Short but sweet
Kennedy has been invited to spend Christmas in Alaska with her roommate and her roomie's family. Also, she and the police chaplain, Dominic, have been on a couple quasi dates.
She's excited to go, but some odd things happen while they're on the plane.
The first thingz during boarding, is a Mennonite family with 4 kids. After a couple Arab-seeming passengers board the plane, the mother turns pale and her husband, after a brief, mostly non-verbal conversation, alerts the staff that they intend to deplane. It takes 15 min., and most assume it has to do with the men with their turbans and billowing pants, xenophobia, etc. but despite that, Kennedy seems to sense the woman is right to leave...but sje has no idea why. She is more consumed with the idea of whether oe not the woman was one of those who gets direct messages from God. And through this and another conversation, we get more insight into Kennedy's spiritual life.
In front of her is an obese man with no seeming acquaintance with personal hygiene or laundry. He has a teenaged girl with him. Willow notices that the girl seems ill at ease, but from her vantage point, Kennedy can't see it. Willow has chatted up a math teacher. Kennedy moves back a row so they can chat, since there are extra seats available. As they watch a horror movie on Willow's device, an older woman comes back to use the restroom, but there is a guy who has been in that restroom more than out, so the older woman sits next to Kennedy, who is finishing up a book on the life of a misssionary. The woman actually knew the missionary via her own missionary parents, and was born in China. Kennedy tells her that her parents are missionaries once the woman says she sees missionary whenever she looks at Kennedy.
While they're talking, a disturbance in front of their cabin is caused by a man frantically pointing and asking for help...in Dari. When ,"BO man," as the girls have dubbed him, starts carrying on about "stinking Arab terrorists," the grandmotherly woman tells him the man isn't an Arab, he is speaking Dari, the language of Afghanistan, and is saying his father can't breathe. The flight attendant calls for anyone with medical training to help, and the woman, stopped from going up, tells the attendant they will need a translator. She goes up and throughout the time the doctor in first class comes back, she alternates between praying - ar first aloud, then silently - and everything she prays for is answered. An allergy reaction to an antibiotic the man is taking for pneumonia is the cause, and the epi pen does the job. Things seem to quiet down. Kennedy gets up to use the restroom, having to go up front since the man who has been in and out of the restroom is in again. The teenager deliberatley trips her, then grabs her and shoves a note in her hand, so Kennedy pretends the fall was her fault and apologizes. When she gets into the bathroom, she reads the note - the girl has written jer name and said she is being kidnapped - a fate with which Kennedy is intimately familiar.
In the midst of her trying to get back to her seat, she is just near where Willow's teacher friend is correcting tests when the plane is skyjacked. The teacher yanks her into the seat next to him to keep her out of harm's way as much as possible. The skyjackers kill 2 people - the demamds they're making relate to an issue the older Christian woman's grandson had made, but it was pushed aside until later, and later never came, sonit went unaired despite his attempts to have someone air it to help. When the gunman grabs Willow, the older woman steps between the 2 and offers herself in his place, saying she is ready to go to heaven, witnessing to the man, but when he tries to kill her, the gun fails, which gives the passengers the courage to take him and his cohorts down. But there is still more to come on the flight before it lands and everyone is taken to a hospital, and interviewed by air marshalls as soon as they're cleared medically. Kennedy, who has been consumed by guilt over not witnessing to Willow, is given some peace of mind via an explanation before the skyjacking. But what will she do with what she has been told?
The book then skips to where the girls are in Alaska, finishing their vacation. Has Kennedy managed to witness to Willow? Will Willow have hernheart softened to the claim of Chrost on her life?