Joe tried to reconcile the words on the transcript with the toxicological findings. He couldn’t.
He said, “What’re the other possibilities? A stroke?”
“No, it just didn’t sound that way on the tape I listened to,” Barbara said. “Blane speaks clearly, with no slurring of the voice whatsoever. And although what he’s saying is damn bizarre, it’s nevertheless coherent — no transposition of words, no substitution of inappropriate words.”
Frustrated, Joe said, “Then what the hell? A nervous breakdown, psychotic episode?”
Barbara’s frustration was no less than Joe’s: “But where the hell did it come from? Captain Delroy Michael Blane was the most rock-solid psychological specimen you’d ever want to meet. Totally stable guy.”
“Not totally.”
“Totally stable guy,” she insisted. “Passed all the company psychological exams. Loyal family man. Faithful husband. A Mormon, active in his church. No drinking, no drugs, no gambling. Joe, you can’t find one person out there who ever saw him in a single moment of aberrant behavior. By all accounts he wasn’t just a good man, not just a solid man — but a happy man.”
Lightning glimmered. Wheels of rolling thunder clattered along steel rails in the high east.
Pointing to the transcript, Barbara showed Joe where the 747 made the first sudden three-degree heading change, nose right, which precipitated a yaw. “At that point, Santorelli was groaning but not fully conscious yet. And just before the maneuver, Captain Blane said, ‘This is fun.’ There are these other sounds on the tape — here, the rattle and clink of small loose objects being flung around by the sudden lateral acceleration.”
This is fun.
Joe couldn’t take his eyes off those words.
Barbara turned the page for him. “Three seconds later, the aircraft made another violent heading change, of four degrees, nose left. In addition to the previous clatter, there were now sounds from the aircraft — a thump and a low shuddery noise. And Captain Blane is laughing.”
“Laughing,” Joe said with incomprehension. “He was going to go down with them, and he was laughing?”
“It wasn’t anything you’d think of as a mad laugh, either. It was…a pleasant laugh, as if he were genuinely enjoying himself.”
This is fun.
Eight seconds after the first yawing incident, there was another abrupt heading change of three degrees, nose left, followed just two seconds later by a severe shift of seven degrees, nose right. Blane laughed as he executed the first maneuver and, with the second, said, Oh, wow!
“This is where the starboard wing lifted, forcing the port wing down,” Barbara said. “In twenty-two seconds the craft was banking at a hundred and forty-six degrees, with a downward nose pitch of eighty-four degrees.”
“They were finished.”
“It was deep trouble but not hopeless. There was still a chance they might have pulled out of it. Remember, they were above twenty thousand feet. Room for recovery.”
Because he had never read about the crash or watched television reports of it, Joe had always pictured fire in the aircraft and smoke filling the cabin. A short while ago, when he had realized that the passengers were spared that particular terror, he’d hoped that the long journey down had been less terrifying than the imaginary plunge that he experienced in some of his anxiety attacks. Now, however, he wondered which would have been worse: the gush of smoke and the instant recognition of impending doom that would have come with it — or clean air and the hideously attenuated false hope of a last-minute correction, salvation.
The transcript indicated the sounding of alarms in the cockpit. An altitude alert tone. A recorded voice repeatedly warning Traffic! because they were descending through air corridors assigned to other craft.
Joe asked, “What’s this reference to the ‘stick-shaker alarm’?”
“It makes a loud rattling, a scary sound nobody’s going to overlook, warning the pilots that the plane has lost lift. They’re going into a stall.”
Gripped in the fist of fate punching toward the earth, First Officer Victor Santorelli abruptly stopped mumbling. He regained consciousness. Perhaps he saw clouds whipping past the windshield. Or perhaps the 747 was already below the high overcast, affording him a ghostly panorama of onrushing Colorado landscape, faintly luminous in shades of gray from dusty pearl to charcoal, with the golden glow of Pueblo scintillant to the south. Or maybe the cacophony of alarms and the radical data flashing on the six big display screens told him in an instant all that he needed to know. He had said, Oh, Jesus.
“His voice was wet and nasal,” Barbara said, “which might have meant that Blane broke his nose.”
Even reading the transcript, Joe could hear Santorelli’s terror and his frantic determination to survive.
SANTORELLI: Oh, Jesus. No, Jesus, no.
BLANE: (laughter) Whoooaaa. Here we go, Dr. Ramlock. Dr. Blom, here we go.
SANTORELLI: Pull!
BLANE: (laughter) Whoooaaa. (laughter) Are we recording?
SANTORELLI: Pull up!
Santorelli is breathing rapidly, wheezing. He’s grunting, struggling with something, maybe with Blane, but it sounds more like he’s fighting the control wheel. If Blane’s respiration rate is elevated at all, it’s not registering on the tape.
SANTORELLI: Shit, shit!
BLANE: Are we recording?
Baffled, Joe said, “Why does he keep asking about it being recorded?”
Barbara shook her head. “I don’t know.”
“He’s a pilot for how long?”
“Over twenty years.”
“He’d know the cockpit-voice recorder is always working. Right?”
“He should know. Yeah. But he’s not exactly in his right mind, is he?”
Joe read the final words of the two men.
SANTORELLI: Pull!
BLANE: Oh, wow.
SANTORELLI: Mother of God…
BLANE: Oh, yeah.
SANTORELLI: No.
BLANE: (child-like excitement) Oh, yeah.
SANTORELLI: Susan.
BLANE: Now. Look.
Santorelli begins to scream.
BLANE: Cool.
Santorelli’s scream is three and a half seconds long, lasting to the end of the recording, which is terminated by impact.
Wind swept the meadow grass. The sky was swollen with a waiting deluge. Nature was in a cleansing mood.
Joe folded the three sheets of paper. He tucked them into a jacket pocket.
For a while he couldn’t speak.
Distant lightning. Thunder. Clouds in motion.
Finally, gazing into the crater, Joe said, “Santorelli’s last word was a name.”
“Susan.”
“Who is she?”
“His wife.”
“I thought so.”
At the end, no more entreaties to God, no more pleas for divine mercy. At the end, a bleak acceptance. A name said lovingly, with regret and terrible longing but perhaps also with a measure of hope. And in the mind’s eye not the cruel earth hurtling nearer or the darkness after, but a cherished face.
Again, for a while, Joe could not speak.
11
From the impact crater, Barbara Christman led Joe farther up the sloping meadow and to the north, to a spot no more than twenty yards from the cluster of dead, charred aspens.
“Here somewhere, in this general area, if I remember right,” she said. “But what does it matter?”