‘What’s your name?’ Mike asked Thompson’s soldier.
He shifted the rifle held across his skinny chest, ‘Dexter boss.’
‘Dexter, I’m Mike, this’s Earl. You happy to go first?’
Dexter had a young, infectious smile. ‘I guess so.’
Dexter regarded the building in front of them, tugging hair, cut in a line under his chin. It looked like a draft excluder, Mike thought, watching Dexter then nervously adjust his stained bush hat balanced on a mass of dreadlocks.
‘You sure you’re ok with this?’ Mike looked doubtfully at Earl.
Dexter transferred his fidgeting to the recycled belt that acted as a rifle sling. ‘Ahuh.’
Mike shrugged and waved him on. ‘Let’s go, see what we can find.’
They advanced slowly down the side wall. Bits of timber, glass and plastic crackled under foot. They reached a window with a rotten glassless frame. A scuffling from inside and the three crouched down, backs against the flaky render.
Dexter’s tongue ran nervously along his lower lip. He clicked the safety off.
From inside there was a scraping of wood and then a clang, and the sound of metal rolling across the floor.
‘We should get the others,’ Mike whispered.
Dexter looked at his dusty boots for a moment and then at Mike, shaking his head with as much determination as he could summon. He signalled for them to stay and crabbed forward to the corner of the building. He hesitated for longer than was necessary and then took a quick look, before pulling back and sitting with his back against the wall.
‘God save us,’ Earl muttered and crawled past Mike.
When Mike reached them, Earl was having an angry whisper with Dexter to hand over his weapon.
Dexter took off his hat and wiped his face but still held onto the gun.
‘Give it to me son,’ Earl said, ‘ain’t no shame in being scared.’
The word seemed to galvanise the young fighter. He took a deep breath, then suddenly jumped up with an abandoned yell and charged around the corner.
Mike and Earl fell forward as they tried to hold him back. Lying face down, they watched horrified as Dexter ran along the wall towards the open doorway.
A cat shot from the opening.
Dexter reared back, his finger squeezing the trigger. Bullets sprayed the remains of the overhanging roof, showering him in rusty tin and bits of timber. He fought it level, still firing and emptied the magazine at the fleeing animal; spurts of sand and debris tracking wide of its terrified escape.
Mike and Earl scrambled to their knees as Dexter frantically searched for a fresh clip of ammunition.
Earl was first up and made it to Dexter, grabbing his arm and pulling him down beside the door opening. Dexter tried to fight him off, but Earl held firm. Eventually the fight left him, and he slumped over, his head between his knees. ‘It’s ok son,’ Earl patted his back, ‘it’s ok.’
Mike joined them.
‘Just as well you missed son, ‘cause I love cats,’ Earl chuckled.
Dexter looked up with the shy smile back on his face.
‘Here, give me that, I think we’d be safer if I took point.’
Dexter handed him his weapon without hesitation.
Inside was as dilapidated as out. The place deserted long before Airbola had gripped the world. Someone had had a fire in the middle of the one room. Singed pieces of paper and half burnt bits of furniture ringed the outer edges. There were the remains of two metal-framed desks, an overturned filing cabinet, a smashed computer screen, a bicycle wheel, and mounds of rubbish. Mike picked up a single chair and set it on its legs. He replaced the missing seat with a section of corrugated tin. He was drinking water when Thompson rushed in, chest heaving, face glistening with sweat and ready to shoot.
Mike dropped the bottle and put up his hands in mock surrender. Thompson swept the room, his men crowding in behind. Eventually he lowered the gun but kept the barrel pointing in Mike’s direction. ‘What happened?’ he growled.
Earl was sitting on a desk corner with Dexter’s weapon across his knees.
Dexter was on the floor under the window, head in hands.
Thompson snarled, shouldered his weapon, and marched over to Dexter, kicking his boots and knocking him sideways. ‘I said, what the fuck happened?’
