Tomorrow 5 - Burning for Revenge

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Tomorrow 5 - Burning for Revenge Page 14

by John Marsden

At last the two missing soldiers came back with a winch. I was impressed by that. I don’t know how they found one in the middle of nowhere, but they had, old and battered though it was. And they knew how to use it. When they began to set it up, running the chain around a big old river red gum, I decided to make my move. If I didn’t go now I mightn’t get another chance. I started to slither and wriggle up the bank.

  The blackberries were the worst. They always seem like they’re out to get you. It’s personal with blackberries. I hate them. They caught my clothes, my skin, my hair. And of course the more you get mad at them and try to rip away, the deeper they sink their claws in. I lost my temper with them half-a-dozen times but it didn’t do any good. They love it when you lose your temper.

  At least the soldiers were totally absorbed the whole time. They were doing quite a good job, I noticed, the few times I looked at them. Before I’d worked my way up to the top of the ridge they had the jeep half out of the water.

  It was about then that I realised we had a big problem. I assumed Homer or Lee had let the hand­brake off, to make the jeep run down the slope into the river. So far, so good. But what worried me was the reaction of the soldiers when they did the post-mortem. I figured I’d better talk to Homer and Lee, and fast. As soon as I got across the ridge I started running. I’d only covered thirty or forty metres when Homer, then the others, popped up in front of me, looking very pleased with themselves.

  ‘We’re home free,’ Homer said. ‘Let’s go.’

  ‘Uh uh,’ I said. ‘I don’t think so.’

  ‘Why not?’

  ‘In about one second they’re going to check the jeep to see why it rolled down the slope.’

  They all stood there staring at me, looking puzzled.

  ‘Oh yes,’ Lee said. Suddenly he’d realised.

  There was no question in my mind that the sol­diers were about to work out that their jeep had been sabotaged. And immediately my mind jumped to the next thought. They had to die, before they could tell the others we were in the district. More deaths. We had a problem, and these days I thought automati­cally of killing as the answer to every problem.

  At least this time I wasn’t going to be the one who killed them, I was sure of that.

  ‘What’s the problem?’ Fi asked. ‘Why can’t we go?’

  ‘The soldiers are going to find the handbrake off,’ I explained. ‘And they’ll know one of us must have done it.’

  ‘But it could have come off accidentally,’ Fi said.

  ‘Don’t think so.’

  ‘But why not?’ Fi persisted.

  I nearly didn’t bother answering, but then said, ‘It just wouldn’t. Not while there’s still tension in the cable.’

  There was a pause, then Fi said: ‘What about if it came off again?’

  There was another pause, a longer one, then suddenly her meaning hit me. I’d only been half-listening, while I tried to work out some way of stopping the soldiers. Tie them up, take them hostage, shoot them? We didn’t even have a gun!

  But then I realised what Fi was getting at. Without another word I belted back up the slope, dropping on all fours as I approached the crest. I knew I could get a nasty surprise if I came face-to-face with a soldier, but time was so short I had to take the risk. I slithered the last few metres, then peeped over the edge.

  They’d got the jeep out of the water. It sat on the bank, looking wet and sloppy and sorry for itself. Two soldiers were inside, one was fiddling with the aerial on the back, and one was getting the hook from the winch off the towbar. ‘That’s me,’ I thought approv­ingly and conceitedly, looking at him. ‘I’d be the one doing the boring job of getting the chain while the others have fun, inspecting the drowned jeep.’

  He was having trouble though. He was trying to free the chain with one hand while holding his rifle at the ready and looking around all the time. Next to him, the guy playing with the aerial slid it up and down as he called instructions to the man in the front seat. They seemed very excited, very anxious. Their attitude was certainly different from a few minutes back. It was like someone had dropped hot coals down their backs.

  I put the clues together. They’d realised the hand­brake had been released. They’d decided it was no accident. They knew we were around somewhere. They were trying to call for help.

  One thing meant good news for us though. I think their only radio was the one inside the jeep. The soaking in the water had damaged it. That was a bonus.

