Wayne,
Here's my stock answer:
Whenever a liquid spill occurs the first thing that has to happen is the laptop should be shut down immediately. All power must be removed as soon as possible. It is especially important that the battery be disconnected and removed.
All affected parts must be removed from the laptop. No attempt should be made to start/restart the computer since this could potentially damage the logic board beyond all repair.
Then all affected parts would be washed in deionized water and blown dry with compressed air. (In a water spill the deionized water is probably not as critical. Depends on the mineral content of the water.).
This is especially true of the large chips on the logic board. Liquid can wick under them and cause havoc for weeks if not months after the incident.
The logic board should be placed in a drying/dehumidifing oven for at least two days. Longer depending on the spill.
The keyboard is a separate matter."
"Is there a way to remove the hard drive and power it up externally to recover the data?
PLEASE NOTE: DO NOT tell me to remove the drive and put it in an enclosure, that won't work for the 2014 MacBook Air!"
OK Wayne that's a mutually contradictory statement! What I''ll say is that given the current state of the technology the only sure way to do what you ask is to remove the PCIe based SSD and put it into a working identical MacBook Air.
However, given that you attempted to start the machine and the PCIe SSD is not a sealed unit, the chances that that SSD is dead are greatly increased.
If it is possible I'm sure OWC would know:
http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/SSD/OWC
I'd call their tech support.