A tearful Catherine Ouellet says she can't thank enough the
man she calls a hero after he carried her 80-year-old aunt away from the
wreckage of Air Canada Flight 624 after it crashed just
after midnight Sunday.
Steve Earle reluctantly came forward Tuesday morning after his
friends saw that Ouellet was using CBC to try to find him, following the
crash on a runway at Halifax Stanfield International Airport. The plane
slammed to the ground while trying to land in a snowstorm.
In the minutes after the crash, Ruth Macumber struggled to get down
the emergency exit and away from the plane. She uses a walker, and
without it found it hard to walk.
Earle, who was sitting in the same row as Macumber and Ouellet, stepped up to help.
"It's not heroism, it's being human," Earle said. "I just happened to
be the guy that was there. I just happened to be the guy sitting in
that row. That's all."
Once outside the crashed plane, passengers found themselves in a
snowstorm with strong wind gusts. Macumber struggled to catch her
breath.
"Her niece was holding her by the arm and trying to get her to move
along," Earle said. "I came down after them and I took her by the other
arm and it really wasn't working. She didn't have enough in her legs to
keep going."
With fuel everywhere, many passengers worried there would be a fire,
and they knew they had to get away from the plane fast. Macumber insisted she could go no further.
That's when he picked her up. First by her waist, but then he put her over his shoulder.
"I needed to get out of there too, and the quickest way to do it was to carry her," he said.
"The alternative was to run. But her niece wasn't going to leave her
either. She's not a big lady. I just, I grabbed her and off we went to
get out of there."
Earle said he couldn't leave Macumber and her niece behind.
"I don't think hero is ... I think human is a better term. That's all. If it wasn't me, it probably would've been the next guy."
But Ouellet disagrees, and she was overjoyed to reconnect with Earle Tuesday morning.
"Everyone else was just concerned about running and getting off that
plane," said a tearful Ouellet, as she hugged him Tuesday. "You just
stuck there and helped her get over that ledge and down that slide."
Ouellet was the first passenger Earle has seen since the crash. Both
said they haven't looked at any news coverage of what they went through.
"Mentally, it's challenging," said Earle. "It's like instant replay
all the time. It's hard to get it stopped. Today is better than
yesterday and yesterday is better than the day before that."
Earle went to visit Macumber in the hospital after meeting with Ouellet.
It's expected Macumber will be in the hospital for some time as her
arm was fractured near the shoulder, in an area that cannot be cast.
Air Canada has offered to pay all her medical bills and support for when she is released.
(From CBC News)