Night Without End (6 page)

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Authors: Alistair MacLean

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BOOK: Night Without End
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     "More or less. I'm a doctor." 

     

     "Doctor, hey?" She looked at me with open suspicion, and what with my bulky, oil-streaked and smelly furs, not to mention the fact that I hadn't shaved for three days, I suppose there was justification enough for it. "You sure?" 

     

     "Sure I'm sure," I said irritably. "What do you expect me to do - whip my medical degree out from under this parka or just wear round my neck a brass plate giving my consulting hours?" 

     

     "We'll get along, young man," she chuckled. She patted my arm, then turned to the young girl. "What's your name, my dear?" 

     

     "Helene." We could hardly catch it, the voice was so low: her embarrassment was positively painful. 

     

     "Helene? A lovely name." And indeed, the way she said it made it sound so. "You're not British, are you? Or American?" 

     

     "I'm from Germany, madam." 

     

     "Don't call me 'madam'. You know, you speak English beautifully. Germany, hey? Bavaria, for a guess?" 

     

     "Yes." The rather plain face was transfigured in a smile, and I mentally saluted the old lady for the ease with which she was distracting the young girl's thoughts from the pain. "Munich. Perhaps you know it?" 

     

     "Like the back of my hand," she said complacently. "And not just the Hofbrauhaus either. You're still very young, aren't you?" 

     

     "I'm seventeen." 

     

     "Seventeen." A nostalgic sigh. "Ah, my dear, I remember when I was seventeen. A different world. There was no trans-Atlantic airliner in those days, I can tell you." 

     

     "In fact," I murmured, "the Wright brothers were hardly airborne." The face had been more than familiar to me, and I was annoyed that I should have taken so long in placing it: I suppose it was because her normal setting was so utterly different from this bleak and frozen world. 

     

     "Being insulting, young man?" she queried. But there was no offence in her face. 

     

     "I can't imagine anyone ever insulting you. The world was at your feet even in the Edwardian days, Miss LeGarde." 

     

     "You know me, then?" She seemed genuinely pleased. 

     

     "It would be difficult to find anyone who doesn't know the name of Marie LeGarde." I nodded at the young girl. "See, Helene knows it too." And it was clear from the awe-struck expression on the young German girl's face that the name meant as much to her as to me. Twenty years queen of the music-hall, thirty years queen of the musical comedy stage, beloved wherever she was known less for her genius than for the innate kindliness and goodness which she tried to conceal from the world with a waspish tongue, * for the half-dozen orphanages she maintained in Britain and Europe, Marie LeGarde was one of the few truly international names in the world of entertainment. 

     

     "Yes, yes, I see you know my name." Marie LeGarde smiled at me. "But how did you know me?" 

     

     "From your photograph, naturally. I saw it in Life the other week, Miss LeGarde." 

     

     " 'Marie', to my friends." 

     

     "I don't know you," I protested. 

     

     "I paid a small fortune to have that photograph retouched and made briefly presentable," she answered obliquely. "It was a splendid photograph, inasmuch as it bore precious little resemblance to the face that I carry about with me. Anyone who recognises me from that is my friend for life. Besides," she smiled, "I bear nothing but the most amicable feelings towards people who save my life." 

     

     I said nothing, just concentrated on finishing the job of strapping up Helene's arm and shoulders as quickly as possible: she was blue with cold, and shivering uncontrollably. But she hadn't uttered a murmur throughout, and smiled gratefully at me when I was finished. Marie LeGarde regarded my handiwork approvingly. 

     

     "I really do believe you have picked up some smattering of your trade along the way, Doctor - ah-" 

     

     "Mason. Peter Mason, Peter to my friends." 

     

     " 'Peter' it shall be. Come on, Helene, into your clothes as fast as you like." 

     

     Fifteen minutes later we were back in the cabin. Jackstraw went to unharness the dogs and secure them to the tethering cable, while Joss and I helped the two women down the ice-coated steps from the trap-door. But I had no sooner reached the foot of the steps than I had forgotten all about Marie LeGarde and Helene and was staring unbelievingly at the tableau before me. I was just vaguely aware of Joss by my shoulder, and anger and dismay on his face slowly giving way to a kind of reluctant horror. For what we saw, though it concerned us all, concerned him most of all. 