‘It’s alright Thompson, just a cat. Damn thing shot outta here like anything, weren’t expecting it that’s all,’ Earl said quietly.
Thompson glared at him. ‘What you doin’ with that?’
Earl looked down at the M16 as if seeing it for the first time. He shrugged, his face disappearing in a network of lines and wrinkles as he laughed at his own forgetfulness.
‘Gimme that,’ Thompson snatched it off him and thrust it at Dexter, who was now standing. ‘You wasted a whole clip on a stray cat!’
Dexter reluctantly took back the weapon with an attempt at a smile.
Thompson backhanded him across the face. ‘Don’t you smile at me!’
Dexter looked down at his feet.
‘You even kill the thing?’ Thompson yelled.
Dexter shook his head.
Thompson pushed him hard in the chest. Dexter hit the wall with enough force to break the remaining render off the wall. He put his face close to Dexter’s. ‘Get to that hotel. Search it, be back in one hour, or I’ll leave you to die here,’ he grabbed the young soldier by the front of his ill-fitting uniform and threw him outside.
Mike got up and Thompson swung round to face him. ‘He goes on his own.’
Mike looked passed him at Dexter sprawled on the ground. ‘He won’t be able to do it on his own in an hour.’
Thompson spat at Mike’s feet.
Mike slowly bent down and retrieved the bottle lying next to Thompson’s globule of phlegm. ‘He’ll need water,’ Mike held up the bottle.
Thompson’s eyes narrowed, his muscled bulk leaned towards Mike, hands balled into fists.
Mike threw it pass him and Dexter caught it on reflex.
Thompson’s arm snapped out and grabbed Mike’s shirt, bunching it tight around his neck. ‘Be very careful Mr Mike,’ he hissed, ‘you better hope that plane keeps flying, ‘cause if it don’t, you’re no longer any use to us,’ he thrust Mike away. The chair caught in the back of Mike’s knees and he fell, arms wind milling.
Thompson’s soldiers sniggered.
Thompson leered down at him. ‘Get searching the rest of these buildings. You,’ he pointed to another of his men, ‘make sure no more cats get in their way.’
Mike was glad to see that Dexter had disappeared.
Earl helped him up from the floor.
Thompson and his remaining men left to search a cluster of buildings on the opposite side of the island.
Back outside, their new guard observed them scornfully. He was older than Dexter, pockmarked face, a sweat stained bandana Durag and a tattoo coming up his neck, finishing in a dragon’s head by his throat. He held his M16 naturally, looking considerably more capable than Dexter.
Mike didn’t bother asking his name.
The humidity, the sun’s intensity pressed down on them, suppressing any sound. The paths were overgrown with vines and tough, drought resistant plants, whose leaves scratched their bare legs making the skin swell irritably in the heat. It was dusty, grim work and Mike soon grew tired of it.
After searching the final building, Mike looked back towards the King Air, ready to call it a day. They could sit under the wing and wait for Thompson’s return.
‘That’s it, there’s nothing here,’ he said.
Even their guard nodded with agreement. They skirted an abandoned bulldozer, its engine a lump of rust, the yellow paintwork barely visible. The driver's protective steel cage askew, as if a tree had once fallen on it. In front of the machine was clear ground with a broader path leading to the landing strip. They started down it and Mike glanced back when something struck him as odd. ‘Hold on,’ he said.
He went back to the rusting hulk. The front blade was off the ground by 4 feet, propped on cinder blocks. Mike peered under the blade. A series of narrow steps had been dug out under the nose of the bulldozer, ending at a framed wooden door.
‘Leave it Mike, ain’t nothing in there that’s goin’ to be useful,’ Earl said.
‘You noticed this?’ Mike asked.
‘Ahuh,’ Earl said.
‘Why didn’t you say something?’
Earl shrugged. ‘Rumours.’
Mike threw up his hands impatiently.
‘Heard this place being used by the Columbians, that’s all.’
