Ghost Flight

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Ghost Flight Page 33

by Bear Grylls


  Plus, there was that unknown toxin leaking out of the Ju 390, and no one aboard the Airlander fancied getting danger-close to that.

  As per Raff’s last data-burst message earlier that morning, there were no drones in the immediate vicinity. Their decoy – the kayak carrying the tracking device and cell phone – seemed to have drawn the surveillance a good distance north of here. It put the Predator out of video range of the Airlander, which in any case was hidden from view by 8,000 feet of cloud cover.

  But an electronic intercept of the airship’s radar signature was still possible, as was an infrared trace of her hotspots – not least her four propulsors. All it would take was one such pick-up and the Predator would be on to them. Time was of the essence, more than it had been since the very start of the expedition.

  It was the morning of day eleven, and if all went to plan, it was to be their last before arriving back in comparative civilisation. Or at least it was for Jaeger, Narov and Dale. Over the preceding hours, he and his team had been immersed in a race against time, not to mention their unknown enemy.

  The previous evening, a lone Amahuaca Indian runner had reached their location with worrying news: the Dark Force was less than eighteen hours away. If they continued marching overnight, they would arrive even sooner. That force consisted of sixty-odd operators, and they were heavily armed.

  The Indians shadowing them had tried to frustrate their progress, but blowpipes and arrows had proven no match for machine guns and grenade launchers. The main force of Indians would keep tracking and harassing them, but there was only so much they could do to slow their progress.

  Since then, Jaeger and his crew had worked feverishly, during which time several things had become clear. First, whatever toxic cocktail was leaking out of the warplane, it appeared to be some form of irradiated mercury plasma. But it was nothing that Jaeger could identify any more specifically, for it appeared to be a threat unknown to his detection kit.

  That kit worked by comparing a detected chemical signature with a known index of agents. Whatever this was, it appeared to be completely off the scale. And that meant that no one could risk going anywhere near without wearing a full set of protective gear.

  Second, while the Airlander had been able to lower a pair of lifting harnesses – Jaeger and team getting them slung beneath the points where the Ju 390’s wings met the fuselage – there was no way she could lift the team out of the jungle as well.

  The Airlander had the means to winch each person up the two-hundred-odd feet to the airship, but there simply weren’t enough NBC suits – or the time – to enable them to do so. The Indians had sent out a series of runners all through the night. The last had arrived just after first light, with the warning that the enemy force was two hours away, and closing fast.

  Jaeger had been forced to accept the inevitable: his team would have to split up. The main body – Alonzo, Kamishi, Santos and Joe James, plus Puruwehua, Gwaihutiga, and half a dozen Amahuaca warriors – would take up blocking positions between the warplane and the bad guys.

  Gwaihutiga volunteered to lead the charge. He would depart with most of the Indian warriors, to set up the first ambush. Puruwehua, Alonzo and the rest would form a second blocking group, nearer to the wreck. In that way they hoped to buy those doing the lift-out some much-needed time.

  As to Jaeger, Narov and Dale – they were going to ride in the Ju 390, as the Airlander dragged her free from the jungle. Or at least that was the plan.

  Dale had been an obvious choice, as someone needed to film the raising of the aircraft. Jaeger had been chosen because the expedition leader needed to stick with its objective – the warplane. Leticia Santos had argued that she should be the third person to ride in the aircraft, for she was a Brazilian, and – arguably – the aircraft had been found on Brazilian soil.

  For a while Narov had fronted up to Santos, making it clear that no one was about to part her from her precious warplane. Jaeger had ended things by pointing out that Santos should probably stick with her foremost mission, which was safeguarding the Indian tribe.

  He’d also made the salient point that the three of them – Jaeger, Dale and Narov – were already suited up, and that shifting about the NBC masks, gloves and suits would risk contaminating whoever was changing into and out of them. The threat was real, and it made sense for those already in the suits to be those to ride the warplane.

  At that, Santos had reluctantly agreed.

  ‘Alonzo, I’m leaving you in charge.’ Jaeger continued with his briefing. ‘Puruwehua has promised to do all he can to get you guys out safely. You’ll return to the Amahuaca village and trek into the land of the neighbouring tribe. That tribe has contact with the outside world; they’ll send you on your way home.’

