Read Expect the Sunrise Online

Authors: Susan May Warren

Tags: #Religious Fiction, #book

Expect the Sunrise (9 page)

BOOK: Expect the Sunrise
6.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

He looked at the passengers—Flint leaning over his bruised knee; Nina, now picking through the debris like a woman searching through the remains of her charred home; Ishbane, who sulked under his emergency blanket; and Phillips, diligently searching for a place to huddle for the night.

He glanced again at the map of the pipeline, noting how it had been marked with repair updates and shut-off valves. A route had been highlighted in yellow, another in blue. And right in the middle, northwest of Wiseman, someone had penciled in a large gray circle around Disaster.

He closed the map and shoved it into his jacket, feeling every nerve tingle, his instincts firing for the first time in three months.

Maybe paranoia had taken over.

He racked his brain for the truth. Hasid had disappeared in June and hadn’t been caught. More than that, many members of his cell had never been fully identified. More and more, terrorists from all walks of life, sharing the same agenda, bonded over one goal—cripple the war on terror. England and America had become their favorite targets, and nowadays customs officials and Homeland Security struggled to sketch an accurate profile of the everyday terrorist.

He or she could be anyone—a hunter, a photographer, a skinny businessman … a bush pilot.

Mac glanced over at Emma and her friend, saw the worry etched on the pilot’s face. He wanted to feel sympathy. Instead he felt only dread.

Cold, dark dread.

And from overhead, sleet began to fall like pellets from the sky.

Chapter 4

 

ANDEE FLASHED THE beam of her flashlight across the crushed instrument panel, examining wires. She’d dug out her radio from the debris, followed the wires into the panel, and spent an hour trying to rewire the radio to no avail.

Outside, sleet had turned to snow, and it sifted from the gunmetal clouds, dusting the hull of the plane. Wind seeped inside through the cracks in the broken windows and made Andee shiver. She should get out of here, but with Phillips and McRae constructing the shelter, she thought she’d attack priority number three and figure out if help might be on the way soon. Not only that, but the panel had stopped sparking, and the threat of explosion seemed more remote. Apparently she’d overreacted when she’d tackled poor Nina.

“Did you get the radio working?” McRae stuck his head through the cockpit door and settled beside her. The cut on his forehead had dried, his bushy hair now hung in tangles about his head. Melting snow in his brown hair glistened in the fading light.

“No. But the ELT is working.” She’d debated taking it out of the plane, but with the electrical panel now quiet and no danger of fire, perhaps it would be safer to leave it in the plane away from the elements.

McRae nodded without smiling. “The shelter is almost done.”

“Great.” Andee squeezed out of the cockpit door after him and trekked thirty feet down the tundra bowl, where Phillips had found a slight indentation in the rocky wall. Flanked on either side by a tumble of large boulders, the enclave made an adequate overnight shelter for the whole group. But with the wash of sleet and now the snow, she didn’t hold much hope of long-term accommodations.
Please, Lord, send help.

Someone like her SAR pals Jim Micah or Conner Young.

She shook the thought away. Micah and Conner weren’t here, and just because they had the alpha-male tendency to lead their SAR team’s call-outs didn’t mean that she couldn’t think for herself. Her father had taught her to survive in more ways than even he realized. She simply needed to keep one step ahead of panic.

Thankfully, McRae had calmed down and focused his energies on helping. “I’m sorry I barked at you earlier,” she said to him as she surveyed his work.

With her instructions, Phillips and McRae had used an edging of metal they’d torn from the broken wing and propped it against the top of the rocky wall. They’d draped one of the two tarps she’d brought over the wing piece for a roof. Wedging it into the rocks, they’d hung the other tarp over the entrance, securing it with the duct tape in her bag. It wouldn’t win any survival-school awards, but for now it would keep the passengers out of the wind and snow.

“It’s not pretty, but it’ll hold,” McRae said, voicing her opinion.

She quirked an eyebrow at him, aware that his attitude had changed in the last hour. Hopefully their predicament had subdued him, and he’d start listening to her.

