Mike was instantly awake.
None of that feeling of hiding under the duvet or wishing for another hour.
Without electricity his body had returned to the natural rhythm of life. Without lights, alarm clocks, radios, TV’s and the myriad of devices that monitored and controlled the days, he had adjusted to going to bed when it got dark and awakening with dawn. Simple harmony with the natural environment. There was daily stress and anxiety from the virus threat and yesterday’s encounter had been an exceptional strain. Overall, he was enjoying life, which under the circumstances, often made him feel uncomfortable.
Mike sat and bunched the pillow under his back. Through the open doors, beyond the balcony the sky had yet to receive its colour injection from the sun, the palm heads still black silhouettes. He could hear the swish of waves on the sand below and the feeding cries of seabirds heading out to sea. He turned his head and felt a surge of wellbeing. Leah’s hair, wild on the pillow behind her, a stray strand over her serene face moving gently with her breathing. Her eyelashes fluttered briefly from his movement or as a brief dream travelled through her.
For the thousandth time he wondered what would have happened if Leah hadn’t persuaded him to come back to the island. Would he still be alive? He would have returned to England, and from the censored news they received, it appeared one of the worst hit countries. The thought brought images of his family. Had they caught it? Had they been given the barbiturate, paralytic and potassium solution, commonly known as the lethal injection, now sanctioned by the World Health Authorities, to relieve the dying from the last few days of agony. Their island had none. If the disease arrived, there would be no escape from the full horror. The massive blood loss, the sight of Leah or Ben bleeding from eyes, ears, gums, nose and rectum, plus the agonising internal haemorrhaging almost had him in tears, the bed sheets bunched in his fists.
Angry that he had allowed his contentment to be broken, he threw off the sheet and walked naked across the wooden floor, sliding back the fly screen as quietly as possible. He breathed deeply the clean air, filling his senses with the natural order of things –sea, sky, land. Wholesome, dependable things that could never be affected by the death and suffering humankind was experiencing. He went to the corner of the balcony and urinated, his stream absorbed by the sand below.
Leah was still asleep, but he could hear stirrings from the back bedroom. He put on boxers and a t-shirt and peeked in. Ben was sitting up in bed, swooshing a Spiderman doll through the air. ‘Mornin’ gorgeous,’ Mike whispered.
‘Hi Daddy,’ Ben said, jumping out of bed and running to him.
Mike scooped him up in his arms and gave him a fierce hug. ‘You sleep ok?
’
‘Yes Daddy, but my tummy’s aching.’
‘Oh no,’ Mike said, his face buried in his son’s sweet-smelling hair. ‘Is it aching because it’s sore or because it’s empty and needs breakfast?’
‘Breakfast, because I’m only full up to here,’ Ben said, pointing to the top of his legs.
‘Alrighty then, let’s see what we have.’
‘Can I bring Spiderman?’
‘Ahuh,’ Mike carried him down the stairs, the light strengthening sufficiently to see where he was going. He sat him on a bar stool and poured a small glass of rationed milk from the mini-bar sized fridge. They had acquired it from the Grand Reef Resort when they realised their solar power was not up to running the American sized beast now used for fruit storage. He sliced banana, kiwi, pineapple and coconut into a bowl.
‘Daddy’s going to take you to school today ok?’
Ben looked at him, his trusting innocent gaze absorbing the information. ‘But I want mummy to.’
Mike sat next to him with his own bowl of fruit. ‘Daddy’s got a meeting in town so it’s easier if I take you.
‘Can I bring Spiderman?’
‘You know what happened last time.’
Ben crashed Spiderman on the countertop catching the edge of his bowl and spilling fruit across the surface.
‘Morning,’ Leah said through a yawn, shuffling into the kitchen and automatically scooping the fruit back into the bowl. She kissed them both before going to the stove, lighting the gas burner from a match and settling the kettle over the flame. It was a luxury they couldn’t afford, gas being in critically short supply, but what the hell, once it was gone it was gone. Mike watched her staring at the flame, hands on her hips, a t-shirt just covering her buttocks, her tousled hair falling to her shoulders. ‘You got anything planned today?’ he asked.
She didn’t look round from filling the coffee percolator. ‘My turn to help Sally out down at the allotment,’ her shoulders sagged, a job she hated. ‘Also need to check over Diving Belle, it’s been a week since her engines were started.’ A job she relished.