Realisation dawned on Mike and he crouched to take another look. After a while he said, ‘would they be refuelling here?’
‘Maybe,’ Earl said.
‘So, keeping fuel underground would make sense. Out of the sun and away from prying eyes.’
‘Maybe.’
‘It’s worth a look.’
‘They don’t like being messed with… these people,’ Earl said.
‘Who knows what’s happened to them Earl,’ Mike snapped, ‘and we need fuel.’ He ducked under the blade and crabbed down to the door, which was 4 feet square, made from old packing cases.
‘There’s a padlock, we need something to break it,’ he called up.
The guard returned with a length of metal that looked like a lever from the bulldozer. Mike inserted it between the padlock and the hoop on the hasp and wrenched downwards. The wood behind the hasp gave a satisfying crack. He applied more pressure and the screws holding the hasp gave way. He pushed it open and it creaked on badly fitted hinges.
‘We need a torch. Earl, there’s one behind my seat.’
‘You sure about this?’ Earl called, from the other side of the blade.
‘I’m just checking for fuel Earl, that’s all.’
Mike waited, his sight adjusting to the gloom. Earl scrambled down the steps behind him holding out the rechargeable torch. Mike played the beam around the dugout, about the size of three transit vans parked end to end, and five feet high. Metal drums were stacked two high and two wide. ‘Bingo, that has to be aviation fuel, right?’ he said, looking at Earl in the halo of light.
‘Hold your horses Mike, if it is, could be Avgas, which would be no good to us. These people normally fly piston engines so most likely is.’ Earl took the torch and pointed it directly at the nearest steel drum. ‘No markings,’ he past the torch back to Mike and with effort twisted the top drum around. It screeched, metal on metal. He took back the torch. ‘There you go, Avgas 100LL, no good to us.’
‘You sound pleased,’ Mike said.
‘Just shouldn’t be messing around down here Mike, you think the world is bad news now, you ain’t seen nothing until you mess with these people.’
‘Okay, okay,’ we’ll go.’ Mike swung the torch around the space. ‘Hey, aren’t those further back a different colour?’
Earl sighed. There were sixteen drums in total. When Earl investigated the far eight, he glumly announced they were JET A. King Air fuel.
‘Well that’s something,’ Mike said, slapping the metal drum nearest him.
‘If it’s still good. Could have been stored here years and gone off. Anyway, that’s two hundred litres a drum, eight drums, short of the 2900 litres that thing needs to fill her up.’
‘I know Earl, but we came in on quarter tanks, it’s better than nothing.’
‘You’ll be able to take off with that much fuel?’ Earl said.
‘Just test the fuel Earl, let me worry about take-off.’
Earl muttered something and left, Mike followed, eager to get out of the rank smelling air.
Their guard with the bandana Durag looked at him questioningly.
‘Fuel,’ Mike said.
Earl returned with a testing kit and went below. He reappeared showing the container with a sample of fuel. ‘The stamps on the side say it’s less than a year. Means people have been here Mike.’
‘OK, but a year is within the right time frame before fuel goes off, right?
Earl nodded, looking at the sample. ‘Needs thirty minutes to separate out any water contamination.’
‘They’re going to be a bitch to get out, we’ll have to wait for the others.’
‘You got that right,’ Earl muttered, staring at his fuel sample.
Thompson’s man emerged from under the bulldozer’s blade, holding out a suitcase with a sly grin.
Mike looked at the case blankly. ‘Where’d you find that?’
‘Few of ‘em, stacked behind the last drum.’
‘Put it back!’ Earl almost shouted.
Mike saw the fear in Earl. ‘Let’s just concentrate on getting the fuel…uhmm,’ he waved his hand asking for the soldier’s name.
‘Daniel,’ he replied, kneeling and laying the case flat on the ground.
‘I’m serious Mike, if that’s what I think it is, stealing the fuel’s bad enough, that…well that would be something else,’ Earl said.
