Leah’s reaction was disappointing.
No anxious tears.
She had taken the news calmly. Hugged him while saying be careful and not take any unnecessary risks. Maybe the fact that Muckenfuss was hovering nervously nearby had made her hold back, or that one of Thompson’s men was waiting impatiently in the jeep, mirrored sunglasses doing nothing to hide his grim expression.
Either way Mike felt deflated. He searched their bedroom for a small travel bag that he remembered seeing last time they had done a clean-up. Perhaps it wasn’t such a big deal, he sighed, getting down on his knees and looking under the bed. He didn’t consider himself a brave person, or rather, he didn’t go out of his way to put himself into situations where bravery was required. Rather, situations came to him and he reacted accordingly. He had flown a plane on his own across the jungle looking for his brother when he had only just got his license. He had fought with terrorists and, Mike closed his eyes as the memories flooded through him, he had killed a man. Self-defence certainly, but he had still pulled the trigger. So maybe he was brave, which was more a spur of the moment thing, maybe it was courage he lacked, which was premeditated, planned.
Mike pinched the bridge of his nose, frowning deeply.
The driver hooted impatiently.
A spike of fear and sweat started to run down his sides. Where was that damn bag? He knew he was scared. Scared as hell for Leah and Ben. Scared that he might not see them again. There the bloody thing was! Stuffed down beside the wardrobe and wall. He pulled it free, cascading belts, shoes, and sweatshirts onto the floor. His hands were shaking as he pulled open drawers looking for a change of underwear and spare shirts. His vision blurred with the thought of not giving Ben a hug goodbye.
The driver hooted three blasts.
‘Hold your bloody horses,’ he muttered and more loudly, ‘what’s the sudden rush anyway?’
He collected his toothbrush and a small tube of travel toothpaste. He had found several boxes of them at the airport; a luxury they were grateful for every day. He zipped up his bag, took a glum look around their room and then ran downstairs.
Leah was waiting for him. She opened her arms and he dropped the bag, hugging her fiercely.
The driver gave four blasts.
Leah pulled back from his embrace and looked up at him tearfully. ‘You’ll be fine, I’m so proud of you. We talked about this day, didn’t we?’
Mike couldn’t speak.
‘It’s essential work hon, just don’t take unnecessary risks.’
Mike hid his emotion by pulling her to him again. ‘Will you give Ben a hug from me? I’m sure I’ll be back later but in case I have to lay over somewhere just tell him I’m in town, not off the island. I don’t want him being scared.’
He felt Leah nod against his chest. ‘You’ll probably be back before him,’ she sniffed loudly.
Muckenfuss appeared at the door, panting, having run up the outside stairs. ‘Come on, he’s getting angry.’
Mike kissed Leah and she put her hands behind his head, pushing their mouths harder together.
Muckenfuss sighed and Leah released him, pushing him slightly away. ‘Go,’ she said, not turning as he picked up his bag and joined Muckenfuss at the door. ‘Be safe,’ she called out, climbing the stairs.
Mike firmly settled his sunglasses as he approached the driver. He knew he was overreacting. This was just another sortie, another reconnaissance flight, something he had done a hundred times before. But there was a world of difference between flying over and landing, especially as most islands had runways barely long enough for the plane he flew.
They pulled away with scant regard for fuel economy, the rear tyres throwing up rooster tails of fine sand.
Mike looked back at their home but there was no sign of Leah.
Muckenfuss held on tightly beside him. Mike glanced over. ‘You weren’t expecting to be included, were you?’
Muckenfuss shook his head.
‘What’d you do before all this?’
Muckenfuss grimaced as the Jeep crashed through a pothole. ‘General Manager of the Brac Trading Company.’
‘You know Purple Bob before then?’
Muckenfuss glanced at the driver. ‘Minister Roberts was…is a shareholder, so I saw him at meetings.’
‘Must have given a good impression,’ Mike smiled.
Muckenfuss stared ahead. ‘I like to think I did a good job. Brac Trading was very profitable.’
‘I should think so. Heard it had a monopoly on island imports.’
They banged together as the driver slalomed banks of drifted sand.
‘We got the trade through reputation, nothing else,’ Muckenfuss said stiffly.
They were silent for the rest of the ride, finally swerving onto the airport approach road and racing down the side of the terminal, through an open gate in the chain link fence and out onto the apron, pulling to a skidding halt next to the King Air.
Thompson and three of his combat clothed men, armed with automatic rifles, holstered pistols and knifes, commando style backpacks, were standing near the rear door.
‘Thanks for the ride,’ Mike said. ‘The five minutes you saved in getting us here will make all the difference.’
A figure appeared from the terminal, her blond shoulder length hair bouncing healthily as she negotiated the cracked, uneven surface. ‘Tony said you’ll need these,’ Jude Winspear held out a case.
Mike took it from her and glanced inside. He pulled out a chart, his attention drawn to the red ink circled island.
Crooked Island.