Mike nodded. ‘I’ll come find you after the meeting.’
Mr George arrived an hour later, ringing his bell. His customised electrically assisted trike had three belted seats over the rear wheels. He had done the rounds and Ben was his last pick up. Leah was nervous over Mr George’s riding skills and would often escort him on her own bike. Mike argued it defeated the purpose but she countered the islands hospital wasn’t up to much and it was wise to be over cautious.
‘I’ll take Ben this morning,’ Mike called down from the veranda.
Mr George, chest heaving, sweat lining his forehead below his scruffy cap, looked disappointed. He hawked up saliva and spat into the sand at his feet. ‘Battery fully charged Mike, no chance of a break-down today.’
Mike smiled. ‘Purple Bob wants me at a meeting.’
Mr George’s brow furrowed. ‘Bout that plane yesterday?’
Mike nodded.
‘Bad news for us?’
‘I didn’t see any survivors,’ Mike said.
Mr George took a cloth from his back pocket and wiped his face. ‘Poor souls,’ he waved the rag at Mike, his bare feet straining on the pedals to get the trike moving.
‘Come on,’ Mike said, as Ben’s head appeared below him.
‘Ok Daddy,’ Ben ran for the stairs.
‘Slow up,’ Mike chased after him.
He missed the last step and face planted the sand. For a moment he lay perfectly still, assessing the situation, then let out a howl.
Mike picked him up, brushing sand from where it had stuck to his tears, before putting his cap back into place.
‘What happened?’ Leah called down.
Mike laughed at Ben’s distraught expression. ‘Hey come on, wasn’t that bad,’ persuading him to wave and blow a kiss before buckling him into the child seat and pedalling off, thankful for the coolness of the morning as Ben’s extra weight sank the tyres into the loose sand.
‘My knee’s got a ouchie,’ Ben complained.
‘I’ll get Mrs Honey to put cream on it,’ Mike grunted with the effort as the road made a gentle ascent out of the bay. Ben started to cry with the thought of it stinging. Mike reached for the water bottle and handed it back to him. ‘Drink, it’ll make you feel better.’ It didn’t. He whinged for the remaining half hour ride only perking up when he saw Will, his best friend. Mike thankfully unbuckled Ben and leant his bike against the high wire fence.
Will’s mum was helping him with his helmet. She had won the Miss Petit Brac competition a decade ago and still walked like she was moving down a catwalk. Her husband had left her a year before the disaster. Now so the gossipers said, her house was a swinging haven, where those on the island went for relief from the stifling isolation and boredom. It was rumoured even Purple Bob was a frequent visitor. She waved at Mike. ‘Mornin’ Mr Mike, how’re you today?’ she smiled sweetly.
Mike could never remember her name. He waved in reply, letting go of Ben’s hand who immediately ran to Will, swooping Spiderman across his face. Will let out a yell and followed Ben in through the gate, racing across the dusty yard and towards the main entrance of the square pink painted building. The ‘ouchie’ long forgotten. Mike willed him to turn and wave goodbye. Will’s mother was beside him and laid a hand on his arm. ‘They’ll be ok.’
Mike continued staring at the deserted entrance.
‘They feel safe, that’s a good thing,’ Will’s mum said, still with her hand on his arm.
Mike nodded.
‘You know, I hardly know you two and you both do such important work on the island, why don’t you come for a visit?’
‘That’s kind ahh…’
‘Serena.’
‘Serena… sorry. I’ll talk to Leah.’
‘Great Mike. We’re having a party Friday, you two would make it special.’
Mike had an image of Leah being chatted up by half naked swingers and felt a wave of jealousy.
‘Don’t worry Mike, rumours aren’t all true,’ she winked and left, her arse hard to ignore in close-fitting jeans. He had to admit she still had a good body and her sashaying walk seemed almost natural.
He glanced at his watch. A Rolex Vintage Chronograph. Sent as a birthday present from his father just before the courier companies collapsed. Hand wound, it was one of the few on the island still working. He wondered if father had known what was coming and had sent him the most useful thing he had? Leah said it was worth a fortune, too good to wear for everyday use. Maybe he had sent it as a peace offering? Mike suppressed the thought.
An hour before the meeting.
The street was now deserted. The parents melting away to their homes or places of duty. The quiet, complete. No vehicles, clattering a/c units, construction; just the chirrup of insect and occasional bird twitter. He could be the last human on earth. Then there was a burst of children cheering from a classroom and he smiled, the world was far from over.