Daniel looked up at Earl, shrugged, and popped the latches, raising the lid. His Durag clad head nodded slowly, then he looked up at them with a knowing smile, turning the opened case so they could clearly see its contents.
The neatly laid bags of powder shone very white in the high sun.
‘Bollocks,’ Mike groaned.
‘Daniel put that back,’ Earl said.
Daniel looked between the two of them then back at the cocaine. He stood abruptly with his hand on the butt of his assault rifle. ‘The Boss should decide.’
They stood in an uneasy silence, Daniel tapping the hard surface of his gun with a fingernail.
Eventually Earl said, ‘good news is the fuel’s ok.’
‘Should we see if we can get a drum out between the three of us?’ Mike said.
Daniel moved in front of the bulldozer’s blade, swinging the barrel to face them, his finger over the trigger guard.
‘We’ll wait for the others then,’ Mike said as nonchalantly as he could, walking off with the intention of sitting under the shade of the King Air’s wing.
‘You should have listened,’ Earl said, joining him.
‘Earl, we need the damn fuel. The people involved in this could all be dead from the disease, and if they’re not, how they ever going to know who took it?’ Mike retrieved some overalls from the rear cargo hold, put them on the ground under the wing, and laid down, pulling his cap low over his eyes.
‘The takin’ is bad but what’s worse is what happens back home.’
‘What you mean?’ Mike said, from beneath his cap.
‘People are bored, people are scared…we had a real problem on the island before the disease stopped supply coming in. Now everyone’s cleaned up but the addiction’s hard to break Mike. If this gets back on Little Brac, it’s going to make people ugly.’
‘We can’t take-off with any more weight. Thompson can take back a sample. Then if Purple Bob wants the rest I’ll come back and destroy it, saying… unfortunately the owners had come back for it,’ Mike said.
‘As simple as that?’ Earl said sarcastically.
‘The fuel Earl, that’s what this is about.’
‘Millions addicted before all this started, Mike. Now with the suffering, demand will be even bigger. It made people rich before, could be making them richer now. They’ve been here since the outbreak, they’re coming back. If it’s not here, where do you think they’ll look first?’
‘Earl, what can we do? We don’t have the guns. Thompson will make the decision and on his head be it.’
He must have then fallen asleep because he was next aware of Earl shaking him urgently. ‘Mike they’re back.’
Mike sat abruptly, feeling giddy from the sudden glare of sunlight. Muckenfuss, Thompson and the rest of his men were facing Daniel. Thompson knelt beside the case, then turned and stared in their direction.
Mike glanced at his watch. Just after three. ‘How long will it take to fill the tanks Earl?’
‘Hour maybe more, depending how easy they come out of that hole.’
They walked out from under the wing and over to the others.
‘Find anything?’ Mike asked innocently.
Thompson’s scowl deepened. ‘No. But looks like you have.’
‘The fuel will be useful. We need help getting it out and into the tanks. I can’t leave after five.’
Thompson grinned wickedly, and Mike’s heart quickened. ‘Wasn’t thinking of fuel,’ He toed the suitcase at his feet.
‘We were told to find medicine, fuel, food … useful stuff. That isn’t useful,’ Mike said.
‘Medicine,’ Thompson grinned at his soldiers. ‘Takes away pain, yes?’
His men nodded enthusiastically.
Mike glanced at Muckenfuss who was visibly suffering with the heat. ‘This on your inventory?
‘I need water and shade. That’s all I give a shit about,’ and he stumbled off towards the plane, collapsing under the wing on Mike’s overalls and drinking from the bottle he had left.
Mike crossed his arms. ‘Fuel’s more important.’
‘My decision,’ Thompson said, turning to Daniel. ‘How many cases?’
‘Ten Boss,’ Daniel said.
‘I reckon they weigh twenty kilos each. That’s 3 men. No way we can take-off with extra fuel and those on board,’ Mike said.
