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This is what God looks at everyday, she thought to herself. Paradise.
Brea
Maybe it wasn’t. Maybe that hadn’t even happened. Ten days here in the wonderful paradise of Brunei—helping train pilots to fly the EB-52 Megafortress “leased” to the kingdom as part of an eventual three-plane arms deal—had purged her of all unhappy memories.
One more week and it might even be impossible to have an unpleasant thought ever again.
Zen had surprised her yesterday by turning up for a weekend visit. They had twenty-four more hours together before he had to return to Dreamland, their base back in the States.
Brea
“I’ll bring down lunch, then I’m going to take a swim before I eat,” she told her husband, who was negotiating the bumps down from the parking area in his wheelchair.
“Yup,” said Zen.
“You don’t sound very enthusiastic,” she said.
“Yup.”
“Jet lag getting to you?”
“I’m fine.”
She leaned over and gave him a kiss on the cheek, then trotted up the hill for the rest of their things.
BEFORE THE ACCIDENT THAT HAD COST HIM THE USE OF HIS legs, Zen had considered going to the beach a useless waste of time and a dreadful bore. In his list of things to do, it ranked right above lying spread-eagle on Interstate 15 at rush hour.
Now it ranked somewhat lower.
He had tried talking Brea
A Lakers game, maybe.
It wasn’t so much the fact that beaches and wheelchairs didn’t go together. Truth be told, wheelchairs didn’t really fit smoothly anywhere. Much of everyday life in the A-B world—as in “able-bodied,” a term not used by the handicapped without at least a touch of sarcasm—was a succession of physical barriers and dignity-stealing obstructions. Going to the beach was probably no worse than going to the grocery store. And the fact that this beach was a private, secluded refuge meant there were no people to gawk at the geek in the wheelchair—or worse, take pity on him by “helping.”
No, what bothered him was deeper than that. There just seemed to be no point, existential or otherwise, in lying on your belly and watching water lap against the sand.
“My, but you’re a slowpoke,” said Brea
“No,” he said stubbornly, gripping the wheels of his chair and half-sliding, half-rolling off the hard-packed pathway and onto the sand. Surprisingly, the chair wheels sank only about a quarter of an inch, and Zen was able to pull over right next to the blanket. There he started a well-practiced if inelegant lift, arch, and twist routine, sliding himself down to the ground.
“You coming in?” asked Bree, kicking off her shoes.
“Yup” Zen pulled himself up, sitting next to the cooler with the beer. He took out a Tetley’s Draught—an English ale that might be the last vestige of Britain’s influence on Brunei—and popped the top. A satisfying hiss and fizz followed.
“ ‘This can contains a floating widget,’ “ he read from the top of the can. “What do you think a floating widget is, Bree?”
“An excuse to charge two dollars more,” said Brea
But some things were worth the price.
And others couldn’t be bought for any amount of money: Zen watched as his wife stripped off her jeans and T-shirt, revealing a red one-piece bathing suit that reminded Zen there were some good reasons for going to the beach after all.
“Mmmm,” he said.
“Don’t get fresh.”
“What? I’m talking about the beer.”
He ducked as Brea
DESPAIR’S BLACK HANDS TOOK HIS THROAT, AND SAHURAH NIU struggled to breathe.
The prince’s wife and infant daughter had not come to the beach. His informants had been wrong.
Sahurah pushed his fists into his arms, struggling to calm himself. It was of vital importance to remain in control in front of his men.
The commander had made clear that he must complete the mission today. They had discussed the possibility of taking other hostages if necessary; clearly that was his course now.
The two people on the beach were Westerners—Australians, he thought, though Sahurah Niu was not close enough to know for certain. Undoubtedly they were guests of the prince, or they would not have been allowed here on the private beach. They would do.
One was in a wheelchair. A pity.
Sahurah was not without a sense of mercy: he would be killed rather than taken.
“What are we doing?” asked Adi, the little one. He handled the Belgian machine-gun they had obtained two months before from their brothers across the border. Despite his small size, Adi had learned to handle the weapon and his body well enough so that he could fire the gun from his hip. This was not easily done; the others and Sahurah himself preferred to fire prone, as their instructor had first taught them.
“We will go ahead with our plan,” said Sahurah. “Tell the others be ready.”
THE WATER FELT LIKE A MINERAL BATH, BALMY AND THICK against her skin. Brea
“Are you coming in or not?” Brea
“Later,” he said.
“Oh come on in!” she yelled. “The water is fantastic.”
“I’ll be in,” he said, sipping his beer.
The shoreline was crescent-shaped and slightly off-center to the east, bordered on both sides by strips of jungle. To the west, a pile of rocks formed a small mini-peninsula about a hundred and fifty yards from the mainland. The rocks were just barely above the surface of the water, and they weren’t very wide; there looked to be just about the surface area of a good-sized desk there. Still, it was a destination and Brea
ZEN DUG THROUGH THE COOLER, SORTING THROUGH THE food they’d taken from the hotel, looking for something that might seem at least vaguely familiar. He took out what seemed to be a roast beef sandwich—meat stuck out from the edges—and then leaned toward the backpack to get a plate. As he did, he caught a glint of something in the trees to his right, well back in the jungle off the beach by fifty or sixty yards.