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Night Over the Solomons (Ss) (1986)

Page 5

by L'amour, Louis


  “No?” Cowan glanced at Chiv, who was listening sullenly. “Why is Mataga keeping Forbes alive? Forbes has a cache of jewels aboard this ship, that’s why. Did Mataga tell you that? Or Donner?”

  Cowan glanced shoreward, but there was no sign of life.

  “or did they tell you there was a war on?

  That the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor?”

  “Is that straight?” Gotto scowled. “Why, I’d like to-was “What’s it to you?” Chiv demanded.

  “The cops run you out, didn’t they?” “Sure,”

  Joe argued. “But what the devil! If the Japanese and Nazis take the States, my racket is sunk. I can’t compete with them guys.

  When I knock over a bank, I want to know there’s some dough in it.” was I know where the jewels are,” Steve Cowan said quietly, looking directly at Chiv. “We could get them and get out. Let Mataga have his crummy planes.”

  “Get out?” Chiv sneered. “You mean swim?”

  “No, I mean in my plane. I told Mataga it crashed, but it didn’t. It isn’t ten miles from here. We could grab those jewels, just the three of us, and take it on the lam.”

  Joe studied him thoughtfully. Then he glanced sideward at Chiv, whose yellow eyes were narrowed.

  “You sound like a right guy,” he said. was I like the sound of it. Anyway, if the Japanese are going to use the planes against our gang, why-was “What the deuce do you care?” Chiv snarled. “Nuts! I don’t care who gets the planes. I want some dough! I’m no Yank.”

  “Those stones are close by,” Steve Cowan hinted. “We haven’t much time.” “Yeah?” Chiv sneered. “Suppose I let you loose? Then you’d get them! Don’t be a sap! Mataga will be back in a little while. was “Sure.” Cowan shrugged. “And then you get the dirty end of the deal. You think I’m a sap? Those stones are down in that manhole, Chiv, in a box back in the corner of the tank.

  That’s why Mataga opened it. That’s why I wanted to know.

  “He’s letting it air out a little, that’s all. You get that box and we’ll get out of here.”

  Joe said nothing. He glanced at Cowan curiously, shifted his rifle a little.

  Chiv got up and looked shoreward. Then he approached the manhole, flashing his light down the rungs of the ladder. It wouldn’t reach to the corner.

  “You got that plane, sure thing?” he demanded.

  “Because, if you haven’t-was “You got a rod, Chiv, haven’t you?” Joe cut in suddenly. “He’s tied up, ain’t he? If it ain’t there, what do we lose? If it is, we take this guy, still tied, and head for the plane.”

  ““How does he know we won’t bump him? Chiv asked. “We could have it all.” His yellow eyes shifted back to Cowan, and the Yank felt a cold shiver run down his spine.

  “Don’t forget I’m the flyer,” Cowan said.

  “Don’t forget I know where the plane is.”

  “All right.” Chiv glanced shoreward again quickly, then he looked at Joe.”

  “Don’t let him try anything funny, see?

  I’ll be right back up. His light thrust in his belt, he started down the ladder. Joe Gotto sat up a little, watching his prisoner, his eyes very bright. Cowan stared at the manhole. They both heard Chiv slip, heard the hollow thump when he hit the bottom.

  Cowan tore his eyes from the manhole.

  “Now it’s just us, Joe. You’re a Yank and so am I. Do the Japs get this load of planes to get our boys with? You’re a tough cookie, pal.

  So’m I. But we aren’t either of us rats!”

  Joe grinned suddenly.

  “What was it?” he asked. “What happened to Chive” He bent over Cowan and hurriedly unbound him. The Yank straightened up, stretching his cramped muscles.

  “No oxygen. Those tanks are dangerous. I had an idea that in this heavy air, darned little of that gas would escape.”

  Cowan grabbed up the shotgun dropped by Chiv Laran and ran with Joe to the gangway. A lifeboat bobbed alongside.

  “What happened to Mataga?” Joe demanded.

  He was nervous, but his hands were steady. In running forward he had picked up a tommy gun from the petty officer’s mess, where it had been left on the table.

  “He’s hunting Forbes and the girl!”

  Steve Cowan sprang ashore when the boat grated on the beach. Then as Joe jumped down beside him, he shoved the lifeboat back into the water.

