'Can you see it Mike?'
Mike adjusted his sunglasses, banked the twin turbo prop, searching through the smudges on the windshield to find the speck ahead that was the unidentified aircraft. There is was. Much lower than he expected. He pressed the transmit button. 'Yeah I got it Tony.'
He began a slow turn. The aircraft was coming in fast from the North, reflecting the overhead sun like a shooting star. The sea sparkled with such intensity it was impossible to see the usual colours of turquoise; aquamarine over the reefs and sand banks, darker blue from the deep trenches and valleys descending thousands of feet from the surface.
Mike completed his turn to the south, put the King Air into a shallow dive and opened the throttles. His airspeed wound up to 250 knots, but the airliner was coming on faster. He increased the dive and drew level with the passenger jet. It looked massive. He hit the transmit button. 'It's a German 767 Tony, Deutsche- Flug registration, delta, tango lima fox sierra.
'
'What's he doing Mike?'
Mike struggled at the controls, the King Air shuddering from the air speed and the turbulence spiralling off the 767's winglets; as tall as the tail plane on the King Air.
'Deutsche-Flug delta, tango, lima, fox sierra, respond please,' Mike heard Tony transmit on the emergency channel.
'I can't see any movement from the cockpit,' Mike said, 'struggling to keep up,' he pulled the throttles to the stops but there was no more airspeed, the 767 was drawing ahead of him, the line of windows slid passed like a train moving from a station. 'Wait!' Mike saw a hand waving, 'yeah Tony I've got someone waving, I can see a face, looks young.'
'Getting no response Mike, and he's still losing height, what you reading?'
'I got three thousand feet, for Christ sake what can I do?'
'Nothing,' Tony's voice, unemotional.
The 767 was ahead now, Mike fought the controls as the King Air swooped and rolled in the turbulence. The great rudder set into the tail fin made minute adjustments, the ailerons fluttered, everything looked normal, except the plane was sinking, like a glider having run out of thermals. He followed, his heart heavy, sweat dripping from his body, stinging his eyes, fists clenching the wheel.
Lower it sank, Mike went with it, a mile ahead now, the sunlight glinting off its sleek alloy surfaces, blending with the sparkles from the waves, until, horrifyingly, they became one in an explosion of water, an eruption of white spray like a giant geyser, higher than his altitude.
Mike gasped, 'They've gone in Tony,' he shouted. He caught up rapidly, saw the long sleek wings spike through the spray and slap the surface like whale flukes. Mike threw the King Air into a steep turn. The plane had cartwheeled and was lying on its back, one wing ripped off, the engine on the other pulling the fuselage slowly over. Mike circled, his hands slippery, his finger on the red button, transmitting a stream of shouted frustration. The top of the fuselage appeared, the nose and cockpit were missing, the tail fin was ripped off and had taken a large part of the rear fuselage. It rolled onto its side, the attached wing with the heavy engine pointing down to the depths. The surface was a mass of white: still boiling and bubbling from the impact. Detritus flowed from the innards like vomit. Suitcases, life jackets, seats, paper, and bodies - lots of them. Some seemed to be moving but he couldn't be sure it wasn't just the suck and pull of the sea rushing into the fuselage.
'Tony I've got bodies, hundreds of them,' he shouted, realising he had been holding the transmit button.
Tony came back immediately. 'Mike you Ok? Jesus, you were freaking me out.'
'Sorry Tony. Yeah I'm Ok but she's going down...Oh God all those people...'
'You see any alive?' Tony came through with a crackle of static.
'I can't tell there's ...there's life jackets.... there’s bodies, ...it was a massive impact....'
'I'm sending the patrol boat.'
'No one could have survived,' Mike said.
'We have to be sure.'
Just the side of the fuselage was visible now. Deutche-Flug painted in red remained intact, along the window line. The entrails of cables and hoses from the missing wing floated in the foaming sea like arteries from a ripped arm. Waves started washing over the white paint, blurring the company name. More stuff boiled out of the fuselage, more bodies. Then it simply went, sinking fast, the white fading into the dark blue of one of the deepest trenches in the Caribbean, the deep valley that ran from Cuba to Central America, parts of it twenty five thousand feet below the surface.
'She's gone,' Mike said quietly.
Tony did not reply immediately.
Mike still circled.
'How's the fuel?'
Mike tore his gaze away from the devastation below. 'Getting low.'
'Come on back Mike, there's nothing you can do. Samuel will find any survivors.'
Mike reluctantly levelled the King Air and headed for home. 'If they’ve survived that, they deserve to live,' Mike said.
