By SImon Gray
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June 4, 2020
Mike collapsed into shade offered by a 5-meter-high dry forest, clinging to life in a small depression just before the track led out onto the spine of the island. His shoulders were on fire, his legs burnt with the effort of lugging the bag up the incline from the hotel. Hudson settled the cooler box gently on the ground then squatted next to Mike. ‘Too much sitting behind the controls of that plane,’ he grinned. Mike laid back, removing his sunglasses before covering his eyes with his arm. ‘Oversight of mine not to bring water,’ Hudson said. When Mike’s breathing returned to normal, he lowered his arm and looked sideways at Hudson. ‘Could say the same for not learning to navigate before you sailed.’ Hudson threw a stone and watched it bounce down the scree, creating a mini avalanche. ‘Life doesn’t always allow you to dot the i’s before action’s gotta’ be taken.’ Mike’s mouth was dry, dizziness swept over him as he struggled to sit up. Sand and bits of old tree stuck to him. He brushed away ants climbing his leg, wincing as he felt the sting from their bites. ‘Putting these weapons together and whatever’s in that cooler box, tells me this trip was planned, just not the shipwreck part.’ ‘True,’ Hudson glanced at Mike. ‘I’m pretty good at managing life on land, but the sea, I hate it and it, hates me.’ From their position they looked down over the roof of the hotel, sprouting vegetation from cracks in the concrete and between twisted communication dishes, antenna and air conditioning units. Mother nature, invasive, powerful, and as if to emphasise the frailty of human endeavour, the great arc of sea beyond, it’s surface glittering, humidity increasing, the cycle starting that created the fuel for the hurricane that destroyed the developers rich dreams in just a few hours. ‘So, you’re a soldier?’ Hudson took off his stained bush hat and pushed a hand through thick, matted black hair. ‘Nope.’ ‘Government agent, something military surely,’ Mike said, ‘don’t tell me you’re one of those nuts that collects these things and then shoots cans in the woods!’ Hudson wasn’t listening something had caught his attention. Mike followed his gaze, shielding his eyes from the glare. Hudson pulled one of the bags towards him. He unzipped and retrieved from a moulded compartment, a pair of Seeker 8 x 42 military binoculars. He pushed up his sunglasses and used his knees to steady his elbows. After a moment of adjusting the centre focusing wheel he concentrated on what had caught his attention, before letting out a low whistle, ‘ahh fucking hell,’ he whispered. ‘What?’ Mike said, staring more earnestly out to sea. ‘ ’They’ve found my boat.’ Hudson lowered the binoculars, ‘‘You can’t see it because the storm pushed it high up the beach under those palms. I covered it with debris but obviously not well enough.’ Mike snatched them off him. He focused beyond the shimmering reef flat. He followed the darker blue channel through the sand banks to the outer reef and then between the gap in the coral to the sea beyond. Because of the reflection it took him a while but his movements froze as the boat jumped into vision. He was impressed Hudson had spotted it. ‘Looks like the patrol boat from our island,’ he said. ‘I could deal with that Mike, but unfortunately you’re wrong.’ Mike concentrated. ‘Yeah you’re right, much bigger, could be a Coast Guard cutter.’ ‘Come on Mike,’ Hudson said holding out his hand to help him up. ‘Trust me, now’s not the time to discuss the differences in boat design.’ Mike ignored his hand and got to his feet, handing over the binoculars. ‘Who are they?’ Hudson focused out to sea. ‘They’re aiming for the channel,’ he was silent for a while, ‘yep I can see they’re getting ready to lower a boat to come ashore.’ Mike shaded his eyes. It was definitely a military ship; he could see the gun on the foredeck. ‘Pick up your bag,’ Hudson said impatiently. ‘ How do they know you’re here,’ Mike said. ‘They’ll have been searching for a while. It was only a matter of time before they turned up.’ ‘But they don’t know it’s your boat?’ Mike said. ‘Not at the moment, I destroyed the name, but they’ll investigate just in case.’ ‘But they’ll see the hotel’s deserted and leave again, won’t they?’ Hudson threw up his arms in exasperation. ‘What’s with the questions Mike? I know these people, they’re not nice. I’m sure I Ieft something on board that’ll tell ‘em it was my boat, then they’ll come looking. I don’t want to be around when they do, and by association, nor do you,’ and Hudson left the shelter of trees and clambered back out onto the track. Mike couldn’t be sure, but he thought he heard a shout; could have been one of the gulls gliding along the ridge line. He stooped and groaned with effort as he swung the bag onto his back, settling the straps on his shoulders. He followed Hudson, glancing back at the ship, now hove-to off the outer reef. A RIB was racing through the channel towards the beach. He couldn’t believe how quickly they had materialised out of the glittering sea to now landing on the beach. ‘Come on,’ Hudson yelled from the top of the ridge. Mike was about to turn and follow when the gun flashed on the foredeck of the ship followed by a shattering explosion in the scrub to his right, pummelling him into the ground and raining debris onto the bag on his back. Mike was no soldier but wasn’t a stranger to combat, he’d even been on the receiving end of a surface to air missile. The terror still occasionally woke him at nights, bathed in sweat. That terror now flooded through his system, kicking in the survival tactics he had learnt. Doing nothing was not an option, his body was already reacting, rolling out from its protective position, adrenaline firing into his muscles as he scrambled up the last few metres thankfully obscured by the dust thrown up by the explosion. The second shell exploded off to his left behind an outcrop of protecting rock. He crested the ridge and fell flat next to Hudson, heart pumping. Hudson wrenched the bag off Mike’s back, unzipped and hefted a Milkor multiple grenade launcher to his shoulder. ‘How far away you reckon the hotel is,’ he yelled. Mike’s hearing was ringing from the explosions, his vision blurred by clouds of dust. ‘How far Mike?’ Hudson shouted. Mike looked at him, blinking away the grit. ‘I don’t know, half a kilometer...maybe…’ ‘What’s that in football fields?’ Hudson shouted. Mike shook his head trying to get rid of the ringing. ‘What?’ ‘Football fields Mike, how far,’ Hudson had loaded the launcher and was kneeling, exposing his upper body over the ridge line. ‘I dunno, ahh about five I guess.’ ‘English or American?’ Hudson yelled, a shell exploded down the ridge forcing Hudson to duck down. He grinned. ‘We’re going to keep moving, they’re spotters are too good.’ 'It’s you they’re trying to kill, not me,’ Mike started to get up. Hudson restrained him. ‘They’re not trying to kill me Mike, just slow me up.’ Another shell hit below the ridge they were hiding behind. Hudson handed him the binoculars. ‘You’re going to have to spot for me.’ ‘What?’ Mike said, stretching his jaw, trying to unblock his ears. ‘Tell me where they are. I’ll fire, then we legit along this ridge to a new position. They won’t come on in a hurry if they know I’m hitting them with grenades.’ Mike looked dumbfounded at the binoculars in his hand. ‘Ready?’ Hudson grinned encouragingly. ‘Take a peek, tell me what you see.’ ‘No,’ Mike started to get up. Hudson placed a boot on his chest and pinned him to the ground. ‘Trust me Mike, they’re not going to differentiate between you or me.’ He glared at him. ‘If they reach that airstrip before us, we’re never leaving.’ Mike angrily tried to push the boot from his chest but Hudson leant down harder. ‘It’s the only way.’ Mike stopped struggling, his mind in turmoil, wrestling with options. Hudson was a known threat; alone, which gave him a better chance of escaping. The ship could be carrying the good guys, if it was a Cutter it represented the government and authority, which would make Hudson a fugitive. One he would be aiding. But who knows what had happened in the world, there was no guarantee they were still the good guys? The question why they wanted Hudson so desperately, would have to wait. He made up his mind. ‘Good boy. Take a look.’ Mike rolled onto his stomach and squirmed up to the crest, using a scraggy plant as cover, he put up the binoculars and focused down to the hotel. ‘Eight of them running up the hotel drive,’ he said breathlessly. Hudson knelt up beside him, aimed and fired in one fluid moment. Ducking back down before the grenade had landed. ‘You hit a gate post, they’ve all run into cover,’ Mike said, just before a shell detonated on the slope below them. ‘Come on, 50 yards, lets go,’ Hudson shouted, running off at a crouch. Mike hefted his bag, lighter by seven kilos thanks to the absence of the Milkor and ammunition and raced after him. They jogged and stumbled, crouched over just the other side of the ridge, off the track so they had to weave around scrub and rock, their arms and legs suffering from the obstacles. Mike knew he had used up all his reserves. Adrenaline was fuelling him. Hudson crashed down behind a rocky outcrop, careful that the cooler bag remained upright. ‘Right, go see what’s happening.’ ‘Three spaced out on the track, four by the gates.’ Hudson crouched on his knee and fired two grenades in succession. ‘Go, go, go,’ he shouted, hearing the distant explosions. They ran on but this time no shell exploded near their last position. ‘Take another look,’ Hudson panted. Mike wiped the sweat from his eyes, his hands shaking making it impossible to focus clearly. ‘They’re running up the track, probably twenty metres apart.’ ‘You sure,’ Hudson said. ‘No, I’m not fucking sure, but as good as,’ Mike shouted, not waiting for instructions from Hudson. He stood and ran as Hudson fired three grenades and watched their pursuers dive for cover. None returned fire. He grinned, sons of bitches wanted him alive or didn’t want to risk damaging the merchandise. He fired another two and set off after Mike. Mike’s throat was like sandpaper, there was no saliva and he had stopped sweating, his body was dangerously dehydrated. His legs were rubbery, vision fading, waves of heat hit him as he plunged and staggered through the rough vegetation. Most of the gullies were jumpable others he fell down one side and scrambled out the other. His hands and knees were bleeding. He miss-timed a jumpable gully, his ankle bent over the far ridge. He cried out from the stabbing pain and landed on his back in the narrow trough. The hard contents in the bag winding him, draining him of any reserves of strength to pull himself out. He lay there like a stranded tortoise. He stared up at the blue arc of sky and wanted to cry. Images of Leah and Ben filled his mind, whirling with the confusion over what was happening, the suddenness of it all, the fact that people were yet again trying to kill him. A shadow fell over him. He held up a hand to block out the sun. A hand took hold and he was pulled from the ditch as if a spring had uncoiled under him. ‘Quit lying around Mike,’ Hudson grinned, patting him on the arm. ‘A few more yards, there’re the palm trees.' Minutes later, with an arm around Hudson’s shoulders they staggered into the shade of the palm grove. The red crabs had disappeared. Mike sunk down next to a trunk. ‘That’s it for me,’ he said drunkenly. Hudson crouched next to him. ‘Listen Mike, I meant what I said, if these guys get hold of us, we won’t be leaving this island, ever,’ he took Mike’s sunglasses off and stared into his eyes. ‘Get it?’ He shook Mike by the shoulders. ‘No more family Mike and I fancied meeting them.’ Mike nodded weakly. ‘You’re the only way off this island, you’ve got to get to your plane, OK?’ Mike just stared into the fierce pale blue eyes, inches from his. ‘I’m going to hold them off, give you time to get it started. When I come running that’s your clue we gotta’ leave,’ Hudson helped Mike off with the bag and then to stand. He put both hands on his shoulders. ‘I’m trusting on you to wait Mike.’ Mike opened his eyes wide, trying to concentrate. Hudson’s face wavered in front of him, ‘you haven’t heard my story yet, it’s a good one, worth waiting around for, OK?’ Mike couldn’t imagine how he was going to pilot the King Air but the thought of escape galvanised him once more. He started to leave but Hudson held him, hands tight on his shoulders. ‘Take the cooler box Mike.’ Mike shook his head. ‘You don’t have a choice Mike,’ he handed it over, ‘this is what they’re after. As long as you have it, your chance of escape is good, without it…’ Mike was relieved to feel it didn’t weigh much. ‘Don’t try and open it Mike, I have the lock combinations here,’ Hudson tapped his head. ‘Try and force it and you’ll destroy what’s inside.’ Mike didn’t care about the contents he just wanted to escape. Without a word, he staggered off down the shaded avenue of sand. A figure appeared in his periphery vision. Mike lurched to one side, trying to evade the outstretched hand but all energy had left him. He almost sobbed when he recognised Earl. ‘Mike!’ Earl cried, ‘mother of sweet Jesus what’s happened to you? We heard explosions!’ Mike gratefully accepted Earl putting an arm around his shoulders. ‘Got to get to the plane,’ he mumbled. ‘What about the other guy?’ ‘Plane,’ Mike said, from around a tongue that felt two sizes too big for his mouth. ‘Sure, sure, come on, I’ll get you there.’ Earl was tougher than his wiry frame let on and he easily held Mike’s weight, their pace quickening. ‘Others,’ Mike said. ‘They’re already at the plane,’ Earl said, his breathing becoming laboured. ‘We’ve been waiting ever since you left, those knots you tied were good and loose Mike.’ They made it to the strip and at the far end the most welcoming sight in Mike’s life. Tears blurred the glint of its fuselage, it spurred him on. Someone came out from the shade of the port wing and stood watching them. ‘You useless bastard, come n’ help,’ Earl shouted. Aloe Muckenfuss hesitated before sauntering towards them. ‘Glad you could make it!’ Earl grunted ‘Take that off him and grab his other arm.’ ‘Where’s the other guy?’ Muckenfuss said, helping carry-drag Mike quickly to the King Air, laying him in the shade of the wing. Earl was doubled over, panting, sweat streaming down his lined face. He looked at Mike. ‘I guess things aren’t cool, so we need you fit to fly outta here.’ Muckenfuss was already rummaging through the remaining food items and finding a bottle of water. He unscrewed the cap and held the bottle to Mike’s lips. The first few mouthfuls dribbled down his chin. Mike held the water in his mouth to relieve the dryness and then allowed it to trickle down his throat, trying not to gag. When his reflexes had fully returned, he greedily finished the bottle. Mike could feel the life-giving liquid surge through his body, and he fell onto his back with a groan. Earl knelt by his side and peeled an orange, feeding him segments. Mike waved him away. ‘Help me up, we gotta get going.’ ‘How’re you gonna fly son, you’re barely standin’,’ Earl said. Muckenfuss knelt next to him. ‘Try this.’ He had a pinch of white powder between his fingertips. Mike winced, shaking his head. ‘It’ll help,’ Earl said, nodding at Muckenfuss who held his fingers to Mike’s nose. Mike breathed deeply through one nostril and then the other. Earl pinched the bridge of his nose, tilting his head back to prevent him sneezing. Mike pushed them away feeling the chemical taste of the drug in the back of his throat. He drank another bottle of water and used Earl’s shoulder as a support to get to his feet. ‘There’s paracetamol in the first aid kit. That’ll do more good.’ Gunfire started from the palm grove. ‘You OK to fly,’ Muckenfuss asked. ‘If you want to get off this island you better hope so,’ Mike said, reaching out for the wing above to support him. ‘Help him on board,’ he pointed to Dexter who appeared delirious. Daniel had been watching them silently from the shade, a make-shift crutch lying by his side. He glared at Mike. ‘Tell me sump’m Mr Mike, that white guy goin’ to make it?’ Mike pulled himself up the steps using the wire handrail while carrying the cooler box. ‘I don’t get her started, none of us will.’ Daniel lifted a pistol that had been lying beside him. ‘He got nah chance of getting on uwah plane,’ he grimaced with pain as he shifted his weight to stand. Mike met Earl coming back through the cabin. ‘Here,’ he said, handing him a pack of paracetamol and Lucozade. Mike nodded his thanks. ‘Persuade Daniel to lose the gun, help Dexter on board and put this in the rear locker,’ Mike said handing him the cooler box. ‘Make sure it’s well supported.’ He slumped into his seat and for a moment looked incomprehensibly at the array of dials and switches in front of him, a brief flurry of panic ran through him as his brain refused to engage with the start sequence. The crackle of gunfire came to him through the open door and Muckenfuss and Earl swearing at each other as they manoeuvred Dexter on board. He felt his seat vibrate from a large explosion. He glanced out of the windscreen seeing debris and smoke drift into the air above the palms. Mike jammed two pills into his mouth and swilled them down with Lucozade, squeezing his eyes tightly closed, he forced himself to relax, allowing his brain to filter out all except the start sequence. His fingers started slowly flipping switches and checking dials, then as the procedure came back to him, his hands moved automatically until he reached the point where he could start the engines. Sweat stung his eyes, the cabin was roasting. He glanced into the cabin and saw that Earl had secured Dexter into a seat. Daniel was by the open door, pistol in hand. For a moment he hesitated and then beckoned Earl forward, ‘leave it open Earl.’ Earl frowned. ‘Make sure you’re ready to close it as soon as he’s on board.’ Earl’s jaw dropped. ‘If Daniel shoots him then close the door, if he makes it on board, close it then.’ Mike turned back to the instruments, cutting off any further comment. He pressed the starter and was rewarded with the whirring of a compressor before the right turbo fan ignited, the smell of burnt jet fuel immediately filling the cabin through the open door. The propeller sped up to idle and the airframe rocked and pulsed as Mike went through the procedure for starting the left engine. He checked pressures and temperatures, momentarily forgetting what was going on outside. Satisfied everything was up to normal he looked out through the windscreen in time to see a figure emerge at full run. It was Hudson, and Mike was amazed at the strength the man had to run that fast while carrying a weapon’s bag on his back. He’s on his way,’ Mike yelled resisting the temptation to roll the King Air forward to meet him. He needed all the take-off space he had. His hands clenched the wheel and throttle levers. Another figure emerged from the Palm grove, gesticulating wildly. Immediately half a dozen more came into view. One knelt and aimed, dirt spurted up around Hudson’s legs. He whirled and fired the assault rifle he had been carrying across his chest. The six by the palm grove threw themselves flat on the ground. ‘Come on, come on,’ Mike said through gritted teeth, flinching as more dirt spurted up around Hudson’s feet and then a ricochet pinged off the fuselage above the windscreen and he ducked lower, feeling very exposed. Hudson turned again, a long burst that scattered the attackers back into the trees, giving him a few more precious seconds. Hudson was three quarters towards him when his pursuers re-emerged, this time fanning out onto the crushed coral of the landing strip, covering its width, weapons levelled at Mike. They started a slow, determined walk towards him. Hudson raced under the wing tip, his face puce with effort, his hat gone, his long black hair looking like he had emerged from swimming. Mike tore his gaze from the approaching fighters and looked back into the cabin. Daniel was leaning out of the doorway, pistol level, he fired, then was pitched back in the cabin, bursting through the toilet door where only his legs could be seen, twitching spasmodically. First the bag was thrown on board and then Hudson jumped in, tripping over it and sprawling headfirst down the passageway. ‘Go, go,’ he wheezed, trying to disentangle his feet from the handles of the bag. Earl expertly shut the door. Mike looked back through the windscreen and his hands froze on the throttle levers. ‘I can’t,’ he yelled, ‘they’re blocking the runway.’ Hudson scrambled into the seat next to him, his chest heaving. ‘Run the fuckers down Mike, go, they won’t shoot.’ ‘I don’t believe you,’ Mike shouted back. ‘Trust me, they won’t risk it,’ Hudson said, resting his hand over Mikes and pulling back on the throttles. Mike flicked his hand off and glared at him. ‘Don’t touch a thing,’ he shouted but he didn’t reduce power. His foot was hard on the brake, the frame shook, eager to be off. The men on the runway suddenly crouched on one knee. There were muzzle flashes and the ground in front of the King Air’s nose erupted from bullet hits. Ricochets pinged off the fuselage. A hit on one engine and they would never take off. ‘Ok so I was wrong! But they’re going for the tyres Mike, not us, it’s now or never,’ Hudson said, sitting back, looking suddenly relaxed, ignoring the blood running down his arm. Mike opened the throttles, released the brake and the acceleration even caught him unawares, as he was pushed back into his seat. Muzzle flashes and Mike prayed Hudson was right and they weren’t tempted to shoot out one of the engines or go near the wings, reducing them to a fireball. Then the nose dipped with a jarring vibration and he knew they had finally hit the front tyre. It would shred in seconds. He glanced at their speed, seconds away from V2 and take off speed of 115 knots, he pulled back on the stick testing, the vibration was getting worse, if the strut holding the wheel collapsed they would nose dive the ground and that would be the end of it. He fought to stay in control, to stop the shredding tyre from veering them of the narrow strip, he lost focus on the men, who were now scattering, no longer shooting, waiting for fate to finish the job. Their speed increased, the vibration intolerable, his vision starring, the tyre must have gone, they were down to the wheel hub, or what was left of it, the engines still bellowed at full power. Red lights blinked, a claxon blared, an automated voice warning him of tyre failure, Mike clung grimly to the wheel, praying for a response, his hands becoming numb from the pressure, then instinctively he felt a change as aerodynamics worked on the wings, he pulled back and the nose lifted, the shuddering lessened and then disappeared as the nose came clear and then the main wheels. They had used all the runway; the lone palm was at last going to carry out its threat. The crown raked the underside of the fuselage like a stiffened paint brush, the undercarriage snagged and for a heart stopping moment Mike believed it was going to throw them to the ground, but it tore free and with a surge of speed, they were out over the reef flat. ‘Left engine fire,’ he could hear Earl yelling. The panel in front of him was full of red flashing lights. A new claxon sound and automated voice warning him of engine fire. He ignored everything except keeping to a maximum climb and the wings level. ‘Mike you got to shut it down,’ Earl was suddenly kneeling between him and Hudson. ‘I need more height,’ Mike said. ‘She’ll blow if you don’t, then we’ll lose the wing,’ Earl said. They had made it to a thousand feet. Mike shut down the engine and pressed the ‘engine fire push to extinguish’ light, something he had never done before. Spray nozzles connected to bottles containing Halon pressurised with dry Nitrogen smothered the engine in seconds. He felt Earl’s hand squeeze his shoulder. ‘You did good Mike, she should get us home on one engine.’ ‘Front undercarriage’s destroyed, the main’s retracted but could be damaged,’ Mike said, pointing at warning lights. ‘Uhuh,’ was all Earl said, before turning back into the cabin, ‘we got more problems back here.’ Mike turned in his seat. The cabin was a mess. One of the windows had been shot out and Dexter was splayed back in his seat, head thrown back, eyes staring sightlessly in his direction. Muckenfuss had been hit too, he was holding his blood-soaked arm, pain contorted his face. They must have raked the fuselage with frustration as they got in the air. Mike sat back round. ‘Why don’t you go and help, there’s nothing you can do here,’ he said to Hudson, scanning the gauges for the working engine. He looked out through the side window to check the other was fully extinguished. He could see no sign of fire and the gauges seemed to be telling him the same. He shut off the claxon and the annoying automated voice. Hudson grunted as he got up, leaving blood on