Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

his own angry voice and thereafter found it more difficult to deceive

himself that he actually felt as calm as he was pretending to be.

Pete Yankowski, the flight instructor from Denver, returned from his

trip to the rear of the plane and reported that through a window he had

spotted an eighteen-inch hole in the horizontal part of the tail.

“There’s probably more damage I couldn’t see. Figure shrapnel ripped up

the rear section behind the aft bulkhead, where all the hydraulic

systems pass through. At least we didn’t depressurize.”

Dismayed at the rippling sensation that quivered through his bowels,

achingly aware that two hundred and fifty-three passengers and ten other

crew members were depending on him to bring them home alive, Delbaugh

conveyed Yankowski’s information to SAM. Then he asked for assistance

in determining how to fly the severely disabled aircraft. He was ùnot

surprised when, after an urgent consultation, the experts in San

Francisco could come up with no recommendations. He was asking them to

do the impossible, tell him how to remain the master of this behemoth

with no substantial controls other than the throttles-the same unfair

request that God was making of him.

He stayed in touch with United’s dispatcher office, as well, which

tracked the progress of all the company’s hardware in the air. In

addition both channels-the dispatcher and SAM-were patched in to

United’s headquarters near O’Hare International in Chicago. A lot of

interested and anxious people were tied to Delbaugh by radio, but they

were all as much at a loss for good suggestions as were the experts in

San Francisco.

To Yankowski, Delbaugh said, “Ask Evelyn to find that guy from McDonnell

Douglas she told us about. Get him up here quick.”

As Pete left the flight deck again, and as Anilov struggled with his

control wheel in a determined if vain attempt to get at least some

response from the craft, Delbaugh told the shift manager at SAM that a

McDonnell Douglas engineer was aboard. “He warned us something was

wrong with the tail engine just before it exploded. He could tell from

the sound of it, I guess, so we’ll get him in here, see if he can help.”

At SAM, the General Electric expert on CF-6 turbofan engines came

back at him: “What do you mean, he could tell by the sound? How could

he tell by the sound? What did it sound like?”

“I don’t know,” Delbaugh replied. “We didn’t notice any unusual noises

or unexpected changes in pitch, and neither did the flight attendants.”

The voice in Delbaugh’s headset crackled in response: “That doesn’t make

sense.”

McDonnell Douglas’s DC-10 specialist at SAM sounded equally baffled:

“What’s this guy’s name?”

“We’ll find out. All we know right now is his first name,” Sleighton

Delbaugh said. “It’s Jim.”

As the captain announced to the passengers that they would be landing in

Dubuque as a result of mechanical problems, Jim watched Evelyn approach

him along the port aisle, weaving because the plane was no longer as

steady as it had been. He wished she would not ask him what he knew she

had to ask.

“. and it might be a little rough,” the captain concluded.

As the pilots reduced power to one engine and increased it to the other,

the wings wobbled, and the plane wallowed like a boat in a swelling sea

Each time it happened, they recovered quickly, but between those

desperate course corrections, when they were unlucky enough to hit air

turbulence, the DC-10 did not ride through it as confidently as it had

done all the way out from LAX.

“Captain Delbaugh would like you to come forward if you could,” Evelyn

said when she reached him, soft-voiced and smiling as if delivering an

invitation to a pleasant little luncheon of tea and finger sandwiches.

He wanted to refuse. He was not entirely sure that Christine and Casey

-or Holly, for that matter-would live through the crash and its

immediate aftermath without him at their side. He knew that on impact a

ten-row chunk of the fuselage aft of first-class would crack loose from

the rest of the plane, and that less damage would be done to it than to

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