'You know the rules Mike,' Tony said.
Despite static, Mike could hear the condescension in the man's voice. He squeezed his eyes tight, trying to shut out the hopelessness.
The island, his home for two years, 3 months, 3 weeks and 4 days, came up low on the horizon. A belt of fluffy white cumulus denoting the rise of land from the surrounding sea. Petite Brac, Brac meaning bluff, a limestone ridge rising to 1900 feet at its highest point, the top of a great mountain, its roots the edge of the valley forming the trench the broken 767 now lay in for eternity. Twenty-three miles from tip to tip, five miles at its widest. Shaped like an exclamation mark to the sea's often vehement commands.
Mike mechanically ran through his pre-landing checks. The complexity of the twin engine plane, routine. The single engine Cessna he had learnt on, a distant memory. Lower flaps, lower undercarriage, reduce throttle. No need for clearance. Tony, the island sentinel, kept watch 24 hours a day from the tower. If his radar had picked up anything other than Mike’s aircraft, he would have hit the emergency button.
The runway could take bigger aircraft than his. A concrete scar separating scrub and a saltwater marsh. Home to crocodiles, the only ones this far out from continental America, a project of some long forgotten, ne’er-do-well environmentalist. The island council had wanted to get rid of them but realised they were a big tourist attraction.
Mike adjusted his heading, lining the nose slightly off centre, making allowance for the light cross wind.
Once a plane had burst a wheel on landing and had veered into the marsh. The only fire engine had made it just before the crocs made a meal out of the pilot and co-pilot. He wondered what they were feasting on, now the tourists had stopped feeding them meat bought from kiosks lining the road into the reserve.
Mike had a vivid image of sharks and the meals they were enjoying courtesy of a German 767. He shuddered; the King Air wobbled and he flared too late, hitting the concrete hard, bouncing twice before the undercarriage settled. ‘That’ll make Mr Pete smile,’ Mike muttered.
Mr Pete, an ageing ex-island commuter pilot, and the only other person allowed to fly the aircraft, was behind him in this month’s league of perfect landings. ‘Still one ahead, you old twat,’ Mike said, watching an armed pick-up and a limousine speed out onto the apron. ‘Talking of twats...’
Petit Brac’s self-proclaimed leader, Commander Roberts, had forcefully put himself forward as the leader of their little community when the nightmare had started. He had served in NATO, his rank he claimed had been colonel, but few believed him. Then followed a spell at the United Nations before returning to the islands and getting stuck into local politics.
Mike shut down an engine passing the blackened wreckage of a light aircraft which had landed without permission a year ago. The crew, what was left of them, had been thrown in the marsh.
Commander Roberts was out of the limousine. Purple Bob he was called behind his back, on the account he loved the colour. Mike saw a flash of it as his jacket ballooned about him from the prop wash.
He stopped in front of the blue roofed terminal. A u-shaped two-story building with the control tower in the middle. Two canopied walkways shaded passengers from plane to terminal. He flicked off switches, writing his log, taking his time, trying to clear his mind. Silence except for the cooling avionics. He glanced out of the windscreen. A convey of baggage trucks in front, weeds growing up through the wheels. Left, two abandoned aircraft, one listing with a flat tyre, the other without an engine. Another pick-up was parked in the shade near the fire truck bay. He couldn't see if anyone was sitting in the cab. If there was, it would be Thompson. It wasn't his birth name, but the name of the flat-bed machine gun he lovingly kept ready for action. The wreck he had passed, had been Thompson’s doing.
There was a tap on the door, the welcoming committee were getting impatient.
Mike rolled his shoulders. He laid his headphones on top of the instrument panel, unclipped the harness and squeezed out and into the cabin. Walking down the aisle between the six executive seats, he opened the rear door, the heat always surprising him after the airplane’s aircon. He lowered the steps and climbed down to the tarmac.
Purple Bob was looking impatiently at him, his mirror glasses reflecting the dishevelled state of Mike’s sweat stained clothing. ‘Commander Roberts,’ Mike nodded.
‘Understand you had a close encounter up there,’ he put his hands on his hips revealing more of the purple shirt.
Mike pushed a hand through sticky hair. He felt lightheaded ‘No aliens. Just a 767 full of people.’
‘Tony’s briefed me,’ Roberts scowled, stepping forward, taking his cap off and revealing a smooth head which would be difficult to maintain, if, as was well known, he had not hoarded the islands stock of razors. He only came up to Mike’s chin and Mike could see the dents and trenches set into the glistening dome of his skull. It was also well known that Purple Bob was not suffering due to the rationing. His jacket was unable to close around his stomach and the shirt buttons were straining, allowing wisps of black hair to escape through the purple.