  Turning, he led the way into the jungle, heading for the point. They had gone only a dozen steps when Cowan stopped suddenly, holding up a hand.

  “Listen!” he said.

  Someone was floundering through the brush, panting heavily. Joe lifted his tommy gun, his eyes narrowed.

  “Hold it!” Cowan whispered.

  It was Captain Forbes. The old seadog broke through the brush, his face red, his lungs heaving. His clothing was torn by brambles, and his face and hands were scratched.

  “They’re comin’!” he said. “Right behind!”

  “Where’s Ruanne?” Steve Cowan demanded.

  “At the plane!” Forbes looked bad, the veins in his throat standing out, his lungs heaving. “We found it! I tried to lead them away. But they got too close!”

  Someone yelled back down the shore. Cowan turned, leading the way toward the mangroves.

  “Make it fast!” he whispered. “We’ve got a chance!” They were almost to the amphibian before Cowan noticed that Joe had not followed. He wheeled and started back. Ruanne stopped helping her uncle in the cabin door.

  “Where are you going?” she cried. “Come on!” “Can you fly?” Cowan hesitated, the shotgun dangling.

  “If you can, warm that ship up. We’ll be back!”

  He turned and plunged back into the jungle.

  Even as he broke through the first wall of green, he heard the angry chatter of a tommy gun and Joe’s raucous yell, then the sound of more guns. Joe cried out suddenly in pain. Cowan burst into a small clearing just as Donner and Besi John Mataga, followed by a dozen men, came through on the opposite side. A bullet smashed by his head, and Cowan jerked up the shotgun. It roared. Donner grabbed the pit of his stomach and plunged over on his face. Joe Gotto, down on one knee, was raking the killers with his tommy gun. Steve Cowan fired again, and the line broke and ran. Lunging across the clearing, Cowan swept.

  Joe Gotto to one shoulder and ran for the mangroves. Beyond, the amphibian’s twin motors were roaring music in his ears.

  Almost at the same instant, a plane roared by overhead. Cowan glanced up, swearing. It was a Kawasaki. It was circling for a return when Cowan boosted Joe into the cabin and then grabbed the controls. “Strap him in!” he yelled. “Get set! I’ve got to fight that Jape greater-than , He opened the plane wide and let her roar down the open water, throttle wide. Just short of the trees he pulled back on the stick, and the amphibian went up in a steep climb. Roaring on over the casuarinas, Cowan gave a startled gasp. A long, slim gray destroyer was alongside the Parawan, and a stream of Japanese sailors and marines were running up the gangway)

  Then he pulled back on the stick again just as the Kawasaki came screaming back toward him. Opening the ship wide, he fled; for the enemy was on his tail and his only safety at this low altitude lay in speed. A roaring chatter broke out in Steve Cowan’s ears. Turning his head, he saw Joe Gotto, strapped in a seat, firing his tommy gun out the port. The burst of bullets missed, but the Japanese wavered. In that instant, Cowan skidded around in a flat turn, raking the Kawasaki with a quick burst of fire. But the soldier was no fool. Screaming around in a tight circle, he tried to reach Cowan with his twin guns in the nose, while his observed opened fire from the rear cockpit.

  A bullet hole showed in the wing. Then Cowan pulled the amphibian on around and climbed steeply. Rolling over before the enemy could follow, he poured a stream of fire into the Kawasaki’s ugly blunt nose. The engine coughed, sputtered.

  Then Cowan banked steeply and came back with the son of Nippon dead in his sights. His guns roared. The Kawasaki burst int
o a roaring flame and went out of sight. Then for the first time Cowan heard a pounding in his ears. Off to his left a puff of smoke flowered. Glancing down, he realized with a shock that the destroyer’s anti-aircraft guns were opening up on him.

  He pulled the stick back and shot up into the sky, reaching for all the altitude he could get.

