Saucer: Savage Planet (15 page)

Read Saucer: Savage Planet Online

Authors: Stephen Coonts

Tags: #Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Science Fiction

BOOK: Saucer: Savage Planet
4.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

When they were back in the cave, Egg seated Solo by the fire and examined the wound while Rip explained about the bear. For illumination, Egg used the fire and the flashlight, which still had some juice left in its batteries.

“It’s very sore,” Solo said.

“It’s almost healed,” Egg said in amazement. “The wound is completely closed.”

Charley made a noise. “Let me look.” She took the flashlight and examined Solo’s scalp.

“Just an angry red line,” she said softly, and went around the fire to take a seat.

“Rip?” Egg queried.

“That polar bear nearly ripped off his scalp. He bled a lot and was unconscious when I found him. I carried him a mile or so, then he woke up and walked the last mile. There he sits.”

“Mr. Solo?” Egg murmured.

“Mr. Cantrell. I have been shot with bullets and arrows, stabbed, slashed, and have fallen from cliffs. I survived several explosions, extraordinary low temperatures that killed several of my companions, and two airplane crashes. And now, a bear attack. My body’s ability to repair itself has been enhanced.”

“Enhanced?”

“Enhanced. An induced genetic mutation.”

“Ye Gods,” Charley Pine moaned. “If those drug moguls find out about that, they’ll slice and dice you and put the pieces under a microscope.”

“Let’s hope they don’t find out,” Adam Solo said, fingering his healing scalp wound.

“Can you be killed?” Rip asked.

“Of course. If the wound is severe enough, I’ll die before my body can repair the damage.” Solo shrugged. “It will happen someday, a traumatic death, or my body will just wear out. I am mortal, as is every living thing. To be honest, as that white bear charged, I thought my time was over.”

In the silence that followed that remark, Charley asked, “Were you scared?”

“No.” He thought about that answer and added, “Relieved, perhaps.”

Adam Solo eyed the fish. Before anyone could reply to his previous comment, he suggested, “One of those would be superb just now.”

His companions agreed. In minutes they were roasting fish on sticks over the fire and Solo was telling them about the bear.

The conversation moved to the coming starship. “How is it powered?” Egg asked.

“Nuclear fusion,” Solo replied. “The reactors in these saucers use fission, but the starships use fusion, the same reaction that goes on inside a star. Light elements, like hydrogen, are fused into heavier elements, and the energy from the reaction is used to power the ship.”

“Fusion has never been achieved here on earth,” Egg remarked.

“The reaction requires a force field to hold it; no material known in the universe can. Suspended in the electromagnetic field, a few grams of light elements are so compressed that nuclear fusion begins. A tiny star beings to burn.”

“The computer had information about it that I couldn’t understand.”

“I don’t,” Adam Solo replied. “No man can know everything.”

They discussed fusion reactors as the fire burned, more wood was added and the fish roasted.

“How is the energy used to move the ship?” Rip asked.

“The energy powers artificial gravity fields, which are used like the rings in the saucer to repel a gravity force, or to attract it, whichever is most efficient at the time. In effect, the ship hurls itself toward a star or black hole, or pushes it away.”

“What is your world like?” Charley Pine asked, changing the subject rather dramatically.

“It’s been a long time,” Solo said. “A few years ago I was in Hollywood when the Star Wars movie projects came around. I drew up some pictures of what the cities of my youth were like, turned them in to the studio artists, who embellished them more than a little.” He laughed. “When I saw the first movie, I wasn’t sure exactly what I remembered.”

“So how’s your head?”

“Sore.”

“So you survived another adventure.”

“That’s the definition of experience,” Solo said with a trace of a smile, “which is underappreciated by those who don’t have it and overvalued by those who do.”

 

10

After dinner everyone took turns examining Solo’s scalp by firelight. The wound was completely healed, leaving only an angry red scar, which would probably disappear soon.

“Amazing,” Egg said.

Charley and Rip had no comment. They looked askance at each other, then wandered toward the Viking ship.

“Oh, man,” Charley moaned softly. “Oh, man! If you thought eternal life got them lathered up, imagine what will happen when they hear about enhancing the body’s ability to recover from wounds. The military will pull out all the stops. Gotta have it, gotta have it, gotta have it.”

“No one will believe that you and I know nothing about this.”

