Vortex

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Vortex Page 18

by Chris Ryan


  'But we've done a good thing, Ben. We've . . . we've saved lives, haven't we?'

  'I know, Annie. And I know it bites, but we're just going to have to keep it to ourselves.'

  Annie's eyes widened as the truth of Ben's words struck her. 'So what do we do?' she breathed.

  'There's only one thing we can do. Try and get out of here without being caught. Nobody knows our names; if we can get back to the youth hostel without being collared, nobody will be any the wiser.'

  'Do you think we should go now, before the RAF get here?' But as she spoke, there was another noise in the background that answered their question. They peered out from the foliage to see two helicopters approaching. 'They're the same choppers that chased us earlier,' Annie murmured. They landed at a safe distance from the burning bunker, and as their doors opened, a swarm of armed RAF men jumped out. Suddenly there were trucks everywhere, driving up the road to examine the burning vehicle and erecting a human perimeter around the area of devastation.

  'I guess that's a no,' Annie whispered.

  'We'll have to wait till dark,' Ben said. 'It's our only chance of sneaking out unseen.'

  Annie nodded. 'Makes sense,' she said. 'But we've got a long time to wait.' She re-manoeuvred her body against the harsh bark of the tree. 'And this isn't the place I'd choose to be hanging around.'

  The day passed unbearably slowly. Ben and Annie kept watch on the movement of the RAF and the emergency services who were swarming around the site – half to distract them from how uncomfortable they were, half because they wanted to keep tabs on where everyone was before they tried to make their escape.

  Morning turned to afternoon, and afternoon to evening. They tried not to think about how long it had been since they had eaten, and their lips seemed to stick together with thirst. As the light began to fail, Ben grew increasingly anxious, and he could tell that the same was true for Annie. Helicopters and trucks were still all over the place, their powerful lights beaming out into the countryside. Ben had the distinct impression that they were looking for something – or someone. Anyone.

  'They probably think it's a terrorist attack,' he whispered.

  Annie nodded mutely.

  'Still, we can't stay up here for days. I reckon we've got another twenty minutes of light. As soon as it's dark, we go, OK?'

  'OK.'

  The day might have been slow, but the next twenty minutes passed more quickly than Ben would have liked. Almost before he knew it, it was fully dark and they were preparing to leave. Ben descended first, stepping over the gun that was still lying at the foot of the tree – that was the last time he wanted to see a weapon of any kind for a long time – then waited for Annie to join him. Then, treading carefully in the treacherous dark, they started trekking deeper into the forest, away from the focal point of activity. It seemed strange, walking in the opposite direction from where they had left Joseph, almost as though they were deserting him; but Joseph had chosen his own path, and there was nothing they could do about that now.

  They walked blindly in the silence and the dark, their hands held in front of them to stop themselves from bumping into trees. Neither Ben nor Annie had any idea where they were going, and soon they were wildly disorientated.

  The sounds were strange in the forest. The sounds of night. Wild animals called to each other, and there was mysterious shuffling all around them. All they could do was ignore it and press on, hoping that they would come out of the forest on the other side and find some way of orientating themselves. They held hands in order to stop themselves from getting separated; more than once, one of them tripped and had to be held up by the other. It was a frightening journey.

  Gradually, however, they became aware that the trees were starting to thin. Desperate to be out of the forest, they upped their pace; in the end they practically ran, hand in hand, out of the woods and onto the grassland beyond. Ben blinked. The moon was startlingly bright – so bright, in fact, that it cast shadows on the ground as sharp and distinct as if it were a summer's day. They stood for a moment, breathing heavily with relief, only now admitting to themselves how scared they had been in the woods. Once they had calmed down, Ben started to look around.

  'Over there,' he said, pointing away from them. 'The boundary fence.'

  Instinctively, they started running towards it. But they had only moved a few metres when Annie called to him.

  'Ben! Stop!'

  His heart jumped. 'What is it?'

  He turned to look at Annie, expecting the worst.

  But his cousin's face had a mysterious smile as she pointed up into the sky. There, silhouetted against the fat, silvery moon, they could see the shadow of a bird, swooping gracefully in the night sky. Time seemed to stand still as they watched it, solitary and magnificent, unaware that it was being admired, and unworried, for the moment at least, by the presence of humans.