  He was still climbing in tight spirals when he rolled over a little to obtain a better view. It was like that, with Steve Cowan watching the scene below, when it happened. He had forgotten the time bomb. He had forgotten everything in the rush of action. How it had been set, he never knew. But suddenly, after these long hours, it turned loose with a tremendous detonation. A pyramid of flame shot skyward until Cowan thought his own wings, hundreds of feet above, must be singed. The puff of the explosion struck his ship and sent it staggering down the sky. He got it righted, banked steeply and circled slowly over the roaring fire below. The Parawan was gone.”… Where it had been was a mass of flaming wreckage. Beside it settled the Japanese destroyer, ablaze from stem to stern, with the bay around it for many yards a furnace of burning oil. Steve Cowan leveled off and then pointed his ship south. “Better have a look at Joe,” he said to Ruanne. “He may be hit bad.” “Aw, it’s nothin”,” Joe protested, blushing. “Take me somewhere where I can join the Army. Boy, what I just seen! And me, I thought Brooklyn’s “Murder, Incorporated’ was tough!”

  *

  Author’s Notes:

  Pirates With Wings

  There have always been men who went down to the sea, not those born to it, as men from the seaports, fishermen, and the like, but drifters whose restlessness led them down to the deep waters. Life at sea has never been an easy life, although conditions have improved drastically in the last fifty years. It is hard, demanding, and never without danger. It has been my good fortune to survive several very bad storms at sea, my misfortune to have encountered them at all.

  Wandering men take what transportation offers itself at the moment, and wherever they arrive they drift in companionship with others of their kind. Often they come what used to be called soldiers of fortune and our now more commonly called mercenaries.

  The term “mercenary” was first applied to those soldiers who fought for pay, but the money did not go to them but to their chieftain, lord, or ruler. The Hessians who fought with the British against the American colonists, for example, had their services sold to the British by their ruler.

  Mercenaries are usually hired when the sons of a country are no longer willing to fight for it, so professionals are sought. And there have been professionals in every war, men who sell their skills with weapons to the highest bidder or to the cause that appeals most. During the Middle Ages there were companies of soldiers who fought for whatever leader paid most for their services. One of the best accounts of such a company in fiction is that by Arthur Conan Doyle, The White Company. However, the White Company itself was not fictitious. It existed and for some time was commanded by a veteran mercenary, Sir John Hawkwood.

  The armies of the Middle Ages and of the Eastern Roman Empire were for many hundreds of years largely mercenary. In more recent years mercenaries have fought in the Latin American revolutions, for the warlords in China, and wherever someone has been willing to pay for their expert services. Often they were men who were called to serve their countries at an early age and became accustomed to warfare and the military life.

  Many of the old noble families of Europe were descended from mercenary soldiers.

  In Ireland in the time of Queen Elizabeth there was no future for a young Irishman of family, so many sailed away to Europe to take service in one army or another. Because they flew away to far lands they were called Wild Geese.

  Alexander O’Reilly, who commanded the Spanish army for a time, was such a one. General McMahon who served with Napoleon was another. There were Irish soldiers in every army in Europe as well as Latin America. For thousands of years warfare offered a young man his best chance of advancement. Due to the rigid caste system that existed in Europe the chances for an ambitious man were slight unless he went to war where courage and a strong arm might win him riches, a knighthood, or a place among the great captains of his time.

  Often such soldiers moved from war to war as long as they survived, renewing old acquaintances as they moved. Yet often enough it was harder to collect the money promised as pay as to win the war, if such wars are ever won.

  It was a hard world, yet few such men knew any other, and nobody mourns for a mercenary.

  *

  Turk Madden heard the man in the copilot’s seat roar, “Turk! Look out!” There was panic in his voice.

  Turk gave one startled glance upward and then yanked back on the stick. The Grumman nosed up sharply, narrowly missing a head-on collision with a speedy ship that had come plunging out of the sun toward them. Turk gave the amphibian the full rudder as it was about to stall, and the ship swung hard to the left and down in a wing over. Then, opening the throttle wide, he streaked for a towering mass of cumulus, dodging around it in a vertical bank.

  Buck Rodd, the man in the copilot’s seat, glanced at Turk, his face pale. “Was that guy bats?” he demanded. “Or was he getting smart with somebody?” Turk kept the throttle open and streaked away for another cloud, swung around it, and then around another. He was doing some wondering himself, for the action had been so swift that he had no more than the merest glance at the fast little ship before it was gone clear out of sight. Nor did he stop ducking.

  He kept the Grumman headed away from the vicinity and traveled miles before he finally began to swing back on his original course.

  “What’s the matter?” Buck Rodd inquired.

