"The Survivors"
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Carol Kingsley was awakened from a deep sleep by someone jostling her at the shoulder. One of the C-130's crew members leaned in closer to call out over the roar of the engines, “There's a problem! Cap'n needs to talk to you.”
Carol shook her head to loose the cobwebs from her brains. Prior to takeoff, she hadn't slept for almost 50 hours. Arranging a last-minute Aid Mission to the cyclone-devastated island of Tongalo had taken her all. After departing Aukland with the cargo and passengers finally aboard, Carol had next spent three hours playing musical chairs to sit and talk with the leaders of the Teams responsible for Medical, Security, Reconstruction, Agriculture, etc.
Once she'd finally decided to get some rest, falling asleep had been easy. The vibration of the aircraft's powerplants mixed with her exhaustion left her dead to the world in just seconds.
Now, though, Carol unbuckled and carefully made her way to the cockpit. The cargo plane rocked violently in a storm that, to her knowledge, hadn't been expected. Reaching the cockpit, she took the empty seat to which she was gestured and donned a communications headset.
"We were hit by lightning," the Co-Pilot began explaining. "Million-dollar lightning prevention system and still..." He went silent a moment, then continued, "We've lost one engine and might lose another. Communications down. Satellite down. Navigation's haywire. We think we're on a heading of 280 toward Fiji, but honestly, who really knows?"
The Pilot turned to Carol, his face showing his grave concern. He told her bluntly, "Odds are we're looking at a water landing."
Carol sat and watched the three struggle with the plane for several minutes before returning to buckle into her starboard side window seat. The next hour was the longest in her life. Beyond the window, lightning occasionally flashed. Each time, she swore the ocean had risen closer.
Suddenly, the plane performed a hard bank to the left as the Co-Pilot announced, "We have located an island with a long, straight, sandy beach. We're going to try to put the plane down there. All passengers and crew strap in. This is gonna be rough."
The pilot maneuvered his aircraft up, down, left, right, doing his best to line up for the beach that only he and his two flight crew team members could see. Carol was looking across the plane's interior at her people -- most of whom looked even more frightened than she was -- when a flash of lightning on the port side illuminated the silhouette of a mountain peak at roughly the same height of the plane itself.
A moment later, the port wing struck something, the plane jerked violently, then tilted to starboard, and another couple of seconds later -- as Carol looked out to see breaking surf -- the starboard wing met with the sea...
**********************
Carol didn't really experience much more of the landing than that. Something had struck her head, and while she hadn't lost consciousness, her head had been spinning wildly enough to prevent her from truly comprehending what was happening.
"Evacuate the plane! Evacuate the plane!" Carol eventually heard a crew member calling out. "Those not injured help the injured outside and away from the aircraft!"
Carol checked for but didn't find any injuries other than the aching head. She unbuckled and stood, only to topple to the bulkhead when she realized that the plane's fuselage was laying at a serious tilt to starboard. Looking aft, she caught sight of the red and orange glow of fire that stretched down the beach. A moment later, she realized that the reason she could see the flames was that the plane had split in two just after of the upper deck passenger seating area and the rear two-thirds of the plane was somewhere else on the burning beach.
Carol joined the effort to get the injured out of the plane and onto the beach. In doing so, she found that the nose of the plane had pancaked against the tall, steep rock wall. She would learn soon enough that all pilots had been killed.
It was dark and overcast and raining, and understanding their surroundings wasn't easy. At sunrise, they would learn they were at the east end of a long, narrow, shallow, sandy beach. Inland was thick, tropical forest. At the far, west end of the beach were forested hills. And of course, to the south, was the Pacific Ocean.
What was beyond the jungle was of great curiosity and concern to Carol, but the priority now was the injured. Being the Aid Team's Leader, she immediately jumped into action. "Listen up! Everyone, listen up!"
She directed the Medical Team to tend to the injured, obviously, telling the Senior Physician to recruit anyone necessary to help. Everyone else was put to work locating priority cargo from the plane, the beach, or wherever it ended up: food, fresh water, water purification units, medical kits, blankets, tents and tarps, and more were to be found, brought to a safe spot, and utilized as appropriate.
"We need a place to build a camp," Carol told the head of Security, clarifying, "On the beach for now if there is such a place. We don't know what's in the jungle, so ... I'd rather stay out of it for now."