Mike rode down a side road, passing boarded up boutiques and tourist shops, sand already filling the doorways, vegetation creeping up the walls, along the shingle roofs. The only maintained building was the General Store, a weathered, yellow boarded building, with twin gables and big windows facing onto the parking lot. Usually stuffed full of anything an islander could want, today there was a single bike outside and the windows were sparse. A display of second-hand clothes, books, some odd tools and kitchen utensils.
Mike stood his bike in the stand next to the other and walked in. The shelves were half full of second-hand stuff that people brought in for exchange. There were no essential items like fuel, batteries, food, water or medicine; these was carefully monitored and distributed by Purple Bob and his cronies.
‘Mr. Mike, good to see you darlin,’ a fat woman said, looking up from the floor where she was kneeling in front of a shelf, adjusting a stack of jigsaw puzzle boxes.
‘Marie, how’re you doing?’
She held up her hand and Mike helped pull her up. ‘Ain’t getting any trimer that fo’sure,’ she laughed, white teeth in a moon shaped face. ‘You lookin’fo’anything?’
‘Don’t think so, just came in to read the latest news.’
‘Ahuh, well you know where it is.’
The General Store’s bulletin board posted news received via the only working radio and TV on the island. Controlled by Purple Bob, it was heavily censored and concentrated on the chaos, collapse of governments, riots and in some regions, war. Designed to keep fear high and the population malleable.
‘This it?’ Mike called out, staring at the single sheet of A4 pinned to the middle of the cork board. It was a typed summary. Bullet points of misery. Some populations had suffered more than others. Genetic or the way people lived, Mike was not sure. It seemed the Chinese had been least affected. Still losing hundreds of thousands but they had started from a huge base. With brutal authoritarian control, they had managed to contain the outbreak getting outside the major cities, enabling them to keep their essential industries and military intact, giving them a perfect opportunity to settle old scores. Taiwan and now Japan were in a desperate war. It looked like Taiwan had been beaten and Japan was on its knees, already crippled by the disease.
North had already destroyed South Korea with China’s help.
Russia was moving military along its border with Europe. It too had contained the virus more effectively than western countries by imposing strict controls and ignoring human rights. The military controlled all human movement.
Africa was an unknown, little news seemed to be coming from the birthplace of the virus. The whole continent had been quarantined by the rest of the world. No one got in or out and any that did were swiftly dealt with. Europe’s humanitarian efforts over the decades with fleeing refugees across the Mediterranean had been swiftly reversed. Patrol boats and navy ships now sank anything coming from the continent that refused to turn back to where it had come from.
The oil supply collapse meant many countries in Europe were without a regular power supply. Those with nuclear were faring better which included the UK but there was nothing on this sheet from his home country.
Eight months ago, an Anglophile neighbour had leaked news from unreleased information held in Purple Bob’s office, that the outbreak in the UK had been stabilised by the implementation of a rigorous quarantine system, essential industries and the NHS had been kept going, and the government had managed to keep control with the help of the armed forces, although recent rioting had been vicious and widespread. The news had sounded hopeful but the hope of receiving regular updates disappeared, along with the neighbour.
The United States had firebombed an entire neighbourhood in New Orleans where the civil unrest had reached an uncontrollable level, Mike read, shaking his head with disbelief and glancing at his watch. He better go.
Marie glanced over from the counter. ‘Y’shouldn’t be reading that, it’s a beautiful day.’
Mike shrugged.
Marie smiled. ‘Ain’t all bad, heard there’s good news too, just them,’ she thumbed out the door, ‘don’t want us to hear it.’
‘You heard any more about a vaccine?’
Marie’s smile broadened. ‘Rumours,’ she threw up her hands, ‘don’t matter none, how they gonna’ get it out to everyone? Ain’t so easy now.’
‘I could go and pick it up.’
Marie’s smile slipped from her face. ‘Dangerous talk Mike. Mean some of us would have to give up what we’ve become.’
‘I would happily give up being a pilot,’ Mike grinned.
‘It ain’t you I’m talking about,’ Marie laughed. ‘You have a good day Mr Mike.’
Mike got on his bike, a lightness about him. This will not last forever. A vaccine will be found if it hasn’t already. The world will return to normal.
