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'That'll do.'
'What about checking over the controls?' Tubby asked. 'I'd like to run over the plane itself.'
'We did it after she was flown in,' Saeton said.
'Yes, I know, but I feel'
'We haven't time, Tubby. She came in all right and we went over her before we finally closed the purchase. If she was all right then, she's all right now. Neil, go and fix that tractor, will you? The sooner we get to bed the better. I want everyone to be fresh tomorrow.' He jerked back his chair and got to his feet. 'A lot depends on it.' He pushed his hand through his thick hair and grinned. 'Not that I shall get much sleep. I'm too darned excited. I haven't felt so excited since I did my first solo. If we pull this off' He laughed nervously as though he were asking too much of the G.o.ds. 'Goodnight.' He turned quickly and went out.
I glanced at Tubby. He was tying endless knots in a piece of string and humming a little tune. He was nervous, too. So was I. It wasn't only the test flight. For me there was the future. Membury had been a refuge, and now the outside world was crowding in on us. I pushed back my chair. 'I'll go and arrange about the tractor,' I said, but I was thinking of Else. I needed to feel that there was somebody, just one person in the world that cared what happened to me.
The Manor seemed in darkness, but I could hear the sound of the light plant and when I rang Else opened the door to me. 'I was afraid you might have gone already,' I said.
'I leave on Monday,' she said. 'You wish to come in?' She held the door open for me and I went through into the lounge where a great log blazed in the open hearth. 'Colonel and Mrs Ellwood have gone out for this evening.' She turned quickly towards me. 'Why have you come?'
'I wanted to arrange with Colonel Ellwood for a tractor tomorrow.'
'To bring the airplane out of the hangar?' I nodded. 'We're flying tests tomorrow.' 'Das ist gut. It will be good to see those engines in the air.' Her tone was excited. 'But' She hesitated and the excitement died out of her, leaving her face blank and miserable. 'But he will not be here to see.' She turned back to the fire and almost automatically took a cigarette from the box on a side table and lit it. She didn't speak for a long time, just standing there, drawing the smoke into her lungs and staring into the fire. Something told me not to say anything. Silence hung between us in the flickering firelight, but there was nothing awkward about it. It was a live, warm silence. And when at length she spoke, the intimacy wasn't broken. 'It has been such a long time.' The words were whispered to the fire. She was not in the room. She was somewhere far away in the reaches of her memory. She turned slowly and saw me again. 'Sit down, please,' she said and offered me a cigarette. 'You remember I ask you not to come here again?'
I nodded.
'I say that a wall separates us.' She pushed back her hair with a quick, nervous gesture. 'I was afraid I will talk to you because I am too much alone. Now you are here and' She shrugged her shoulders and stared into the fire again. 'Have you ever wished for something so much that nothing else matter?' She didn't seem to expect a reply and after a moment she went on. 'I grew up in Berlin, in a flat in the Fa.s.senenstra.s.se. My mother was a cold, rather nervous person with a pa.s.sion for music and pretty clothes. My brother Walther was her life. She lived through him. It was as though she had no other existence. My father and his work did not mean anything to her. She knew nothing about engineering.' She s.h.i.+fted her gaze from the fire and stared at me with a bitter smile. 'I think I was never intended to be born. It just happened. My father never spoke about it, but that I think is what happen, for I was born eight years after my brother when my mother was almost forty.' Her smile ceased suddenly. 'I think perhaps it was a painful birth. I grew up in a world that was cold and unfriendly. I seldom saw my father. He was always working at some factory outside Berlin. When I left school I took a secretarial course and became a typist in the Klockner-Humboldt-Deutz A.G. There I fell in love with my boss.' She gave a bitter laugh. 'It was not difficult for him. I had not had much love. He took me away to Austria for the skiing and for a few months we shared a little apartment - just a bedroom really. Then he got bored and I cried myself into a nervous breakdown. That was when I first really met my father. My mother did not wish to be bothered with me, so she sent me to stay with him in Wiesbaden. This was in 1937.'