  'What is it?' Ben whispered.

  'I don't know,' Annie replied. 'An owl of some kind. But whatever it is, it's beautiful.'

  And so it was. The two cousins continued to watch it until suddenly, without warning, it drifted away on some unseen eddy of wind, leaving Ben and Annie alone once more.

  They stood together in a kind of respectful silence, aware that they had been privileged to share that moment with the mysterious, phantom-like bird. Ben found himself wondering if Annie, too, was thinking about Joseph, and how he had entered briefly into their lives and then, like the bird, disappeared, never to be seen again.

  He didn't ask her. Instead he took her by the hand.

  'Come on,' he said quietly. 'Let's get home.'

  And hand in hand, they tramped out of Spadeadam and along the boundary fence. They did not look back until they reached the warmth and safety of the youth hostel, where they slept more deeply than they had ever slept before.

  Epilogue

  Three days later

  Ben's body ached from the bruises he had sustained in the tank, but he ignored them as he jumped down off the bus and hurried along the street to Annie's house. In his hand he clutched an A4 envelope, and he wanted to show his cousin the contents.

  He rapped on the front door and Annie answered. She nodded at him, and silently led him upstairs to her bedroom. The bird magazine that Annie had showed him last time he was here was lying on her bed, open at the page that showed the picture of the hen harrier. Ben felt a pang as he remembered seeing the birds being shot down, but also a small surge of pride that maybe – just maybe – they had made the world a little bit safer for those birds that remained.

  As soon as they had shut the door behind them, Ben spoke. 'I've got something to show you,' he said, and he handed over the envelope.

  Annie looked curiously inside, and pulled out a piece of paper. It was a photocopy of a newspaper cutting, and the two of them read it together.

  It was only a small article, and the picture that accompanied it was faint. There was no mistaking the face though – the hooked nose, the floppy hair, the piercing stare. It was Joseph. A young Joseph, but Joseph nevertheless. They read the words that accompanied it in silence.

  A physicist, Joseph Sinclair, has been detained indefinitely at a hospital for the mentally ill in York. Mr Sinclair, 21, was widely viewed as one of the most promising young scientists of his generation, but friends had become increasingly concerned about his erratic behaviour in recent weeks. His brother, Lucian Sinclair, spoke of his family's concerns. 'We are desperately worried for Joseph,' he told this newspaper, 'but we are confident he will make a full recovery in the very near future.'

  Annie breathed deeply. 'It's horrible, isn't it,' she said, 'what people are willing to do to each other?'

  Ben nodded.

  'Do you think he knew?' she asked him. 'What he was doing, I mean, when he blew up the bunker? Or was it the voices in his head that he told us about?'

  'I don't know, Annie,' he replied. 'I guess we'll never know.'

  Before he could say anything else, there was a knock at the d
oor.

  'Come in,' Annie called.

  The door opened, and a tall, thickset man with steely grey hair appeared.

  Annie blinked, then smiled. 'Dad!' she said with delight, then ran to her father, who embraced her in a great bear hug.

  Air Commodore James Macpherson smiled at Ben over his daughter's shoulder. 'Ben,' he greeted him affably.

  'Hi, James,' Ben replied. He barely ever saw Annie's dad, but he liked him a lot.

  Annie pulled away from her dad. 'How come you're back?' she asked excitedly.

  'Been reassigned up north,' he replied. 'All this business at Spadeadam – you've probably read about it in the paper.'

  Ben did his best not to catch Annie's eye. 'Yeah,' she replied. 'Bits and pieces. Do you know what went on?'

  James took a seat on Annie's bed and stretched his legs out. 'Not a clue, to be honest. It's all very mysterious. Some people seem to think it's a terrorist strike, and we've had certain intelligence—'

  'What sort of intelligence?' Ben asked, a bit too quickly.

  James looked slightly taken aback by his sudden question. 'I'm sorry, Ben,' he said quietly. 'It's the sort of thing I can't discuss.'

  'No,' Ben muttered, slightly embarrassed. 'No, of course not.'

  'Still,' James announced brightly, 'for what it's worth, I don't agree with them. Strikes me as being much more likely that it was an unexploded bomb left over from the war. Or something like that. Whatever it is, it's a mess. Anyway' – he smiled over at his daughter – 'it means I'm going to be around for a bit, I'm afraid.'