Mike glanced up at the control tower. No sign of life behind the smoked glass. He knew Tony was watching, always vigilant.
‘You perform a vital service for all of us Mike, you know we appreciate what you do?’
Mike nodded.
‘Were there any survivors?’
This was all he had come out for. Wasting the islands precious resources speeding around in the limousine just to satisfy himself that his sanctuary was safe, his dictatorship un-threatened.
Mike shook his head and bent under the aircraft, kicking chocks under the wheels, retracting the steps and shutting the door, before turning back to Purple Bob and pulling sunglasses from his shirt pocket. ‘No one could have survived that impact.’
Purple Bob studied him behind the reflective lenses before glancing off towards the pick-up that now had Thompson standing beside it. ‘Good…good, I guess we’ll know for sure when the patrol boat gets there.’ His voice was oily, like the top of his head and there was a hint that he rolled his r’s but tried to hide it behind an exaggerated speech. ‘My responsibility is to the people on this island, you know that Mike.’
Mike nodded.
‘Good…good, well, we’ll have a full meeting tomorrow once we have the report from the patrol boat. Make sure you’re there.’
Mike watched him swagger away, his door opened by the driver before his bulk disappeared into the dark, air-conditioned interior. The limousine did a slow circuit of the King Air followed by its pick-up escort before stopping beside Thompson, who bent to the rear window, looking up at Mike on a couple of occasions before straightening and half saluting as the car sped off.
‘How much fuel she got left?’ a man said, ducking under the wing. He had grey hair and beard, contrasting with the dark skin, dungarees stained with oil, tattoos on his skinny arms.
‘Not much Earl,’ Mike said checking his notebook.
‘You OK boy, y’look kind’a pale.’
Mike looked up at the smoked glass of the control tower. ‘Tony tell you?’
‘Didn’t have to, was listening on the VHF.’
Mike glanced back to Earl. ‘Then you know.’
Earl shrugged. ‘Hell of a thing Mike, nuthin’ y’could’a done,’ his tired expression seeming to collapse a little more. ‘I’ll fill her up,’ and he walked off to his lonely fuel truck.
Mike walked to the terminal in the shade of the canopy. Thompson blocked his way, scowling, hands on hips above holstered pistols, kaki vest and combat trousers covering his tall, muscled frame. Mike held up his hands, ‘not now, OK?’
Thompson’s scowl deepened. ‘Y’see any survivors?’
Mike stopped. ‘I told Purple Bob what I saw.’
‘You mean Commander Roberts,’ Thompson said darkly.
Mike nodded and side stepped passed him. ‘Samuel on the patrol boat will find out for sure,’ he shouldered open the terminal door and left Thompson staring after him.
The gloomy terminal, floor gritty with sand, outlining footprints from dim window light, did nothing to lighten his mood. The boutiques, café and duty-free shop were all shuttered, not that they had anything left inside to sell. Luggage trolleys were concertinaed by the departure door, and through the dusty glass to the departure lounge he could see a few suitcases, opened and ransacked, discarded items lay with the last time newspapers had been printed, sweet wrappers and food containers. All undisturbed for over two years, a museum to one of the islands darkest episodes.
Mike pushed open doors signed ‘security personnel only’, down a deserted corridor, the white tiles and fine sand making him feel like he was skating by the open office doors, desks still looking ready for action, through another set of doors and then climbing the concrete stairway to the control tower.
Tony was sitting behind his bank of screens, the only room that had electricity and air-conditioning, supplied by a generator secured in a concrete bunker, guarded by the ever-attentive Thompson.
Tony swivelled to face him in his chair, crossing his arms, looking over the top of his glasses, the sweep of the radar circling the screen over his shoulder. ‘Your landing was shit, Mr Pete will be pleased.’ Tony always sounded as though he had a cold, perhaps it was the air-conditioning.
Mike glanced at the chart on the wall mapping their monthly landing league. Last six months he had won every one. ‘You told Samuel what to expect?’ Mike asked.
Tony nodded, taking off his glasses and rubbing his eyes.
Mike moved over to the floor to ceiling windows. Earl had reversed the fuel truck up to the port wing to refuel. ‘I forgot to tell Earl the oil needs checking on the starboard engine,’ Mike said, resting his head against the cool glass.
There was no reply, Mike looked over his shoulder. Tony was back to looking at his radar screen, his back permanently bent, testament to his dedication, his long fingers hovering over the dials. He slept in rooms below, alarms fed to his bedside should anything stray into their protective zone whilst he slept. He had not left the airport since the beginning.
