Samuel stared blankly at the avenue of pearlescent reflection from the sea. His body instinctively at one with the motion. He visibly shook himself from his reverie and lifted the night vision binoculars hanging from his neck.
They should almost be there.
He glanced sideways at the person sitting in the captain’s seat; Little Brac’s defence chief, Tara Suckoo. They had only spoken a few words since leaving.
Patrol Boat 917 known as Island Defender, was just under 100 feet long and needed a lot of care to keep going. As its captain, it was a responsibility Samuel readily accepted as well as looking after the well-being of its ten crew. He resented his position being undermined by her rigid frame in his chair.
Sensing his brooding look, she said, ‘do you know where we are? If so, how much longer Captain?’
Samuel dropped the glasses to his chest. ‘Should be sighting debris any minute.’ He glanced at the radar. Clear. Depth good. Speed… ‘watch your speed,’ he growled at the helmsman. Island Defender had old diesels that liked to burn fuel at an eye watering rate if pushed to anything over ten knots. The helmsman nudged back the throttles.
‘I’m going on deck,’ Samuel said, leaving before Tara Suckoo could say anything.
Island Defender was a typical 1980’s design coastal protection vessel. Long hull, low stern, centre structure housing bridge and navigation, emergency treatment room, crew room, heads, galley and steps down to the engine room, stores and armoury with assault rifles, pistols, flares and stun grenades. The foredeck had a heavy calibre machine gun and the weapon stations were linked via a communication system to bridge command and his seat, now occupied by uptight Tara Suckoo!
Samuel greeted his men as he toured the deck, reminding them to be vigilant.
He joined Moses on the bow, his trusted second in command. Medium frame, serious, loyal to those who proved themselves, obstinate to those who hadn’t. Despite his family living on the island for generations they were still recognizable for their pale skin and red hair. Their Irish accents the only thing lost.
‘She drivin’ you crazy Captain?’ Moses said, his face ghostlike in the pre-dawn light.
‘What you think?’ Samuel growled, his six-foot frame towering over the other man.
‘Even Purple Bob ain’t got time talking her into bed.’
‘Sho’ respect. He’s our commander and chief,’ Samuel said.
Moses grunted turning to look ahead, long hair blowing back from his face. ‘I’ve heard, she’d like to be commanding you between the sheets.’
‘That what you’ve been thinking about? You jealous?’’
Moses chuckled and then stiffened, making minute adjustments on his binoculars. ‘Got something.’
‘Where?’
‘Two ten, bout half mile.’
Samuel searched with his binoculars. ‘Got it,’ he pressed the transmit button on his radio, instructing the helmsman to change course. ‘What is it?’
‘Looks…looks like one of them airline containers,’ Moses glanced at Samuel.
‘OK, we’re entering debris field. You know what to do, no unnecessary risks,’ what was he saying, they knew what they were here for. To make sure there were no survivors.
Samuel strode back to the pilothouse. The crew scrambled into protective suits and put on breathing apparatus equipped with a hands-free communication system. They would be sweating in seconds.
A searchlight picked out the object instantly. Samuel read the airline insignia on the side facing them.
Tara sat forward in her seat, knuckles white as she clenched the grab rail.
Like the standard bearer for an advancing army, the container heralded a swarm of objects spreading back, cone shaped into the distance, undulating ghostlike on the gentle swell.
‘Have your men check their weapons,’ Tara said tightly.
Samuel hesitated.
She shot him a glance, her eyes hostile below the peak of her baseball cap.
Samuel transmitted the order.
‘See if that container has food or anything we can use,’ she said.
‘We know what to do,’ Samuel said.
Tara stood abruptly crossing her arms. Her lithe body in close fitting designer t-shirt and jeans. ‘Get out there Captain. I don’t want your men fucking up.’
Samuel clenched his jaw, settled his binoculars with deliberate care, before leaving for the crew room and his protective gear.
When he arrived on deck, Island Defender was idling next to the container. ‘What we got?’ he asked, his voice distorted by the breathing apparatus, his body covered in sweat.
‘Standard air-freight container, holding up pretty good but heavier one end, see how she’s riding?’ Dwayne, Island Defender’s bosun said.
‘Ok, Alden, bring her round so we can get the deck crane on her,’ Samuel said, glancing back at the pilothouse. Tara was staring at him through the windscreen, she would be hearing his transmissions through the overhead speakers.
Dwayne hesitated. ‘She’ll float for a few hours yet, shouldn’t we… look for survivors first?’
‘Get on with it,’ Samuel said, walking off towards the stern.
