down. There are two aisles. Weâll split up, two and three.â He points to the youngest guy and me. âYouâre with me. The back of the plane near the tail is probably already filled with waterâI doubt itâs completely sealed. When we get there, if thatâs true, the water line becomes our starting point. We canât save anyone below it; theyâve already drowned. Weâll race down the aisle and start checking the people in the first dry row for a pulse.â
He puts his hand to his throat. âPress hard and wait. No pulse, move on. Get a pulse, slap them hard with the other hand, try to wake them. No response, unbuckle them, put them over your shoulder, and carry them to the next person in lineâweâll try to get the folks still on the plane to help. Check children firstâfor the obvious reason, and because theyâll be lighter, and itâs more likely the life vest will keep their heads above water. If you go five rows without seeing a kid, go back and check the adults.â He gives each of us our assignments, splitting the seats roughly evenly.
People are coming back with blankets now, dropping their loot near the fire and warming themselves. Nick makes a beeline for Jillian and the doctor, waving the two CPR volunteers over.
âThese folks know CPR,â he tells Sabrina. âTheyâre going to help you with the people we bring out of the plane.â He turns to Jillian. âYou know CPR?â
âIâve . . . had training but never, you know . . .â
âFirst time for everything. Youâll do fine.â
âI donât like this.â Sabrina frowns as she looks at the bloodied survivors from our section. âThe exertionâany of these people could have severe head trauma.â
âNo choice. This is what weâre doing.â Nickâs voice is firm, but not condescending or harsh.
I like that about him.
Nick runs to the waterâs edge again and yells for Bill. He has to call again before the paunchy man finally appears, looking haggard and nervous. The bottom edge of the plane hovers just three feet above the water now, and the sight of how close the water is rattles him further. He peers out at us, frightened.
âThere are too many. We canât get them all.â
âItâs okay. Weâre going to help you, Bill. We need you to get the life vests from under the seats and put them on the people youâve moved to the opening. Understand?â
Bill looks around. âThen what?â
âThen weâre going to lower them out of the plane to the rescue teams. Itâs imperative that you and anyone who can help with that stay there. Do you understand?â
Bill nods.
âWeâre going to make a line to you. Weâre coming out soon, okay? Get ready.â
Nick turns his attention to the group on the bank. He organizes the lines, placing the very strongest at the front, closest to the plane, the weakest in the middle, and the next strongest closest to shore. I can follow his logic, but I couldnât have come up with it, not here in the cold, under the gun, knowing weâre about to watch dozens of people die.
He puts life vests on everyone in the line, in case they have to switch placesâa good change to the original plan.
The moodâs starting to change. People are pitching in. The fire is having its effect, both physically and psychologically. The nonswimmers are stockpiling firewood, moving in and out of the woods quickly. One of them, a gargantuan guy in his twenties wearing a worn peacoat, reaches for a life vest. âI can join the line if I stay close to the bank.â
Two more people step forward, echoing his words as they pull yellow life vests around their necks.
Despite the bustle, I feel my nerves winding tighter. The guys near me, the other strong swimmers, introduce themselves. My hand is clammy as I shake theirs. I can barely take my eyes