He knew it well. Only thirty minutes away. Shaped like a rough Nike logo. Crooked Island was a few hundred metres above sea level with a coral foundation, prone to damage from hurricanes and had only ever been sparsely populated. An exclusive hotel chain had attempted to establish a resort, but the last hurricane had wiped it out and there had been no attempt to rebuild. He doubted they would find anything useful. A wasted journey and a reckless way to break their isolation.
Mike smiled brightly. ‘You coming too?’
Jude shook her head, her face dominated by large framed Prada sunglasses. ‘I’d prefer it to being stuck up there with him,’ she glanced up at the control tower. ‘Needs to keep his hands on the dials, or he’s going to lose them.’
Mike glanced at Jude’s toned legs and mini skirt. ‘I don’t think you’ll be on his radar once we’re airborne.’
She smiled sarcastically before turning and walking with care on her high heels back to the terminal.
Mike unlocked the door and lowered the steps. He glanced over his shoulder. Thompson and his men were still watching Jude.
‘Aloe, sit up front with me,’ Mike said, gesturing for him to go up the steps. ‘Right hand seat,’ he said walking away to do his visual inspection. Earl had been sitting in the shade under the far wing and got up as Mike came around the fuselage. ‘She’s fuelled up, oil checked, tyre pressure ok but starboard tread looking thin.’
Mike went over to the tyre and crouched down. It did look worn. In normal times he would have changed it but they only had one spare.
‘Mr Pete’s been trying to beat you on landings,’ Earl smiled, ‘bringing it in awful rough.’
Mike shook his head. ‘We’ll be landing with extra weight from now on, keep a close eye on it.’
‘Ahuh,’ Earl said, following Mike, ‘ain’t going nowhere unless we get some fuel real soon.’
‘I know,’ Mike checked the alerions moved without hindrance. ‘Put the syphon pump in the rear baggage locker. If we land and I find some, I’ll fill her tanks.’
‘Ahuh,’ Earl said, ‘you know good fuel from bad?’
Mike glanced at him; grey eyebrows raised questioningly.
‘Fuel goes off just like everything else,’ Earl said.
‘You want to come?’ Mike said.
‘Ahuh, don’t think they’ll mind,’ he thumbed at the control tower. ‘She’s too important to lose,’ Earl stroked the fuselage along the black and red stripe curving down from her rudder separating the beige painted underside and her white upper works.
Mike ran an experienced eye over the aircrafts high T-tail, looking for any signs of stress or fracture, proud to be her pilot considering he only learnt to fly a few years ago. ‘Remove the chocks, grab the syphon pump and climb aboard, the more the merrier.’
Thompson and his men were lounging in the executive leather seats, their weapons propped between their legs. ‘Check safeties boys, don’t want bullet holes through the pressurised hull.’
He dropped into the left-hand seat. Muckenfuss was already buckled up, sweat spreading across his shirt. ‘You like flying?’ Mike said, starting to run through his pre-flight checks; landing gear handle – down, parking brake – set …
'Never been in anything this small…with an unqualified pilot.’
Mike glanced at him; circuit breakers – checked, oxygen pressure – checked… ‘who told you that?’, flaps – extended, emergency exit – unlocked …
‘Who do you think?’ Muckenfuss said, nervously following Mike as he flicked switches and checked dials.
Mike looked back into the cabin.
Earl climbed aboard, closing and locking the door. He put a thumb up and sat in the nearest vacant seat.
Mike started running through the prestart check list. ‘Mr Pete’s a good pilot but he’s not winning the landing contest,’ Mike grinned.
‘Landings aren’t worrying me,’ Muckenfuss said.
‘They should. Take-off and landing, most dangerous bit,’ Mike started the right hand, then left hand engines, the frame shaking and wobbling as the propellers roared into life, the sudden noise shocking. Mike motioned for Muckenfuss to put his headphones on and drop the mike to cover his mouth. ‘Can you hear me?’ Mike said.
Muckenfuss nodded.
After a few minutes, satisfied everything was reading normal, Mike looked out at the deserted apron, glanced left, right and let the King Air move forward, checking breaks and flight controls. He pressed the red transmit button. ‘You up there Tony?’
‘You didn’t get permission to taxi,’ Tony’s voice came back immediately.
‘You going to wait to let some tumble weed roll by?’
‘Procedure Mike, we’ve got people watching.’
Mike shook his head. ‘Go ahead tower, tell me if it’s clear for take-off?’
‘Brac Tower, King Air two zero zero, ready for take-off IFR runway two niner, winds two eight zero at eleven, cleared for take-off.’
Really! Mike looked scornfully at Muckenfuss already ridged in his seat, knuckles white as they clamped the armrests, expression severe.
‘Are…are you not going to reply?’ he stammered.
Mike took a deep breath, stamped on the break and swung the King Air to line up at the end of the runway. ‘Cleared for take-off runway two niner, King Air two zero,’ he said and opened the throttles.