  Annie grinned at him.

  'Well,' James declared, standing up and stretching his legs, 'I'd better get back to it.' He made to leave. 'Oh,' he said, turning round just as his hand touched the doorknob, 'your mum said you went bird-watching in that area.'

  Ben and Annie nodded mutely.

  'See anything interesting?'

  Ben blinked, his mind suddenly blank as he tried to think of something to say.

  'Oh,' he managed finally, shrugging his shoulders as nonchalantly as he could and turning to look out of Annie's bedroom window, 'you know. This and that.'

  Know the Facts

  Fact

  In the 1950s, the CIA initiated Project MKULTRA.

  Its purpose was to use scientific techniques to affect

  and control people's minds. According to an official

  CIA document, this included research into 'substances

  which will promote illogical thinking and

  impulsiveness to the point where the recipient

  would be discredited in public'.

  It is not known if the British government carried out

  similar research, though some people think it likely.

  Fact

  In 2004, excavations for a secret missile silo were

  uncovered within the grounds of RAF Spadeadam. No

  official documents relating to the construction of

  these silos appear to exist.

  Fact

  RAF Spadeadam contains a number of sites of Special

  Scientific Interest, and the RAF is scrupulous about

  conserving the wildlife and habitats that exist within

  the base.

  Fact

  The hen harrier is one of the rarest birds in the

  United Kingdom. Evidence suggests that breeding hen

  harriers are being routinely killed and if nothing is

  done to reverse this trend, this beautiful bird risks

  becoming extinct, at least in England.

  Author's Note

  Ever since I was a boy, I have enjoyed hiking outdoors – not only appreciating the physical challenges involved, but also being aware of the local wildlife. I am particularly concerned with the conservation of our natural wild birds and animals, and especially where individual species are at threat of disappearing for ever unless they are actively protected.

  The hen harrier bird is one such species. In 2004, a survey by the RSPB, Scottish Natural Heritage and other countryside agencies found only 749 nesting pairs in the UK, almost all of which were in Scotland. Only ten pairs were found in England and this year only fifteen successful nests have been confirmed. This is a pitifully low number, considering that the birds have legal protection, and I would very much like to see their numbers increase.

  For further information on the hen harrier, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) has information on how you can help to save this amazing bird of prey, as well as giving you information on other birds at risk. See www.rspb.org.uk for further information.

  And

  www.rspb.org.uk/youth/join_in/wex.asp for details of their wildlife explorers club.

  Outside the UK, you will almost certainly find your own national organization to help protect birds and wildlife in your area.

  For further information on species at risk – insects, birds, animals or reptiles:

  www.wwf.org

  www.worldwildlife.org/endangered

  www.wildlifeprotection.info

  Chris Ryan

  If you would like to know more about helping to conserve wildlife and birds, both in the UK and abroad, you can join the world's most exciting wildlife club for young people:

  Be a Wildlife Explorer

  Join the club for:

  * a great membership pack, including posters

  * a magazine, BirdLife, six times a year

  * the chance to enter competitions and take part in activities and wildlife holidays

  * and free entry to more than 100 RSPB nature reserves.

  It's a great way to learn about wildlife and to help protect birds. There are family membership packages too, and teenagers can also become RSPB Phoenix members and get their own environmental magazine, Wingbeat, four times a year. Your membership will help conserve wildlife both in the UK and abroad.

  Full information at: www.rspb.org.uk/youth/join_in/wex.asp

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  CHRIS RYAN

  Chris Ryan joined the SAS in 1984 and was involved in numerous operations with the Regiment. During the first Gulf War he was the only member of an eight-man team to escape from Iraq, three colleagues being killed and four captured. It was the longest escape and evasion in the history of the SAS and for this he was awarded the Military Medal. He wrote about his remarkable escape in The One That Got Away (1995), which was also adapted for screen.

  Chris left the SAS in 1994 and is now the author of many bestselling titles for both adults and children, including the Alpha Force series and Code Red adventures for younger readers. His adult thriller The Watchman has been optioned for a movie.

  His work in security takes Chris around the world, and he has also demonstrated his skills in different scenarios by presenting a number of television series, including Hunting Chris Ryan, Pushed to the Limit and Terror Alert.

 

 

 


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