Here in the American Northeast, we're
preparing for the first major snowstorm of the year. This is all fine
and good, and, as I've discovered since moving here, it comes with
the territory. On the other hand, it's giving me some terrible
flashbacks to last year's record-breaking snowpocalypsemageddon Winter Storm Juno that we endured only thanks to discreetly
cannibalizing our neighbors and using their hides as extra blankets.
Let none of it go to waste, I always say!
In January of 2015, my friend, Matt,
was getting married to his longtime girlfriend, Carissa. My
girlfriend, Steph, and I received our invitation in the mail, and
after my insistence that just because I'd met Matt and the other
invitees over the internet, it wouldn't be weird and we should go.
Steph bought it. We booked our tickets to sunny California and
waited.
Well, that snowstorm somehow found out
that we'd booked tickets and decided to hit that week. Steph and I
were both working, but she kept me updated throughout the day as she
refreshed the airline's website. The long-and-short of it was this:
the snow had begun falling quite furiously, and our flight had been
canceled proactively, because everything was going to be covered in
up to three feet of snow on that first day, and with 70 mph winds,
cleanup would have been impossible for days. Luckily, there was one
lone Little Plane That Could that was planning to fly out at 7pm that
evening. All we had to do was bump the flight up a couple days and
come home a couple days early. No harm, no foul. Work was closed for
the rest of the week at this point anyway. So we booked the tickets
and came up with a plan: I would get home first, so I'd throw all of
our stuff into a suitcase so we'd be ready to go by the time Steph
arrived. Steph's end of the bargain was to find us a ride to the
airport. I called Matt, who I assume was wearing shorts and sipping
something out of a pineapple and told him the news as I trudged
through the beginnings of the storm. I'd see him that night. Suck it, Juno.
Things went fairly smoothly after that.
We said our goodbyes, got to the airport, checked our bag, and took
our seats. We even took a cute photo on the plane to put on Facebook,
even though everyone tells you not to do that because that's how your
house gets broken into.
The winds had picked up by now and snow
was starting to gather in piles on the tarmac. The pilot assured us
that we were all so smart for taking this flight out, because even
though it was Monday, the snowfall would be so heavy that there was
no way anyone would be leaving the airport til Saturday. Suckers. We
collectively patted ourselves on the back and buckled up, put our
trays in the upright position, and listened to the dumb “what to do
in case of an emergency” speech that they give every time, even
though if there's an emergency we're all dead anyway.
The pilot drove us out to the runway
where he told us we'd have to be de-iced before takeoff, as the snow
whipping around the plane and strong, freezing winds could cause some
problems for a tin can that wanted to go into the sky. Who knew? The
pilot assured us that it would only take 15 minutes and we'd be up
above all this. Everyone in the cabin gave high-fives liberally. The
crew drove the de-icing crane over. A guy sat in the seat with a hose
between his legs. He looked like a fighter pilot in a World War II
biplane shooting the slime from Ghostbusters 2 all over the plane.
The de-icing process took 45 minutes. We started to grow restless,
but the siren song of California (probably sung by the Beach Boys)
kept us calm.
Finally, the de-icing was done. The
captain urged everyone to get to their seats and buckle up, because
the de-icing only lasted for a few moments, and if we weren't in the
air before our window closed, we would have to start all over again.
Everyone did, but the plane didn't move. Our captain addressed us
again. The snow was worse than anticipated, so we'd have to de-ice
again. The WWII crane returned and we all sighed. The captain
reminded us not to get up, as that escape window was no joke. To
apologize, the flight crew gave everyone a bottle of water. I got
mixed signals.
Another 45 minutes later, the plane
rolled to the edge of the runway. I texted everyone I had been giving
my running commentary, “Here we go!”
The plane stopped. The captain came
over the intercom. “Well, folks, we got a computer error. We're
going to have to go back to the terminal so I can get the tech crew
in here. Then we'll de-ice one more time and get you all to sunny
California!”
The crowd cheered. This must be what
it's like to be brainwashed.
The IT crew boarded the plane. Three or
four guys all went to the cockpit to look at gauges and buttons and
levers. I got up to use the bathroom, because that bottle of water
was really a bad idea. As I was standing in the tiny stall, the
captain addressed us again.
“OK, so we're going to restart the
plane and that should fix everything.”
So an IT team fixes a plane the same
way I fix my laptop when it can't find my mouse. Excellent. The plane
turned off. I peed in the dark.
By the time I returned to my seat, the
IT crew was bringing the plane back to life and standing around
fairly confused. The reset hadn't worked. I wanted to suggest a
factory reset, or a paperclip that they could poke into that little
hole in the back, but they didn't appreciate my joke, and paperclips
aren't allowed past airport security.
The bad news? We were still getting an
error and our captain didn't want to risk our lives on a plane that
was sub-par. The good news? They had a second plane ready just in
case this happened.
Everyone reentered the terminal as they
prepped plane #2. Some of the flight crew made snow angels on the
tarmac. A few non-believers on our flight decided to cut their losses
and go home. Apparently they decided they could wait until Saturday.
At this point, everyone began turning their phones back on to check
the weather and complain on social media. The big new development was
that the roads would be shutting down after midnight. It was too
dangerous to plow without the roads being salted, and it was too late
to get the salt out there.