“Even if there is one chance in a million that we have the formula for antiaging, or body quick-repair, we’re toast. Even if the Americans leave us alone, there are the Russians, Chinese, North Koreans and Muslim fanatics. With eternal life and a quick fix for wounds, the diaper-heads would be Allah’s supermen.”

“So what do we do?”

Before Charley could answer, the faint hum of a passing airplane sounded in the cave. The sound waves were muted, because they entered through the crevice to the outside world, and through the stone, which was not a good conductor.

Rip and Charley stood frozen. A minute passed, then two. As one, they broke and ran for the crevice so they could hear better.

They raced through the stone crack into the cold evening air. Twilight, a hint of breeze …

They heard the plane. Then they saw it, circling over the lake and starting back this way. A Beaver on floats.

“Infrared,” Charley said. “They’ve seen the heat from the fire coming out of this cleft in the rock.”

Rip said a dirty word and went running back into the cave. Charley followed.

“Pack up and saddle up,” Rip shouted to Egg and Solo. “They’ve found us.”

*   *   *

“We got ’em, Mr. Murkowsky,” the pilot said. “A heat plume where there shouldn’t be one.”

Dr. Harrison Douglas looked at the screen of the portable infrared radiation detector, which was sitting on the empty seat beside the pilot, where the copilot would sit if there were one. There was only the one hot spot on the screen, and it was a plume, indicating the gases from a fire. A small fire. “Gotta be it,” he agreed.

Sitting shoulder to shoulder with him, Murkowsky grinned. He nodded at the pilot, who dialed in a frequency and started talking.

Johnny Murk spoke to the pilot. “Land as close as you can.”

“Gonna be tough, Mr. Murkowsky. We can land in the water, but you’ll have to swim ashore. And the water is very cold.”

“The other Beaver. It’s on wheels. Find a place for it to land.”

Murkowsky and Douglas were so excited they could barely contain themselves. The second Beaver fifteen minutes behind them contained four gunmen as passengers. Their job, if they could be placed on the ground, was to capture Adam Solo. Well, not really. Their job was to get him dead or alive. After all, the drug moguls believed, Solo’s body held valuable secrets that would improve the life of every person on earth—and, incidentally, make them filthy rich. Solo was being “unreasonable.” Too bad for him.

The pilot was an old hand at bush flying. He scanned the beaches, which were reasonably flat. All he needed was a straight stretch of a thousand feet or so without rocks or trees or a creek.

He found just the place, less that a mile from the heat plume, pointed it out to his passengers and began talking to the other Beaver. Johnny Murk enthusiastically pounded Douglas on the back. Oh boy, oh boy!

*   *   *

“Mr. President,” the aide said excitedly, “the pharma people have found the saucer in Canada.”

“How?” P. J. O’Reilly demanded.

“Two Beavers were searching the shore of Hudson’s Bay and discovered a heat plume. One is going to land. We’re picking up their radio transmissions on the satellite and have them triangulated.”

The president nodded. P. J. O’Reilly swung into action. He had two C-130s sitting on the ramp at Duluth with mountain-trained paratroops aboard, ready to go with five minutes’ notice. The C-130s were equipped with wheels and skis, so they could land on runways or snow or frozen lakes, if a place could be found. If not, the paratroopers could jump.

O’Reilly issued the orders, and the aide hurried off to the situation room to pass them on.

Of course, the Canadian government didn’t know of the planned invasion by U.S. military forces. Sometimes it is easier to ask forgiveness than get permission, and this was one of them. Those confounded Ottawa politicians were still huffing and puffing about sovereignty.

“Murkowsky and Douglas,” the president fretted aloud. Now there was a pair.

When the aide strode back into the room, he asked him, “How long until the C-130s get to Hudson’s Bay?”

“Over two hours,” the aide said.

“Get some fighters up there ASAP. Have them make life difficult for Murkowsky and Douglas. Set up a shuttle and keep a couple fighters on top of that location until the paratroopers get there.”

“It’s getting dark up there, sir, and the Canadians—”

A glare from the president shut him off. The aide charged out of the room again.

*   *   *

The Beaver on wheels landed in the twilight on the beach. The pilot was an old hand; he had his bird completely stalled just as all three wheels touched the sand. When the plane stopped, the four gunmen leaped out with their weapons and set off on a trot for the rocky promontory a mile away along the beach.

Above them in the other Beaver, Harrison Douglas and Johnny Murk monitored their progress.

“How long can we stay?” Douglas asked his pilot.

