
eBook - ePub
The 15:17 to Paris
The True Story of a Terrorist, a Train and Three American Heroes
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eBook - ePub
The 15:17 to Paris
The True Story of a Terrorist, a Train and Three American Heroes
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Yes, you can access The 15:17 to Paris by Anthony Sadler, Alek Skarlatos, Spencer Stone, Jeffrey E Stern in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & Military Biographies. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
PART I
AIRMAN SPENCER STONE
1.
JOYCE ESKEL CLOSED THE COMPUTER with an uneasy feeling.
She didnât love the idea of Paris. Sheâd followed the story of the terrorists attacking the magazine there, Charlie Hebdo, a few months back. Sheâd been reading about Islamic extremists since 9/11, and she knew France had open borders. Paris was a big city of course (sheâd been there before, but that was many years ago now) and the odds that the boys would be at any kind of risk were low. She knew that.
Still, she felt something.
Plus Anthony was there, and whenever her son got together with Anthony, things just happened. Two weeks into their trip, she couldnât quite believe theyâd managed to avoid major catastrophe.
Although theyâd avoided major catastrophe only barely. She knew about the two drinking just a little too much, so that Spencer stumbled over a cobblestone and nearly broke his ankle, on the very first night of their trip. Spencer told her, when he connected to the Internet, that he might need to call it off and go back to base. Call off the whole trip, done on the first day. Could you even get an X-ray there? Would his insurance cover it?
It was uncanny, how they brought the mischief out in one another. She couldnât figure out their relationship, two mostly laid-back kids who didnât seem to have much in common, but when they were together ⌠She remembered once when they were in eighth grade how theyâd redecorated the neighborâs house with a dozen rolls of toilet paper, then took turns ringing the doorbell and diving for cover in the hedges. When together, the two just seemed to love trouble.
So she sat down after closing the computer, and thought about the feeling. Twenty years ago she might have dismissed it; now she knew what it was. The still, small voice. She called it âintuitionâ to those who wouldnât understand; to those who would, she called it what she knew it was: God. Preparing her for the events that would follow, just as heâd done countless times before, once she learned to listen, warning her when her children were in danger. What mattered now was what to do with it, and so she decided to do what she always did in situations like this: she prayed. Joyce Eskel closed her eyes, bowed her head, and prayed that things would turn out okay for the boys in France.
BY THEN, JOYCE HAD LEARNED to leave a lot up to God. Sheâd learned early, when Spencer was a baby, when she first brought the kids to their new house, fresh off a traumatic divorce and a devastating custody battle. Sheâd taken them to her parentsâ first, a single mom feeling like a failure and wondering what had just happened.
For a time that was a refuge for her, but she couldnât rely on her aging parents forever. She mustered up all her strength and got a job, and with her parentsâ help she found a house with room for the kids to roam. The neighborhood had a swim club and a tennis club, all within walking distance. Joyce excitedly pointed it all out to the kids that first day, but when they pulled up to the house, the kids got out of the car looking deflated. To them the house was old and ugly. It was the best Joyce could do with almost no income of her own, but the carpets were worn through, the rooms stank, and the paint was faded. It was a signal to the children that their big bright lives with two loving parents and a big happy home had been blown apart, and this was what was left. An ugly old ranch-style, beckoning them into a new and uncertain world.
But Joyce had a vision. She would turn this place into a colorful home for the kids. It was a mighty burden she had: the three kids and a messy divorce, the childrenâs father not so far away but mostly out of their lives, finally a new job but as a workerâs comp adjuster for the state, which meant the kind of long days that could wreck you and leave you gasping for air. It meant constant exposure to the ugliest human qualities; the things people do to each other, the things that happen to them. The way wily people manipulated the system to get a buck; the way the system suppressed people in need. Every day she was submerged in desperation, and in greed. She hardened. She began to feel that her whole life prior to her failed marriage and her new job sheâd been embarrassingly naĂŻve. Sheâd always assumed the best in people. That everyone was capable of goodness; that everyone was inclined to act on it.
Not anymore. Now she read bullshit professionally, and her children were beginning to pick up the skill.
When Spencer cried in his room because it was cleaning dayâwhat an emotional child he was!âshe gave no quarter.
When she lay in her room and yelled out to Spencer and Everett, âWhatâs all the noise?!â as long as Spencer said, âWeâre just having fun,â even if it was in an oddly pinched, high voice, she let them be.
Of course, she didnât know that most times, outside on the floor, Everett was sitting on top of Spencerâs chest, holding him by the wrists and making him punch himself, saying heâd swing harder if Spencer snitched. âTell Mom, âWeâre just having fun.â Say it!â
Even then, as far back as when Spencer was a four-year-old, he was picking up on his motherâs skepticism. He had a hard time accepting rules, no matter from what height they came. Joyce took him to church with her, sat him right up front every Sunday, and when the pastor asked whoâd like to receive salvation, Spencer raised his hand. Every single week; the pastor smiled every time. âI got you, buddy.â Joyce tried to teach him the scripture. âYou donât need to do it again and again every week!â But the rule didnât make sense to Spencer, that you only had to do it once. Who decided that? Why was it up to that person? Maybe it was insolence, maybe Spencer just wanted to eat more than his fair share of the savior, but Joyce started to see it differently, that Spencer had a tender heart; her boy wanted to be right with God every week. So she decided to stop fighting. She saved her energy for the fights that mattered.
