Trenchman shone his flashlight into the darkness. Jumbled rubble. Tunnel collapse a few yards inside the shaft.
Good place to rest. A chance to shelter from a cold desert wind.
He lowered himself to the ground, shuffled his ass to get comfortable and leant back against one of the prop beams.
He thought about the journey west. Maybe he would find water in the mountains. Somewhere, in a shaded canyon, he might stumble upon a rockpool.
Half-remembered advice from survival class: if you find a basin of deliciously clear water, don’t drink. Could be tainted with sulphur or arsenic. If, on the other hand, you discover a pool green with algae, then the water is probably free of toxins, so drink hearty.
He drowsed, pleased that he was thinking straight and true, had yet to succumb to the manias and night terrors that could play out during prolonged isolation.
Faint noise.
Shifting grit. Skittering stones.
Couldn’t see a damned thing. Too dark. Maybe he disturbed a desert critter, something that made the mine entrance its home.
Clattering stones. Rubble mounded against the shaft wall began to shift and bulge. An emaciated, dust-caked figure slowly pulling itself free as if reluctantly emerging from deep hibernation.
The creature drew itself fully upright and stepped clear of the rubble pile.
It stood over Trenchman. It reached for him.
Trenchman snatched the pistol from his holster and fired. Three shots, centre of mass. Muzzle flash lit the rotted revenant in a series of freeze-frame contortions as bullet hits sent it stumbling backwards out the mine entrance into moonlight. A red jumpsuit. A skeletal, eyeless face. Something buckled round each wrist as if the thing had broken free from heavy restraints.
Two more bullet strikes nudged the creature to the cliff edge.
Headshot. The figure toppled over the ledge, and fell out of view. Muffled sound of impact somewhere below.
Trenchman slowly got to his feet. He edged towards the lip of the stone shelf. He switched on his flashlight, leaned over the precipice and trained the beam downwards.
The body lay forty feet below, sprawled face down on rocks.
White stencil on the back of the jumpsuit:
Clatter of stones from the rock face high above him.
Trenchman quickly shut off his flashlight. He stepped back and pressed against the rock wall, willed himself to become a shadow. He stood still as he could. He held his breath.
Skitter of shifting gravel to his far left.
Might be grit displaced by a scorpion or snake. Might be frost-shattered scree shifting, settling, of its own accord. Or it might be a rotted, skeletal thing prowling the ridges above his position, searching for a route down.
Trenchman ducked beneath the cross-beam of the mine entrance and crouched in darkness. He trained his pistol on the moonlit entrance, ready for whatever might come.
31
Frost stood on the ridgeline and watched the sun descend towards the western horizon.
Noble climbed the dune and joined her.
‘I’ll head out in an hour,’ he said.
‘Be another cold night.’
‘Then I better not stop to rest.’
‘I’ll explain the situation to Hancock when you’re gone.’
‘He won’t like it.’
‘Not much he can do,’ said Frost. ‘He’s in no shape to chase you down.’
‘His head wound smells pretty cankerous.’
‘I’ll remind him you’re his best shot at survival.’
‘Reckon you’ll be okay?’ asked Noble.
‘Bring back one of those SUVs. We can drive out of this damned desert, find a pharmacy, maybe hook up with a MASH. Shit, if Hancock is still set on detonating the bomb we can toss him the keys once we reach safety and let him drive back here. Fucker can do as he likes.’
‘I don’t like to leave you two alone together. Watch your ass, all right? Not sure the guy is thinking too clear.’
The flight deck.
They sat cross-legged on the floor.
Hancock solemnly broke an energy bar and shared it like he was re-enacting the Last Supper.
Noble turned the hunk of granola between his fingers.
‘Right now, I want a cheeseburger more than I’ve wanted anything my whole life.’
‘Ever eaten lizard?’ asked Frost. ‘I hear they taste like tuna.’
Hancock glanced at the cockpit windows. Amber light.
‘Sundown in an hour or two,’ he said. ‘Ought to pack. Figure how to remove the warhead and carry it to the sled.’
Frost didn’t meet his eye. She examined a split nail.
‘I’ll load a backpack,’ said Noble. ‘Bottle as much water as we can carry.’
‘Well, best get to it. We’ll need food. Survival blankets. Might be worth bringing the trauma kit. And don’t forget the map.’
‘I’m on it, boss.’
‘Navigation should be easy enough. We’ll head for Capricorn. Adjust our heading five degrees an hour to compensate for natural deviation. That should keep us on the right heading.’
‘Okay.’
‘I’ll remove the core element from the missile. The warhead itself weighs less than a hundred pounds. We’ll strap it to the sled, take turns to pull.’
Frost looked like she wanted to argue but Noble threw a glance, a barely perceptible shake of the head. Just let the guy talk.
Hancock got to his feet, stumbled and gripped the wall.
‘I’ll need your help down in the bomb bay, lieutenant.’
‘Be with you directly, sir.’
Frost stepped outside.
Daylight curdled red. The low sun cast long shadows. Her silhouette stretched across the sand.
She tied the sleeves of her flight suit round her waist and tucked the Beretta into the waistband.
She lifted the nuclear authorisation lanyard from around her neck. She snapped the plastic tab, extracted the code slip, and hurled the spent lanyard as far as she could.
She unfolded laminate paper. The authorisation sequence. Ten digits that would arm the nuclear device, transform a canister of rare metals into a new sun.
She held the slip in her hand, felt the power that resided within the row of inked symbols.
She flicked open her Zippo and wafted the flame beneath the paper. The slip browned and caught alight. Text blackened and shrivelled. She let the paper burn down to her fingers, dropped the stub and kicked it beneath the sand.
Noble emerged from the plane. He bent and double-tied his boots. Then he stood and shouldered the backpack.
‘Guess it’s time to leave,’ he said.
They embraced. They stood back and looked at each other.
‘Via con Dios, brother,’ said Frost. ‘Don’t forget about us, all right? Once you reach the world, come get us, you hear?’
He nodded, smiled, adjusted straps.
‘Back before you know.’
He set out, big strides, crested a high dune. He glanced back, parting wave, then dropped out of sight.
Frost stood alone and contemplated his footprints in the sand.
32
Moonrise. Dunes lit ice-white.
Residual day heat quickly radiated into a cloudless sky. Skin chill. Each exhalation fogged the air. Noble zipped his flight suit to the neck.
He was awash with adrenalin, tempted to break into a run, try to cover as much ground as he could before morning.
‘Calm the hell down,’ he told himself. ‘You’re a rational man, a trained professional. You got a solid plan. Stick to it.’
Machine mode. Steady respiration. Breathe from the diaphragm. Inhale: three paces. Exhale: three paces. He zoned out and let his body eat miles.