Thompson put a foot up on the closed case and crossed his wrists on his knee. He clicked his fingers and one of his men leapt forward with a pack of Camel cigarettes. He took a few deep drags before straightening up. ‘We’ll fuel the plane and take all ten cases….’ He held up his hand to stop Mike interrupting, ‘we’ll leave three men here, you can come back in the morning.’
Mike glanced at Earl. ‘That’s a waste of fuel. One case would be enough for medicinal purposes. If Purple….Commander Roberts needs more we can come back of them.’
Thompson glared at him. ‘And if the owners return in the meantime?’
Mike held his glare. ‘If they do, what about the men you have left behind?’
Thompson took a step forward and placed his mouth close to Mike’s ear. ‘Keep your fucking mouth shut, you’re the pilot, that’s all.’ He stood back. ‘Clear?’
Mike took a deep breath.
‘Fuel the plane,’ Thompson shouted.
With the exception of Muckenfuss and Dexter, who had still not returned from the hotel, they sweated for well over an hour, man-handling the drums from under the bulldozer and over to the aircraft, where Earl attached the pump and syphon hose. Each man took a turn resting, by filling the tanks.
When they were finished and standing in various states of exhaustion, Mike looked at his watch. 4.45. ‘We got to go.’
Thompson nodded. He pointed to Earl wiping down an area of wing where fuel had spilt and Muckenfuss, ‘you two stay and he’ll come pick you up tomorrow.’
Mike shot a glance at Earl who glared back at him angrily.
‘They’re not heavy enough, you should stay and you,’ Mike pointed at Thompson and Daniel, both being the heaviest looking men, ‘if you want me to take all the cases.’
‘And you would come back when?’ Thompson sneered.
‘Tomorrow, like you said,’ Mike said.
Thompson laughed harshly. ‘I don’t think so, but I agree, you stay,’ he pointed at Daniel who seemed unperturbed by the prospect, ‘and Dexter if he ever makes it back, that’s four, should be easily enough.’
‘I need Earl for the plane, without him if anything goes wrong, we’re screwed,’ Mike said.
‘Then you better make sure you get back nice and early,’ Thompson said.
‘I can’t stay,’ Muckenfuss finally scrambled out from under the wing.
Thompson looked at him as he might a turd on his boot.
‘Minister Roberts needs me…my advice…at all times.’
‘The Commander will survive for one night without you, especially when he sees this,’ Thompson gestured to the cases. ‘Get the cases loaded, now!’ he shouted, his hand going to his holstered pistol to deter any more discussion.
Mike felt at a loss.
Earl shrugged resignedly.
The cases filled the rear hold with more stacked at the back of the cabin.
They had pushed the King Air to the start of the landing strip with the rear hanging over the vegetation. Mike still worried if it was long enough.
The cabin was stifling. Mike was soaked with sweat as he went through the pre-flight checklist. Thompson and two soldiers lounged in the executive chairs, the tables in front of them had already been used to snort up a few lines.
Mike glanced out of his side window. Earl, Muckenfuss and Daniel were walking towards the ‘escaped cat’ building. They were going to make camp there.
Muckenfuss had protested up to the moment the door had closed.
Mike started the right engine, the fuselage vibrating as the engine roared into life. He left it in high idle to get the air conditioning on and the generator working for the left engine start. He soon forgot the others predicament as he prepared for take-off, memories of another time, leaving from a rough jungle airstrip in a fighter plane he had never flown, heightened his anxiety.
The left engine fired and ran smoothly, Mike scanned the gauges, satisfied, he looked ahead, heart thumping, wishing something would go wrong so he could abort take off. He glanced back into the cabin. Thompson was looking at him, head resting on the leather, eyes glittery, his rifle propped between his legs. The prick didn’t even have his seat belt on. He nodded once to say get on with it, and Mike turned back without acknowledgement.
Mike made minor adjustments to the rotation speed, rudder pedals and angle of climb for the short runway. There was nothing else to do except pray. He opened the throttles to maximum against the brakes. The engines wound up to full power, the noise deafening, the frame shaking, ‘please God,’ Mike whispered.