Her gaze had gone back to the fire. 'My father was wonderful,' she went on, speaking slowly. 'He had never had anyone to help him before. I looked after the flat and did all his typing. We made excursions down the Rhine and took long walks in the Black Forest. His hair was white even then, but he was still like a boy. And for my part, I became engrossed in his work. It fascinated me. I was not interested in men. I could not even bear for a man to touch me any more. I lived and breathed engineering, enjoying the exactness of it. It was something that had substance, that I could believe in. I think my father was very impressed. It was the first time he discovered that women also have brains. He sent me to the University at Frankfurt where I took my engineering staats.e.xamen. After that I return to Wiesbaden to work as my father's a.s.sistant in the engine works there. That was in 1941. We were at war then and my father is engaged on something new, something revolutionary. We work on it together for three years. For us nothing else matters. Oh, I know that my father does not like the regime, that he is in touch with old friends who believe that Germany is doomed under Hitler. But apart from the air raids, it is quiet at Wiesbaden and we work at the designing board and at the bench, always on the same thing.'
She threw her cigarette into the fire. Her face was very pale, her eyes almost luminous in the firelight as she turned to me. 'They came when we were working in the engine shop - two officers of Himmler's S.S. They arrested him there in the middle of our work. They said he was something to do with the attempt on Hitler's life. It was a lie. He had nothing to do with the conspiracy. But he had been in contact with some of the people who were involved, so they took him away. They would not even wait for me to get him some clothes. That was on the 27th July, 1944. They took him to Dachau and I never saw him again.' Her lips trembled and she turned away, stretching her hand down for another cigarette. July, 1944. They took him to Dachau and I never saw him again.' Her lips trembled and she turned away, stretching her hand down for another cigarette.
'What did you do?' I asked.
'Nothing. There was nothing I could do. I try to see him, of course. But it is hopeless. I can do nothing. Suddenly we have no friends. Even the company for whom he has worked for so long can do nothing. The Herr Direktor is very sympathetic, but he has instructions not to employ me any more. So, I go back to Berlin, and a few days later we hear my father is dead. It means little to my mother, everything to me. My world" has ceased. Within a month Walther also is dead, shot down over England. They give him the Iron Cross and my mother has a breakdown and I have to nurse her. Her world also is gone. Her son, the pretty clothes, the music and the chatter all have disappeared and the Russians take Berlin. I do not think she wished to live any longer after Walther's death. She never leave her bed until she died in October of last year.'
'And you looked after her all that time?' I asked, since she seemed to expect some comment.
She nodded. 'I have never been so miserable. And then, when she is dead, I begin to think again about my father and his work. I go to Wiesbaden. But the designs, the experimental work is all disappeared. There is nothing left. However, the Rauch Motoren is still in business and they are willing for me to try to' Her voice died away as though she could not find the right words.
'To try and recover the engines?' I suggested.
'Ja'
'And that is why you are here at Membury?' It was so obvious now she had told me about her father, and I couldn't help but admire her pluck and tenacity.
She nodded.
'Why have you told me all this?' I asked.
She shrugged her shoulders and kicked at the big oak log, sending a shower of sparks up the chimney. 'I do not know.' Then she suddenly flung up her head and looked straight at me almost defiantly. 'Because I am alone. Because I have always been alone since they took him away. Because you are English and do not matter to me.' She was like an animal that is cornered and has turned at bay. 'You had better go now. I have told you, we are on two sides of a wall.'
I got slowly to my feet and went towards her. 'You're very bitter, aren't you?' I said.
'Bitter?' Her eyes stared at me angrily. 'Of course I am bitter. I live for one thing now. I live for the day when my father's work will be recognised, when he will be known as one of the greatest of Germany's engineers.' The fire suddenly died out of her and she turned away from me. 'What else have I to live for?' Her voice sounded desperately unhappy.
