(Revised 12/11/2023)
This story came from a disturbing dream.
It was published in November of 2020, deeper into the worsening pandemic. When my wife and kids began relating their own strange dreams, I found academic articles online describing that very phenomenon, so I stopped feeling like I was going nuts, and went to writing.
All characters involved in adult activities are much older than eighteen years of age.
We hope you enjoy:
'Twas the Flight Before Christmas
December 19, 2017
There's something particularly rewarding about ferry-flying. I've never understood why people hire me to fly their otherwise-empty planes from point A to point B instead of doing it themselves, because the country is spectacularly beautiful. I'm pretty damned sure I've seen most of it. Seen from above, the landscape is so breathtaking, especially the western Rocky Mountains.
Don't get me wrong. I don't ever complain when I'm offered a job. That was the primary reason I wanted my commercial pilot certificate. I mean,
jeez
! When someone is willing to pay me to fly all over God's incredible creation, no way would I turn it down. Such was the case for a particularly easy ferry flight of a 2011 Cirrus SR22 from Bozeman, Montana, to Louisville, Kentucky.
I'd amassed almost a thousand hours enjoying a hobby. I have a full-time and very flexible schedule which allows me to aviate on weekends and holidays, and, given my position, I can even step away from the office for a few days whenever a particularly nice opportunity springs up.
My usual fee is $300 and an additional $1.00 per great circle mile. Fuel and agreed-upon expenses are added, so the Montana to Kentucky job would net me $2,000. Half of the fee was due before the flight, and the other half was due on delivery.
I reckoned the buyer of the Cirrus had paid about a half-million for his bird, so my fees were a drop in his bucket.
The seller had scanned and emailed me all of the airplane's logbooks as well as the results of the last oil and filter tests and examinations. Everything checked out. The buyer also reviewed and approved the materials. He faxed me the cover document from his insurance carrier listing me as personally covered for the ferry flight.
I triple-checked my portable oxygen equipment. Even though the SR22 had a convenient built-in system which indicated full, I was more familiar with my own. Its nine cubic-foot bottle would give me eight hours of gas, which was plenty for the two hours I'd need.
The weather was "severe clear" for the departure, and the forecast showed the same for the entire first leg. I settled into the pilot's seat. The beautiful beast's engine started easily because the local FBO had placed a hot air blower at the cowling to preheat it. The overnight temperatures had dipped into the low single digits, and was still below freezing as I climbed in.
I tuned the radio to the automated terminal information broadcast. I shook my head in mild disgust. The horrible synthetic robo-voice did its best to convey the information, but even now, I still can't understand why a world superpower can't invest money for a more natural voice like Siri's or Alexa's instead of one that'd make even the late Stephen Hawking roll his eyes.
At any rate, the recorded message offered no surprises, so I swapped frequencies and requested my instrument clearance from the controller. On receipt, I programmed it into the Garmin avionics.
I was airborne nine minutes later, heading east in a climb to 17,000 feet with my nasal cannula secure and standing by. On the way through 12,000 feet, the next ninety minutes of the flight would be at oxygen-requiring altitudes until exiting the easternmost fringes of the Rockies into the plains of eastern Montana where I'd turn southeast toward Wheeler Airport in Kansas City, Missouri.
I'm going to let you in on a little something. Breathing pure oxygen at low altitudes is an experience on its own. It's why Wal-Mart sells cans containing a few snorts of it for ten bucks apiece. When inhaled, muted colors immediately become brighter. Night vision is enhanced, as is one's sense of smell. Every sense is heightened.
Of course, it's required at hypoxia-inducing altitudes toย โฆย well, maintain life. But a side effect, for me at least, is it makes me hungry.
Ravenous is a better descriptor.
I was already craving dinner at Arrowhead Barbecue as I exited the high altitude pass and began my descent to 11,000 feet where I would no longer need to breathe the pure life-giving gas. I shut off the bottle's valve and stowed the entire kit into its purpose-built case.
The desire to eat a whole smoked moose waned as my body reacclimated to its normal atmosphere, but my overall appetite didn't. I charge ferry customers a $50
per diem
for long shuttles, and I'd put the $40 remainder on business expenses because I was planning on meeting a potential client at the restaurant. I'd enjoy the plentiful leftovers for dinner the next evening at my destination in Louisville.
The thing was, though, it didn't happen.
I'd just flown by Osceola, Nebraska. I was less than ninety minutes away from my stop when something strange happened.
"Whoa. What the heck? Bugs don't fly this high, do they?" I asked myself aloud when a splat appeared on the windshield. I was still at 11,000 feet, and saw another blob impact the clear screen about a minute later.
"What theย โฆ" I said when I realized it wasn't insects hitting the windscreen. Anything that high would be frozen solid in air indicating -20ยฐ Celsius.
"Oh,
no no no
," I groaned as the splats became splashes.
I scanned the instrumentation. The oil pressure indication was still in the green, so it hadn't yet sounded an alarm, but it was way too close to the yellow line to be normal. There was an oil leak somewhere in there, and it was escaping the cowling.
"Oh,
crap
," I said to no one as warnings began to sound and flash on the MFD.
I poked some buttons on the multi-function display to bring up the list of the nearest airports. As part of my preflight, I'd already looked up and written down on my kneeboard the best glide speed, and, as luck would have it, I was within range of one suitable runway.
I radioed Minneapolis Center. "Mayday, mayday, mayday, Cirrus seven three three delta whiskey, mayday. Losing oil. Engine failure imminent. Need to land at Sierra Whiskey Tango immediately," I said, using the three-letter ID for the airport I saw on the MFD.
"Cirrus seven three three delta whiskey, Minnie Center. Mayday received. Uhย โฆย turn left heading niner zero for Seward. State fuel and souls onboard."
"Left to niner zero. Two plus hours, one soul. Descending at best glide now. Do I need to call approach?"
"Altitude and heading at pilot's discretion," said the controller. "I am coordinating with Omaha Approach. Remain this frequency. Seward is at your twelve o'clock and fourteen miles."
"Altitude and heading PD. I'll circle a few here to shed some altitude, three delta whiskey."
"Roger," said the controller.
I pulled the power back to idle and set the autopilot for a constant-rate turn. If the engine was losing oilโฆ
If
?
Yeah, no. It was definitely losing it and I didn't want it coming apart under the cowl. Even shutting it down completely didn't stop the leak.
I briefly considered using the autopilot for an RNAV approach to the runway but decided it was an insane plan. I tried forward-slipping the craft to see if the wind might blow the oil off to the side enough to regain visibility.
Fat chance of that.
"Center, oil has covered the windshield. I can't see anything in front of me," I radioed. "Do you have a positive fix on me?"
"Affirmative, three delta whiskey. State intentions."
"I'm going to pop the chute."