He released the brakes and Mike was pushed back in his seat with the surge of acceleration. He struggled with the pedals to keep her straight on the loose surface, there were bangs and jolts as the undercarriage thudded into holes and cuts in the surface, something fell over in the cabin behind, the cockpit rattled and he desperately felt for the lightness that indicated rotate speed. He glanced at the gauges, speed still climbing, Christ this was going to be close. The palm seemed to fill his vision.
‘Come on, come on,’ he said through gritted teeth, too far gone now to abort. He glanced at the air speed, nearly there, he pulled back on the wheel testing, nothing then yes, there it was, the lift he was looking for. Sweat stung his eyes, the King Air bounced, reluctant to let go. Mike's heart hammered and then they were free and he pulled back on the stick, the wings sucking them into the air. He scrambled for the undercarriage lever; the palm brushed the wheels as they folded away and then the glint of sea below. The engines still on maximum, the climb still steep, Mike keeping it that way until the altitude was 1000 feet. He throttled back and exhaled, wiping his face with a cloth he normally used to clean the windscreen.
When he had reached a cruise altitude and cut back on the power, Mike finally glanced back into the cabin. Thompson was trying to appear nonchalant, but his fingers were still dug deep into the leather armrest.
He radioed Tony they were on their way back.
‘Find anything useful?’ Tony replied immediately.
Mike didn’t bother to respond, turning down the volume.
Jude Winspear was waiting for them as he taxied onto the apron, thirty minutes later. She attempted a wave while keeping her hair in place.
Mike shut down, arching his back to release the strain. His shirt stuck to him. He dreaded having to do it all again the next day, although with the lighter payload it would be easier. One thing for sure, he was going to be glad to see the back of Thompson.
Tony must have called ahead because Cyril Roberts drove fast onto the apron in an open topped Land Rover, skidding to a halt next to Jude.
Mike went through the cabin and opened the rear door, taking a deep breath of salty, humid air as he climbed down the steps.
‘You took your time,’ Jude said rolling her eyes, ‘any longer and he was going to die,’ she glanced up at the control tower. ‘You must have found something?’ she said.
‘I’ll let him explain,’ Mike pointed at Thompson coming down the stairway.
Cyril barged past Jude. ‘Did you come into contact with anyone?’
Mike shook his head.
‘Good, good,’ Cyril beamed, looking at the case Thompson brandished with interest. ‘What’s this?’
‘Medical supplies, he believes,’ Mike said, avoiding Thompson’s glare.
Thompson laid the case on the concrete and clicked open the latches.
Cyril pursed his lips, whistling softly as he crouched down on his haunches and studied the contents.
‘We have ten cases Boss,’ Thompson said.
Cyril whistled again.
Thompson nodded, a look of triumph on his face.
‘Not quite what we were expecting but…could be useful,’ Cyril said. ‘Put them in the Land Rover, we’ll take this to my father immediately.’
‘Anything else?’ Jude asked.
‘Just some fuel,’ Mike said, ‘which I’ll waste going back to pick up the four we had to leave behind.’
Cyril stood and placed a hand on Mike’s shoulder. ‘They’ll survive until the morning. I think my father will consider it a necessary expense.’
‘What about the people it belonged too? You’re not worried they might come looking for it?’
Cyril patted him harder than was necessary. ‘That’s why we have Thompson and his men.’
‘Earl said there was a drug problem before the disease arrived. Do you think this is wise?’ Mike said.
Cyril jabbed Mike’s chest. ‘This flight’s classified, understood? You don’t talk about it to anyone.’
Mike stepped away.
Cyril put his hands on his hips. ‘No one, including your family, otherwise I’m going to have to re-consider your usefulness to this island.’
Mike crossed his arms and stood aside as they loaded the Land Rover.
Cyril put his arm around Thompson, ‘Come my friend, Commander Roberts will want to thank you personally.’