breaks and on CNBC.â The producer made a point of looking Sherry squarely in the eye as she added, âThis is news, not Frasier, okay? Nobody yells âcutâ if you screw up, so try to get it right.â
Sherry nodded and looked down at her notes. At first glance, she didnât see anything too difficult. It was mostly about emotion. How was she holding up under the stress? Did she think that the authorities were acting quickly enough? Are there things about her son that the world should know?
With the microphone finally clipped to the collar of Sherryâs turtleneck, Molly took a call on her cell phone. âHello? Yeah? Shit.â
Sherryâs heart rate doubled. âWhat?â
Molly held up a finger and listened for a moment more. âOkay, yeah, we can be ready.â To Sherry, she said, âChange in plans. They want to go live in one minute, as soon as they come out of the break.â
Instantly, Sherryâs mind went blank.
âDonât look so scared, Mrs. OâToole. I wrote the questions and theyâre all softballs.â
âItâs Dr. OâToole,â Sherry corrected.
Molly rolled her eyes and smiled. âQuiet on the set, please.â She donned a headset with a boom mike and stepped behind the camera, disappearing in the glare of the lights.
After a brief pause where nothing seemed to move, Sherryâs earpiece popped to life, and she was listening to the Today show. A satiny smooth voice was in the process of introducing the segment when Mollyâs voice boomed, âOkay, Doc, stand by. Weâre ready to go in five, four, threeâ¦â
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S COTT FELT LIKE HEâD BEEN BEATEN . Every muscle, every joint screamed a dissonant chorus, with his ankle playing the role of lead singer in the newest boy band, Scott OâToole and the Agonies.
But at least heâd lived through the night. What were the chances of that? How about a thousand to one? Nobody would have touched that bet. Stack a night of sure hypothermia on top of surviving a plane crash, and you might as well hand over your dollar to the lottery.
According to his wristwatch, it was nearly eight in the morning. Heâd slept for a solid six hoursâabout what he got at home during school. During the night, though, his shelter seemed to have shrunk. It was like being in a grave.
That was the thought that drove him back outside.
The rescuers would come today. He knew it as surely as he knew his name. Heâd never held much hope that people would come looking for him last night, not with the storm raging the way it had been. Now that it was daylight, though, even though the snow continued to fall, he figured that the search teams would find the margin of safety theyâd need to do their jobs. He expected them to come by air, but heâd say yes to a dog sled if that was all they had to offer. He was ready to be warm again.
Outside the shelter now, Scott surveyed his surroundings, wincing against injuries he swore to God he didnât have last night. His neck and his back hurt, his fingers throbbed, and his ankle hurt all the way up to his knee. That didnât even count the six thousand bruises that had to be covering every inch of flesh beneath his clothes.
âI feel like I yelled âredneckâ in a biker bar,â he mused aloud. The image made him smile, and even the smile hurt.
Everything looked so much smaller in the daytime. Distances that had seemed impossibly far last night now showed themselves for what they really were. The whole crash site, including the wrecked Cessna and the pitiful shelter Scott had built didnât cover a circle more than a hundred feet in diameter. Last night, heâd have sworn that it was twice that large. Maybe more. Thatâs what happened when every step through the deep snow yielded such little distance.
Even the twisted remains of the airplane itself seemed smaller. The unrelenting snowfall had