I reached out and put my hand on her shoulder, but she shook me off. 'Leave me alone. Do not touch me.' Her voice was sharp, almost hysterical. And then in a moment her mood changed and she turned towards me. 'I am sorry. You cannot help. I should not have talked like this. Will you go now, please?'
I hesitated. 'All right,' I said. Then I held out my hand. 'Goodbye, Else.'
'Goodbye?' Her fingers touched mine. They were very cold despite the warmth of the fire. 'Yes. I suppose it is goodbye.'
'Will you give my message to Colonel Ell wood? We would like his heaviest tractor at the airfield at eight o'clock.'
'I will tell him.' She lifted her eyes to mine. 'And you fly the test tomorrow?' Her fingers tightened on my hand. 'Alles Gute!' Her eyes were suddenly alive, almost excited. 'I will watch. It will be good to see those, engines in the air - even if no one knows it is his work.' The last few words were little more than whisper.
She" came with me to the door then and as she stood there framed in the soft light of the lounge, she said, 'Neil!' She had a funny way of saying it, almost achieving the impossible and p.r.o.nouncing the vowels individually. 'If you come to Berlin sometimes I live at Number fifty-two, Fa.s.senenstra.s.se. That is near the Kurfurstendamm. Ask for - Fraulein Meyer.'
'Meyer?'
'Ja. Else Meyer. That is my real name. To come here I have to have the papers of some other girl. You see - I am a n.a.z.i. I belong to the Hitler-Jugend before -before they kill my father.' Her lips twitched painfully. 'Good-bye,' she said quickly. Her fingers touched mine and then the door closed and I was alone in the dark cold of the night. I didn't move for a moment and as I stood there I thought I heard the sound of sobbing, but it may only have been the wind.
It was a long time before I got to sleep that night. It was such a pitiful story, and yet I couldn't blame Saeton. I was English - she was German. The wall between us was high indeed.
Next morning the memory of her story was swamped in the urgent haste of preparations for tests. It was a cold, grey day and it was raining. A low curtain of cloud swept across the airfield. But n.o.body seemed to mind. Our thoughts were on the plane. Apparently Else had delivered my message, for promptly at eight o'clock a big caterpillar tractor came trundling across the tarmac ap.r.o.n leaving a trail of clay and chalk clods on the wet, s.h.i.+ning surface of the asphalt. We slid the hangar doors back and hitched the tractor to the plane's undercarriage.
It gave me a sense of pride to see that gleaming Tudor nose slowly out of the hangar. It no longer had the toothless grin that had greeted me every morning for the past five weeks. It was a complete aircraft, a purposeful, solid-looking machine, fully engined and ready to go. The tractor dragged it to the main runway and then left us.
'Well, let's get moving,' Saeton said and swung himself up into the fuselage. I followed him. Tubby wheeled out the batteries and connected up. First one engine and then another roared into life. Saeton's hand reached up to the four throttle levers set high up in the centre of the winds.h.i.+eld. The engine revs died down as he trimmed the motors. Tubby came in through the c.o.c.kpit door and closed it. 'What about parachutes?' he asked.
Saeton grinned. 'They're back in the fuselage, you old Jonah. And they're okay. I packed them myself last night.'
The engines roared, the fuselage s.h.i.+vering violently as the plane bucked against the wheel brakes. I was in the second pilot's seat, checking the dials with Saeton. Tubby was between us. Fuel, oil pressure and temperature gauges, coolant temperature, rev meters -everything was registering correctly. 'Okay,' Saeton said. 'Ground tests.' He released the brakes and we began to move forward down the s.h.i.+ning surface of the runway. Left rudder," right rudder the tail swung in response. Landing flaps okay. Tail controls okay. Brakes" okay. For an hour we roared up and down the runways, circling the perimeter track, watching fuel consumption, oil indicators, the behaviour of the plane with four motors running and then with the two new inboard engines only. Tubby stood in the well between the two pilots' seats, listening, watching the dials and scribbling notes on a pad.
