by Hazel Hunter
And it was good that they had to land two more times today and do another takeoff. When someone’s had a scare, it was best to get back in the seat and not let fear settle in. Though he couldn’t hear it, he saw Jules take a deep breath and she let go of the arm rest. He let her hand go as she reached down to the floor to pick up the map and binder. He adjusted their heading to bring them back on course but what he saw ahead wasn’t good.
In the few minutes it’d taken to recover from the near collision, the weather to the south had changed.
“Lumby will have to wait,” he said.
“What?” she said, sitting up and looking at him. She checked out her window and his. “Is there damage?”
“No,” he said, as he put the plane into a gentle one-eighty, swinging the nose to the left. He nodded toward her side of the plane. “But that weather is going to be a problem.”
The cloud mass had become thick and black and the ceiling had dropped at least a thousand feet. As the weather moved to their starboard, he saw lightning flash and heard it crackle over the headset. Rain began to spatter the windshield but it quickly turned to hail. His hand immediately went to the carburetor heater, pushed it on, and then he twisted the throttle counterclockwise to thin the fuel mixture.
“Is the lightning a problem?” Jules asked, looking out her window.
Logan began a gradual descent.
“No,” he said, truthfully. “Lightning strikes planes thousands of times a year. The metal surface of the skin acts like a cage so it rarely affects aircraft operations or the people inside.”
What he didn’t say was where there was lightning, there was also an unstable air mass. Combined with the hail, it meant thunderheads were towering thousands of feet above them. Only the enormous up and down drafts of a tall cumulus cloud could create ice. It was nowhere for a small plane to be. They needed to get away from those clouds–fast.
Suddenly, hail crashed around them in a white sheet and the plane plummeted.
• • • • •
“Wind shear!” Jules heard Logan say.
Though he hadn’t screamed, the strain in his voice was unlike anything she’d ever heard from him. The plane was being buffeted from side to side and the wings were flexing as though it was trying to fly.
“Full throttle,” he said.
He shoved the throttle forward and yanked back on the yoke. Even over the headset she could hear the whine of the engine and the knuckles on Logan’s hands were white with the effort to keep a grip on the wheel. Some of the dials on the dash were spinning crazily.
“Not enough altitude,” he ground out through his clenched jaw.
Outside, the hail had turned back into a sheet of rain that smeared across the windshield and whipped by their windows in streaking rivulets. Lightning flashed somewhere off to the left as the headset hissed.
Logan was checking left and right and trying to look over the nose of the plane. That’s what he did when he was landing!
Oh my god!
“There it is,” he grunted.
His right hand flicked to the radio and flipped a few dials.
“Squawking 7700,” he muttered.
Then his hand flew back to the wheel as he continued to tug backwards.
“Soft field,” he grunted.
Suddenly, the trees were flying by in the window to Logan’s left. With the nose of the aircraft so high, it was impossible for Jules to see over it. Out her window, they were below the level of the tree tops. How were they not crashing into the trees?
“Brace for impact!” he yelled. “Chin down!”
Jules complied but not soon enough as the plane’s rapid descent suddenly bottomed out. Her chin hit her chest as her head snapped forward with the jolt and the headset flew off. A loud banging sound came from the back of the plane but then they were airborne again.
“Hold on!” Logan yelled.
The plane came down a second time and Logan killed the throttle. Even as the propeller windmilled to a near stop in front of her, the landscape continued to rush by in a blur. They bounced chaotically, the sound of the vibration deafening. Suddenly, an explosion rocked her side of the plane. As it dipped to the right, the last thing Jules saw was her window rapidly approaching.
CHAPTER TWO
“We lost a tire!” Logan yelled but he continued to stomp on the top of the left rudder for the brake.
As the right strut ate into the ground, the right wing dipped down.
“Not the wing,” he ground out through his clenched jaw but there was nothing he could do.
Although he still gripped the yoke, it was useless without lift. Momentum and the brake in the left tire were the only things determining their trajectory. But the high wings carried the fuel and if they hit–
A different time and place flashed into his mind. The tires of the CC-130 had shredded on impact and the giant plane had started to skid sideways. His copilot was already dead, hit by the brunt of the shrapnel. He would later learn the plane had been hit simultaneously by two rocket propelled grenades as it’d made its final approach. It’d been a miracle that it hadn’t exploded on impact.
An explosion on his side of the Cessna brought Logan to the present. The left tire was gone. Logan felt his chest hit the harness and the back of the plane lifted.
No, don’t flip!
He pressed back in his seat as though that might help and for a few moments the plane hovered in nearly a vertical position, tail high in the air and the propeller touching the ground. He stared at grass through the windshield for what seemed like an eternity. Finally, though, the tail rotated back toward the ground. The small back wheel thudded down and the plane finally came to a rest.
Chest heaving, Logan finally released his grip on the yoke. He turned off the engine, removed the keys, and hit the red master switch.
“Jules, are you–”
Her arms hung limp at her sides and her head was resting against her window. A bright red trickle of blood slid down the glass.
“Dammit,” he muttered as he wrenched his harness off and threw open the door. He jumped to the ground as his right knee responded with a sharp stab of pain.
