s system,” I said.
“To finish it,” he corrected. “And tonight, you’re giving me the final authentication.”
The co-pilot whispered, “Can you do it?”
“Yes,” I said. “But not the way he wants.”
I was the only person still alive who knew the Riley split-key sequence. Mason knew the first half — the public-facing engineering logic. I knew the private half my father hid in nonsense phrases he made me memorize as a teenager. I stepped closer to the console, entered the first string slowly, and watched the red prompt change.
Mason heard the keypad through the open mic. “That’s right,” he said. “Now the second line.”
Instead, I typed a deadman fork my father once called the thief’s door — a hidden branch that looked like full authorization but triggered an internal quarantine. The cockpit screens flashed white. In the cabin, breakers thudded. Every external relay severed at once.
Mason’s voice vanished mid-breath.
The captain grabbed the controls. “Manual authority restored!”
The plane shuddered, then steadied.
Behind me, the Homeland Security agent exhaled hard. “You just trapped his code inside the aircraft.”
“Not just his code,” I said. “His receiving node too. He’s been piggybacking through a ground mirror station. Follow the quarantine beacon and you’ll find him.”
Three hours later, after an emergency landing in Phoenix, federal agents confirmed the signal had led them straight to a hangar outside Barstow. Mason was there, alive, furious, and very much in handcuffs.
I visited him once before they moved him.
He sat behind glass in an orange jumpsuit, staring at me with the same gray eyes I saw in the mirror every morning.
“You chose them over family,” he said.
I shook my head. “No. I chose the people on that plane over your obsession.”
He almost smiled. “Dad would’ve understood me.”
“Maybe,” I said. “But he trusted me.”
That was what finally landed. His face cracked, just for a second.
When I walked out of that federal building into the Arizona sun, the air felt thin and honest. The airline scandal became national news. Executives were investigated. Security contracts were frozen. The merger board gave me the deciding vote I’d nearly died carrying across the country.
I voted no.
Not because I was afraid anymore. Because I had seen exactly what happened when powerful people buried dangerous systems under polished branding and called it innovation.
My name is Autumn Riley.
The flight that was supposed to test how invisible I looked ended up revealing everything.
And this time, everybody saw me.