  “Are you afraid that mug will find you again? He’s probably scared silly right now.”

  “Could be,” Turk Madden agreed dubiously, “but that near smashup could have been deliberate. Leone warned us to expect trouble from Petex, you know.”

  “You mean a guy would do a thing like that on purpose?” Buck demanded, incredulously. “Not a chance! Why, if you hadn’t pulled up so darned fast we would both have crashed!”

  “Oh, sure!” Turk agreed. “But maybe he didn’t figure our speed quite right. You want to remember, a ship that fast, diving past us that close, could cause us a lot of trouble. If he did mean it, he was probably trying to throw a bluff into us. He probably tried to scare us.” “I can’t answer for you,” Buck Rodd assured him grimly, “but he sure got results with me!”

  Grimly, Turk Madden, fighting, roistering adventurer of the skyways, leaned forward, searching the green carpet of jungle below them for some indication of the landmarks he wanted. He was not kidding himself about his newest assignment. It was a job that gave every indication of being one of the toughest and most dangerous he had ever attempted, and his life had been one long series of tough jobs.

  The vast jungle below him, known to explorers as the “green hell,” amounted to more than three hundred thousand square miles of unexplored territory, a dense, trackless region of insects as large as birds, of natives who fiercely resented any encroachments on their territory, and of fevers that were as deadly as they were strange. This was the land he had promised to survey for oil for Joe Leone’s Tropical Oil Company, a job that could only be done from the air.

  To make the project all the more dangerous, another outfit was in the field or soon to be there. The Petroleum Exploration Company had long been known by reputation to Turk Madden. He was himself a hard-bitten flyer who was ready to tackle anything if the price was high enough. The Petex was also ready, and they had the men to do it. The difference was that Turk possessed a hankering for the right side of the law, whereas the Petex was unhampered by any code of ethics. It promised to be a dog-eat-dog battle. Joe Leone, the tough, fat little executive of Tropco, had warned him as to what he could expect. Leone had been weaned on a Liberty motor, had pioneered with an air circus, and had been a wing walker. From that he’d gone to an airline, and from there to the
more hectic business of prospecting for oil by use of the magnetometer.

  Leone and Madden talked the same language, and Joe pulled no punches in explaining.

  “The first one to get a good survey of that region can get a concession. If there’s oil there, we want it. An’ get this, Turk. The government wants it. The Tropco is doin’ the job, but Uncle Whiskers is mighty interested.

  “Our country needs oil-an’ plenty of it. Where does the oil come from? We ain’t supplyin’ our domestic needs now. An’ don’t kid yourself that we’re goin’ to make any big discoveries anymore. This country has been prospected from hell to breakfast!

  “Sure! We’ll find oil here an’ there, but not enough. Not a drop in the bucket. That Brazilian country is liable to be the biggest thing yet, an’ the folks I speak for an’ the ones Petex works for are out to get that survey finished an’ make a bid.

  So figure on trouble. “They’ll do anything-and I mean anything-to wreck your chance of a survey.

  They’ll sabotage your planes. They’ll kill if they come to it, don’t forget that. I don’t know for sure, but some of the guys behind this Petex outfit may represent another country. At any rate, they don’t respect Uncle Whiskers, an’ we do.

  “I’d figured on you. But there was a tip from Washington, too. They said you’d be the man.

  Seems they liked your work during the war. So you take that ship of yours an’ head for the Matto Grosso. We’ll have oil spotted for you at Cuyaba, an’ on the Amazon at Obido.

  We’ve got two men to send along, both good sharp boys, rough an’ tumble guys.”

  Turk had nodded thoughtfully. “Who are they?”

  “Dick London an’ Phil Mora.

  London’s your expert on the magnetometer.

  Knows it like a book, an’ a good radio man.

  He’s just a kid-twenty-two years old.

  “You ever hear of that Boy’s Ranch out near Old Tascosa? It’s a set-up something like Boy’s Town, an’ a mighty good one. Well, this Dick London came from there, an the kids that leave that ranch are tops, take it from me. Dick had some tough breaks as a kid, but he took to the life on that ranch an’ left there mighty interested in electrical science. Somebody helped him get a job at Westinghouse, an’ he went from that to a job in the survey of the Bahamas.

 

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