     

     The injured wireless operator still lay where we had left him. All the others were there too, grouped in a rough semi-circle round him and round a cleared space to the left of the stove. By their feet in the centre of this space, upside down and with one corner completely stove in on the wooden floor, lay the big metal RCA radio transmitter and receiver, our sole source of contact with, our only means of summoning help from the outer world. I knew next to nothing about radios, but it was chillingly obvious to me - as it was, I could see, to the semi-circle of fascinated onlookers - that the RCA was smashed beyond recovery. 

     

     

     

   CHAPTER THREE - Monday 2 A.M. - 3 A.M. 

     

     

     

     Half a minute passed in complete silence, half a minute before I could trust myself to speak, even bring myself to speak. When at last I did, my voice was unnaturally low in die unnatural hush that was broken only by the interminable clacking of the anemometer cups above. 

     

     "Splendid. Really splendid. The perfect end to the perfect day." I looked round them slowly, one by one, then gestured at the smashed transmitter. "What bloody idiot was responsible for this - this stroke of genius?" 

     

     "How dare you, sir!" The white-haired man whom I had mentally labelled as the Dixie colonel took a step forward, face flushed with anger. "Mind your tongue. We're not children to be-" 

     

     "Shut up!" I said, quietly enough, but there must have been something in my voice rather less than reassuring, for he fell silent, though his fists still remained clenched. I looked at them all again. "Well?" 

     

     "I'm afraid - I'm afraid I did it," the stewardess faltered. Her brown eyes were as unnaturally large, her face as white and strained as when I had first seen her. "It's all my fault." 

     

     "You! The one person here who should know just how vital radio really is. I don't believe it." 

     

     "You must, I'm afraid." The quiet controlled voice belonged to the man with the cut brow. "No one else was anywhere near it at the time." 

     

     "What happened to you?" I could see he was nursing a bruised and bleeding hand. 

     

     "I dived for it when I saw it toppling." He smiled wryly. "I should have saved myself the trouble. That damned thing's heavy." 

     

     "It's all that. Thanks for trying anyway. I'll fix your hand up later." I turned to the stewardess again, and not even that pale and exhausted face, the contrition in the eyes, could quieten my anger - and, to be honest, my fear. "I suppose it just came to pieces in your hand?" 

     

     "I've told you I'm sorry. I - I'was just kneeling beside Jimmy here-" 

     

     "Who?" 

     

     "Jimmy Waterman - the Second Officer. I-" 

     

     "Second Officer?" I interrupted. "That's the radio operator, I take it?" 

     

     "No, Jimmy is a pilot. We've three pilots -we don't carry a radio operator." 

     

     "You don't-" I broke off my surprised question, asked another instead. "Who's the man in the crew rest room? Navigator?" 

     

     "We don't carry a navigator either. Harry Williamson is - was -the Flight Engineer." 

     

     No wireless operator, no navigator. There had been changes indeed since I'd flown the Atlantic some years previously in a Stratocruiser. I gave it up, returned to my original question and nodded at the smashed RCA. 

     

     "Well, how did it happen?" 

     

     "I brushed the table as I rose and - well, it just fell." Her voice trailed off uncertainly. 

     

     "It just fell," I echoed incredulously. "One hundred and fifty pounds of transmitter and you flicked it off the table just like that?" 

     

     "I didn't knock it off. The legs collapsed." 

     

     "It's got no legs to collapse," I said shortly. "Hinges." 

     

     "Well, hinges, then." 

     

     I looked at Joss, who had been responsible for the erection of the table as well as the radio. "Is it possible?" 

     

     "No." His voice was flat, definite. 

     

     Again the silence in the cabin, the hush, the tension that grew from the merely uncomfortable to the all but unbearable. But I was beginning to see that there was nothing to be gained now by further questioning, much to be lost. The radio was wrecked. Finish. 

     

     I turned away without a word, hung up my caribou furs on nails on the walls, took off goggles and gloves and turned to the man with the cut brow. 

