Cloe Fields and her boyfriend, Christian Zelada, were driving on a two-lane highway at the edge of a steep canyon in Southern California on Tuesday when, they said, a woman in a white Mercedes pulled up behind them and started honking.John Gilbert of the Sheriff’s Department said it was a “miracle” that the couple had survived the plunge into Monkey Canyon in the Angeles National Forest, which was reported by the Los Angeles Times.“It was honestly strange,” Fields said, adding that although she is a “very techie kind of a person,” she had not known about the satellite feature.He said he was not aware of anyone else who had called to report the crash, “so there was a high potential they could have been stuck in the canyon after midnight.”A rescue team arrived in a helicopter, hoisted the couple out of the canyon, and took them to a hospital.He said he remembered gripping the steering wheel as the car plunged into the canyon, and Fields said she remembered him saying as the car fell: “We’re OK. We’re OK. We’re OK.”Later, Zelada said, he told Fields, “We were in the 1 in 100 million who get to walk away with our lives and our limbs.”This article originally appeared in The New York Times."