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About 3 p.m., the pair drifted toward a manned rig. Henderson realized his friend wasn't keeping his head above water. Henderson told Coen to kick to the rig. He pulled him as he swam, but Coen was sideways. Henderson told him to kick. Coen thought he was. And so Henderson decided to cut the strap. He swam for two hours, but lost his sense of direction. He was tired. Frustrated. Depressed. He rolled on his back and floated. It was after 7 p.m. when he woke up. He saw another rig in the distance, and prayed for strength. He swam, seeing ice and crystal trees in the water. He reminded himself constantly there were no trees. He made it past a blinking light, a milestone that pushed him on toward the rig. It was 2 a.m. On legs so weak he could barely lift them, Henderson slowly pulled himself up the rig's barnacle-covered ladder. "I'm here. I'm on a derrick," Henderson said out loud. He found a galley with food, water and a phone. He called his wife, and told her to call the Coast Guard. He said he was on rig 633A. "It was over 50 miles from where we went in the water," Henderson said. All he could think of, though, was Coen. Convinced his friend would survive, he told the Coast Guard where they had parted. Two hours later, Henderson was ashore in the Coast Guard dispatch room when haunting words came across the radio. A fisherman had found a body in a life jacket. Later, in the hospital, Henderson saw his friend. He apologized and asked for forgiveness. He promised to fulfill his wishes, make him proud and look after his girls. "I felt like a part of me had died out there," Henderson said.
[Associated
Press;
Plushnick-Masti can be followed on Twitter at https://twitter.com/RamitMastiAP.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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