The sleek turbo prop surged forward, the four propeller blades on each engine grabbing slabs of air and throwing it backwards over the wings as they accelerated down the wide expanse of concrete. Quickly, Mike felt the flight controls become alive as gravity relinquished its hold. He lifted the nose and they were sucked upwards, Muckenfuss making a strangling sound in his headphones, throttles still wide open, gear up, Mike banked to port, feeling the g-force on his body and Muckenfuss groaning loudly beside him.
Mike levelled out. ‘Brac Tower, King Air two zero zero, one thousand climbing six thousand.’
‘Was that really necessary?’ Muckenfuss said weakly.
Mike glanced at him, the cockpit filling with the sour smell of the man’s sweat. ‘No, but people are watching,’ he grinned.
Tony’s voice sounded irritated. ‘You know the way Mike. I’ll be watching. Let me know when you’ve landed so I don’t have to alert Island Defender to go look for the pieces.’
‘Thanks for the confidence boost Tony,’ Mike said, turning in the climb to the correct heading and levelling off at six thousand feet, reducing engine power.
‘Should be there in fifteen minutes.’ You want to have a go?’
Muckenfuss shook his head, still clenching the armrest.
Mike checked instruments, adjusted settings, the routine procedures settling his fears. His body relaxing, his mind pushing back the black thoughts as he took in the aquamarine shades of sea and cobalt sky studded with puffs of white cloud. He felt again, this was his natural domain and wished he had discovered it earlier. He wasn’t officially qualified to fly a twin engine aircraft as sophisticated as the King Air, but he knew he flew it well and it felt an extension of himself, like a natural racing driver, this was where he should be.
Ten minutes later, Crooked Island appeared as a smudge on the horizon. He started his descent, planning on giving the island a once over at two thousand feet before another low pass to check the strip was clear. He also wanted to surprise anyone who might be there and throttled the engines back another notch, gliding towards their destination on minimum power and noise. Thompson had binoculars and started searching as soon as they were over the island, the large circular window giving him excellent vision.
He reported no sign of human activity. Mike was not surprised.
The island was covered in scrub vegetation with pockets of taller trees and palm groves and a few dilapidated buildings. It was ringed with a wide reef and a crescent shaped white beach in the crook of the ‘tick’, fronting the ruined mass of the hotel. A sandy track wound along the centre of the island from the hotel to the landing strip.
Mike lost more altitude, watching for seabirds. He circled the landing strip. He knew it was long enough but the extra weight on board made it tight. Also, the surface was of crushed coral requiring a longer run out than the concrete he was used to.
‘Do we have to land,’ he asked Muckenfuss.
Muckenfuss was unable to respond.
Mike turned onto approach, lowering flaps, bringing the airspeed down to almost stalling. The King Air wallowed. He worked the controls, sweat forming on his face. He had to put her down near the threshold. The outer reef passed under the nose, then the rough coral studded foreshore, scrub then a dangerously tall palm that brushed the undercarriage, before he dropped the aircraft, forcing the rear wheels to bang down a few metres in from the start of the runway. Mike pulled back on the throttles, changing the angle on the propellers so they pushed back, helping the aircraft slow in reverse thrust and saving the brakes. The surface was slippery, and he worked the rudder to keep her straight, coming to a stop fifty metres short. There was no taxiway or apron, so he turned on the runway and faced back the way they had come, the scene obliterated by a cloud of dust. Mike shut down the engines and glanced back at his passengers. Only Earl looked comfortable.
‘Gentlemen, welcome to Crooked Island you may now unfasten your seatbelts, make sure you take everything with you and get the hell off my plane,’ Mike smiled shakily.
Thompson hid his fear with a fierce scowl.
Earl opened the door and immediately the cabin filled with humid tropical air.
Mike glanced at Muckenfuss still clamped to the armrests. ‘Ready?’
'The…the take-off…is that going to be…’ Muckenfuss with effort, relaxed his hand and pointed out through the cockpit to the runway, as it gradually reappeared through the settling dust.
‘Be careful what you decide to bring back. Too much weight and we won’t clear that,’ Mike looked seriously at the lone palm, outlined against the sky, giving him a finger to his chances of a successful take off.
Muckenfuss nodded emphatically and Mike helped him undo his harness. He followed him out to stand behind the defensive cordon Thompson’s men had formed.
‘You with me,’ Thompson said, looking at Muckenfuss. ‘One of my men stays with you,’ he pointed at Mike and Earl. ‘Search all the buildings around here.’
Mike made a mock salute and Thompson stiffened. Mike realised he should not rile the guy; he was way too dangerous, but he was such a prick. He had felt safe doing so up to now because they needed his flying skills, but things were changing.
Mike looked at his Rolex. 2pm. ‘We can’t leave after dusk,’ he called after them.
They didn’t respond.
Mike wiped his forehead with the back of his hand and accepted a cap Earl handed him. The nearest building was at the end of a path leading directly from the runway. It looked like a bus shelter with a square block and tin roof house attached behind. Some of the corrugated roof sheets were missing. Constructed possibly to serve as a terminal for the hotel passengers. ‘Let’s get this over with,’ Mike said, leading the way.