In the CC-130, he’d immediately crawled to Wick but, as he reached him, he saw his face. Eyes still open, the right hand side of his head was a pulpy mess. Glittering pieces of metal and glass were imbedded everywhere. Part of a small green circuit board protruded from his neck.
“Jules!” Logan yelled, as he opened her door and she slumped outward as far as the harness would let her.
Her eyes were closed and blood ran from a gash above her right eyebrow. He quickly felt her neck for a pulse and finally found one. As he unhooked the harness, he was careful not to let her fall. Already stooped over to fit under the wing, especially now the tires were gone, he bent even lower and scooped her out of the seat. He hadn’t smelled fuel but they needed to get a safe distance away from the crash.
As he cleared the wing, he stood up and ran for the edge of the forest. Whether it was Jules’ light weight or the adrenalin coursing through his system, it didn’t matter. In moments, they were in the forest. The plane had come to rest with little room to spare. A collision with the trees would almost certainly have meant a fire.
Gently, he laid her down next to a large tree trunk, and realized her face was wet with rain.
“Jules?”
Her lips were parted, her eyes closed, and she didn’t move. He bent down over her nose and mouth and heard her light breaths. He took off his leather jacket and laid it over her torso. More than likely the blow to the head had knocked her unconscious and she’d soon wake up–at least he hoped so. He lightly smoothed her hair away from the gash and ran the backs of his fingers over her cheek, brushing away the rain. As much as he wanted to stay with her and make sure she was all right, he knew there was important work to do as his survival training took over.
“Never say die,” he said to her.
He stood and his right knee twinged but he ignored it.
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As he trotted back to the plane, he thought of the emergency locator transmitter or ELT and also his 7700 transmission. The broadcast had been brief but hopefully someone had picked it up. If not, then the ELT ought to bring SAR, search and rescue. He ducked under the wing and out of the rain. Unfortunately, search aircraft wouldn’t be leaving the ground until the storm had passed. Nor would they mount any operations in the dark. He looked back toward Jules. They would be spending the night. At least he knew the plane was outfitted with a good emergency kit. He’d prepared it himself.
He went to the baggage door, toward the tail, and used the keys to open it. He grabbed the red duffle bag and also Jules’ doctor’s bag from the back seat and ran back to the forest. As he did, he noted the airstrip. That was indeed what it was. When he’d briefly tried to see where that Piper Super Cub had come from, he’d glimpsed it. In reality, he’d seen it on virtually every flyover they’d done. As he reached Jules and set down the two bags, he briefly surveyed the surroundings. The forest was thick and the ground sloped down and away from their position. In order for the strip behind him to exist, trees had to have been cut down and stumps removed. Large rocks had been removed as well. Though small, the runway had not been an easy thing to construct.
“Or maintain,” he muttered.
If the presence of the Piper Super Cub hadn’t told him it was in active use, the good state of it did. It wasn’t on any sectional maps though. It was private. And there was only one reason to have a private strip in the middle of the mountains and the forest–drugs.
• • • • •
“Clear Channel Base, this is Bravo Echo. Do you copy?”
Seth swung his gaze from the TV to the radio set on the desk.
What do they want now?
“Clear Channel, this is Bravo Echo. Do you hear me?”
Seth looked at Frank, who was smoking a joint.
Seth drained the last of his beer and tossed the empty can. It hit Frank in the ear.
“Ow!” Frank yowled.
“Shut up and answer the radio,” Seth said.
Frank took another hit and set the joint in the ashtray.
“You could just say something,” he grumbled.
Sure I could, thought Seth. But what fun would that be?
“Hurry up,” he yelled.
Frank was a slug–slow and fat. He also smoked too much weed. If it weren’t for the fact they were brothers, he’d have buried his worthless carcass in the woods a long time ago. Frank snorted, coughed and spit in the trash before he thumbed the big button on the base of the mic.
“Yeah,” he said.
“Clear Channel Base,” Seth corrected him.
From the beginning, they had all agreed never to use real names or call signs on open broadcasts.
“Yeah,” Frank said again, scratching his beard.
Even though his beard itched, Frank was too lazy to shave. Seth shaved every day, despite the fact they never saw anyone. The pilot of the Piper’s loud voice sounded in the room again.
“Clear Channel Base, we observed a plane low over the strip.”
“A what?” Frank muttered.
Seth sat up and took his feet off the coffee table. Frank was staring at the mic, his mouth hanging open a little. Seth pushed off the couch and shoved Frank out of the way. Seth hit the mic switch.
“When?” he barked. “And don’t give me any of that Zulu time crap.”
“On departure, over,” said the pilot.
“Did they see our ops?” Seth demanded.
There was silence for several moments and he glanced at Frank, who was taking another hit.
“Unknown,” the pilot finally replied. “Over.”
Damn. They’d avoided detection for three years. Gone to great lengths to do it too.
Outside the window, rain was coming down and it’d be dark in another couple hours. The strip wasn’t far but the dirt road would be washed out now, down near the grow barns. They’d need to check everything: the barns, the generators, the strip, everything. Seth looked at his watch as Frank started coughing.