  ‘Got it,’ Alonzo confirmed. ‘Puruwehua, we’re in your hands.’

  ‘We will get you home,’ Puruwehua replied simply.

  ‘All being well, we three will ride the warplane all the way to Cachimbo,’ Jaeger announced. ‘En route I’ll warn Colonel Evandro to prepare a cordoned-off landing area, where the Ju 390 can be set down and kept in isolation, at least until her cargo can be made safe.

  ‘It’s a fourteen-hundred-kilometre journey, so it should take the Airlander a minimum of seven hours, especially with that thing in tow.’ Jaeger jerked a thumb in the direction of the Ju 390. ‘As long as SS General Hans Kammler and his cronies didn’t overload her, the lift should be doable, in which case we’ll be at Cachimbo by this evening.

  ‘I’ll send a one-word message in data-burst once we get there: “SUCCESS”. Hopefully you’ll have enough of a signal somewhere en route to receive it. No message means something’s gone wrong, but at that point your sole priority has to be to get yourselves safely out of here and on your way home.’

  Jaeger glanced at his watch. ‘Right, let’s get moving.’

  It was an emotional parting, but time kept the goodbyes short and sweet.

  Gwaihutiga paused briefly before Jaeger.

  ‘Pombogwav, eki’yra. Pombogwav, kahuhara’ga.’

  With that he turned and was gone, leading his men off at a fast jog, a war chant rumbling from his throat and being taken up by his fellow warriors, reverberating powerfully through the trees.

  Jaeger glanced at Puruwehua questioningly.

  ‘Pombogwav – it means “farewell”,’ Puruwehua explained. ‘You have I think no direct word for eki’yra. It means “my father’s son”, or “my older brother”. So, “farewell, my older brother”. And kahuhara’ga you know: so, “farewell, the hunter”.’

  Not for the first time since he’d met this tribe, Jaeger felt truly humbled.

  Puruwehua proceeded to force upon Jaeger a magnificent parting gift: his blow-dart pipe. Jaeger was hard pressed to think of anything suitable in return. Finally, he settled on his Gerber knife – the one with which he’d fought on Bioko’s Fernao beach.

  ‘This knife and I have history,’ he explained, as he strapped it around the Amahuaca Indian’s chest. ‘I once fought with it far away in Africa. It saved my life and that of one of my closest friends. You I now count among my closest friends – you and all your people.’

  Puruwehua drew the knife and tested the keenness of the blade. ‘In my language – kyhe’ia. Sharp, like a spear cut lengthways.’ He glanced at Jaeger. ‘This kyhe’ia – it has drawn the blood of the enemy. It will do so again, Koty’ar.’

  ‘Puruwehua, thank you – for everything,’ Jaeger told him. ‘I promise one day I’ll return. I’ll come back to your village and share the mother of all monkey roasts in the spirit house – but only if you spare me the nyakwana!’

  Puruwehua laughed and agreed that he would. No more shots of psychotropic snuff for William Jaeger any time soon.

  Jaeger turned to each of his team in turn. He saved an extra-warm smile for Leticia Santos. She in turn grinned at him and blew him a big Brazilian kiss.

  ‘Be careful, no?’ she whispered close to his ear. ‘And especially of
that . . . that ja’gwara, Narov. And promise – come pay me a visit next time we have the Rio carnivale! We’ll get drunk together and go dancing!’

  Jaeger smiled. ‘It’s a date.’

  With that, the team, commanded by Lewis Alonzo but led by the Amahuaca Indians, hoisted their packs and weapons and disappeared into the jungle.

  77

  Raff’s data-burst message was typically short and to the point: Airlander good to go. Secure yourselves. Commencing lift three minutes, 0800 Zulu.

  It had come not a moment too soon as far as Jaeger was concerned. During the last few minutes he’d heard gunfire erupt from the jungle to the north – the approach route of the Dark Force.