At length Saeton brought the plane back to the ap.r.o.n opposite the hangar and cut the engines. 'Well?' he asked, looking down at Tubby. His voice seemed very loud in the sudden silence.
For answer Tubby raised his thumb and grinned. 'Just one or two things. I'd like to check over the injection timing on that starboard motor and I want to have a look at the fuel filters. We got a slight drop in revs and she sounded a bit rough.'
Saeton nodded and we climbed out. As we did so I saw a movement in the trees that screened the quarters. It was Else. Saeton had seen her, too. 'What's that girl doing up here?' he muttered angrily. Then he turned quickly to me. 'Did you tell her we were flying tests this morning?'
'Yes,' I said.
'I thought I warned you to keep away from her.' He glared at me as though I were responsible for her presence there on the edge of the airfield. Then he switched his gaze to the fringe of trees. Else had disappeared. 'It's about time the authorities took some action about her.'
'How do you mean?' I asked.
'She's here on false papers. Her name isn't really Langen.'
'I know that - now,' I said. And then suddenly I understood what he was driving at. 'Do you mean to say you've reported her to the authorities?'
'Of course. Do you think I want her snooping around the place, sending reports to the Rauch Motoren. They'd no right to let her into the country.'
'Haven't you done that girl enough harm?' I said angrily.
'Harm?' He glanced at me quickly. 'How much do you know of her story?' he asked.
'I know that it was her father who designed these engines,' I said. 'She worked on them with him.' I caught hold of his arm. 'Why don't you come to terms with her?' I said. 'All she really wants is recognition for her father.'
He flung my hand off. 'So she's got round you, as she got round Randall as she nearly got round me. She's just a little tart trading her body for the glorification of the fatherland.'
I felt a sudden urge to hit him. 'Don't you understand anybody?' I exclaimed through clenched teeth. 'She loved her father. Can't you understand that all she wants is recognition for his work?'
'Recognition!' He gave a sneering laugh. 'It's Germany she loves. They killed her father, bur still it is Germany she thinks of. She offered to be my mistress if I'd, allow the Rauch Motoren to manufacture the engines. My engines! The engines Tubby and I have worked on all these years! She traded on my weakness, on the fact that I was alone up here, and if Diana hadn't come' He half-shrugged his shoulders as though shaking off something he didn't like. 'Her father has got about as much to do with these engines as you have.'
'Nevertheless,' I said, 'it was his prototype you stole'
'Stole! d.a.m.n it, man, a country that has gone through what we have on account of the blasted Germans has a right to take what it wants. If Professor Meyer had completed the development of those engines' He stopped and stared at me angrily. 'You b.l.o.o.d.y fool, Neil. Why waste your sympathy on the girl or her father? She was a good little n.a.z.i till the S.S. took Meyer to Dachau. And Meyer was a n.a.z.i too.' His lips spread in a thin, bitter smile. 'Perhaps you're not aware that Professor Meyer was one of the men who developed the diesel engine for use in bombers. London is in his debt to the tune of many hundreds of tons of bombs. My mother was killed in the blitz of 1940.' He turned away, his shoulders hunched, his hands thrust deep into his pockets, and walked across the tarmac to the hangar. I followed slowly, thinking of the tangled pattern of motive that surrounded these engines.
For over an hour Tubby worked on the engine. Then he checked over the others. It was just on one o'clock when he climbed down and pulled the gantry away. 'Okay,' he said. 'There's nothing more I can do.'
'All right,' Saeton said. 'Let's have a bit of food.' His voice was over-loud as though by speaking like that he could convince us of his confidence. I glanced at the plane. The rain clouds had broken up and she was caught in a gleam of watery sunlight. It was one thing doing ground tests, quite another to commit ourselves to the take-off. But she looked just like any other Tudor. It was difficult to realise, seeing her standing there on the tarmac, that this wasn't to be a routine flight.
