The Pacific Air X11 had been airborne for a couple of hours now.
Melanie had just finished writing improvements into the speech she had penned for the Tokyo conference and had cast one last critical eye over it, before she'd slid it into her bag and begun reciting the first couple of lines over and over in her head, like a mantra. She almost had the whole two pages entirely memorised but she liked the comfort a physical piece of paper gave her and so kept it within her potential grasp.
Ladies and Gentlemen, I thank you for allowing us the opportunity to present...
Her parents would probably already be there. She could bet half her company that both of them would be attending with their own respective businesses, and they always seemed to like to maintain a 'friendly' family competitiveness. She was surprised her mother and father's marriage had survived all these years; their rivalries did tend to become a little extreme. Melanie liked to keep out of it, but they always liked to point out how small her own enterprise was compared to both of their corporal giants - ignoring the fact that they operated in entirely different industries.
Melanie found herself glancing around the first class section of the plane. A lot of it was taken by people attending the conference; most notably, Silver Lining's biggest competition, SOFEX - headed by Adrian Helderbrand, who was sat a couple of seats down from her. She wondered what kind of thing he'd prepared, in relation to her speech - no doubt something big and flashy, in an attempt to eclipse her. She'd suffered through political bullying, underhand tactics (that she couldn't legally link back to him, but she was fairly certain he was behind it) and his numerous offers to buy her out, but she'd resisted. So far.
She instinctively clutched the armrests as the plane wobbled slightly. Turbulence, the air hostess reassured on her next round of the cabin, and Melanie grimaced. She'd hoped for a relatively peaceful journey but it seemed that that hope was a vain one. She dug her eye-mask out of her bag and lay back on her seat, reclining it as far backwards as was deemed polite. She'd rarely had time to sleep as of late - often only grabbing a few hours each night, due to various business complications - and so it was an inviting prospect, even if she was unlikely to doze off entirely. She slowed her breathing and focused on inhaling and exhaling. One thing that she could guarantee; this would be the last shred of relaxation she'd get for a long while.
Melanie had just finished writing improvements into the speech she had penned for the Tokyo conference and had cast one last critical eye over it, before she'd slid it into her bag and begun reciting the first couple of lines over and over in her head, like a mantra. She almost had the whole two pages entirely memorised but she liked the comfort a physical piece of paper gave her and so kept it within her potential grasp.
Ladies and Gentlemen, I thank you for allowing us the opportunity to present...
Her parents would probably already be there. She could bet half her company that both of them would be attending with their own respective businesses, and they always seemed to like to maintain a 'friendly' family competitiveness. She was surprised her mother and father's marriage had survived all these years; their rivalries did tend to become a little extreme. Melanie liked to keep out of it, but they always liked to point out how small her own enterprise was compared to both of their corporal giants - ignoring the fact that they operated in entirely different industries.
Melanie found herself glancing around the first class section of the plane. A lot of it was taken by people attending the conference; most notably, Silver Lining's biggest competition, SOFEX - headed by Adrian Helderbrand, who was sat a couple of seats down from her. She wondered what kind of thing he'd prepared, in relation to her speech - no doubt something big and flashy, in an attempt to eclipse her. She'd suffered through political bullying, underhand tactics (that she couldn't legally link back to him, but she was fairly certain he was behind it) and his numerous offers to buy her out, but she'd resisted. So far.
She instinctively clutched the armrests as the plane wobbled slightly. Turbulence, the air hostess reassured on her next round of the cabin, and Melanie grimaced. She'd hoped for a relatively peaceful journey but it seemed that that hope was a vain one. She dug her eye-mask out of her bag and lay back on her seat, reclining it as far backwards as was deemed polite. She'd rarely had time to sleep as of late - often only grabbing a few hours each night, due to various business complications - and so it was an inviting prospect, even if she was unlikely to doze off entirely. She slowed her breathing and focused on inhaling and exhaling. One thing that she could guarantee; this would be the last shred of relaxation she'd get for a long while.