Part II... When we last saw our intrepid hero, he was headed back to his girlfriends place in Boulder (at least he had somewhere to go, and she was able to make the hour-long drive to retrieve him). Despite being told by the gate agent that his bags were held there because he didn't make the plane, they were actually at 39,000' winging their way home. Fortunately an AirTag in one of the suitcases tipped us to that and I was able to get to BWI about 2 hours after the flight he wasn't on arrived, walk into the baggage area, pick up his bags (1 suitcase and one snowboard bag) and walk out without anyone attempting to stop me (glad I did that and not someone else!).
Thursday morning dawned, and the kids headed back to Denver for Round 2. This is when Alexander finally looked at the details of the flight he had been rebooked on and realized he was going on a WN-special: DEN-BNA*-CLT-BWI, all on the same plane. Tapping into the boarding pass on the app, he also discovered he was standby on a direct flight that left about 30 mins earlier (and arrived in BWI 4 hours earlier since it didn't take the scenic route). There were 6 names on the list in front of his, and they all had green checkmarks, so we were feeling good about his chances. He proceeded to that gate, verified that he was there, that he was next on the standby list (by showing the agent his phone, more foreshadowing), and that they would be boarding shortly. They begin the boarding process, and in reasonable time everyone present (save for the crowd of standby passengers) is on the plane. Apparently then there was some drama concerning some late-arriving connecting passengers and now long they needed to wait before filling the 4 seats on the plane with standby passengers. Finally they started calling names, and they were nothing like what the app was showing. At this point, his ticketed flight is starting to board, so he hustles down to that gate to begin the trek east (finally!). Upon further examination of the screen shot he excitedly sent off the standby list, I noted that it was the standby list for the correct flight, but the previous day. WN had put him on it, but didn't alert him, so he very nearly missed a second flight the previous day without knowing it.
Finally inflight, and expecting a stop in Nashville (*BNA) where he can relocate to a more better seat, the flight crew instead informs them that everyone was getting off. The plane that was to continue their journey was supposed to be at the next gate over (we confirmed on FlightAware that seemed to be the case), but that everyone should check that when they got inside (am I getting too heavy-handed with this foreshadowing thing?). Upon arriving in the terminal, there is no sign of the connecting flight - as it turns out because the aircraft is in (you guessed it!) Denver, and it's late and getting later.
At this point, our seasoned traveller sees the writing on the wall and isn't interested in spending the night in Nashville. He starts exploring other options and notes a direct flight from there to DCA. Calls us to make sure we're good to pick him up down there (told him I'd drive anywhere in the mid-Atlantic at this point) and he gets in line and rebooks himself. To his surprise, he pulls boarding #A44 just 3 hours from departure. Come departure time the plane is full from other people rebooking into it, but he's finally on a plane heading somewhere that we can pick him up. Was a good call, as the aircraft from Denver ended up hours-late and the subsequent legs were cancelled. I picked him up at DCA about half-past midnight on Christmas Eve and we had him safely at home about an hour later. 48 hours after he was supposed to be there, and without bags since they made the trip separately.
T'was an ordeal, but one that ended up with him home for Christmas. He does say that next year when he flies out there, it'll be after Christmas.