Now that would be a first. A stubborn Scot bending his will to a wisp of a lady. Wow
, she thought she’d forgiven her father, Gerard, for his heritage. Apparently she still harbored latent grudges.

She knelt before Sarah, who lay zippered inside her sleeping bag. Flint watched over her. “How’s her breathing?” she asked.

“Okay.”

Andee felt for a temperature, took Sarah’s pulse, checked her eyes. One pupil seemed slightly larger than the other, but in the dim light she couldn’t be sure. She refused to jump to conclusions. With a head trauma, it wasn’t unusual for a victim to fall unconscious, but with each passing hour Sarah’s injury seemed more profound.

She checked Sarah’s bandage. The bleeding had stopped, and from a cursory glance the wound seemed superficial. Still, she could have hit hard enough for an intracranial hematoma, and hanging upside down certainly had to have increased the pressure. Which meant Sarah needed medical assistance, maybe even emergency surgery, as soon as possible.

“Has she made any noises?” Andee asked Flint.

Flint nodded. “Groans mostly now and again.”

Andee felt a flare of relief. Groans or any reaction to pain she’d sing hallelujahs over. “Let me know if anything changes. And if it looks like she might vomit, turn her on her side and get me immediately.”

McRae and Phillips were dragging supplies inside the shelter. Andee ducked her head inside and saw Nina trying to assemble the stove.

“I thought we might need heat,” she said to Andee. Nina seemed to be trying to conquer her fears, and Andee couldn’t help but admire her. She’d be a good ally once the adrenaline and shock wore off.

The gray overcast sky along with the gray tarp turned the inside to shadow. The space inside the embrace of rock allowed for the group to sit comfortably. With Sarah lying prone, it would be a tight fit. Body heat could raise the temperature inside a snow cave up to forty-five degrees. Only they weren’t in a snow cave, and Andee feared for the heat loss as the night closed in.

“We should get inside and stay there.” Andee glanced at Nina, still trying to assemble the stove. “Let’s run the stove only when we’re cooking or melting snow for water. We need to conserve the gas.”

Nina nodded.

“Just how long do you think we’ll be here?” Ishbane entered the shelter, shivering under his blanket.

“Sit down and get warm, Mr. Ishbane,” Andee said. “When we have everyone inside and a fire going, we’ll discuss options.”

“Our only option is to get out of here fast,” he said.

Oh, sure. I’ll just call 911.
She battled frustration as she crawled out of the shelter. However, one look at Sarah and Andee had to agree with Ishbane. She briefly surveyed the map. According to her calculations, it was a two-day hike to Disaster Creek. Possibly three.

Sarah could be dead in three days. Andee would give her entire life savings to know if someone had picked up their ELT transmission. Her flight plan didn’t have her checking into Prudhoe Bay until well after noon, and no one except her father knew she was headed to Disaster. Officials in Prudhoe Bay, not to mention her experienced father, could easily surmise, with the temperamental weather, that Andee had landed to wait it out. If she guessed the time correctly, it was nearly four, with night descending fast.

Her thoughts tumbled over each other and threatened to steal her breath, her action.
Make a fire. Determine your assets. Concoct a plan
.

She breathed through the cascade of events, piecing them out, weighing her priorities.
Get the injured inside.

“Mr. McRae, can you help me move Sarah inside?” She turned around and was surprised to see him standing arms akimbo, staring at her. As if before she’d even spoken, he’d already been fixed on her, studying her with a pensive expression. He’d put a fleece pullover on under his lined canvas jacket. The wind shifted and tangled his hair, and she couldn’t put out of her mind the image of some outlaw from the days of legends and Wild West cowboys—or maybe the age of lairds and wars with England and Robert the Bruce. He certainly had the aura of a man on edge.

She’d make sure he slept on the other side of the cave tonight.

“Mr. McRae?”

He raised an eyebrow as if only just now hearing.

“Can you help me lift Sarah?”

“I’ll help.” Phillips appeared from the shelter and took one end of Sarah’s board. Before Andee could react, McRae grabbed the other end. They carefully maneuvered Sarah into the shelter, while Andee helped Flint. She hated his moans, wishing she had something to give him—even whiskey at this point.