  Everything now depended on their next step. Would they get the radio working? Would they get the jeep started, and rush away for reinforcements? Or would they look for us first?

  It might come down to a question of what would get them in the least trouble. Having to admit that we pushed their jeep in the water while they stood around doing nothing could be pretty embarrassing. However, if they came back with our bodies, dead or alive, no-one would give a stuff about the jeep getting wet.

  There was a lot of talk going on, even shouting at times. I guess they were debating the very issues that I was thinking about. All four of them kept looking around so anxiously all the time. They were very aware of us.

  Their next step was to try to start the jeep. They didn’t have much of an idea. For people who knew their way around a winch they seemed surprisingly helpless when it came to starting a wet engine. One of them sat in the driver’s seat turning the key while the others stood by, alternately looking for us and shouting advice at the driver.

  When it became obvious that the car wasn’t about to start they went to Plan B. And that gave me my chance.

  Plan B was a search of the area. I suppose they didn’t like the thought of returning to base unless they’d done that much. And maybe they thought the car would dry out while they searched.

  They started upstream. They did it methodically. They’d obviously been trained for this. Two stood at the back scanning the area, rifles held ready. The other two beat their way through the bushes using their rifles like sticks. Dad would have had a fit. He always kept our rifles in top condition. I’d dragged several thousand pull-throughs down their barrels over the years. One speck of dirt and I had to do it all over again.

  But now was the time to make my move, while they were still a fair way away. I used the jeep as cover and went for a little darting run halfway down the bank to the first bit of shrubbery. I paused there, panting, and peered through the branches. So far so good. The soldiers were still on the job.

  I put my head down again and waited a moment. I needed another charge of energy, another gulp of oxy­gen. But when I looked up again my stomach went into a spasm. The young soldier, the fifteen year old, was walking straight towards me. I stared at him in horror. I flattened myself even further, like an echidna, squirm­ing against the ground, as though I thought I could press a hole into it. His gaze was wandering across a patch of blackberries, but it felt like a laser beam head­ing my way. In another second it would reach me. He would see me. His eyes would widen. His mouth would open. He would call out. I would be dead.

  A plop saved me. A loud sharp plop from the water. In the middle of the biggest pool large, rough ripples were spreading. It was almost too big for a fish. I wondered if it might be a platypus. The boy frowned – something he seemed to do most of the time – and turned towards the river. He and his mates were so nervous that they would have jumped at a leaf falling from a tree. He took a step towards the bank, but then another soldier called out a few sharp and angry words. The boy screwed up his nose as though someone had farted. Mumbling to himself he walked back to the search party.

  I thought I’d better make the most of my reprieve. I made my second dash, keeping so low to the ground I nearly got gravel rash on my tummy. I’d planned to stop again but once I started I just kept going. The last few metres were breathtakingly scary. But I made it to the jeep, crouching beside it, on the safe side. I peeped around the left-hand tail-light to have a quick look at the soldiers. They were poking their rifles into some wil
low roots. It was a long way from where we’d been hiding, so I wasn’t worried that we’d left any incriminating evidence. They were probably peering down a wombat hole. I reached into the jeep and released the handbrake. ‘You’re a genius, Fi,’ I thought. I backed away slowly, but the soldiers were still interested in the willows. Before I knew it I was at the top of the hill. One last slither over the crest and I was with the others again.

  I got a few pats on the back for that effort. But Lee was proud of himself too. ‘Did you like my shot with the rock?’ he asked.

  ‘Rock? What rock?’

  Then I realised. ‘Oh. I thought it was a platypus. God, you took a hell of a risk.’

  We decided to stay and see what happened. It was too important to us. If these guys weren’t fooled, if they were convinced we were in the area, it’d change our whole strategy. If we had successfully conned them, then we’d bought ourselves another chunk of time and space. We had to know.

  It took half an hour to find out. In that time the soldiers, working carefully and methodically, covered the whole area up to the road. Then they at last decided to take a break. They came back down to the jeep.

