Crash Into You (3 page)

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Authors: Cara Ellison

BOOK: Crash Into You
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Too dazed by her escape to think much about the Rose City, she
risked a glance out the airplane window over the wing.  It was deep night and the earth was black, without definition.  They were somewhere over the Rocky Mountains, a cityless, lightless expanse of peaks and plains.   Black sky and black earth dissolved into each other like chemical compounds.

Zooming through the socket of night, she began to relax.   It appeared she’d made a clean getaway.    At least for now.   Seth would no doubt come after her, but she would have a few days to ready herself for the confrontation.  

Her thoughts were interrupted by the crackle of the PA system and a female flight attendant saying, “Ladies and gentlemen, we are experiencing mechanical problems. Please fasten your seatbelts, fold your tray tables and bring your seat is in a full upright position.  The pilots are going to attempt to land at the Gallant, Montana airport.”

O
thers in the cabin began to mumble to their neighbors.

Aimee
craned her neck, searching the flight attendant’s face for some clue to how bad this was.  She looked busy but not terrified.
It was a mask.  They had been trained not to alarm the passengers. 
Two others huddled at the rear of the plane looked a little more nervous; they were speaking in hushed tones and their eyes betrayed anxiety.

The
man seated beside her smiled reassuringly.  “It’s probably nothing.”

“I hope so,”
Aimee replied. 

She’d spent the whole flight trying to soothe herself,  breathe through the fear of flying and now …
mechanical problems?!

The cabin was perfectly silent, tense, waiting for something to happen.  
But when the aircraft maintained its smooth glide, she slowly she began to relax.  Maybe it wasn’t that bad.  It seemed okay.  The plane was still flying exactly as it was before.  No weird noises or sputtering engines.  She unclenched her fingers from the armrest and placed her hands in her lap.  Aimee shut her eyes and began to draw in long, deep breaths, forcing her muscles to unclench.  
Relax.  Relax.  Think of a beautiful, dewy meadow resplendent with wildflowers…

A violent shudder
rocked through the aircraft, knocking Aimee’s head against the window so hard she cried out.   The plane pitched violently from left to right.   Oxygen masks dropped from the ceiling as luggage broke from the overhead storage and tumbled into the aisle.   At the same time, the lights whooshed off, and the cabin was plunged into darkness equivalent to the sky outside.   Hysteria zoomed through the aircraft.

The
clipped, businesslike voice of a pilot came over the PA.  “Flight attendants prepare for emergency landing.”

Oh God.

“Please remember what we said as the plane departed Dulles Airport,” a young flight attendant was saying over the screaming engines as she held on to two seats, trying to make her way up the aisle to the jump seats.  “Brace yourselves.   Keep your head between your knees.”  Her voice was rising with breathless panic. 

T
he airplane was no longer in control.  It was teetering from side to side in a nauseating gyration that roiled Aimee’s belly and produced a cold, cloying sweat over her whole body.  Reflexively, grasping for comfort, her fingers gripped the older man’s hand on the middle of the seat between them.  He smiled compassionately at her and squeezed her hand.

They b
oth bent over to brace themselves in the position the flight attendant had demonstrated.

“The closest door is five rows ahead of us,” the man said to her.   “Count the seatbacks, and go up five rows.
There are doors on both the left and right side of the plane.”

Aimee
was too scared to answer, but she was thankful for the information.

Passengers were crying; some were screaming.  Aimee
squeezed shut her eyes, and joined the others in a silent collective prayer that the plane would be okay, they’d land, they’d be scared, it was okay to be scared, but it wouldn’t be bad…. Nobody was going to die, for God’s sake.  Not on this quiet, mundane nighttime flight to Portland. 

The turbulence intensified.   The rocking was making passengers sick; she could hear them retching. 
Someone in the back was openly screaming.

The plane seemed to be falling at an angle, an
d through the window, she barely glimpsed the mountain peaks.  They seemed too close.

She cried out.   

“Good luck,” the man said.

             
Then the world went black.

 

 

Kimberly Ashcroft
lay curled up on the sofa in her living room under a warm chenille blanket.   The landline phone was beside her, and her fingers gently rested on the casing, ready to pick it up as soon as it rang.  Some inane sitcom was chattering from the television, but her red-rimmed, glassy eyes were not focused on the screen.  She had tried to watch the news coverage of the crash, but couldn’t.  Even without live pictures, the low, swoopy timbre in the newswoman’s voice snagged on some ragged edge of her brainpan and made her homicidally insane.   
Because there was no news
.  Just the constant bulletins that a plane had crashed at the mountainous border between Idaho and southern Montana.  The newscasters made a point of saying it was very cold up there year-round, that it was “harsh, unforgiving territory.”  

             
Kimberly had listened with a sick feeling in the pit of her stomach, guilt creeping into her body like a virus.   She’d made the reservation for Flight 134, using Aimee’s middle name, Lauren, and Smith as the last name.  An evening flight, so that Aimee could leave the house when it was dark outside.  The darkness would give her some cover to slip to her neighbor’s house.  Bryan would then drive her to the airport.

             
Now Aimee was dead on a mountaintop in Idaho.   Another choking sob came to her throat.  She would have to be strong, and not jump to conclusions, she told herself for the thousandth time.   There was no telling if there were survivors or how many.  People did walk away from plane crashes, as her husband had reminded her.  
We know nothing yet
, he’d emphasized in an effort to soothe her.