But she needed clear heads and cooperation, and whiskey didn’t exactly encourage sane behavior.

Inside the shelter, the barest of lights lingered to outline faces as people clumped around Sarah and Flint, tucking in their legs so as not to jostle them. The ground, wet from the sleet, felt like a sponge, and dampness seeped into her knees. They needed dry ground. And they needed to eat.

Yes, she needed to figure out what to do if the ELT didn’t call in rescuers. Heaviness loomed over the quiet shifting of snow overhead. Andee tried not to let it find her spirit, but as she slumped against the boulder near the opening, feeling the wind flap the edges of the shelter, she fought the sudden burn of tears.
I’m in over my head here, Lord. Way over my head. Please help me.

“We need to get supper going,” she said softly. No one moved. Not that she expected them to, but still, if Micah and Conner were here, they’d already have a blaze heating the shelter like a cabin in the north woods.

No, that wasn’t fair. Micah and Conner had been Green Berets, and Phillips and McRae had both obeyed her instructions without grumbling. Sorta.

But with Micah and Conner she felt safe. Even if the world fell in, they’d be there to help hold it up.

As the wind whistled through the opening and Sarah breathed quietly and five pairs of eyes peered at Andee through the darkness, she had the sudden and overwhelming urge to let weariness overtake her, to put her hands over her head and hide.

Andee had tried to hide from her misery after the high drama of watching her life shatter, the day when her family finally fell apart, when her mother had packed her bags and Andee’s and demanded that Gerard fly them to Fairbanks so they could check out of his life. Andee had felt numb as she watched her father fly away, leaving them on a wet and cold tarmac, seeing the only life she’d ever known or loved disappear with him.

In the childish places of her heart, she had just wanted someone to tell her that someday, somehow, this nightmare might end, that they might be a family again, that everything would be all right. Sort of like she felt now.
Please, Lord.

“Nina, hand me the stove. I’ll show you how to light it.” Andee took the stove from her and dug out the canister of gas from her duffel bag. She lit the stove with her lighter, adjusted the flame. It growled and flickered out, grabbing at them with fingers of warmth.

“Is anyone feeling like they might be running a fever?” Andee put a hand on Sarah’s head, then checked her pulse. She scanned the group.

Nina shook her head.

“Do you know where we are?” McRae spoke out of the semidarkness. He’d taken the place across from her, so his feet nearly bumped hers. She saw his dark profile and for a second felt an odd burst of relief that he’d taken the place near the opening. Just in case the wind decided to attack their shanty.

“For guys who have just been in a plane crash, Mr. McRae, you and Phillips think well on your feet. You did a superb job on this shelter.”

“Thanks, Emma,” Phillips said, although he sounded exhausted.

Andee took the pot out of her duffel and filled it with water from the water canister. “I have six soup packets and enough water for three days if we ration. We’ll have to share the soup. The good news is that we have enough Sierra cups.”

Silence.

“That was supposed to be a joke. I was thinking that you might not care about sharing at this point.”

“I care,” Ishbane said.

O-kay.
Andee nodded, smiling in his direction. He shivered, and she instinctively reached out to check his temperature. He slapped her hand away.

“Hey!” McRae barked from his corner. “Back off, Ishbane.”

“She got us into this mess. I don’t want her near me.”

“She may be your best bet for survival. Hit her again, and you’ll wish you hadn’t.”

Andee felt the tension snap and coil around her. “All right. Sorry. I … ah, just wanted to check your temperature, Mr. Ishbane. Tell me if you’re feeling hot, okay?”

He only grunted.

Andee shot a glance at McRae. He didn’t meet her gaze, and she couldn’t tell if she was grateful for his words or annoyed. She needed these passengers to see her as a leader. To trust her.

BOOK: Expect the Sunrise
6.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Out of the Ashes by Anne Malcom
The Sweetheart Rules by Shirley Jump
Anglomania by Ian Buruma
Island Practice by Pam Belluck
Tell Me True by Karpov Kinrade
The Lost Years by Shaw, Natalie
Sleight by Kirsten Kaschock
Beyond the Hanging Wall by Sara Douglass