Saeton had brought a loaf and some cheese and b.u.t.ter up from the quarters. We ate it in the hangar, none of us talking, all of us, I think, very conscious of the emptiness of the place and of the aircraft standing out there on the ap.r.o.n waiting for us. As soon as we'd finished we got into our flying kit and went out to the plane. Saeton insisted we wear our parachutes.
Once more we sat in the c.o.c.kpit - Saeton and I the pilots' seats, Tubby in the well between us - the engines ticking over. Saeton's hand reached out for the throttle levers. The engines revved and we moved away across the ap.r.o.n, along the perimeter track and swung on to the runway end, the concrete stretching ahead of us, a broad white path s.h.i.+ning wet in sunlight. 'Okay?' Saeton looked at us. His jaw had broadened with the clenching of the muscles. His features looked hard and unsmiling. Only his eyes mirrored the excitement that held him in its grip.
'Okay,' Tubby said. I nodded. Again Saeton's hand reached up for the throttle levers, pressing them slowly down with his palm. The four motors roared in unison. The fuselage shuddered violently as the thrust of the props fought the brakes.
Then he released the brakes and we started forward.
I won't pretend I wasn't nervous - even a little scared. But it was overlaid by the sense of excitement. At the same time it was difficult to realise fully the danger. Viewed from the c.o.c.kpit all the engines looked ordinary standard models. There was nothing to bring home to us the fact that those inboard engines were the work of our own hands only the memory, now distant, of the countless hours we'd worked at them in the hangar. In a sense it was nothing more than I'd done hundreds of times before - a routine take-off.
I tried to concentrate on the dials, but as we gathered speed my eyes strayed to the concrete streaming beneath us, faster and faster, and thence to the ploughed verge of the runway and to the woods beyond. I caught a glimpse of the quarters through a gap in the trees. It suddenly seemed like home. Would we ever again sit at the trestle table drinking Scotch in celebration of success? Would we again lounge in those hard, uncomfortable chairs talking of a huge freighter fleet and our plans for a constant stream of aircraft tramping the globe? And as these questions appeared in my mind, my stomach suddenly became an empty void as panic hit me. Suppose those pistons I'd worked on when I first arrived were not quite true? Suppose ... A whole stream of ugly possibilities flooded through my mind. And what about the engine that had been completed before I arrived? My hands tightened automatically on the control column as I felt the tail lift.
I glanced at Saeton. His face was tense, his eyes fixed unblinkingly ahead, one hand on the throttles, the other on the control column. I saw his left foot kick at the rudder to counter a sudden swing of the tail. The end of the runway was in sight now. It ran slightly downhill and a bunch of oaks was rus.h.i.+ng to meet us.
No chance now of pulling up. We were committed to the take-off. The new starboard engine was still running a little rough. The tail swung. Left rudder again. I held my breath. G.o.d! He was leaving it late. I should have been watching the rev counters and the airspeed indicator. But instead my eyes were fixed on the trees ahead. They seemed to fill all my vision.
Then the control column eased back under my tense, clutched hands. The wheels b.u.mped wildly on a torn-up piece of concrete. The starboard motor still sounded rough, the tail swung and the engine notes changed to a quieter drone. We were riding air, smooth, steady, the seat lifting me upwards as the trees slid away below us. Through the side window I saw Membury dropping away to a black circle of plough criss-crossed by the white pattern of runways and circled by the darker line of the perimeter track, the hangars small rectangles that looked like toys. We were airborne and climbing steeply, the full thrust of the motors taking us up in a steady, circling climb.