  There had been the sudden fierce crackle of assault rifles, which Jaeger figured was his team springing their ambush, but the return fire had sounded horribly intense, the signature rapid reports of SAW – squad automatic weapon – light machine guns mixing with heavier bursts of what sounded like GPMG fire, plus the hollow crump of grenades.

  Such weaponry would cut a murderous swathe through the jungle.

  Whoever this Dark Force might be, they were heavily armed, not to mention ready and willing to wage deadly battle. And in spite of the team’s best efforts, they were closing in on Jaeger and the warplane with worrying speed.

  Time was running out: the Airlander would commence her lift in 180 seconds, and Jaeger for one couldn’t wait to get airborne.

  He hurried down the Ju 390’s dark hold and reached for the rear cargo doors, tugging them closed and securing them with their handle. He moved forward again, skirting around the shadowy ranks of crates, and slammed shut the bulkhead door, locking it firmly behind him.

  Dale and Narov had forced open the cockpit’s side windows: once the aircraft got moving, the through-flow of air should help clear it of any toxic fumes. Jaeger took up position in the co-pilot’s seat, and buckled himself into the restraining flight belt and chest harness. Dale was in the pilot’s seat next to him – a position he’d commandeered so he could best film the warplane as she was dragged free from the jungle.

  As for Narov, she was hunched over the navigator’s table, and Jaeger had a good idea what she was up to. She was studying one of the documents from the satchel that she’d retrieved from the Ju 390’s cockpit. Jaeger had got a passing glance at it. The writing on the yellowing pages was in German, which meant it was mostly Double Dutch as far as he was concerned.

  But he’d half recognised a word or two on the title page. There were the usual TOP SECRET stamps, plus the words Aktion Feuerland. From distantly remembered schoolboy German, Jaeger knew that Feuer meant ‘fire’, and land was obvious. Operation Fire Land. And typed below it was: Liste von Personen.

  That needed little translation: ‘List of personnel’.

  As far as Jaeger had seen, every last crate lying in the Ju 390’s hold was stamped Aktion Adlerflug: Operation Eagle Flight. So what was Aktion Feuerland – Operation Fire Land? And why Narov’s fascination with it, almost to the exclusion of all else?

  There was little time to ponder such matters now.

  The lift that the Airlander was about to attempt – that of a Ju 390 packed full of cargo – would be accomplished by a combination of factors. One, aerostatic force – due to the simple fact that the airship’s helium-filled hull was lighter than air.

  Two, thrust – the use of the airship’s four huge propulsors, each powered by a 2,350-horsepower gas turbine driving a giant set of propellers. That alone was akin to having four heavy-lift helicopters roped to the corners of the warplane, giving their all.

  And three, aerodynamic lift – provided by the Airlander’s laminated fabric hull. It was shaped like a cross section of a conventional aircraft wing, with a flatter underside and a curved upper. That shape alone would provide forty per cent of the lift, but only once the Airlander got moving in a forwards direction.

  For the first few hundred feet, she’d be lifting vertically – during which time it was all up to the helium gas and the propulsors.

  Jaeger heard the noise from the Airlander shift from a barely audible purr to a hollow roar, as she prepared for the lift. Right now, the four massive sets of rotor blades were set in the horizontal position, to provide maximum vertical thrust as the Airlander went about dragging the warplane free.

  The downdraught increased to approaching storm force, blowing a blinding whirlwind of broken branches all around the warplane. It felt to Jaeger as though he was standing behind a monster combine harvester while the machine chewed its way through a field of giant wheat, spitting out the unwanted chaff into his face.

  He slammed his side window closed, and gestured for Dale to do likewise, as blasts of rotten wood blew inside. Arguably, they were approaching the single most risk-laden moment of the whole crazy enterprise.

  The Ju 390’s standard loaded weight was 53,000 kilos. With a 60,000-kilogram lift capacity, the Airlander should be able to manage the carry – as long as Hans Kammler and his cronies hadn’t overloaded the warplane.

  Jaeger had every confidence in the strength of the slings looped beneath the Ju 390’s wings. He had similar confidence in the Airlander’s pilot, Steve McBride. It was whether they’d break free from the dead wood that was the million-dollar question. That, and the trust they were placing in German aeronautical engineering standing up to seven decades of rot and corrosion in the heart of the jungle.

