Running Blind by Desmond Bagley

edge of the crater wal flying low. As it cleared the edge it dipped

down into the crater to our left. I said, ‘Whatever you do, don’t lift

your head. Nothing stands out so much as a white face.’

The plane flew low over the lake and then turned, spiral ing out into a

search pattern to survey the interior of the crater. It looked to me

like a four-seater Cessna from the brief glimpse I got of it. The

Land-Rover was parked in a jumble of big rocks, split into blocks by ice

and water, and maybe it wouldn’t show up too wel from the air providing

there was no movement around it.

Elin said quietly, ‘Do you think it’s someone looking for us?’

‘We’l have to assume so,’ I said. ‘It could be a charter plane ful of

tourists looking at the /Obyggdir/ from the air, but it’s a bit early in

the day for that – tourists aren’t awake much before nine o’clock.’

This was a development I hadn’t thought of. Damn it, Slade was right; I

/was/ out of practice. Tracks in the /Obyggdir/ are few and it would be

no great effort to keep them under surveil ance from the air and to

direct ground transport by radio. The fact that my Land-Rover was the

long wheelbase type would make identification easier – there weren’t

many of those about.

The plane finished quartering the crater and climbed again, heading

north-west. I watched it go but made no move. Elin said, ‘Do you think

we were seen?’

‘I don’t know that, either. Stop asking unanswerable questions – and

don’t move because it may come back for another sweep.’

I gave it five minutes and used the time to figure out what to do next.

There would be no refreshing swim in the lake, that was certain. Askja

was as secluded a place as anywhere in Iceland but it had one fatal flaw

– the track into the crater was a spur from the main track – a dead end

– and if anyone blocked the way out of the crater there’d be no getting

past, not with the Land-Rover. And I didn’t have any il usions about the

practicability of going anywhere on foot – you can get very dead that

way in the /Obyggdir./ ‘We’re getting out of here fast,’ I said. ‘I want

to be on the main track where we have some choice of action. Let’s move!’

‘Breakfast?’

‘Breakfast can wait.’

‘And the radio antenna?’

I paused, indecisive and exasperated. We /needed/ that antenna – I had

to talk to Taggart – but if we had been spotted from the air then a car

ful of guns could be speeding towards Askja, and I didn’t know how much

time we had in hand. The antenna could be close by but, on the other

hand, it might have dropped off somewhere up the track and miles away.

I made the decision. ‘The hel with it! Let’s go.’

There was no packing to do beyond col ecting the coffee cups and my

shaving kit and within two minutes we were climbing the narrow track on

the way out of Askja. It was ten kilometres to the main track and when

we got there I was sweating for fear of what I might find, but nothing

was stirring. I turned right and we headed south.

An hour later I pulled up where the track forked. On the left ran the

/Jokulsa a Fjollum,/ now near its source and no longer the mighty force

it displayed at Dettifoss. I said, ‘We’l have breakfast here.’ ‘Why

here particularly?’

I pointed to the fork ahead. ‘We have a three-way choice – we can go

back or take either of those tracks. If that plane is going to come back

and spot us I’d just as soon he did it here. He can’t stay up there

forever so we wait him out before we move on and leave him to figure

which way we went.’

While Elin was fixing breakfast I took the rifle I had liberated from

Graham and examined it. I unloaded it and looked down the bore. This was

no way to treat a good gun; not to clean it after shooting. Fortunately,

modern powder is no longer so violently corrosive and a day’s wait

before cleaning no longer such a heinous offence. Besides, I had neither

gun oil nor solvent and engine oil would have to do.

I checked the ammunition after cleaning the rifle. Graham had loaded

from a packet of twenty-five; he had shot one and I had popped off three

at Slade – twenty-one rounds left. I set the sights of the rifle at a

hundred yards. I didn’t think that if things came to the crunch I’d be

shooting at much over that range. Only film heroes can take a strange

gun and unknown ammunition and drop the baddy at 500 yards.

I put the rifle where I could get at it easily and caught a disapproving

glance from Elin. ‘Wel , what do you expect me to do?’ I said

defensively. ‘Start throwing rocks?’

‘I didn’t say anything,’ she said.

‘No, you didn’t,’ I agreed. ‘I’m going down to the river to clean up.

Give me a shout when you’re ready.’

But first I climbed a smal knoll from where I could get a good view of

the surrounding country. Nothing moved for as far as I could see, and in

Iceland you can usual y see a hel of a long way. Satisfied, I went down

to the river which was the milky grey-green colour of melt water and

shockingly cold, but after the first painful gasp it wasn’t too bad.

Refreshed, I went back to tuck into breakfast.

Elin was looking at the map. ‘Which way are you going?’

‘I want to get between Hofsjokul and Vatnajokul ,’ I said. ‘So we take

the left fork.’

‘It’s a one-way track,’ said Elin and passed me the map.

True enough. Printed in ominous red alongside the dashed line which

denoted the track was the stern injunction: /Adeins faert til austurs -/

eastward travel only. We wanted to go to the west.

I frowned. Most people think that because Greenland is covered with ice

and is wrongly named then so is Iceland, and there’s not much ice about

the place. They’re dead wrong. Thirty-six icefields glaciate one-eighth

of the country and one of them alone – Vatnajokull ? is as big as al

the glaciated areas in Scandinavia and the Alps put together.

The cold wastes of Vatnajokul lay just to the south of us and the track

to the west was squeezed right up against it by the rearing bulk of

Trolladyngja – the Dome of Trolls -a vast shield volcano. I had never

been that way before but I had a good idea why the track was one way

only. It would cling to the sides of cliffs and be ful of hair-pin

blind bends – quite hairy enough to negotiate without the unnerving

possibility of running into someone head on. ”

I sighed and examined other possibilities. The track to the right would

take us north, the opposite direction to which I wanted to go. More

damaging, to get back again would triple the mileage. The geography of

Iceland has its own ruthless logic about what is and what is not

permitted and the choice of routes is restricted.

I said, ‘We’l take our chances going the short way and ( hope to God we

don’t meet anyone. It’s stil early in the season and the chances are

good.’ I grinned at Elin. ‘I don’t think there’l be any police around

to issue a traffic ticket.’

‘And there’l be no ambulance to pick us up from the bottom of a cliff,’

she said.

‘I’m a careful driver; it may never happen.’

Elin went down to the river and I walked to the top of the knoll again.

Everything was quiet. The track stretched back towards Askja and there

was no tel -tale cloud of dust to indicate a pursuing vehicle, nor any

mysterious aircraft buzzing about the sky. I wondered if I was letting

my imagination get the better of me. Perhaps I was running away from

nothing.

/The guilty flee where no man pursueth./ 1 was as guilty as hel ! I had

withheld the package from Slade on nothing more than intuition – a hunch

Taggart found difficult to believe. And I had kil ed Graham! As far as

the Department was concerned I would already have been judged, found

guilty and sentenced, and I wondered what would be the attitude of Jack

Case when I saw him at Geysir.

I saw Elin returning to the Land-Rover so I took one last look around

and went down to her. Her hair was damp and her cheeks glowed pink as

she scrubbed her face with a towel. I waited until she emerged, then

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