  It took another five minutes for anything to hap­pen. For those five minutes we watched from our vantage points, sweating and wishing. If willpower could make those guys do what we wanted, they would have been moving at triple speed. But all our combined willpower didn’t seem to make any differ­ence. The soldiers lit cigarettes, and stood around talking, but still very watchfully, with rifles ready. I thought maybe they were losing enthusiasm. There wasn’t much to encourage them.

  It was only when one of them threw his cigarette away and went over to the jeep that things at last started to happen. He sat in the driver’s seat and tried the key again. Again it didn’t fire up. He continued to sit there. One of the others called something but the man in the driver’s seat just shrugged. For another couple of minutes he sat gazing through the windscreen.

  I didn’t see him look down at the handbrake. But suddenly I heard his cry of surprise. Of delight even. He jumped out of the car, calling to the others. I felt Fi’s hand grip mine nervously. This was so important to us. Especially to her, seeing it was her idea. It just had to work. We were too tired, too wrecked, to start another long bout of running and hiding. We had to buy that extra time.

  Whatever the man said brought them all to have a look. There was a lot of excited discussion. But one thing was for sure: their attitude changed. They were relaxed, laughing, happier. I knew they didn’t want to find us, any more than we wanted them to find us. To them we were vicious armed guerillas. Totally dangerous, totally deadly. Amazing. But I could see how they would think that way. They were just regular soldiers, used to cleaning their boots, marching round the parade ground, getting the barracks inspected, having rifle practice in the after­noons. Nothing would have prepared them for the kind of stuff we were doing. Nothing would have prepared them for the inferno we’d created at the airfield.

  They were thinking now that they weren’t going to find us. All they had now was a jeep with a faulty handbrake. That was cool by them. They were happy again.

  There was more discussion. But at least two of them obviously wanted to go. With dark coming on, I assumed they were approaching the end of their shift. The first two were starting to wade across the ford, and urging the other two, the older man and the teenager, to come with them. They weren’t as keen, but after a moment they started to follow. The five of us watched anxiously as they splashed across the river. Soon they were heading up the opposite bank. But only when they were over the top and out of sight did we relax. We lay back and laughed. The relief was huge, overwhelming. We had survived, without hurt­ing or killing anyone. It was a big break.

  Chapter Twelve

  No-one was very keen to go back in the river. The darker it got, the safer the river would be – ambushes would hardly work when they couldn’t see us – but we had become so uncomfortable and cold after the first trip that we weren’t in a hurry to do it again. Instead we decided to follow the banks for as long as we could, then get some sleep. Funnily enough, no-one even mentioned food. I guess there was no point. We knew we wouldn’t be magically coming across any golden arches, so what was the good of whingeing? But I also knew our energy levels were a long way down, and we would need food soon.

  We struggled along the sides of the river. It was difficult. There were big patches of blackberries in a few places, blackberries that stretched for a hundred metres or more. And in another place the banks were just too steep. Finally, while the rest of us struggled through another tricky part, where a clump of trees forced us into a big detour, Lee slipped into the water and swam around. It took him thirty seconds, but it took us ten minutes. When we got past the trees, Lee was waiting, comfortably stretched out on the grass. It was enough of a hint. At the next patch of black­berries we all took to the water.

  We floated on for an hour and a half. By then the light was gone and we were terribly cold again. We needed to get out of the water. None of us had a clue where we were, but we hadn’t seen any sign of habitation for twenty minutes, and the thick bush on either side of the river made us think we’d be safe.

  We clambered out. We were so cold and miserable and hungry that when Homer said he was lighting a fire, no-one objected. He looked straight at me, quite fiercely, as if he expected me to kick up a fuss, but I didn’t have the spirit to say anything. And when I thought about it, as we straggled around the clearing looking for wood, it seemed like the right thing to do. It’d be dangerous to stand around in wet clothes. By the morning we’d have a few cases of pneumonia to worry about.