The last thing Seth wanted to do was ride around in the rain and dark, with his brother high and toting a gun. They’d run their checks in the morning.
“Clear Channel Base, did you copy?” the pilot said.
Seth hit the mic button.
“Yeah, we copy.”
• • • • •
Pain in the occipitofrontal region, Jules thought. She slowly opened her eyes and put a hand to her forehead. It was wet. As she brought her fingers into focus, she saw blood.
Blood?
She sat up and immediately wished she hadn’t as pain lanced through her head.
“Probable concussion,” she muttered.
What happened?
The flickering fire caught her attention and, as she focused on it, she saw the plane beyond it in the distance.
They’d crashed.
“Logan?” she said, looking one way and then the other. “Logan!” she yelled as she got to her feet, unsteady. A dull ache in her ankle made her pick up that foot.
Where is he? Is he okay?
“Logan!” she yelled again just barely keeping her balance.
“Jules,” he said, from behind her.
She turned but was met by some type of screen made of branches.
“Logan?”
Finally, he appeared to the right of the screen.
“Oh, Logan,” she breathed as she took a step toward him and started to tilt over.
In seconds, his arms were around her, holding her upright.
“Careful,” he said. “You took quite a knock on the head.”
She clung to him and rested her head against his chest. A million questions went through her mind. Though the pressure in her head told her she had a concussion, one question made her draw back away from him.
“Are you injured?” she asked, studying his face.
“Not a scratch,” he said, gazing down at her.
“Are you sure?” she said, looking at his arms and down his torso, though he didn’t let her go.
“Yes,” he nodded. “I’m sure.”
He sounded fine and looked fine and relief washed over her as she swayed.
“Here,” he said, helping her back to the ground.
She held on to his firm arms as he eased her into a sitting position. He crouched in front of her, his back to the fire.
“Your doctor’s bag is right here,” he said. He stood and reached behind her. “All the emergency supplies are here at the back of the lean-to.”
He set the black leather bag down in front of her, unlatched it, and opened the wide rectangular mouth. She immediately retrieved the acetaminophen. Aspirin might promote bleeding.
“Is there water?” she asked.
He was already fetching it. It was a foil packet he tore open at the top and then handed to her. As he did, she realized that, not only did her head hurt, she was thirsty. She took the pills with the entire bag.
“Thanks,” she said, handing it back empty.
Just the hydration made her feel better.
He took the bag but remained crouched in front of her.
“How are you feeling?” he asked.
She had been about to say concussed when she saw the deep furrows in his forehead and the tight set of his lips.
“Better,” she said.
His blue eyes stared into hers and, with the fire to his back, it was difficult to read his expression.
“Really,” she said.
He reached out a hand to her arm and gave it a little squeeze.
“Okay,” he said quietly.
Beyond him, in the fading light, she could see the plane.
“What happened?” she asked.
He stood and picked up a bundle of firewood he’d apparently been collecting. He untied the rope around it and laid several of the larger pieces on the fire.
“Microburst,” he said.
She watched as
he stoked the fire.
“Just under the big thunderhead,” he continued. “The downwash overtook us and pulled the lift from the wings.”
“We dropped,” she said, remembering.
“Like a stone,” he confirmed, nodding. “We had just enough altitude and airspeed to maximize the angle of glide.”
“We landed?”
“Right,” he said. His eyes focused on her forehead. “Is there something I can do for that?”
She glanced upwards and remembered she’d been bleeding. A cut on the forehead, though not severe, could still produce a lot of blood because the face and head were so full of blood vessels. She reached into the doctor’s bag and withdrew an antiseptic wipe.
“It’s not serious,” she said, slowly wiping it. “So we landed.”
“And then the tires blew,” he said, watching her hand. “Here, let me,” he said.
She handed him the wipe but it was full of blood.
“Oh,” she said.
He was already opening another one. She sat still as he gently and methodically wiped around the cut, down to her eyebrow and around to the temple.
“I’ve tried the radio but there was no response,” he said. “Could be the antenna’s damaged but more than likely we just don’t have line of sight to any receivers. Same with the cell phones.”
As he finished with the second wipe, Jules retrieved some gauze, tape, and scissors from the bag.
“How big is the cut?” she asked.
“About half an inch.”
She cut and folded the gauze accordingly, snipped a piece of tape, and handed them both to Logan. For such a big man, his touch was gentle and he took his time.
He sat back and judged his work. Apparently satisfied, he bundled up the wipes and the empty water bag and put them in a white trash bag she hadn’t noticed before. In fact, as she looked around, she realized she hadn’t noticed much. Logan had been busy.
She was sitting under a lean-to of rough tree limbs that had been lashed together at the corners with bright orange rope. Entire branches with their pine needles had been laid over the framework of poles and tied into place. An open emergency kit was tucked back underneath the furthest corner. Inside it she saw more foil pouches and various tools and supplies. Underneath her there was a shiny silver emergency blanket. The ground was soft though and she saw pine needles and a wool blanket protruding from the edges. Logan must have been working non-stop.