We all got on plane #2 and took our
seats. The captain, having checked the weather and complained on
social media, himself, addressed us again. Yes, the roads were
closing, but that sounded like a problem for Northeasterners. We were
all going to be drinking those pineapple drinks on Venice Beach. If
not, we'd all be home in bed by midnight and we wouldn't have to
worry about road closures at all. But that wasn't going to happen. We
were smart enough to stick it out. It was time to get this bird in
the air—after one more de-icing.
After another 45 minutes of reenacting
the radar jamming scene in Spaceballs, we taxied out to the runway.
We stopped. We waited. At this point it was after midnight. We'd been
on two different planes in five hours. The roads were shut down,
everything would be closed until Saturday, and we hadn't gone
shopping in weeks, prepping for the vacation. The intercom came on,
broadcasting dead air through the cabin. Then a sigh. “Yeah, we're
getting the same error we got on the other plane, ladies and
gentlemen. It's just not going to happen tonight. I'm sorry.”
We all groaned. Now what were we going
to do? The plane rolled back to the terminal and we all de-boarded.
Through the windows of the airport, billions of snowflakes looked
back at us, probably with high-pitched giggles, but those were
drowned out by the howling of the 70mph winds.
On the way to baggage claim, a few of
the airport employees handed out vouchers for free cabs. We'd all
have to go home. The airport was closing because everything was
canceled, and the nearby hotels were all full of people whose flights
had been canceled hours ago. Steph and I grabbed our suitcase and
headed to the door where the cab lane is usually three cars deep, all
trying to usher you in to bring you to your destination.
It was desolate. Not one cab. What good
was a cab voucher when nobody was out driving? Angry fliers began
calling cab companies to come pick them up. Steph and I stood in the
line, about 50 people deep, to wait for a car. Ahead of us, a woman
bounced her screaming baby. He wore nothing but a onesie and snot
streamed down his face. The woman balanced a huge suitcase and a
stroller with her other hand. Seeing that the woman didn't have
nearly enough going on, the airport gave her a complimentary car seat
for her child when and if a cab ever came. The baby screamed. I
realized I had left my sweatshirt at home, because I was going to be
in California.
After some time, a lone cab approached
the terminal. The first person in line hopped in and, after a brief
exchange with the cabby. Other passengers continued to call taxi
companies. After another long dry spell as we all shivered and the
baby continued to cry, a man in a trenchcoat made an announcement: No
taxi companies were sending people to the airport because they
weren't getting paid. They were only getting vouchers.
At about 1:30 am, a van approached. The
driver asked where people were going, and the crowd, either pitying
the overburdened woman or just sick of the crying, mucus-y baby, said
she should take it. She shuffled to the front of the line with her
four things in tow and explained to the cabby where she was headed.
Turns out it was two states north, and about an hour and a half away.
The cabby asked who else was heading north. Steph and I were! We
rushed to the exit with one other young girl and began to load our
collective excess of baggage into the trunk of the van. The young
girl plopped down in the back seat. Snow stung our faces as the rest
of us took refuge behind the van. I wished I had my sweatshirt. The
baby had to sit in the center row, since it was the only seat with a
buckle in it. Mom couldn't get in, obviously, until the baby was in.
I couldn't get in until mom has comfortably in the back seat, tending
to her screaming baby, who could now add “freezing” to “sick
and tired.” But before we could get the baby in, we had to assemble
the car seat.
The woman with the baby continued to
attempt to calm her slime creature as the cabby ripped the plastic
off of the new car seat. The mom directed him: “The cushion has to
go over the plastic shell, but-- not like that, that's upside down.
See the holes? The straps need to go through them. No, they need to
line up so the straps can go through. No, you have the padding
backwards. I--” She looked around. “Can you hold my baby?” I
glanced around. She couldn't mean me. She handed me the baby. He
screamed louder, adding “Being held by a stranger” to his list of
grievances. I did what I could with my motherly instinct, shushing
him and bouncing him. Mom assembled the car seat and strapped it into
the van. As she placed the mandrake-covered-in-lung-pudding in the
seat, it became apparent that the child was far too big for the seat.
Mom tried to buckle him in, but he cried louder. The only way the
baby would fit, would be to fold him in half. Mom called it off and
assured us she'd be fine. She and I climbed into the van. Steph took
the front passenger seat.
Steph and I are a quick 15-minute drive
to the airport on a normal day. The icy roads and slow going ensured
that this would not be a normal day. We inched up the first big ramp
out of the city, sliding our way across two lanes of non-existent
traffic. The baby soon fell asleep, gurgling his sickness into the
small heated van.
At 3am, the cabby stopped at the foot
of our street. Getting any closer would require going downhill, and
once down there, we weren't so sure he'd be able to get out. We said
we'd make a run for it, sweatshirt or not. Steph and I pooled our
money together to give him something of a tip. He really went above
and beyond, even promising the other passengers at the airport that
he would return. We grabbed our bags from the trunk and wished them
good luck.
The end of our street, likewise, it
about a thirty second walk. In sub-zero weather with three feet of
snow on the ground, it might as well have been the arctic. By the
time we had sprinted to our house, I was shaking from the cold.
We, along with the rest of the city,
were snowed in for the next two days. The airport opened late on
Wednesday, allowing us to escape the frozen wasteland before the
pilot's promised Saturday. When we boarded the third plane of the
week, Steph and I had both begun to develop familiar runny noses.
As for the mom and her baby? I think
they're still out there driving somewhere.