Pause.
‘It’s me, Frost. Anyone up there?’
No reply.
She pulled herself up the ladder, executed an arduous hop-climb to spare her injured leg.
The upper cabin.
She rolled onto deck plate, gripped the EWO situational display for support and got to her feet.
The blast screens had been lowered. Each curtain fringed by a halo of daylight.
Banks of dead instrumentation.
Scintillating motes of dust.
She looked up. Open sky. Sunlight shafting through vacancies left by two jettisoned roof hatches.
The back-facing Electronic Warfare chair remained in position. The seat rockets must have failed. Lieutenant Noble, the EWO, would have followed a well-drilled back-up procedure. He would have unhitched, slid down the ladder, dropped out a vacant floor hatch and been snatched away by the airstream.
The co-pilot seat had fired. Hancock propelled clear before impact.
The pilot seat was still in place.
She could see the arm and shoulder of a flight suit.
‘Pinback? Can you hear me?’
She released her grip of the Warfare console and limped towards the pilot seat.
Captain Pinback. Crazy bastard rode the plane during its terminal descent. Fought ’til the end. Stayed aboard the smoke-filled, depressurised flight deck. Didn’t want to abandon the aircraft, the weapon.
‘Captain?’
A gloved hand twitched and clenched.
She circled the seat, kept her distance, held the bracket rails of the now-absent co-pilot chair for support.
‘Cap?’
She reached for her shoulder holster, realised she’d left the pistol below.
Pinback sat slumped in front of inert, fire-streaked avionics, his face veiled by his visor and oxygen mask.
Frost tentatively reached forwards.
Pinback took a shuddering breath.
She jumped back.
A gasping, heaving convulsion.
‘Cap? Hey. Daniel. Can you hear me?’
Tentative approach. She reached out a hand and slowly lifted his visor.
He raised his head, groggy like he was waking from deep sleep. Blue, unclouded eyes. Free from infection.
He stared at her face, struggled to focus.
‘Christ. Can you hear me? Can you talk? How bad are you hurt?’
Right arm folded across his belly. He lifted it aside. He was sitting crooked in his seat, lower body twisted like he’d been cut in half and jammed back together at a weird angle. Shattered spine.
‘Jesus. Hold on, Captain. Just hold on.’
9
Pinback pawed his shoulder, tried to reach his sleeve pocket. Wild eyes. Contorted face. Feverish pain.
‘Hey,’ said Frost. ‘Let me.’
She unzipped the pocket, uncapped a syringe and jabbed his shoulder.
She released his oxygen mask.
‘Breathe slow. Let the dope do its work.’
Convulsive breaths began to subside. His head drooped a little.
Soothing, like a mother:
‘Yeah. That’s right. That’s the good shit. Ride it all the way.’
Pinback. Fourteen-year veteran. His resolute, hard-ass demeanour replaced by pain and confusion.
She’d hoped to find him unhurt, hoped he would take charge, think on her behalf. Instead, here he was, helpless.
She lifted the blast screens to get more light.
She stood over the pilot seat, unbuckled his chin-strap and lifted his helmet clear.
She ran fingers through his hair.
‘Take it easy. Just got to sit tight until Trenchman decides to show up.’
His lips moved.
She leaned close.
‘Get me out of here,’ he whispered.
‘Help will come soon.’
‘Get me out of this fucking chair.’
‘Not such a great idea. You’ve suffered a significant thoracic injury.’
‘I don’t want to die strapped to this fucking thing.’
‘You’re not dying anywhere, sir.’
Pinback impatiently swiped his hand as if her bullshit, you’ll-be-fine platitudes were buzzing his head like mosquitoes.
‘Help me up, Lieutenant.’
‘You’ve hurt your back, sir. Probably broken. Don’t want to make a bad injury worse.’
‘I’m fucked beyond repair. Moving me around won’t make a damned difference.’
‘Best wait for the EMTs.’
‘Do as you are told, airman. Get me out of this chair.’
‘Afraid I cannot comply with that order.’
‘Come on. Don’t leave me scrunched like waste paper. I’m done, anyway you cut it. Lay me out, let me have a little dignity.’
She thought it over.
‘I’ll get the WALK.’
She fetched the trauma kit. Brought it up from the cabin below slung over her shoulder.
She threw it down.
Headrush. She lay a while and tried to recover her strength.
The back-frame of the WALK pack was a bunch of self-locking aluminium rods which snapped together to form a litter.
Frost assembled the stretcher and laid it on the flight-deck floor behind the pilot seat.
‘No two ways. This is going to hurt.’
‘Just do it,’ said Pinback.
‘Internal injuries, sir. It’s a concern.’
Tabloid horror stories from the New York subway. Commuter slips and falls as a train pulls into the station. Gets pinned between the subway car and the platform. Twisted at the waist like a corkscrew. So there he is, the besuited commuter, trapped but feeling fine, trading wisecracks with first responders. He waits for the fire department to show, tilt the train with a Hurst tool and pull him clear. He wants to call his employer, let them know he has been delayed, promise to work late to make up the time. It’s a glitch in his day, an anecdote to tell co-workers when he reaches the office. But MTA cops lay the hard truth: ‘Dude, you’re beyond help. Your spine is shattered, your insides are messed up. Moment we tilt this train, you’ll bleed out and die. Anyone you want to call? Any message we can pass on?’
‘Reluctant to move you around, Daniel. Might have repercussions.’
‘Want me to beg? I’m all-the-way fucked. Help me die, Lieutenant. Least you can do.’
Frost leant over the injured man and unclipped his harness.
‘Got to ask one last question, sir, before I pull you out the chair. Did you transmit a Mayday? As they plane went down, did you broadcast a distress?’
‘We were squawking on all channels.’
‘Did you get a response? Do they have our grids?’
‘No. Couldn’t raise a soul.’
‘Christ.’
‘Come on. Get me out of here. Make it quick.’
She put a hand between his shoulder blades and pushed him forwards. He barked in pain.
‘Want me to stop?’
‘No.’ Panting through clenched teeth. ‘Keep going. Get it done.’
She stood behind him and hooked her hands beneath his armpits. She slowly toppled sideways dragging him from his seat, across the centre console and onto the floor. They both screamed. His back. Her leg.
She caught her breath.
‘Finish it,’ he hissed.
She dragged him onto the litter. More screams.
She arranged tie-down straps, got ready to buckle him tight. He pushed her hands away.
‘We ought to get you rigid, sir. Put you in a neck brace.’
‘Forget it.’
She unclipped the drogue chute from his seat and put it behind his head as a pillow.
She crawled across the deck and sat with her back to the cabin wall.
Both of them pale, sweating, exhausted.
‘What’s the time?’ asked Pinback.
Frost looked out the cockpit windows. Long shadows. The sun heading for the horizon. The sky tinged red.
‘Late afternoon, heading into evening.’
‘What day? How long have I been here?’