He cycled quickly to the perimeter road and turned left. The airport frontage looked its abandoned new normal, but he knew Tony was up there, watching. The road jinked around a shipping container and timber yard, guarded by one of Thompson’s men, distribution sheds, one of which had burnt down a year ago destroying most of the islands supply of paint and DIY materials. Mike could feel the heat bouncing off the road surface, it was going to be a hot one.
An island defence jeep rattled by, the driver giving a casual wave.
Undeveloped land and the palms lining the road on either side gave welcome shade. They merged with a row of small colonial style buildings, fading tropical colours, verandas with hammocks, some occupied and he was greeted with a lazy wave, neat gardens full of flower and birdsong. Civilisation; except there was nothing running through the looping overhead power and telephone cables and the few parked cars were covered in thick layers of dust.
His shirt was sticking to him by the time he entered the main town for Petit Brac. Plymouth’s narrow twisting streets built around a natural bay sheltered on two sides by limestone bluffs, dated back to the time of pirates, when the port became infamous as a hangout for rogue captains looking to plunder the Spanish shipping from South America. Then the British had seized it and started transforming the slum and hovels into something more substantial, building over the millennia, churches and civic buildings, like the town hall, the government building, the islands museum, the hospital. Gaining in prosperity the buildings became grander and more permanent and then when it became an official tax haven and the super-rich moved in, so did the boutiques, the estate agents the banks and shady financial companies hiding behind office blocks of reflective glass.
Mike’s reflection ballooned and contracted in the angles of glass, the deserted buildings and roads maintained by gangs of unpaid labour. For the day when things returned to normal? Or to prevent bored minds questioning Purple Bob’s authority? Mike thought the latter as he acknowledged a workman waving him safely by a road crew repairing a broken drain.
Mike again had that uncomfortable, guilty feeling of enjoying how things were. The town empty of traffic and hustling, suited people. The absence of business and making money. The atmosphere was relaxed, pressure off. He entered Harbour Road with its broad promenade lined with palm trees and tended gardens, the harbour to his left, with an assortment of pleasure craft on pontoons and restaurants, boutiques and tourist shops on his right. There was a sprinkling of people to prevent the place feeling completely like a ghost town.
A few shops were open selling exchanged items and a different restaurant a week could open, allowing the owners to gain credits to use elsewhere. This week it was Rudie’s. He’d let Leah know; it was her favourite. Even in these times his Brac Style Lobster was the best it had ever been. The only downer was Purple Bob and his cohorts would dine at the chosen restaurant every evening.
A man was unloading fish from a sailing boat tied stern-to the harbour wall. Diesel fishing vessels were banned so fishermen had commandeered private sailing boats to keep the main source of fresh meat coming.
Little Brac’s government building occupied a whole block behind lush gardens off Harbour Road. An impressive, two-storey, nineteenth century limestone block building with one of the few tiled roofs on Petit Brac. Painted a mustard yellow, with white painted windows and frames and four elegant columns holding an ornate portico which Purple Bob’s limousine was parked under. Mike propped his bike in the stand with the others.
Inside was cool, his footsteps echoing off the polished limestone. A woman with Beth on her name badge looked up behind the reception desk and gave her best administerial stare. ‘Help you?’
‘Morning Beth, meeting with Commander Roberts,’ Mike smiled.
‘Name?’
Mike suppressed an urge to tell her she knew damn well who he was and gave his name.
Beth looked down a list, nodded curtly, stood, smoothed down her dark skirt and buttoned her jacket. ‘Follow me Mr. Huntley.’
‘That’s OK, I know the way,’ Mike said.
‘Sure y’do Mr Huntley, but all non VIP’s have to be escorted,’ Beth said, each dimple on her buttocks clearly visible through the stretched material, as her heels clicked across the floor.
The first-floor meeting room, normally used for government debate, was arranged with a main table facing two tiers of seats each with a microphone activated by a red button. The coverings were worn green leather, the woodwork polished hardwoods. An ornate chandelier dominated the space above.
A generator must be working overtime Mike thought, noting that the ornate Victorian styled wall lights were on, despite one side of the room having floor to ceiling windows and Mike could feel the soft breeze from air conditioning.
Behind the throne, which is what it looked like to Mike, was a huge painting of the man himself, the purple shirt dominating the canvas. The stern yet tolerant expression captured by the artist, matched the real thing sitting below.
‘Ah there you are,’ Purple Bob said, looking pointedly at his watch, a plum in the middle of grey suits. Mike felt scruffy in his shorts and Hawaiian style green patterned shirt, thinking he should have made more of an effort.