I glanced at Saeton. His body had relaxed into the shape of his seat. That was the only sign he gave of relief. 'Check undercarriage up,' he shouted to me as he levelled out. I glanced out of the side window. The starboard wheel was up inside the wing casing and I nodded. His eyes remained hard and alert, scanning the instrument panel. Tubby was jotting down notes as he read the dials. Oil Pressure 83-Oil Temp. 68-Coolant Temp. 90-Revs 2,300, with the exception of the inboard starboard engine, which read 2,270-Vacuum Pressure 4 ins. - Height 1,500. We cruised around for a bit, checking everything, then we began to climb. Oil Pressure 88-Oil Temp. 77-Coolant Temp. 99-Revs 2,850 plus 9-Vacuum Pressure 4 . I glanced at my watch. Rate of climb 1,050 feet a minute.
At 6,000 Saeton levelled out. 'Okay to cut out the other motors?' He glanced down at Tubby, who nodded, his face unsmiling, his eyes almost lost in their creases of fat as he screwed them up against the sun which drove straight in through the winds.h.i.+eld. At the same moment I saw the outboard engine slow. The individual blades of the prop became visible as it began to feather. The noise in the c.o.c.kpit had lessened, so had the vibration. We were flying on our own motors only. Airspeed 175. Height 6,300. Still climbing. Swindon lay below us as we turned east, banking sharply.
The two motors hummed quietly. Saeton pulled back the control column. The nose of the plane lifted. We were climbing on the two engines only. Six thousand five hundred. Seven thousand. Eight thousand. Rate of climb 400 feet per minute. Half a dozen banking turns, then a long dive to 4,000 and up again. The motors hummed happily. The starboard engine was a shade rough perhaps, and engine revs were a little below those of the port motor. But there was plenty of power there.
Saeton levelled out. 'I could do with a cigarette.' He was grinning happily now, all tension smoothed out of his face. 'From now on we can forget all the hours we've slaved at those engines. They're there. They exist. We've done what we set out to do.'
Tubby was smiling, too, his face wreathed in a happy grin. He hummed a little tune.
We swung south over White Horse Hill. The racing gallops at Lambourne showed like age-old tracks along the downs. Climb, turn, dive - for two hours we flew the circuit of the Marlborough downs. Then at last Saeton said, 'Okay. Let's go back and get some tea. Tomorrow We'll do take-off and landing tests. Then we'll try her under full load and check petrol consumption.'
'I want that starboard motor back on bench tests first,' Tubby shouted.
Saeton nodded vaguely. For him it was all settled. He'd proved the motors. It only remained to get them to the highest pitch of efficiency. 'Okay,' he answered. 'We've plenty of time. I'll fix airworthiness tests for the latter part of next week.' He eased the control column forward and we slid down towards the rounded brown humps of the downs. Ramsbury airfield slid away beneath us, the Kennet showing like a twisting ribbon of steel in the cold light of the sinking sun. Membury opened out on the hill ahead of us. The two outboard motors started into life.
'Ready to land?'
We nodded.
Saeton looked down through the side 'There's a bottle of whisky down there.' He grinned as we peered down at the felted roof of our quarters. 'Pity Diana isn't here to see this.' He said it without thinking. I glanced at Tubby. His face gave no sign that he'd heard, 'Better get your undercarriage down,' Tubby said.
Saeton laughed. 'If you think I'm going to prang the thing now, you're wrong.' His hand reached down and found the undercarriage release switch automatically. He pulled it up and glanced out of his side window. Then he turned quickly, peered down at the lever and jerked at it. In the tenseness of his face I read sudden panic. I turned to my own side window and craning forward, peered back at the line of the wing. 'The starboard wheel is down,' I reported.
Saeton was flicking at the switch. 'It's the port wheel,' he said, staring out of his window. 'The b.l.o.o.d.y thing's jammed.' I don't think he was frightened for himself. The panic that showed in his face was for all our achievement that could be set at nought by a crash landing.
'I told you we ought to check over the plane,' Tubby shouted back, peering forward over the lever.