Island Defender healed aggressively as the crane laboured to swing the container on board. They used sledgehammers to open the doors and stood back allowing the contents with a good amount of sea water, to spill out. The water flowed away through the scuppers leaving boxes and bags labelled with red crosses, strewn on deck. Medical supplies; a good salvage for the island. Samuel looked back to the bridge wing and Tara gave a brief thumbs up from her position overlooking the deck.
‘Seal it, tie it down, then get to your positions for the rest of the search,’ Samuel said.
For two hours they eased through the debris field. The bow occasionally knocking aside bits of aircraft and contents once held securely in it. Most pieces were no bigger than a TV screen and held no salvage value. Any life jackets were fearfully avoided, all were empty of bodies, but Island Defender nevertheless made exaggerated moves to ensure no contact was made.
The crew silently went through their duties, their visual inspection of the pathetic pieces easing as the light strengthened behind and to the east.
‘Where the bodies?’ Moses said, coming to stand beside Samuel on the bow.
‘Empty lifejackets. It’s a good sign,’ Samuel said.
Moses turned to look at him, his sweat glistening face frowning inside the protective hood.
Samuel shrugged. ‘Means they were dead before they hit.’
‘Bodies float,’ Moses said.
Samuel waved him away. ‘Look at the debris size. Massive impact. Any bodies would just be handy shark mouthfuls.’ He was feeling lightheaded. He needed water and he should rotate the crew otherwise they would be passing out on him as soon as the sun’s heat was up. ‘We were lucky with the container,’ he said making his way to the bridge.
‘Body!’ a shout through his earpiece.
Samuel froze ‘Identify yourself?’
‘Sorry Boss, Jack, starboard side.’
The sun became a slice of orange, the sea still black, malevolent, the detritus from the 767 glowing sickly yellow. Samuel hurried to Jack’s position, arriving with Moses. ‘Show me,’ he said tightly.
The young crew man pointed.
‘Hold position,’ Samuel breathed, focusing on where Jack was pointing. Suddenly the surface erupted, thrashing white water 50 meters from the beam, a dorsal fin, then what was left of a body was flung in the air, turning grotesquely in the strengthening light before slapping back on the white water, twitching and fidgeting as it was attacked from underneath. Samuel un-holstered his pistol, then gasped as the remains began to move, gaining speed towards them, ‘full ahead,’ he shouted, the deck vibrated as he levelled his pistol, emptying the magazine and cursing with the futility as it thumped into the hull below him, a twenty foot shark thrashing and twisting at a chewed mass of organs hanging from the chest cavity. Samuel found that his extended arm was shaking, and he quickly holstered the pistol. The corpse thumped and slid along the hull and then fell off astern, where the sharks thrashing was lost in their wake. ‘shit,’ he said forgetting he was pressing the transmit button.
Tara immediately came through on his headset. ‘What’s happening? Have you contaminated this fucking vessel?’
Samuel felt sick. He could see other bodies now. More sharks.
The sun was above the horizon, burning orange like the lifejackets floating uselessly among the bloated mutilated corpses.
‘Captain!’ Tara’s voice sounded shrill. ‘Get this vessel the fuck away from these bodies.’
Samuel gathered himself. ‘Helm, twenty degrees to port.’
Thick black exhaust was spewing from Island Defender’s stack. The crew quickly grabbed handholds as the hull listed with the turn. It was crazy, how could these poor mutilated bodies be any threat, but the fear ran deep. The virus airborne, but they had not received proof that bodily fluids could not be contagious. The old Ebola had transmitted that way. But, after all this time in the water and half eaten? Samuel thought the sharks were much more of a threat. They circled out around the crash site.
‘Must be coming up from the wreckage below. Only explanation that they’re all concentrated here,’ Samuel said, ‘come back to idle,’ he ordered surveying the scene with binoculars.
‘Look at those sharks,’ Moses muttered.
The bloated bodies danced and jiggled in the water, now taking on its familiar hues as the sun climbed higher. Dorsal fins sliced between the empty lifejackets, clothing, bags, books, seat cushions, paper cups, plastic containers, seat trays, toys, and all the other hundreds of everyday items.
‘Survivors,’ Tara demanded having not left the climate-controlled bridge.
Samuel’s shoulders dropped. They all looked alive. As the light strengthened the attack from below seemed to gather pace. A finale. The water turned white with thrashing fins and slapping bodies. Samuel could stand it no more, ‘go north,’ he ordered, heading for the furthest boundary of the debris field.
The radio remained silent.
Samuel left the deck and took off his sweat-soaked protective gear in the crew room.
Tara took an involuntary step back as he entered the Bridge. ‘You showered?’
Samuel looked down at his stained t-shirt and shorts. He could lie and said he had but instead he shook his head, grabbing a bottle of water and greedily glugging the contents.
‘You should?’ she stood with the Captain’s chair between them.