  So Lee dived into his waterproof pack and got his matches. He’d said to me that I might be grateful one day for his waterproof pack, and he was right, as usual.

  We lit a tiny fire and huddled around it to hide the flame, feeding it with dead twigs so there’d be no smoke. We talked quite a lot, in low voices, in case there were people closer than we realised. My first question was to Lee. ‘Was I dreaming or did you take the rifles from where those two soldiers dropped them?’

  ‘Yeah, you must have been dreaming. I never touched them.’

  For a moment I actually believed him, which shows how tired I was.

  ‘Yes you did!’ I said indignantly.

  ‘OK, I did then. Whatever you reckon.’

  ‘Oh come on Lee, tell me, what happened? How did you do it?’

  Homer finally took pity on me. ‘It was a snap deci­sion. It looked like there was a good chance we could get out without any shooting, but only if we put the rifles back. So we took the risk.’

  I was relieved it was such a simple explanation.

  We talked about the airfield, each telling our stories. What we’d done and where we’d made mistakes and how stunning and amazing it all was. We didn’t rave or scream or have a celebration party. We just talked quietly. I knew we were probably hurting Kevin by having our post-mortem right in front of him, but too bad. We needed to do this. We weren’t trying to rub salt in his wounds, but the whole thing had been so overwhelming, so intense, so sudden and rushed, that we hadn’t even begun to absorb it. That very morning we’d brought off what could be one of the most impor­tant hits of the war. We knew that from the Wirrawee airfield the enemy controlled thousands of square kilometres of land. We’d changed that. The explosions and the fires had been so vast and on such a scale that it was quite possible we’d destroyed every plane.

  We were talking about the big hangar when Lee said: ‘We should try to contact Colonel Finley.’

  ‘Yes, good idea,’ Homer said, with sudden enthusiasm.

  Lee went on: ‘They mightn’t even know this has happened. And they’ll need to know, because then they can take advantage of it. They can bomb the hell out of any targets they want.’

  ‘But they’ll know about it,’ Fi said. ‘All that smoke! It’d just about have crossed the Tasman.’

  I think Fi’s rea
l worry was that if we used the radio we might give our position away. The New Zealanders had told us how easy it was to be traced, and how we should only use the radio in emergen­cies. To be honest, I did sort of want to call the Colonel, but for the wrong reasons. I wanted to hear a friendly familiar adult voice again, and even more than that, I wanted someone to say: ‘Fantastic! You guys did well. That was good!’

  I hadn’t heard any praise from an adult in quite a while.

  ‘We’ll be circumspect,’ I said to Fi. She just looked at me, like: ‘You’re pathetic’.

  We decided we’d spend a maximum of four min­utes trying to establish contact. That mightn’t sound much, but the New Zealand Army maintained a twenty-four hour a day listening watch on the fre­quency we’d been given, so if we were in a good enough position and there wasn’t much interference we might get through.

  We were all still damp. Steam was rising from our clothes but the fire wasn’t big enough to dry us out. We decided to go find a place for the broadcast, and hope that the walk warmed us a bit. Even Kevin seemed to brighten a little at the thought of talking to New Zealand, and he came along fairly happily. At the next bend of the river we trudged up a hill, occasionally whispering a comment, but mostly we were silent, thinking our own thoughts.

  At the top, Lee took out the radio. He was so con­fident it hadn’t been damaged during our assault on the airfield that he hadn’t even checked it yet. But I was very nervous as he turned it on. If it was broken ... well, I didn’t want to think about that. The isolation, the fear, the loneliness of having no radio would be almost unbearable. Sometimes I thought the only thing that kept me going was the knowledge we weren’t alone. There was an invisible link across the Tasman, a reminder that someone was on our side, fighting like we were, committed to the same cause.

  The little red light came on OK. So far so good. Lee pulled up the aerial. He pressed the transmit switch and began calling. Our password was the password that Iain and the Kiwi guerillas had used – Lomu. Lee would say it four or five times, then switch to receive.

 

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