David Dun - Overfall

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The chopper was coming back up the island, the edge of its beam just nipping the shore on which they sat.

“Come on,” he said, trying to stand but unable. “You gotta crawl.”

Even as he said it, he felt a tiny spark of strength returning. He managed to get up, put his arm around her belly, and lift her trembling body to stand next to his. They struggled up the beach and stumbled barefoot off into the trees as the copter whizzed past.

Once in the trees, Sam knew that their lowered body temperature was critical.

He was still breathing hard from the cold.

“We have ten miles,” he gasped as if running. “Over rough ground. Got to get to the resort.” He doubled over, and it occurred to him that maybe age was affecting him. But he shoved the thought from his mind. He was only forty-two, still young. The hopeful message pulsed through the structures of his brain. But his ever-present self, the thing that cowered at age, answered back: Your dad killed himself at thirty-seven. “We have to get away from the water.”

They stumbled and meandered through the woods for maybe an hour, the cold feeling slightly less extreme as they dried in the night air. The helicopter was an occasional buzz in the distance as it patrolled the other island. He knew the angry bird would soon have to leave for fuel.

He turned on his light. Trees and brush everywhere.

“I just need to sleep.” She wobbled and he grabbed her.

“No way,” he said. “You sleep, you die.”

He pushed her ahead of him by the belt.

She started to fall, and he gently shook her. When that didn’t work, he shook her harder.

“This is awful. I’m gonna die.” She was shaking and her legs looked weak.

“You forget about the paperwork. I gotta keep you around.”

It took him another thirty minutes to find what he needed. It was a house-sized rock with nearly sheer faces. They put the rock between themselves and the water from which they had come. There was a cleft in the rock and a niche maybe two feet deep.

“Help me,” he said. “You can’t be a lazy movie star out here. Pick up sticks, like this.”

He began grabbing any wood he could find. Although she stumbled and fell repeatedly, she worked alongside him. Hollowing out a small area in the middle of the woodpile, he put in twigs and dry needles.

Then he took out one of the wax-dipped matches, cleaned off the wax, blew on it for two minutes, prayed, and struck it on the rock face. It lit.

“First time, every time.” He looked down. When she sat down, she went immediately to sleep and appeared unconscious. Snapping on the light, he pried up a lid and saw her eye rolled back in her head.

“Damn.” He began slapping her and shaking her to wake her. She groaned. The fire was burning. He nurtured it with more small sticks, then shook her some more.

“Wake up.” He put her back to the meager flame and began rubbing her as if to warm her skin with the friction. As he fed the fire, the flame grew larger and began to put out genuine warmth. Now she began to groan in earnest. That was good. Her body was coming alive, starting to sense pain again. With all the bruising, she would soon feel as if she’d rolled down a hill in a box of rocks.

He began to clear an area of the forest duff. He found some stones the size of softballs and began stacking them next to the fire. He put some in the fire. He broke boughs on nearby trees and placed them in a pile. Next he took a stick and began digging in the dirt. It was rocky but not impossibly hard. As he pulled up more rocks, he also placed those in and around the fire, which by now had a three-foot flame.

The helicopter continued patrolling over the water, a mile or more distant.

Sam was pretty sure that they wouldn’t see the smoke at night, and the flame was invisible from three directions. It was unlikely that their pursuers would fly out over a black forest searching for people on foot. And even if they did, the forest was so heavy they probably wouldn’t see the fire. It took him ten minutes, but he found a long log that he dragged to the rock face. He put one end of the log in a notch in the rock next to the cleft that housed the fire. The log stood directly over the shallow trench and about three feet off the ground at the high end. Knowing he had what he needed, he set the log aside.

Now he dug pockets in the trench, put a hot rock in each pocket, and covered each rock with an inch or two of dirt. Soon the entire bottom of the trench was filled with hot buried rocks. Next he stacked on about six inches of fir boughs and placed the log against the rock over the boughs. He leaned dry, stripped, arm-sized branches against it and then piled the boughs along the branches, making a tent of the boughs.

Anna was huddled by the fire with a bad case of the shakes. “Let me help. You’re doing all the work.”

“Stay right where you are. Keep warm.”

He figured it had taken two hours to complete the tiny hut.

“It’ll be warm enough.” Sam doused the fire, hoping no one had spotted it.

Without hesitation he stripped off his clothes. She stared, obviously warn out and fumbling for some way to make the sleeping arrangements workable.

“Leave on your underwear and let’s get in,” he said. She retained her bra and panties, but Sam was happy naked. Apparently she had a thing about her fanny pack, or its contents, because she kept it by her side. He put their clothes under some spare hot rocks and watched with satisfaction as they steamed. He and Anna crawled into the tent, where he wrapped himself around her back as they sank into the warmth of the bough-lined trench. Heat from the rocks radiated through the boughs on which they lay, and as their bodies soaked up the warmth. It felt luxurious.

“You are quite a guy,” she said. “Not a real diplomat, though.”

“Maybe you know too many guys with their nose up your ass.”

“You seem to be hanging on pretty tight.”

“That’s for warmth.”

“Thank you for clarifying that. I’m going to sleep.” True to her word, she was gone in less than a minute.

They slept fitfully.

“My butt is too hot,” she said after a time. By now they had become partially unentwined and sprawled on their backs.

“Actually, my backside is fried too. If it’s not one thing, it’s another,” Sam muttered, crawling out to get more boughs to put over the rocks. Gray dawn filtered through the trees. Birds were starting to flit and chirp.

Weary beyond words, he muscled the boughs beneath them, spread them around, and once again curled up tight against her back.

Just then there was barking in the distance.

“Damn. They dropped them on this island just in case,” Sam said. They probably went for jet fuel and left the dogs and a couple men to go after us. Come on.”

Sam pulled her out of the lean-to, snatched up her clothes, and tossed them over her shoulder. She scrambled to pull them on.

Sam listened carefully. The dogs were coming too fast to be on a leash.

“Shoes now,” he said, pulling on his own clothes in seconds, then his sneakers. Nothing was buttoned. She had done the same and put her fanny pack around her waist. “Climb,” he said.

She tried, but was obviously not a rock climber.

Sam sprang up on a small ledge on the rock. From there he climbed around her, got above, and pulled. Twice he repeated the process. Now ten feet up, she spread-eagled on the rock using her fingers and feet. Sam looked up to a ledge at least two feet deep. He had to get her there. The hounds were running in a meandering course, no doubt following Sam’s and Anna’s wandering of the night before.

“Lift your right foot.”

“I can’t.”

“Yes, you can.”

The dogs were close and barking, and then they were beneath them. One of them limped, but they both looked crazy with blood lust. They charged the wall, trying to climb.

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