‘You hear me?’
Tony nodded.
‘I saw someone waving…from one of the windows…there was at least one person alive on that plane Tony.’
Tony fidgeted with a dial. ‘Write up your report Mike, you’ll need to tell it to the meeting tomorrow. Nothing this big’s happened in a while, they’ll want to know.’
‘You had no communication?’
Tony shook his head. ‘Tried every channel.’
‘Any idea where it might have come from?’
‘It was a 200ER so had transatlantic capability…German registration…so I’m guessing Germany, but who knows.’
‘How many passengers?’
‘250 give or take…’
‘Fuck,’ Mike sat heavily.
Tony looked up from his screen. ‘Just be glad it didn’t try landing here. This way we can’t feel responsible.’
Mike stared into the unblinking eyes behind the round lensed glasses. ‘I hope you’re meaning because the runway isn’t long enough.’
Tony felt for his mug, his fingers grabbed the handle and he gulped the contents, his Adam’s apple bobbing in his scrawny unshaven neck. He put the mug down without looking and resumed his gaze with Mike. ‘Enough reverse thrust, lot of brakes, you could get one in here.’
Mike snorted with disgust, got up and found a bottle of water in the chiller cabinet.
‘You know the rules Mike, we all agreed to them. You want a reminder, go talk to Thompson.’
Mike cracked the lid and drank. ‘When’s Pete due, I want to go home,’ he said wiping his mouth.
Tony nodded. ‘Couple of hours.’
‘I’ll be outside. Too cold in here.’
‘Remember the report.’
‘Won’t take long,’ Mike said quietly, ‘German registered 767 intercepted, no response from flight deck either via comms or visually, it ran out of fuel and glided into the Caribbean and is now a grave for 250 or so people.’
Tony turned back to his screens. ‘That’ll do. Unless Samuel finds survivors.’
Mike slammed open the door, glad for once to be out of the frigid air. He didn’t want to talk to anyone, not even Earl and went out through the small hall with the deserted check in desks, the departure board frozen in time showing the only flight that day; a Caribbean Airways 737. He had been at the airport and could still see the confused, fearful unwanted visitors, shepherded through under the glare of Thompson and his soldiers, while the steel band played, and they sucked uncertainly at their coconut cocktails.
Outside, an abandoned electric taxi in the pick-up area and a rusty minibus on flat tyres in the car park across an island of scraggy grass and palm trees.
Mike sat against a palm trunk to wait for Pete. He closed his eyes. Images immediately came flooding back. He stared across the sand drifts slowly burying the car park. He wanted to get home, back to Leah and his boy, back to something good, something wholesome. He knew he should be grateful. He was alive, they were safe, but what kind of world was waiting for them out there. Thanks to Purple Bob’s restrictions; no mobile phones, radios, internet, TV, they had done such a good job at isolating the island that no one really knew what had happened, how bad it had been; how bad it was!
Movement. A green iguana, not native like the blue, a tourist allowed to stay. It exited the terminal, searched up and down the pavement, tongue flickering towards the taxi, before scurrying away, its tail sweeping aside the blown sand. A whistling flock of once timid parrots landed in the palm above. Whatever chaos the human world was in, nature was thriving.
Mike jumped awake, startled by the ring of a bell. Sitting upright, his back aching, Mike focused on the figure astride a bike.
‘Sleeping on the job. Sackable offence,’ Mr. Pete said, his expression as serious as ever.
Mike got to his feet.
‘Tony told me what happened. Thought you’d be all edgy, but no you’re sleeping under a banana tree, like a real Brac.’
Mr. Pete had lived on the island all his life. He could follow his lineage back to the times of the first colonisers. One of the original Jones’, of which there were now hundreds. Mr Jones would simply have people asking; ‘now which Jones would that be?’ Whereas ‘Pete’, was scarce.
Mike pointed above him, ‘Coconuts Mr. Pete, not bananas,’ he smiled at the expressionless clean shaven face in shadow from the peak of his hat - he must have access to Purple Bob’s razors Mike thought, scratching his permanent stubble which he tried to keep in check by using scissors. Pete got off the bike, smoothed down the jacket of his old uniform, always pressed and never showing any sweat marks, despite the heat and the fact that he had ridden 2 miles. Most locals still struggled with riding everywhere, arriving sweat stained and grumpy.
Mr Pete handed the bike to Mike ‘So, you goin’ to tell me what happened?’
