A flight attendant approached, professional smile already in place.
“Is there a problem here?” she asked, resting a hand on the armrest beside the woman.
“Yes,” the woman said firmly. “He’s sitting where he doesn’t belong. We’re trying to depart.”
Daniel extended his boarding pass again. “This seat is mine.”
The attendant glanced at the pass briefly, then gestured toward the aisle. “Sir, economy seating is located toward the rear.”
“I’d appreciate it if you actually read the ticket,” Daniel replied.
The woman laughed softly. “This is absurd. Look at him.”
Several passengers had now taken out their phones. One teenager a few rows back started recording.
A senior crew member arrived, his tone brisk and authoritative.
“We need to resolve this now,” he said. “Sir, please move to your assigned seat.”
“You haven’t verified my seat,” Daniel said evenly.
“If you continue to delay the flight, security will be involved,” the supervisor replied.
The cabin grew quiet. The tension was unmistakable.
When Someone Finally Looked
Security officers arrived moments later. One of them took the boarding pass from Daniel and read it carefully.
“Seat 1A,” the officer said aloud.
The words seemed to echo.
The supervisor frowned. “That doesn’t make sense,” he muttered.
Daniel took out his phone and opened an internal company app. The screen displayed his credentials clearly, unmistakably.
He turned the phone toward the officers, then toward the crew member, and finally toward the woman now sitting rigidly in the seat.
“I own this airline,” Daniel said, his voice low but firm.
The cabin froze.
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