  Any error on either count could prove catastrophic. The Ju 390 – and maybe the Airlander with her – would plummet like a stone into the jungle.

  Overnight, Jaeger and his team had felled some of the largest trees, using shaped ring-charges of plastic explosives slung around their trunks to blast them down. But they’d been limited both by time and the number of charges they had to hand. As much as fifty per cent of the canopy of dead wood remained intact.

  They’d blasted down the largest and least decayed tree trunks – those most likely to put up greatest resistance. They were banking on the fact that the surviving dead wood was rotten, and would break apart as the Airlander dragged the warplane free.

  The roar of the propulsors rose to an ear-splitting howl, the downdraught approaching hurricane force. Jaeger could tell that the Airlander was nearing its maximum thrust. He sensed something falling from above, as a dark linear shadow slashed across the cockpit.

  A massive tree limb smashed into the apex of the Ju 390’s windscreen, where the front window panels met. The vertical steel strut linking the panels buckled under the blow, the thick Perspex warping under the crushing impact. As the branch broke in two and fell away, a jagged fault line streaked across the windscreen like a burst of forked lightning.

  But, for now at least, the windshield had held.

  Jaeger’s head was filled with a tidal wave of sound. Heavy, wind-blasted debris rained down on the Ju 390’s metal skin. He felt as if he were strapped inside a giant steel drum.

  A long humming vibration rippled through the fuselage, as the turbulence from the propulsors set up some kind of resonance with the thick lifting straps wrapped around the plane. Jaeger could sense that every fibre of the airship was straining to make the lift, and that the aircraft herself was somehow fighting to be free.

  Suddenly there was a violent lurch as the cockpit seemed to plunge towards the ground and the Ju 390’s tail wheel flipped up and broke free. The rear of the fuselage rose, throwing off whatever fallen debris and tree limbs still lay across her.

  Four double wheels – eight colossal tyres – held the warplane to the ground now. The massive aircraft seemed to twist and shake, as if she were a monstrous bird trying to drag her claws free of a cloying swamp and take to the skies.

  Moments later, there was a sound like a giant Velcro strip being ripped apart, and the Ju 390 lurched into the air.

  The force of her breaking free thrust Jaeger downwards into his seat, and threw him forward against the restraining straps. For several seconds the giant warplane rose into the air as if th
e force of gravity had suddenly been suspended, moving steadily closer to the jagged crown of the skeletal canopy.

  With the dead wood casting a cobweb of shadows across the cockpit, the warplane’s upper fuselage ploughed into the lowest branches. There was a tearing crash, the sudden impact throwing Jaeger off his seat, the straps of his harness ripping into his shoulders.

  All around him, bony tree limbs clutched at the cockpit, as if a giant hand was trying to break its way in and pluck Jaeger, Dale and Narov out and hurl them to the ground. As the warplane tore a path upwards, an extra thick finger of wood punched through the Perspex side window, half knocking Dale’s camera from his grasp and spearing towards Jaeger on the far side.

  He ducked, the jagged branch jabbing into his seat where his head had been moments earlier. The impact snapped it in two, leaving the broken limb hanging out of the warplane’s window.

  Jaeger sensed the upward momentum of the aircraft slowing. He chanced a momentary glance to his left. He could see the giant propellers on the Ju 390’s port wing – each twice the height of a fully grown man – ensnared in the branches. Moments later, the grasp of the skeleton canopy tightened around the aircraft and she came to a juddering halt.

  They were suspended ninety feet above the ground, and stuck fast.

  78

  For several seconds the Ju 390 seemed to hang there in her nest of wooden bones.

  From above, Jaeger heard the howl of the propulsors changing pitch, the downdraught dropping off to a faint breeze. For an instant he feared the pilot was giving up; that he’d been forced to admit that the dead wood had defeated him – in which case Jaeger, Narov and Dale would be facing a sixty-strong enemy force pretty damn quickly.

  He risked flicking on his Thuraya, and instantly there was a data-burst message from Raff.

 

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