Mike shrugged. ‘Nothing much to tell, no comms from the flight deck she glided in like she was still on autopilot. Just ran out of fuel I guess.’
Mr Pete pulled a face. ‘Flight deck crew incapacitated for sure, maybe they lost cabin pressure, maybe the pilot had had enough … where they were heading was no better than where they had left. Maybe no one let them land? Kind of ironic though don’t you think?’
Mike raised the saddle and casually got onto the bike, pulling his shorts over his knees to stop them burning. ‘What is?’
‘That our only air space violation in months was German registered and there I was, only telling you yesterday about that German pilot ten years back, you know the one who had the mental problems, locking the flight deck and flying his passengers straight into the side of a mountain.’
Mike sighed. ‘Next time Mr Pete.’ He did a U-turn and pedalled away without looking back. He coasted down the access road in the tracks left by Purple Bob’s limo and turned left onto the coastal road, heading parallel to the runway, towards the western point. There was no sound except the alternating thrum of tyres on concrete and the quieter swish of sand. He passed deserted airport storage buildings, doors chained and padlocked, all useful equipment removed. A supermarket closed after its shelves had given up the last can over a year ago. Its parking lot storing useless vehicles, their shiny surfaces dulled with dust and sand.
Mike pedalled in the un-potholed middle of the road. To his right were driveways to houses commandeered by locals. Some were expensive, owned by foreigners or rich ex-pats unlucky enough not to have made it back. Clay tile roofs just visible through tropical gardens of silver thatch palm, sea grape, west Indian cedar, tamarinds, mahogany and mastic trees. Some maintained, others left to run wild, all full of bird song and vibrant tropical flowers. These were his neighbours, most friendly, a few, especially the ones like Mr Pete, harbouring resentment that he, a newbie should have been allowed to stay. He called out a hello to a woman pedalling in the opposite direction. She laboured a trike with a large basket on the rear, she waved and puffed a reply from a round, sweat glistened face.
Around a curve, a crew from the utility services were shoring up a telephone pole that had started to lean dangerously after the storm a few months back. Island communication was vital. Observation posts were manned 24 hours and had to report any sightings immediately to the governing council in the capital.
There were two thousand seven hundred and fifty-three people at the last count on the 38 square kilometre island, that was 72 people for every square kilometre, yet Mike found it eerie just how deserted it felt. People kept to themselves or in small family groups. They may have successfully protected themselves from the rest of the world, but psychologically it was certainly having an effect. Isolation was the mantra and if you could isolate yourself on an isolated island then so much the better.
A guarded Texaco station, one of Thompson’s men glared out from a converted port-a-loo, his duty to make sure the few remaining gallons of fuel were not pilfered.
The shuttered tourist information centre, the sign hanging at a drunken angle, faring better than the quadrant of shops that had all been looted in the beginning and now stood without doors or windows, toothless fronts letting in the elements, which month by month were slowly demolishing the structures.
The college used as the school for all the kids on the island. The only place that regularly saw islanders together, although still wary, keeping their distance, children running like startled foals from the gates to their parent’s clutches. During playtime he could hear the shrieks from the airport, and would often close his eyes, enjoying the normality of the moment.
A supermarket, still in use, open once a week for ration collection. Tins that had been saved, now given as luxuries, along with soap, detergents, clothes, all offered for free but under the watchful gaze of Thompson’s men.
The pillared entrance to the Grand Reef Resort, it’s expensive sand coloured render and neat brickwork still looking good but beyond the gates weeds were growing through the driveway, gardens overgrown, tennis courts covered with a haze of sand, nets sagging or lying on the ground, a golf buggy on its side by a palm. Up by the entrance, the drive swept behind what was once a pool with a fountain, to the glass doors of reception. One of Thompson’s jeeps now stood outside, a reminder that the Grand Reef Resort was headquarters for The Island Defence Western Division.
Another few hundred metres and the crushed limestone ended. Even with his sunglasses he had been dazzled by the white surface, now the baked reddish earth reflected a less intense glare. Here the islands scraggier vegetation crowded the edges of the single track. Palms, evergreen thickets, an iguana scuttling from his path, butterflies of every colour flitting between clumps of red, yellow and white flowering plants before the track ended. Ahead, sanctuary. A round wattle and daub building, famed on the island for its unique construction, sitting on replacement concrete posts rather than traditional ironwood, protecting it from high storm seas over the hundred and twenty years since it had been built. A silver thatch roof, and a dark wood veranda that ran around its circumference. Beyond, through the natural landscape of palm and sea grape was the Caribbean. Home. And as always, his fears ebbed from him.