     

     "Let's have a look at your head and your hand - it's a pretty nasty gash on your forehead. Forget the radio for the moment, Joss - let's have coffee first, lots-of it." I turned to Jackstraw, who had just come down the steps from the hatch and was staring at the smashed radio. "I know, Jackstraw, I know. I'll explain later- not that I know anything about it. Bring seme empty cases for seats out of the food tunnel, will you. And a bottle of brandy. We all need it." 

     

     I'd just started to wash the cut forehead - a nasty gash, as I had said, but surprisingly little signs of bruising - when the big amiable young man who had helped us lower the second officer from the wrecked plane came to us. I looked across up at him, and saw that I could be wrong about the amiability: his face wasn't exactly hostile, but his eyes had the cool measuring look of one who knew from experience that he could cope with most of the situations, pleasant and unpleasant, that he was ever likely to come up against. 

     

     "Look," he began without preamble, "I don't know who you are or what your name is, but I'm sure we are all most grateful to you for what you have done for us. It's more than probable that we owe our lives to you. We acknowledge that. Also, we know you're a field scientist, and we realise that your equipment is of paramount importance to you. Agreed?" 

     

     "Agreed." I dabbed iodine fairly liberally on the injured man's head - he was tough, all right, he didn't even wince - and looked at the speaker. Not at all a man to ignore, I thought. Behind the strong intelligent face lay a hardness, a tenacity of purpose that hadn't been acquired along with the cultured relaxed voice at the Ivy League college I was pretty certain he had attended. "You'd something else to say?" 

     

     "Yes. We think - correction, I think - that you were unnecessarily rough on our air hostess. You can see the state the poor kid's in. OK, so your radio's bust, so you're hoppin' mad about it - but there's no need for all this song and dance." His voice was calm, conversational all the time. "Radios aren't irreplaceable. This one will be replaced, I promise you. You'll have a new one inside a week, ten days at the most." 

     

     "Kind," I said dryly. I finished tying the head bandage and straightened up. "The offer is appreciated, but there's one thing you haven't taken into account. You may be dead inside that ten days. You may all be dead in ten days." 

     

     "We may all-" He broke off and stared at me, his expression perceptibly hardening. "What are you talking about?" 

     

     "What I'm talking about is that without this radio you dismiss so lightly your chances - our chances - of survival aren't all that good. In fact, they're not good at all. I don't give a tuppenny damn about the radio, as such." I eyed him curiously, and a preposterous thought struck me: at least, it was preposterous for all of a couple of seconds, before the truth hit me. "Have you - have any of you any idea just where you are, right here, at the present moment?" 

     

     "Sure we have." The young man lifted his shoulders fractionally. "Just can't say how far to the nearest drugstore or pub-" 

     

     "I told them," the stewardess interrupted. "They were asking me, just before you came in. I thought Captain Johnson had overshot the landing field at Reykjavik in a snowstorm. This is Langjokull, isn't it?" She saw the expression on my face and went on hastily. "Or Hofsjokull? I mean, we were flying more or less north-east from Gander, and these are the only two snowfields or glaciers or whatever you call them in Iceland in that direction from-" 

     

     "Iceland?" I suppose there is a bit of the ham actor in all of us, and I really couldn't pass it up. "Did you say Iceland?" 

     

     She nodded, dumbly. Everybody was looking at her, and when she didn't answer they all transferred their gazes to me, as at the touch of a switch. 

     

     "Iceland," I repeated. "My dear -girl, at the present moment you're at an altitude of 8500 feet, right slam bang in the middle of the Greenland ice-cap." 

     

     The effect was all that anybody could ever have wished for. I doubt whether even Marie LeGarde had ever had a better reaction from an audience. "Stunned' is an inadequate word to describe their mental state immediately after this announcement: paralysis was nearer it, especially where the power of speech was concerned. And when the power of thought and speech did return, it expressed itself, as I might have expected, in the most violent disbelief. Everybody seemed to start talking at once, but it was the stewardess who took my attention, by coming forward and catching me by the lapels. I noticed the glitter of a diamond ring on her hand, and remember having some vague idea that this was against airline regulations. 

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