'That's a h.e.l.l of a lot of use now,' Saeton's voice rasped through his clenched teeth. 'Neil. Take over. Climb to 7,000 whilst we try and sort this b.a.s.t.a.r.d out. Tubby, see if she'll come down on the hand gear.'
I felt the control column go slack under my hands as he eased himself out of his seat. I took hold of it, at the same time reaching out for the throttle levers. The engines responded to my touch and Membury dropped away from us as I pulled the control column back and climbed under full power, banking steadily. Saeton and Tubby were trying to wind the port wheel down, but the handle seemed to be alternately jamming and running free.
At 7,000 feet I levelled out. They had the floorboards up and Tubby was head down in the gap. A steady blast of bitterly cold air roared into the c.o.c.kpit. For an hour I stooged round and round over Membury. And at the end of that hour Tubby straightened up, his face blue with cold and stood there blowing on his ringers. 'Well?' Saeton demanded.
Tubby shook his head. 'Nothing we can do,' he said. 'The connecting rod is snapped. A fault probably. Anyway, it's snapped and there's no way of lowering the port side undercarriage.'
Saeton didn't speak for a moment. His face was grey and haggard. 'The best we can hope for then is to make a decent pancake landing.' His voice was a flat monotone as though all the weariness of the last few weeks had crowded in on him at this moment. 'You're absolutely sure there's nothing we can do?' he asked Tubby.
The other shook his head. 'Nothing. The connecting rod has snapped and'
'All right. You said that once. I'm not that dense.' He had pulled a packet of cigarettes out of his pocket. He handed it to me. I took one and he lit it for me. It was a measure of his acceptance of the facts of the situation. He would never have smoked in the c.o.c.kpit unless he had abandoned all hope.
'The light's fading,' I said. 'And we haven't much gas left.'
He nodded, drawing in a lungful of smoke.
'Better make for Upavon,' Tubby shouted. It was an R.A.F. Station and I knew what was in his mind. There would be crash squads there and ambulances.
'No. We'll go back to Membury,' Saeton answered. 'You two get aft. Have the door of the fuselage open. I'll take you over the airfield at 3,000 feet. Wind's easterly, about Force 2. Jump just before I cross the edge of the field.' He climbed back into his seat. 'All right, Neil. I'll take over now.' I felt the pressure of his hands as he gripped the other control column and I let go of mine. Tubby started to protest, but Saeton rounded on him. 'For G.o.d's sake do as you're told. Jump at the edge of the field. No point in more than one of us getting hurt. And as you so tactfully point out, it's my fault. Of course we should have checked the plane.' Out of the tail of my eye I saw the starboard wheel folding into the wing again.
'I'm sorry, Bill,' Tubby said. 'I didn't mean'
'Don't argue. Get aft. You, too, Fraser.' His voice was almost vicious in his wretchedness. And then with that quick change of mood: 'Good luck, both of you.'
I had hesitated, half-out of my seat. His face was set in a grim mask as he stared straight ahead of him, thrusting the control column forward, dipping the nose to a long glide towards the airfield. Tubby jerked his head for me to follow him and disappeared through the door that communicated with the fuselage. 'Good luck!' I murmured.
Saeton's eyes flicked towards me and he gave a bitter laugh. 'I've had all the good luck I need,' he snarled. I knew what he meant. Whether he came out of the plane alive or dead, he was finished. For a moment I still hesitated. I had a crazy idea that he might intend to crash the plane straight into the ground.
'What the h.e.l.l are you waiting for?'
'I think I'd better stay,' I said. If I stayed he'd be forced to make an attempt to land.
He must have sensed what was at the back of my mind, for he suddenly laughed. 'You don't know very much about me, do you, Neil?' The snarl had gone out of his voice. But his eyes remained hard and bitter. 'Go on. Get back aft with Tubby, and don't be a fool. I don't like heroics.' And then suddenly shouting at me: 'Get aft, man. Do you hear? Or have I got to come down there myself and throw you out?' His eyes narrowed. 'Ever jumped before?'