Samuel wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.
‘You de-contaminated the area that body touched,’ she shuddered.
‘Tara, you really think they’re still a threat,’ he gestured out to the crash scene.
‘You know our policy. We’ve been successful this long because of it.’
Samuel closed his eyes and breathed deeply.
‘Anyway, looks like there’s no survivors?’
Samuel regarded her questioning expression before shaking his head.
‘Good. I need some rest. Wake me if anything comes up.’
Samuel watched her walk into his day cabin. She pulled down the cot that folded up against the far wall and give him a final glare before slamming the door. He slumped into his chair and picked up the MIC. ‘Moses, rotate half the crew, give ‘em an hour R & R.’
‘OK Boss,’ Moses replied.
‘You too,’ Samuel said to Alden, the youngest on board at nineteen who had been at the helm for twelve hours now. ‘Put her on auto pilot, should be ok for the next hour.’
Samuel adjusted the A/C as he felt the heat from the sun warming the interior. He nodded his thanks at Alden who had settled a mug of coffee in the cup holder next to him. His reflection glared back from the windscreen. Eyes narrowed, deep frown lines on his forehead, and the bridge of his nose. Unruly hair now that his last razor had finally become too blunt. The same for his beard; quite different from those kept good looks he had nurtured during his days on Diving Belle. Even the hell they had endured in Central America had not prevented him keeping up the ‘man grooming’. He had reason then though, with a camera beaming his face into millions of living rooms around the world as he helped battle to rescue Mike’s brother. Samuel snorted, reaching for his coffee. Mike… now with Leah… his Leah, and a child he would have liked to have called his own. Somehow Ricardo’s murder on the banks of the river had put paid to that. Maybe she felt they had all become too close and looked at Mike as a way out.
Samuel stared moodily at his reflection. No point going over it. Mike was a good enough guy and they seemed happy enough. In a way he was glad. No love, no kids, no one to worry about but himself.
Samuel rolled his shoulders, the t-shirt straining, the fabric stiff from dried sweat. The pain at the base of his skull returned. A memento after the ISIS commander had kicked him out of a speeding pickup during the grand finale of their adventure. Stress brought it on quicker. He reached into his shirt pocket and withdrew a pack of Tylenol. There were only two left and he hoped there were more in the container they had salvaged; the island was almost out.
He found his sunglasses, pushing them firmly into place, his reflection fading as the sun climbed. Flying fish glided from the bow, plopping into the waves a safe distance away, leaving no trace, unlike the sharks. Occasionally a mist of spray would settle on the window and evaporate almost immediately. The gentle motion was sending him to sleep. He sat straighter, taking the binoculars and surveying the sea around them.
Nothing. Time to change course back home.
Samuel typed in the coordinates and the autopilot automatically brought the bow around to the north east. He ordered Moses to bring the rest of the crew inside so they could get out of their suffocating gear and get some rest.
‘Where’s Dragon Suckoo?’ Moses said, dumping his hood on the console as he came up beside Samuel, swigging from a plastic water bottle, the top half of his suit tied round his waist.
Samuel thumbed to his cabin door. ‘She better not see you like that and take that,’ he waved at his hood, ‘off my instruments.’
‘If I got it, she’d be the first I cough over,’ Moses said irritably.
Samuel nodded, the movement making him wince.
‘You know what gets me most?’
Samuel squeezed the bridge of his nose.
‘She knows shit all ‘bout security. Gets the job ‘cause Purple Bob’s her cousin… it’s like nothing’s changed, Boss, same nepotism that existed on this island before. I mean if things ain’t going to be different after all this, when are they?’
Samuel glanced at him, a grin suddenly on his face. ‘Nepo what?’
Moses remained serious. ‘Nepotism Boss, favouritism.'
‘That right?’ Samuel’s grin broadened. ‘Guess it’s a word you aggrieved Irish use a lot.’
Moses regarded him for a moment and nodded ruefully. ‘Get you something to eat Boss?’
‘Yeah, sandwich would be good,’ Samuel said, lifting his binoculars as something caught his attention.
A piece of wreckage lying low in the water. As he concentrated, the gentle swell lifted it enough for him to see that it was larger than usual. He clicked off the autopilot, adjusting course.
Moses returned and handed him an overstuffed sandwich which oozed mayo onto Samuel’s lap. ‘Goddamit Moses!’ Samuel got up thrusting the sandwich back at him and rubbing away the mayo while throttling back the engines.
Moses stared ahead, distractedly setting the sandwich on Samuel’s seat. ‘Shall I get the boys ready?’ he asked.
Samuel shook his head. ‘Probably nothing. Let them rest.’
‘It’s a big piece,’ Moses said.
