Wild Tales [TRUSTED]

The mountain grew large in the window.

He dropped the gun. He fell to his knees. The clerk held him. Outside, sirens wailed. The sun shone. A bird sang. Wild Tales

A man in 7A stood up. He wore a janitor’s uniform but held a pilot’s badge. “My name is Ernesto,” he said. “I was the best pilot in this airline’s history. But they fired me because I refused to fly a plane with faulty wiring. They called me ‘difficult.’ So today, I am flying this plane. And everyone here—the executive who fired me, the lawyer who defended the airline, the psychiatrist who said I had ‘anger management issues,’ the ex-wife who took my children, the journalist who wrote the hit piece—everyone is on my list.” The mountain grew large in the window

The plane taxied. The safety demonstration played. No one watched. The businessman was already drafting emails. Diego was sweating. The woman was crying silently. The clerk held him

Then, a click. A small, almost polite sound.

He shot the judge. Then he shot the bailiff. Then he shot the prosecutor. Then he turned the gun on himself. But before he could pull the trigger, the clerk—a young woman who had been in love with him since high school—stepped forward. “Don’t,” she said. “I have something to tell you.”

The cabin erupted. But the doors were locked. The plane rose. Ernesto’s voice came over the intercom, calm as a lullaby: “We are going to fly straight into the mountain where my father died in a crash caused by this same airline. No one will survive. But before we go, I want you to know: you are not the victims. You are the cast. And this is your final scene.”