the seat. Mike shrugged off his congratulatory pat on the shoulder. He reduced power on the good engine, adjusted trim settings to compensate, flight controls seemed responsive, but the plane felt lopsided, like walking with a broken heal. Nothing to what it was going to look like after they landed, he thought grimly, sad that his days of flying the King Air were ending. That’s if they made it out alive. He pushed the thought from his mind, concentrating on keeping the cruise steady at 1500 feet. His headache was fierce. Mike finished the Lucozade, mildly surprised to still find it wedged between his thighs and settled the headset over his ears, drowning out the roar of the remaining engine and the noise coming through the shot-out window. He lowered the microphone to his mouth and pressed the transmit button. ‘Hey Tony, you listening?’ There was a hiss of static and Mike thought that maybe the radio had been damaged but Tony’s voice came back clear. ‘Thought that was you Mike, why you so low?’ ‘Ran into some trouble, lost an engine and haven’t got three greens on the undercarriage.’ Tony was silent for a heartbeat. ‘Shit,’ he said. ‘Yep, I’m going to do a pass, want you to tell me how bad the front wheel is. If there’s anything left I’ll try putting her down on the rear undercarriage and then drop the nose at the last but if it’s no good, maybe better if I just drop her down on her belly.’ ‘Shit,’ Tony said again. ‘I’m not sure that’s flight control protocol,’ Mike said, surprised that he sounded so calm. Tony took him seriously. ‘Roger that Mike, sorry… I’ll ready the fire truck. Thompson’s here with his boy’s, they’ll help you out when you land and Cyril Roberts is on his way, over.’ Great, Mike thought, the full welcoming committee. A few minutes later. ‘King Air two zero zero, Brac Tower, the Defence Chief is requesting a status report on the aircraft, over.’ Mike could see the smudge of land ahead that had been his home. His haven. All that was about to change. ‘It’s fucked Tony, if we don’t end up in a fireball, even Earl’s won’t be able to fix what’s left.’ ‘Roger King Air two zero zero, understood. Are the others on board, over?’ Mike watched the island growing by the second. Should he pre-warn they’ve got a non-islander on board? Would they go easy on him if they thought he had been hijacked? Would the others back him up? Or, if he told them now, would they just shoot him out of the skies to prevent a stranger setting foot on land? He pressed the transmit button. ‘Daniel and Dexter didn’t make it, Muckenfuss injured, don’t know how bad, I’m OK, so’s Earl,’ he would take his chances once they were on the ground. Hudson slumped back into the seat next to him. ‘What’s happening?’ he said. He had wrapped a bandage around his arm covering the wound. ‘Telling the waiting committee what to expect,’ Mike said, removing the headphone nearest Hudson. ‘Didn’t mention you.’ Hudson’s grim expression softened. ‘No chance you can let me off before they see us?’ Mike shook his head. ‘No parachutes if that’s what you’re asking. There’s a good chance none of us are going to make the landing.’ Hudson looked at Mike with sadness. ‘I’m sorry OK, I really am, but I had no choice.’ ‘Sure you did, you could have stayed hidden and I’d have picked the others up and left, none the wiser. You had a choice,’ Mike said. Hudson chewed his lip, then seemed to make up his mind. ‘Mike, I trust you.’ ‘Wow, I’m honoured,’ Mike muttered. ‘King Air Two Zero Zero, Brac Tower.’ Mike held up his hand for Hudson to be quiet. ‘Yeah Tony, go ahead.’ ‘The fire truck won’t start Mike.’ Mike closed his eyes. ‘Ok Tony, get Thompson to load his jeep with those extinguishers we salvaged and get his men holding them instead of their bloody guns,’ Mike said. Hudson raised an eyebrow questioningly. ‘No fire truck,’ Mike said, looking ahead at the distinct shape of Little Brac. They were coming in from the north east, he glanced at his watch, late afternoon, the sun was sliding towards the horizon, shadowing the land where it dipped and raised across the limestone bedrock, The buildings were stark, white structures amongst the dark greenery, the scars of roads, some concrete most dirt tracks, the turquoise of water close to shore and the ring of white beach, the darker reef flat and then a further guarding ring of cream surf denoting the outer reefs. He could see the whole island. It looked so small and it was thanks to this that it had remained untouched, unmolested by the world’s troubles. That was all about to change. Hudson had been saying something, He dropped his headphones. ‘What?’ Mike said impatiently. ‘I can trust you, can’t I Mike?’ ‘For fuck’s sake, we’ll be crashing in a few minutes why does it matter?’ ‘Because if we survive you’ve got to know it was worth the risk.’ Mike glanced at Hudson irritably. ‘The cooler box Mike, that’s what they want.’ Mike shrugged impatiently. ‘Can’t this wait.’ Hudson shook his head. ‘No Mike, that cooler box holds the fate of humanity, it’s a vaccine Mike.’ Mike took a moment to register what Hudson was saying and even turned in his seat to look back in the cabin to locate the box. ‘It wasn’t hit. It’s OK,’ Hudson said. Mike let out a deep breath. ‘I don’t believe you, why would you be carrying a vaccine?’ Tony was transmitting. He dropped the headphones into his lap. ‘I worked as head of security for a US lab in Puerto Rico. They had already been working on a vaccine before Airbola took hold. The US Government got all the best scientists onto it, flew everyone they could think of onto campus, then locked it down, security was tighter than a nuclear missile silo.’ Mike glanced out of habit over the instruments, checked his heading and then back at Hudson. ‘When they found the vaccine everyone was jubilant Mike, this was it, end of the world’s horrors, but the US flew in some Navy Seals and top brass and sealed the complex even tighter. They weren’t going to release the vaccine to the likes of you and me Mike, just the elite, the chosen few, the new world order. So, I broke into the lab, got hold of what I could and legged it for the marina and a boat, the rest you know.’ Mike’s headache returned with vengeance. He winced, he pressed his fingers into his forehead, his eyes screwed shut. ‘Couldn’t you have told me earlier,’ was all he could think of saying. The enormity of what Hudson had said was struggling to sink in. He was carrying the most precious cargo he could imagine and about to crash land on an island. ‘You think by telling me I’m suddenly going to be able to land this thing without a problem?’ Hudson stretched over and rested his hand on Mike’s shoulder. ‘No Mike, I know you’ll do your best no matter what, I just wanted you to know what was at stake if we survive.’ Mike felt oddly emotional with the touch. Reminding him of another fighter, an SAS soldier named Winterton who had placed similar trust in Mike’s abilities. What was it that gave these capable men, faith in him. He made a decision. ‘Thompson’s a trigger-happy prick, but hopefully all he’ll be armed with is a fire extinguisher. I’ll try and put her down near the southern perimeter, the fence is down so you’ll get through ok, make sure you head south, my house is the one on the beach, it’s a round building on stilts, you can’t miss it. Hide nearby until I get home, I don’t want you scaring Leah and Ben.’ There were tears in Hudson’s eyes and he looked as though he was about to lean over and give Mike a hug. ‘What about those two?’ He motioned behind him. ‘Earl is ok but Muckenfuss, I have no idea.’ ‘Should I chuck him out the plane?’ Hudson said. Mike glanced at Hudson to make sure he wasn’t being serious. ‘You need to think of something that will keep him quiet,’ Mike said. ‘Perhaps it’ll be enough just to threaten him that if he says anything, Thompson will kill him too.’ ‘I’ll tell them,’ Hudson hesitated, wanting to say more. ‘Good luck,’ Mike cut him off. ‘Belt up, stay out of sight of the windows and look after that box,’ Mike said, putting his headphone back on. A vaccine! A vaccine for Ben, Leah, everyone! An end to the nightmare. The fear, a life without fear. Mike felt tears sting his eyes. Then he looked out of the windscreen and reality fell in on him. So close. ‘King Air two zero zero, Brac Tower.’ ‘Yeah, go ahead Tony,’ Mike said wearily. There was a pause. ‘The Defence Chief wants to know if you came into contact with anyone?’ Mike sat straighter. ‘No Tony, we took off before they could touch us but that didn’t prevent them shooting at us.’ Another longer pause. ‘Understood King Air two zero zero. What’s your current status?’ ‘Tony, lets cut the chat OK? I’m a minute away from crash landing, something you’ll be surprised to hear I’ve never done before. I need to concentrate. Out.’ Mike dropped the headphones in his lap and clenched the wheel. He pushed the thoughts of vaccines and Thompson’s guns out of his mind. A few clouds were building along the shoreline. As they passed beneath, the King Air jolted from the up currents, almost reminding Mike that it was still flying, still able to get them down if he did things right. Mike took a few deep breaths making up his mind. They were going in for a landing without gear, there was no point having it checked from the ground, he knew the front wheel was gone and it would be safer to not rely on it. He had read manuals, studied gear up landing procedure and provided he followed the essentials, it was usually something most pilots walked away from. There was movement beside him and Hudson fell into the co-pilot’s seat. ‘Thought I told you to stay in the cabin,’ Mike said, not looking at him. ‘Couldn’t let you do this on your own,’ Hudson said. ‘How do you plan to help?’ Mike said. ‘Can’t I pull on something?’ Hudson said. Mike appreciated his bravado and suddenly grinned. ‘We’re going to come in gear up, I think it’s safer, I’m dumping fuel now, so if there’s a spark there won’t be so much to go up.’ ‘Good thinking,’ Hudson said. ‘Glad you think so,’ Mike said. ‘I’ll shut down the engine before we touch so the props don’t tear off the wings,’ Mike found that talking actually helped concentrate his mind on what had to be done. He banked the King Air, the runway could be seen clearly now, a broad expanse of concrete running down the middle of the southern part of the island. He could see the terminal, the control tower where he knew Tony would be watching them with binoculars and racing out to the threshold, a couple of jeeps with Thompson’s men, hopefully carrying extinguishers. ‘You’re coming in quite quick,’ Hudson said anxiously. ‘Yep, got to maintain airspeed and I don’t want to use flaps,’ Mike replied, leaning forward against his harness, judging angles, glancing at his airspeed, the dials indicating that most of the fuel had now been dumped into the Caribbean below. He shut off the pump, reducing power on the remaining engine, watching his height, letting the sleek fuselage arrow in towards the runway, keeping the descent as flat as possible, the sea was coming up to them quickly, then they flashed over the rocky limestone shore, no beach or reef for this part of the island, the sea broke against the stubby cliffs, then scrubland before the lusher green of the mangrove swamp that ran the length of the runway, a few sheds, the airport perimeter fence, still quicker than normal. Mike stopped their remaining engine, the propeller froze, he shut down fuel pumps, anything that could create a spark from a short circuit or ruptured supply cable. They passed the runway threshold, the white lines telling him it was now safe to touch down, the jeeps on either side flashed passed, he kept his precious plane off the ground for seconds longer, delaying the end, bracing himself for the point where it would start to tear itself apart on the unforgiving concrete but also wanting to put as much distance as possible between him and Thompson’s crew. Halfway, and they were still feet from the surface, still going quickly. ‘We’re running out of runway,’ Hudson shouted. Mike waited, waited, for the King Air to touch in her own time, he was calm which pleased him, flat and fast, her last bit of life in the air and he was helping her live every second, there was a jolt from the nose as the dangling remains of the front landing gear was wrenched away and then there it was, the belly hitting with a tremendous crash, like a thousand spades being dragged over concrete, the sleek riveted metal skidded across the surface. He was thrown against his harness; loose items crashed and fell around him. Mike worked the rudder to try and keep her straight, the engine casings acting more effectively. Even crashing, the plane performed perfectly, slowing down the centre line of the runway, sound abating as the speed quickly bled away, the nose broke through the navigation lights denoting the end of the runway and then they were onto softer scrub ground, the speed no longer frightening, the concrete replaced with the rumble and thwack of bushes. Debris and dust covered the windscreen, quickly obliterating his view. Mike jumped on the rudder and with what speed they had left, slewed the aircraft to a stop, the cabin door facing away from the runway. ‘Go!’ Mike yelled at Hudson, more scared of what Thompson might do than he had been of the landing. Mike looked back into the cabin, grateful to see Earl was still thinking and had already opened the cabin door. Hudson scrambled passed him. ‘Don’t go left, that’s the swamp, go straight towards the sun,’ Mike said. Hudson picked up his remaining bag of weapons and pulled the cooler box from the rear locker. He looked back at Mike. ‘You’re a good pilot Mike, see you soon.’ Mike waved him away and caught a brief glimpse of him running off towards the perimeter fence before he was lost in the clumps of scrub. Mike unbuckled his harness and went back through the cabin, the smell of aviation fuel and hot metal hurrying him along. They jumped to the ground and ran a distance away before stopping and looking back. Other than it was lying on its belly with its engines buried in torn scrub and dirt, his beautiful aircraft looked remarkably intact. The fuselage, with its high t-tail, its rakish black and red stripes leading down and under the windows looked as good as always if you ignored the bullet holes and shot out window. Earl came and stood beside him. ‘You did well Mike.’ Mike had a premonition that if he had nothing to fly, his usefulness to the island had come to an end. ‘Can you get her flying again?’ Earl let out a harsh laugh, looking away as the jeeps raced into view. Mike’s heart sank. They were all wearing breathing apparatus and contamination suits. They skidded to a halt between them and the King Air. Several men jumped out holding extinguishers and raced towards the aircraft but halted, looking back, uncertain what to do. There was a man behind each machine gun mounted in the back of the jeeps, each gun was pointed at the survivors and Thompson was standing up in the front of his jeep yelling through a megaphone for them to lay on the ground.