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Ahern, Jerry – Survivalist 05 – The Web

hair back from her face,

hair already flecked with snow. Beside her Rubenstein crouched, as if

waiting.

Rourke stopped walking, a yard or so from her still. He held up the knife.

“Never told me about the Bali-Song knife.”

She only smiled. Rourke glanced back where the plane had disappeared; if

anything could be salvaged, it would have to wait. The leather jacket was

bunched in his left hand along with the CAR-. He approached Natalia,

squatted down beside her, and draped the coat across her shoulders. She

was already shivering, as was Paul Ruben-stein. And so was Rourke. . . .

“I had the Bali-Song for a long time. For some reason I didn’t carry it

when you found me in (he desert. I don’t remember why- But I took it with

me to Florida, just in case.

“Are you good with it?” Rourke asked her, shivering.

“Yes. If my hands weren’t so cold—I could show—” She shook from the

freezing air temperature; sub-freezing, perhaps close to zero, Rourke

thought as he started down the side of the embankment, carefully, slowly,

for the rocks that formed the purchases for his hands and feet were

ice-coated. “Be careful, John.”

“Once I get down there, I can snake up a rope; then you and Paul can join

me and at least we’ll have some shelter—unless it looks like it’s going to

blow or some­thing.”

“I can—” Rubenstein began.

“You stay with Natalia. If I break every bone in my body doing this, I

want someone in one piece to take care of her.” It was getting dark as

Rourke started climbing again, the aircraft still some thirty feet below

him, its portside wing broken in two, the starboard engine

snagged in a clump of rocks some fifty feet farther below it and

half-obscured now by snow.

Rourke’s hands were numb as his fingers played along the glistening

iced-over rocks, his shoulder still ached from where he’d hit the road

surface, and one desire suddenly obsessed him—to urinate. Rourke’s right

foot edged down, then his left. The left slipped as loose shale under him,

crusted over with ice, broke away from the dirt that had held it. His

fingertips dug into the rock sur­face against which they pressed as his

right foot braced against the coated rock against which only the toes now

pressed.

“John—I’m coming down,” Natalia shouted.

“No—I’ll be—” Rourke swung his left leg out, finding a purchase against a

gnarled stump of bush growing out of the dirt embankment. “I’m all right.”

Rourke edged his right hand down onto a lower ledge of rock, then his left

foot, then his left hand, then his right foot. Slowly, methodically, his

kidneys screaming at him to let go, he kept moving.

His hands were numbed to the point where he could barely sense the rocks

under his fingertips, and his feet were becoming chilled as well. A

numbness was setting into his thighs. But the plane was nearer.

He glanced up once; Natalia and Paul, peered down at him, over the edge.

The thought crossed his mind that even if one of the bikes had remained

serviceable, how would they ever get it up to the road surface? And the

freak storm—when would it end?

The plane was a few yards away from him now, across a wide break in the

ground and below the break, a drop of seventy-five feet or more. Rourke

settled himself against the rocks, checking his footing, then awkwardly

because

of the narrowness of the ledge, swung his left leg around behind him,

found a purchase for the left foot, then simultaneously swung his left arm

out and around, twisting his body. He moved his feet slightly, firming the

position he had, his back now against the rocks and dirt of the

embankment. The snow, falling in larger, heavier flakes, covered his

shoulders, lingered on his eyelashes-freezing him.

The jump to the opposite side of the break in the ground was only ten or

eleven feet. But there was no running room. He would simply hurtle his

body off the ledge and that would be it.

He sucked in his breath hard, glancing up one nfiore time; he couldn’t see

either Natalia or Paul cleariy because of the heaviness of the snowfall.

“Now!” he rasped, pushing himself away from the embankment wilh his hands.

His knees slightly flexed as he half-jumped, half-fell forward, his

fingers reaching out. His righl hand, then his left touched the opposite

side of the open space, his hands clawing at the dirt and loose rocks

there. His hands slipped, his thighs slamming down hard against the

surface of the ground, his body starting back down the incline, slipping.

He couldn’t dig in his heels—his feet dangled in the air. As he started to

slide backward, he spread-eagled his arms, his fingers clawing for a

purchase on the ice-coated ground. A rock—he held it, then the rock

dislodged and he was slipping again.

His left hand snaked behind him, snatching for the A.G. Russell Black

Chrome Sting IA he carried in the little inside waistband holster. His

fingers closed stiffly around it as he slipped toward the edge, his left

arm swinging around his body in a wide arc. The point of the Sting IA bit

deep into the ground, penetrating the ice. His right

hand grasped for the knife handle as well now, both fists bunched around

it; his body below the breastbone dangled in midair.

He sucked in his breath, flexing his arm muscles as he tried pulling

himself up. There wasn’t time; the knife was already slipping from the

soft dirt beneath the ice, and his cold-numbed fingers were slipping from

the slick steel of the knife’s handle.

“No!” Rourke heard the shout come from his lips and for the first time

became conscious of it. Summoning all his strength, he drew himself up.

The knife slipped from the dirt; his body lurched forward, onto the ice

and snow. He rolled, flattening himself, the knife still clutched in his

left fist.

He couldn’t see through the snow now to the road thirty feet above, but

through the whiteness he heard a voice. “Answer me, John—John!” It was

Natalia.

“I’m all right,” Rourke shouted back, already starting to edge across the

ice.

Two yards from the still intact fuselage, he stood up, slowly edging

forward. He started into the plane, but stopped.

His stiff right thumb and first finger worked at his zipper; there was

something more important than inspecting (he plane that instant. . . .

He stood inside, shivering with the cold, but at least out of the wind.

Natalia’s borrowed motorcycle, a vintage BSA, had been the first of the

three, farthest forward in (he fuselage; the other two bikes had hammered

against it in the crash. It was twisted, as was the underside of the

fuselage where apparently the craft had gouged against a large rock, or

one of the supports for the steel guardrail.

But his own jet black Harley-Davidson Low Rider appeared undamaged, as was

the bright blue Low Rider he had found for Paul Rubenstein after the

younger man’s motorcycle had been abandoned to lighten the plane during

the Florida evacuation.

With effort, still shivering, he got Rubenstein’s bike aside so he could

get to his own. The Lowe Alpine Systems Loco Pack was still strapped in

place behind the seat. Rourke got to it, opening one of the pockets. There

was a red-and-silver Thermos Space Blanket, the kind larger than the

original disposable models developed for the astronaut program. The silver

reflective side toward him, he wrapped the blanket around his shoulders,

leaning heavily against one of the fuselage ribs. Rourke rammed his hands,

palms inward, down inside the fr\>nt of his trousers, warming them against

his testicles to reduce the numbness o( his fingers so he could move them

well enough to work. He stood there, the blanket around him, his hands

starting to get back feeling, his eyes flickering from one part of the

fuselage to another— the damage.

The plane was a total loss, as he had realized it would be from the first

moment he had decided to abandon it, when stopping it on the ice-slicked

road surface had proven impossible. It would have been unlikely that the

iced and stalled engine could have been successfully repaired in any

event. It had been the single-engine landing that had caused the problem

with stopping in the first place—not enough power. Aside from Natalia’s

motorcycle, everything that was important seemed rela­tively unscathed.

He could move his fingers more now, so he withdrew his hands from inside

his pants, then quickly started

going through his things and the packs of Natalia and of Paul Rubenstein.

. . .

A pair of vintage, heavy leather Kombi ski gloves on his hands, a

seen-better-days gray woolen crew-neck sweater on over his shirt, Rourke

fed out part of the climbing rope from his pack, a rock secured to the

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