‘Take the wheel, bring her to a stop,’ Samuel said, going to the rangefinder telescope fixed in the corner of the bridge. ‘Wing section definitely,’ he stiffened, ‘shit,’ he breathed.
‘What you got?’ Moses said.
Samuel looked hard at his second in command. ‘Here, take a look.’
Moses peered through the eyepiece and sucked in his breath. ‘Fuck…a survivor!’
‘Don’t know that, it’s just a body,’ Samuel said, easing the engines into reverse to bring Island Defender to a stop.
‘I’ll get the boys ready,’ Moses said.
Samuel rested a hand on his arm. ‘Not yet. Get Dwayne but tell the crew we’re having a look at some wreckage, nothing for them to bother about.’
‘Boss?’
‘Just do it,’ Samuel snapped. He bent again to the eyepiece and could now make out the body. It was small, a child without a doubt and to anyone less observant, would have looked like a piece of wing assembly laying proud of the smooth surface of the torn section of wing. Samuel gasped as he watched the figure move, as if sensing their approach. It rolled over and struggled to sit up. Torn clothes barely covering its body, long dark hair, a girl, no more than ten. As he watched she lifted an arm and waved a small hand weakly.
‘What we got,’ Dwayne said. suddenly beside him.
‘Survivor,’ Samuel said with a clenched jaw.
‘Shit,’ Dwayne sighed. ‘You want me to do it?’
‘Do what?’ Samuel muttered, manoeuvring Island Defender broadside to the wing section.
They could see her clearly now. Dark matted hair. Her skin colour was not Caucasian, Arabian maybe, there was a cut on her cheek, her legs were bruised and striated with cuts. Her eyes and lips swollen, yet she had enough energy to keep her hand waving.
‘I’ll get the crew on deck,’ Moses said.
‘No,’ Samuel held up a fist glaring at the two of them. ‘We could just leave her. She won’t survive long.’
Moses rubbed his hand vigorously through his tangled red hair. ‘Current’s pushing it towards the island, she could survive another day or so…too risky.’
Samuel continued glaring at them both.
‘You know the rules,’ Moses said looking down at his feet.
‘I know the damn rules, don’t preach the damn rules at me,’ Samuel said through gritted teeth.
‘Let her do it,’ Moses nodded to Samuel’s closed cabin door where Tara Suckoo was still sleeping. ‘Ain’t right you should have to… if we all went, we could share…the…the burden.’
Samuel shook his head. ‘I’ll do it…alone,’ he pulled his pistol from its holster and put in a new clip. ‘Swing her round till she’s stern to,’ he indicated for Moses to take the helm.
‘What about your suit?’ Dwayne said, as Samuel walked towards the door that led on deck.
Samuel hesitated, resting his hand on the frame. ‘She’s a child, a survivor, the least I can do is for her to see the person who’s going to murder her.’
‘You can’t go out there without protection, they’ll never let you back on land,’ Dwayne said.
Samuel slapped the door frame. ‘OK, I’ll put the fucking suit on, but it’s my job. You two make sure no one comes on deck.’
Dwayne and Moses exchanged glances as Samuel disappeared to the crew cabin.
Samuel struggled into his hazmat coverall, sweat immediately oozing from his body. Ignoring the looks from his men he pulled the hood over his face and turned on the air bottle held in a loop around his waist. He re-checked his pistol before stepping out on deck.
Moses had manoeuvred Island Defender stern to the wrecked wing section. The salvaged container hid the view from the pilothouse rear windows which is what Samuel wanted. He had no wish to be witnessed, it was bad enough he was going to have to live with it for the rest of his life.
‘Astern five feet,’ he ordered looking down at the pathetic bundle struggling to stay sitting, ‘keep coming,’ waves lapped over the edge and she seemed to shake each time the water touched her. She stretched out her arm, her fingers trembling, waiting for him to pull her to safety, ‘hold there,’ he lifted his pistol and despite her condition, her swollen eyes widened, her hand waved, beseeching him to help her, lips moved making them split and a trickle of blood ran down her chin.
‘Forgive me,’ Samuel whispered, and he fired, once, twice, then savagely holstered the pistol. With tears in his eyes he winched down the platform at the rear of Island Defender, used for transferring people on and off smaller boats. He opened a locker containing a spare anchor, chains, buoys, brooms and buckets. He was not going to leave her out on the wing. He pulled out a length of spare chain and then stripped off his hazmat suit.
‘Captain? Captain you OK?’ Moses said.
‘Keep her where she is and keep the crew inside,’ he shouted, tears wetting his cheeks. He found a boat hook and managed to pull the shattered wing section the last few feet to bump against the hull. Samuel then stretched out on the platform and reached for the girls battered body despairing at his life and what the world had become.