             
And it was true, because the airline wasn’t talking yet and the news people could only offer extraneous, irrelevant information, such as the stupid topography of the crash site, or the fact that it was thirty-four degrees.

None of that chatter
brought her a one step closer to any concrete information about Aimee.  Having given up on the news, she poured her faith in United Airlines.  She’d been waiting for hours to hear from the representative who took her inquiry.  But there was only unending godforsaken silence – and a Friends re-run she’d seen a million times.

             
“Still waiting?”  

             
The warm, rich voice of her husband startled her.  She looked up at him in his pajamas and mussed bedhead. Her deep love for him reverberated through her, as if seeing him for the first time.   

“Nothing yet,” she said and tossed the phone on the coffee table.    He tousled her hair and then padded off.   She heard him knocking around in the kitchen and a few minutes later, returned with a platter of apple slices and
cheese.  “Have a snack.  You’ll feel better.”

             
She looked dubiously at him.  Smoked gouda had no power to stunt the wild thoughts that her baby sister had perished in a horrible plane crash.  But she found herself popping a wedge into her mouth anyway.

             
Rob sat beside her, lifted her feet to his lap and then covered them with the blanket.   He began to massage the soles, his thumbs slowly digging into the arch.  A foot massage was one of her favorite things in the world, a fact that Rob knew well.  She saw the gesture for what it was: an effort to comfort her.   “You’re the best husband in the world.”

             
He smiled gently at her.  

             
When the phone rang, the line had enough energy to explode the night.    Infused with sudden adrenaline, Kimberly reached for it, sitting up.  “Yes?   Hello?”

             
“Kim, it’s Seth.”

             
Disappointment twisted through her so acute she could hardly breathe.  She felt like she was holding a live, hissing snake.  She handed the phone to Rob and stood up.  Not able to sit still, she paced, and listened to Rob as he calmly handled the call.

             
“Hey Seth.   No.  No, we were asleep.   No, we haven’t heard from her.”

             
Kimberly walked back to the sofa and held her hand out for the phone.  Rob wordlessly gave it to her.

             
“This is Kimberly.   What do you want?”

             
“I’m looking for Aimee.”

             
“She isn’t here, and even if she was, I would not let her talk to you.  You’re a controlling asshole and we don’t want anything to do with you.”

             
He took in a sharp breath.  He was not used to being confronted by anyone, particularly women.   Kimberly felt a certain satisfaction provoking him when there was nothing he could do about it.  Now that Aimee was on that mountaintop, she felt the years of compressed rage and frustration threatening to explode, quivering under the surface of her grief.

“I know you talked to her today.   What did you talk to her about?”

              “None of your business,” she hissed.  “She doesn’t owe you an explanation of her every conversation.”

             
“You’re pushing me, Kim.”

             
“Leave us alone.”

             
“I know she’s there.  Put her on the phone.”

             
“She isn’t here.” 

Wait.  

He thinks she’s here?  

He doe
sn’t know the plane has crashed.
 

Was it possible he didn’t realize that Aimee was on that plane?  

              “You’re lying,” Seth said flatly.

             
Kimberly looked to Rob, her strategy in dealing with Seth changing by the second.  If Seth thought Aimee wasn’t in Portland, he would start investigating, and possibly discover she had been on that plane.  It was childish, maybe, but Kimberly could not bear the thought of Seth’s presence in the middle of memorial plans.   Aimee wouldn’t want that either.

             
“Look Seth,” Kimberly said sternly.  “She doesn’t want to talk to you.”

             
Rob frowned.

             
“Put her on the phone,” Seth demanded.

             
“No,” Kimberly said and hung up.   Placing the phone back on the coffee table, she said to Rob, “I hate that man.”

             
Rob stood up and embraced her.  His warm arms felt so good around her – like home.  She rested her head against Rob’s broad chest as he gently fingered back her hair behind her ears.

             
“You want to explain that to me?” he asked gently.

             
She shook her head as tears began to fall again, wetting his pajama top.

             
“Let’s go to bed,” he whispered and shut off the tv with the remote.  “You need some rest.”

             
She let Rob take her hand in his and lead her up the stairs to the bedroom.  

She slid into bed.   “Make sure the ringer is on that phone,” she said.

              Rob double-checked.  “It’s on.  We’ll hear it if it rings.”

S
nuggling against the warm, familiar body of her husband, she shut her eyes.  He was the only touchstone she had right now; everything else about her life had been rendered unrecognizable.  

Shutting her eyes, i
mages of Aimee came back to her from when they were kids.   Where Kimberly was tall and blonde, Aimee was petite and brunette.  Old family photos showed two very different looking girls, but the differences ended there.   They had been close their whole lives.   When Kimberly moved from Salem to Portland for college, Aimee followed.   They shared a house for a while before Kimberly married.  Then Seth showed up.  Almost immediately, he began intruding in subtle ways in the sisters’ relationship.   He started whittling away the time Aimee was permitted to speak on the phone, telling Aimee that, as an adult, it was time to quit being so dependant on her sister.  

Kimberly was appalled, but knew that if she tried to convince headstrong Aimee that Seth was trying to isolate her, she’d think Kimberly was crazy.

Aimee had been so caught up in Seth’s charm and the excitement of moving to Washington D.C., drunk on the newfound feelings of independence and crazy, mad infatuation.   Kimberly figured that Aimee had the right to live her own life, and she wouldn’t interfere.  But one day, she was certain, Aimee would become disillusioned with Seth and she wanted to be there for her sister when that happened.   

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