She pinched pennies and turned the ugly old house into a warm family home, fires always burning when it dropped below fifty, shrubs well tended and grass always mowed. Saturday was cleaning day. She wanted her kids to go out into the world, when they were ready, knowing how to leave it a little better off than they found it. Having won custody, she tried to raise them herself, to keep the kids safe and fed and help them with their homework. And daily she felt she could use an assist, so she looked up and asked God for his favor. She did it in times of particular struggle, or particular need, but also when an opportunity presented itself, like when the couple next door started talking about moving out, and Joyce recognized a chance. She went around the property and found strategic places to pray, conveying upward her preferences for the next tenant. Ideally a single mother like her, please, because itâd be nice to have someone to commiserate with. Ideally one with children the ages of her own, so that the childrenâs social lives might improve, without Joyce having to drive them more.
And he answered, proving his grace in the form of a young mother coming off her own divorce with two kids in tow and one in her arms. Spencerâs sister, Kelly, took the new neighbors flowers from the yard to welcome them, and then came trotting back, bubbling over with excitement. âMom, sheâs kind of like you!â Joyce invited the woman over for coffee, and the instant they began talking, Joyceâs eyes widened with surprise. âYou used to be a flight attendant too?â Joyce had traveled the world that way, and Heidi had as well. The country too. Heidi had worked for a bus company before that. She laughed. âGuess Iâve always been in the travel business,â and her latest trip had brought her right here to Joyce. As they spoke, a series of uncanny coincidences revealed themselves, and the two women talked over each other.
âYou adored your parents too?â
âYou worry about being overprotective of your boys?â
âYou also look back, a little embarrassed at how naĂŻve you used to be?â
Joyce had been delivered a replica of herself. The only difference was Tom, a rock of a man whom Heidi had started dating, and who took to her kids like they were his own. He plied them with pizza and Chris Farley movies, had a good job, and was so obviously a strong man with a good soul. But Heidi was reluctant to take the plunge with him, she said; she didnât want to marry right away because she still didnât trust herself after what sheâd just put her kids through. But he was there, a stand-in father for her kids, and soon for Joyceâs too.
The two became like sisters; their two houses became two wings of the same estate. They might as well have had no doors or walls because the kids moved through them so freely. Joyce was sure the Lord had something to do with it, that it was he who deserved the credit for this new friend. Or perhaps more accurately, he deserved most of the credit and Joyce perhaps just a little bit of gratitude herself, if you please, for having thought to ask him in the first place, thank you very much.
They were two pillars leaning in on one another, doubly strong. Each was exactly what the other needed, at exactly the moment each needed the other the most. They were both strong-willed and wise, but both in desperate need of support, and for someone with whom to let her guard down, because the kids needed stability after what theyâd been put through. Each woman felt guilty. Each felt the need to subdue her own feelings for the sake of the children, because what the children needed was a dependable parent, not an emotional one. It was only with each other that each could let down her guard and admit to even having feelings.
Joyce and Heidi filled a missing piece for one another, and as if that wasnât enough, their children were just the right ages. Joyceâs son Everett was still the oldest, and Heidi had Solon, the youngest of the new crew, but Heidiâs son Peter was Kellyâs age, and Heidi also had a young son who, it turned out, was born within a few months of Spencer. A quiet child with an occasional flare for the dramatic. Sheâd wanted to call him Alex, for Alexander, a good Greek name like her first son Peterâs, but when a speech therapist next to her at Lamaze class pointed out it was hard to say the s in Skarlatos after an x, Heidi decided to tweak it. He would be Aleksander. People would call him Alek.
Spencer and Alek became as close as their mothers; they were always together. Alek was usually quiet, a reserved child, but he had a sense of humor and of self-expression that came out in the most unexpected ways. A fleeting obsession with Batman during which he wore a Batman muscle costume all day, every day, for months, even out on errands with his mom, earning compliments from cashiers and supermarket stock boys.
He played a tin soldier in the churchâs Christmas production, done up with the full French-style moustache, drawn on with a makeup pen. When an audience member came up to him after the show and kneeled down to congratulate him, the six-year-old Alek looked up and considered the man. He frowned, then he said, âSo do you want my autograph?â
Alek was still water running deep, picking up and feeling more of what went on around him than he let on. A barbeque Joyce and Heidi held ended early when the police showed up at Heidiâs door, claiming they were responding to an emergency. Joyce looked at Heidi, who raised her eyebrowsâshe didnât know of any emergency. It took half an hour for the moms to find out that Alek, who hadnât been getting enough attention during the festivities, had decided to call 911 and report a crime in progress. Alek explained to Spencer, who defended his friend; Alek was guilty only of laziness, not sabotage. Heâd picked up the phone at Spencerâs house to make the fifteen-foot phone call over to his own, but his finger slipped when typing the 916 area code. An honest mistake!
Or like how well Alek understood Spencer. Spencerâs favorite topic of conversation during his first five vocal years was his own birthday. Without letting on, Alek picked up bits and scraps of things Spencer said about it, and then, when it was finally time to bake a cake for the neighbors, Alek asked Heidi if he could be in charge. He dragged her to the toy store, made her buy three plastic army men and a tiny American flag, and wedged them into the top of the cake in a loose approximation of the marines at Iwo Jima.
Spencer walked into the kitchen on his tenth birthday, saw the cake, looked over at Alek, and then smiled, overwhelmed by the feeling that never before in the whole grand course of human history had a more perfect gesture been performed by one friend for another.

ALEK SITS NEXT TO HIM, looking out the...
Table of contents
- Map
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- â Prologue: Anthony Sadler
- Ayoub
- â Part I: Spencer Stone
- â Part II: Alek Skarlatos
- â Part III: Anthony Sadler
- Notes
- Acknowledgments
- About the Authors
- About the Publisher