Elena Vasquez, a 22-year-old senior with 210 actual flight hours, slid into the left seat. The familiar smell of old plastic, worn upholstery, and the faint ghost of coffee from a dozen instructors hit her. This particular Frasca 141 was an old warhorse—a non-motion, single-engine trainer with a wrap-around visual system that looked like a first-generation PlayStation game. But its controls were stiff, honest, and famously unforgiving.
That’s when the first red X appeared on the annunciator panel. Alternator Fail.
Mark pulled off his headset. “You forgot to lean the mixture for the lower altitude after descent. But you lived.” A pause. “Good job.”
She descended through the simulated overcast at 500 feet per minute, using the compass, the clock, and a dead-reckoning guess from her last known fix. The Frasca’s screen flickered, then resolved into a tilted, rain-streaked view of trees rushing up. She flared by feel alone—back pressure, the soft thunk of the simulated stall horn, the whisper of tires on wet asphalt.
She patted the glare shield. “You ugly old box,” she whispered. “You’re a nightmare. And I love you.”
Elena had a choice. Push on to Decatur in zero visibility, no airspeed, a dying engine, and a compass swinging like a pendulum? Or divert to the little private field at Monticello, which she remembered from a sectional chart as having a 2,400-foot strip, no tower, and—if the sim’s database was right—a bean field at the end.