Гарри Гаррисон - The QE2 Is Missing

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“What could have happened to her?” The search pilot asked, as he had been asking for days now.
“Someone said maybe a sudden tidal wave,” the copilot offered.
“Nothing like that has been reported. No tidal waves, no collisions. Just nothing, that’s the damnable part of it!”
“Bermuda Triangle?” the copilot asked. The pilot just sniffed loudly. “I know. Just a lot of nonsense. But nevertheless, Lieutenant, she appears to have vanished…. “

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“Bite your tongue when you say that! We’ll not have that kind of trouble here. This is going to be a day flight, we’re staying at thirty-one thousand feet, and once we have made the search sweep you can twist the dials and get the beacon in Bogota and we’re home free.”

“Great, thanks.”

“You’re welcome.” Bush switched on the public address speakers, humming happily to himself. This was a bit like the old days, on your own, without all the navigational aids the young flyers were used to now.

“Good morning. This is your Captain speaking. We have now reached our cruising altitude of thirty-one thousand feet. The outside air temperature is fifty degrees below zero, but the weather in Bogota is better than that. Clear and sunny and the temperature is now twenty degrees, seventy degrees Fahrenheit. Our arrival time there will be slightly later than you were told because this aircraft, like many others, is cooperating in the search for the passengers of the QE2. Therefore, we will be going slightly west of our planned route to report on any ships in that area. I will tell you when we are there in case you want to look out the windows yourself. Who knows — one of you may be the person who finds the missing passengers and crew of the Queen. Have a pleasant flight and thank you for flying Western.”

“A master of psychology.” Trubey said.

“Naturally. If we are getting in late you might as well let them know. And they’ll be busy staring out at the ocean.”

The cabin attendants were just clearing away after luncheon when the loudspeakers crackled to life once more.

“This is Captain Bush again. We are now passing over the invisible boundary of the area within which we have been asked to make observations. We are logging any ships that we may sight and this information will be relayed to the authorities when we land. Thank you.”

“A lot of empty ocean out there,” Trubey said. “And not a ship on it that I can see.”

“We’re away from the normal sea lanes, that’s why. But the visibility is still unlimited, so, who knows. Call back and get us some coffee, will you?”

For the next half hour there was nothing below them but empty sea, empty of ships of any kind. A few light clouds appeared which cut their visibility slightly, but did not really interfere with it. Trubey, peering ahead, saw a dark smudge on the horizon.

“Looks like some clouds coming up.”

Bush checked the compass heading, then the chart. “Not clouds, an island, Clipperton Island. It’s the only land we’re going to see until we are over Central America.”

“Clipperton? Really?” Trubey ran his finger over the chart. “It certainly is. I read an article about that island in Crotch.

“Wonderful. And just what words of geographical wisdom could you possibly find in a girly magazine?”

“It was pretty good, a real serious article. I even remember the title. The Mad White Queen of Cannibal Island ____”

“Tremendous. That really sounds serious.”

“No, listen, it was. Maybe the writer jazzed up the idea to sell it to the magazine but the facts were bright, honest. Because I looked it up in the Encyclopaedia Britannica. I had a bet on with this guy in the hotel.”

“Oh, sacred font of wisdom, who can doubt your pale white pages!”

“It’s true, Ernie, honest. This island used to belong to Mexico and it’s just a hunk of rock out here in the ocean with nothing growing on it and no water or anything. Only it used to be covered yards deep in guano…. “

“I knew it! It’s turning into a shitty story!”

“Not that way at all. They still mine guano in South America for fertilizer. So it seems that the Mexicans had a camp on Clipperton, in the last century, where they used to dig out the bird guano and ship it back home for fertilizer. It wasn’t a popular job—”

“You can say that again!”

“But they needed the stuff. They used to bring all of the food and water in by ship, then take the guano out. Which was OK until there was a revolution and during the war and everything, why, they forgot about the people on Clipperton. By the time a ship stopped by there months later a lot of them were dead and the survivors had been reduced to cannibalism to stay alive.”

“You mean that?” Bush looked out at the solitary pinnacle of rock growing out of the ocean ahead, and touched the wheel to turn them in its direction. “It must be true. I don’t think you have the imagination to make up a story like that. It must have been pretty gruesome.”

“You bet it was. Hundreds of miles out in the ocean, alone, no way off, no food — and waiting for a ship that never came.”

Clipperton was a mountaintop in the sea ahead, a gray pinnacle of rock jutting up out of the blue sea. Utterly alone. Trubey had the high-power binoculars to his eyes now and was examining the island.

“Now that’s what I call a grim place,” he said. “No trace of green, trees or plants or anything. The rock is streaked white all over, guano in the making I guess. A sort of natural bay. Lot of rock formations in it, I can just make them out. Rows of rocks along the shore.”

He lowered the glasses and rubbed his sore eyes. The 747 tore on through the empty sky and past the island at a steady six hundred and fifty miles an hour. It began to shrink into the sea behind them.

“It couldn’t be,” Bush said. “It just couldn’t be — but it could be as well.”

“Going to let me in on this?” Trubey said.

“A wild idea, that’s all. Really wild. Those rocks you saw. Could they be boats?”

“Looked a lot like rocks to me….”

“Listen. They say the QE2 could have been in this area. All of the ship’s boats and launches are gone. I know it sounds crazy — this whole thing is crazy — but could they be down there, on this deserted island, drawn up on the shore?”

“Jesus….” Trubey breathed the word out quietly, realizing what it could mean.

Captain Bush switched off the autopilot and seized the controls and started a slow turn, throttling back at the same time. “Get on the radio to Mexico City and give them our position. Tell them that I am dropping down to six thousand feet to take a closer look at the island. Keep the frequency open and let them know that we’ll be giving them a running report. Then tell the passengers what is happening.”

Turning and dropping steadily, the great aircraft headed for the island. Coming in lower now, from the west with the sun behind them, they could see the dark clusters on the beach clearly, watch them as they* grew larger and larger.

“Boats! By God, they’re boats!” Trubey shouted as they tore over the sparkling bay. “The whole shore down there is covered with lifeboats!”

As they hurtled by they could clearly see the flares that were now bursting in the air above the crowded beach.

As they swung out to sea again even the passengers, crowded at the windows, could see the hundreds and hundreds of people on the strip of shore, waving and waving and waving…

28

“Be quick,” Josep said. “I have no time for any games. What do you mean that this little speck on the chart is the answer to our problems? That is as foolish as these officers saying we are going to crash into it.”

“They’re right,” Uzi said. “Our present course will take us unpleasantly close to Clipperton Island. In a storm like this we need all the sea room we can get. But what I propose is that we don’t alter course, that we sail at top speed to this island. How long before we reach it?”

The Third Officer used the dividers on the chart. “We’ll be there in about six hours. That is why I want to discuss a course correction now…. “

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