‘Take a seat Mike,’ Purple Bob waved his hand to the empty seats.
Mike slid into the one closest to him and Purple Bob looked annoyed he hadn’t chosen one front and centre. ‘Ok, we’ve got a lot to get through,’ he looked again at his watch. ‘In case you’d forgotten, this is Spencer Suckoo, deputy defence, his sister as you know is the defence chief but she’s out on Island Defender, Cyril Roberts island security,’ and also your son, Mike thought, ‘Aloe Muckenfuss, island supplies and Jude Winspear tactical strategy.’
Purple Bob fixed Mike with a stare, his bald head glistening.
Mike sat up. ‘Good morning,’ he said unfolding his arms and lacing his fingers together on the table in front of him.
‘Can we have your report on the encounter with the plane yesterday,’ Purple Bob said, nodding to a secretary who had suddenly appeared from a side door and sat on the end, opening a laptop.
Mike retold the encounter without preamble, anxious to get it over with.
There were no interruptions.
‘No survivors?’ Cyril Roberts said.
Mike shook his head; he had not told them about the figure he thought he had seen waving from one of the windows. He couldn’t be arsed going through the cross-examination he knew would follow and anyway what did it matter, there was no way anyone could have survived the impact.
Cyril looked at his father who nodded imperceptibly. ‘Island Defender has reported a survivor being found.’
Mike felt himself blush, sweat broke out under his arms. ‘That…that’s impossible.’
'Ahuh,’ Cyril Roberts said darkly. ‘But you saw no sign of life?’
‘I, I couldn’t keep up with it for long, it was…like looking into a carriage of a fast-moving train.’
‘Did you get a chance to see into the cockpit?’
Mike shook his head. ‘There was a lot of sun reflection, I was trying to avoid the turbulence…things happened very quickly… that was my first air to air interception. Was like trying to survey an oil tanker from a rowing boat.’
None of them showed any empathy.
‘How old was the survivor?’ Mike asked.
Cyril went still. ‘Curious thing to ask?’
Mike could feel his face burning.
‘I…I umm, was just thinking of my son…you know, the crash was bad enough but to be a child and survive it must have been…’
Cyril was a younger version of his father. Close cropped dark hair, round well-fed face with deep set, squinting eyes connected by a deep line across the bridge of his nose and deeper lines to the corners of his down turned mouth. He stabbed the desk with a thick finger. ‘You should be thinking of this meeting, not your son.’
‘Sorry,’ Mike said quietly, forgetting to push the button.
‘The age of the survivor is of no concern to you and it had been dealt with according to our protocols,’ Cyril Roberts snapped.
Mike wiped away sweat and pitied Samuel on Island Defender following ‘protocol’.
Purple Bob held up his hand and smiled at Mike. ‘We’d appreciate if you kept that piece of information confidential.’
Mike nodded stiffly.
‘I don’t think there is anything else you can add to what we already know, so, we have something else to discuss with you,’ his smile broadened even more, ‘something that is of national importance and makes you a very vital person to the…the well-being of this island.’
Mike’s stomach tightened.
‘Mr Muckenfuss, if you please,’ Purple Bob said.
Aloe Muckenfuss leant forward. ‘Mr. Huntley, for a few months now the islands stocks of essential items have been running dangerously low. We have cut back and implemented emergency rationing where we can but we cannot help the fact that if we do not source new supplies we are going to run out of fuel, medicines and essential foods.’
‘We need you to fly reconnaissance missions to locate new supplies,’ Jude Winspear said, having received a nod from Purple Bob. ‘First, we need to check out our closest neighbours, some we know are still occupied, we will avoid those for the moment. Others we have not heard from and these are the ones we want you to concentrate on.’
Mike could feel his heart thumping. Shit! ‘I…I wouldn’t see much from the air… wouldn’t it be better to send Island Defender?’
‘This is not a debate,’ Cyril Roberts shouted.
His father rested a hand on his arm, still smiling at Mike. ‘Remember you were lucky to stay on this island. You have been protected and now you need to pay back our…generosity,’ Purple Bob’s smile was more menacing than Cyril’s glare and Mike dropped his gaze to the tabletop.
‘The islands we have selected all have runways capable of landing your aircraft, ‘Jude Winspear went on after another nod from Purple Bob. ‘You will circle the island to see if there is any sign of life and then land to investigate if any supplies are available.’