“Another hour, then we have to head back to base. “

“An hour should be enough,” Johnny Murk cackled gleefully. “I’ll bet Solo and the Cantrells don’t even know we’re coming. Tough for them, great for us.”

Douglas told the pilot, “Radio the guys on the beach. It’s Solo we want. Ignore anyone else they find.”

The pilot nodded and keyed his lip mike.

*   *   *

Charley Pine was in the pilot’s seat of the saucer when the others got aboard and Rip closed the hatch. She already had the computer running, had run the built-in-tests and was ready. As everyone else strapped in, she lifted the saucer, snapped up the landing gear, and spun the saucer so that it was pointed toward the underwater cave entrance.

Carefully, using the landing light, she submerged the saucer in the lagoon as she edged it forward. The water was murky, but she had just enough visibility. She found the entrance and eased the saucer through into the open water of Hudson’s Bay. Keeping the saucer as near to the bottom as possible, she slowly turned it north and proceeded at a walking pace. Too fast, she thought, and the saucer would create a wake in this shallow water.

What is your plan?
That was Solo.

I’m going to give these bastards something to think about.

Killing them won’t solve our problem.

That’s rich, coming from you. If these guys were monks in some Irish abbey, you’d chop them up quick enough. And steal their habits, wooden plates and potatoes.

She gradually increased speed as the water appeared to get deeper. The bay was certainly no ocean, so there wasn’t going to be a shelf that allowed her to drop into the depths.

She glanced over her shoulder. All three of the men were strapped into their seats. Their expressions were a study. Solo was expressionless, Egg was calm, and Rip’s face mirrored his excitement.

*   *   *

The gunmen arrived at the rocky promontory eight minutes after they exited the Beaver. They were in excellent physical shape. From the Beaver overhead, Douglas and Johnny Murk described where the crack in the rock face was that the heat was pluming from. Not that the gunmen needed directions; they had found the tracks of Solo and Rip.

In they went, weapons at the ready.

Two minutes later, one of them ran back outside and radioed the Beaver overhead. “They’re gone. No one there. Fire still burning. Marks from the saucer’s gear pads. And you aren’t going to believe this, there’s an old Viking ship in this cave. Been here forever.”

Douglas and Murkowsky looked at each other and both said the same dirty word simultaneously.

After ten seconds or so, Johnny Murk told the pilot, “Have them look around outside. Maybe they sent the saucer somewhere and are hiding.”

The pilot was transmitting this message when the first F-16 fighter made a pass right by his plane. The wash rocked the Beaver viciously.

Another went roaring down the beach toward the bush plane sitting there idling. It cleared the bush plane by no more than ten feet.

As Johnny Murk and Harrison Douglas watched, horrified, the first fighter made a long, lazy turn, then steadied out in a shallow dive toward the Beaver on the beach. The water beside the Beaver boiled furiously.

“He’s shooting, he’s shooting,”
the pilot on the beach shouted into his radio. He didn’t wait for another pass. He spun his plane 180 degrees and began his takeoff run. After an amazingly short distance he was airborne.

Another jet was inbound on a strafing run, so the bush pilot laid his Beaver over in a hard right turn and skimmed away over the forest eastward.

*   *   *

“They’ve boogied,” P. J. O’Reilly told the president. The duty officer in the White House command center was giving him the blow-by-blow over a telephone. “Douglas and Murkowsky’s thugs found where they had been, and the marks of the saucer, but the saucer and crew are gone.”

The president indulged himself in the same dirty word the Big Pharma guys had used.

“So we’re back to square one,” the leader of the free world said to no one in particular. “Well, that saucer is somewhere. Tell those satellite people and air force weenies to find the thing or I’m going to start biting heads off.” He grabbed his coffee cup and threw it at the wall.

*   *   *

The saucer broke surface about ten miles from the cave. Charley Pine lit the rockets and took it out over the surface of the bay for another ten miles, accelerating quickly, and turned while still subsonic. A nice, clean four-G turn back toward the cave and the Beavers.

Other books

Outbreak: Brave New World by Van Dusen, Robert
Rogue's Reward by Jean R. Ewing
Naked Edge by Charli Webb
Snowfall (Arctic Station Bears Book 3) by Maeve Morrick, Amelie Hunt
The Flight of the Iguana by David Quammen
Whirl Away by Russell Wangersky
Cutter 3 by Alexa Rynn
Kung Fu High School by Ryan Gattis
Transference Station by Stephen Hunt
The Distance Beacons by Richard Bowker