‘Much quicker than sending a boat,’ Purple Bob said.
‘People can hide from the air. What if I land and they suddenly appear, overwhelm me, take over the plane?’
‘You will not be alone, you will have Thompson and some of his men with you,’ Cyril said, sitting back, enjoying Mike’s obvious discomfort. ‘So, you need not be scared.’
Mike told himself he wasn’t scared it was the threat to his comfortable routine that was making him desperate. ‘But the plane is too small to bring much back.’
‘That is why we are calling it reconnaissance,’ Cyril said sarcastically. ‘We will send a boat for anything you find.’
‘We don’t have much aviation fuel left,’ Mike said.
‘That is one of the things we hope you find,’ Aloe Muckenfuss said, holding up a sheet of paper. ‘These are the things we want you to concentrate on looking for.’
‘What about Mr Pete, he’s been flying longer than me, he’s more experienced and knows all the islands,’ Mike said, hating the desperation he could hear in his voice.
‘Exactly,’ Jude Winspear said, ‘and if we have to extend our reconnaissance we will have to rely on that expertise, but for the moment we feel…’ she glanced at Purple Bob, ‘it wiser if you fly to the nearest islands.’ She also held up a piece of paper. ‘These are the islands we want you to look at.’
Mike did not move, so the secretary leapt from her seat and hurriedly took the papers from Muckenfuss and Winspear over to Mike. He didn’t look at them. ‘When?’ he said.
‘Immediately, this afternoon,’ Purple Bob said, suddenly getting out of his seat and walking around the table. He strode up to Mike holding out his hand, beaming. ‘Mike, Mike, Mike, I know this is a shock but there are two thousand people depending on you. You will be our island’s saviour, forever remembered, praised,’ he squeezed, and Mike tried not to wince, ‘and you will truly be considered one of us.’
‘I need to tell my wife…and my son,’ Mike said.
‘Of course, of course,’ his voice boomed around the meeting room. ‘Take a government jeep. In fact, he turned and looked back at the four still seated, ‘I’ve decided that Mr. Muckenfuss should accompany you, I think it unfair for you to try and search a whole island on your own.’
Aloe Muckenfuss appeared to shrink in his suit. Of Indian decent, black curly hair, narrow face, close set dark eyes either side of a pointed nose. ‘We…we haven’t discussed this Minister Roberts. If…anything should happen who would look after the inventory?’
‘You have done such a good job detailing everything Mr Muckenfuss, anyone could do it,’ Purple Bob cried, clapping his hands together and looking back at Mike, a gleam in his eye. ‘Jude will make sure everything is planned and will meet you at the airport in let’s say, ‘he looked at his watch, ‘three hours’ time. She will be your point of contact and will be staying at the tower with Tony to oversee the whole operation.’
Judging by her expression this was a surprise to Jude Winspear but decided it was not in her interest to protest. Her pale cheeks took on a pink hue, she pushed a curl of blond hair behind one ear as she nodded a little too enthusiastically. She was attractive, and Mike had heard one of Bob’s favourites.
‘Good, excellent, I’ve got to go pee but good luck everyone,’ he started marching to the door, ‘Jude, Cyril make sure I’m kept up to speed 24/7’
The door slammed shut leaving them all except Cyril, looking breathless and confused.
Spencer Suckoo who hadn’t said anything, stood, buttoning up his jacket. ‘The Island Defender is expected in soon, I had better go.’
‘You do that,’ Cyril said, ‘make sure your sister has done her job properly and that boat is thoroughly washed down.’
Spencer left looking agitated.
‘Aloe, you go with him,’ Cyril leered at Mike, ‘make sure he gets to the airport.’
‘Have I done something wrong?’ Mike asked.
‘Not yet,’ Cyril grinned unpleasantly. ‘Be very careful Mr Mike, if you become contaminated you know…our protocols.’
Aloe Muckenfuss came over to Mike. The top of his head level with Mike’s shoulder. His handshake was limp, a nervous smile. ‘We better go.’
Mike nodded, his feeling of well-being a distant memory. Why should he do anything for these people? Because they had allowed him to stay. Others with greater rights, had been forced onto that last jet to leave the island. He was lucky Leah had been so well respected. He should have realised that at some stage there would be payback. He followed Aloe Muckenfuss out of the room, feeling Cyril Robert’s cold stare drilling into the back of his head.