CHAPTER 2
07.50
At the
ground floor of the warehouse, Metcalfe and Svenson are pursuing a grand scale
search of the place. They have open up
the huge garage door so the outdoor light could illuminate the place and they
would see more clearly. They go from
door to door in the place, opening each of them wide, entering every room. They look at each and every dark corners of
the warehouse. At one point, they even
go outside, to take a look around the building. Not knowing what the other two are exactly looking for, Holden
and Blackburn do nothing but stare at them, almost thinking of them as some
kind of madmen, seeing as how they’re running around the place.
Svenson and
Metcalfe have being gone outside for a whole ten minutes, when Holden, who’s
taking the sun with Blackburn, in the opening of the garage door, looks up at
his watch. Blackburn is quietly smoking
a cigarette, staring into space, waiting.
“Do you
think we should call the local constabulary?” Holden asks him quietly. “Or maybe the men in white?”
Blackburn
laughs softly. “No, I don’t think it
would be wise to call them. Considering
the unique circumstances for which we are here…”
“Yes,
you’re right, of course.” Holden sighs.
Blackburn
offers his companion a cigarette that Holden refuses graciously.
“It’s not
recommended for Aquanauts to smoke.” He says. “You know, we generally work in
restraint areas… Plus the fact that your lungs have to be quite healthy when
you go swim with the fishes…”
“I more
prefer go fly with the birds.” Blackburn answers back. He puts the cigarette back in its case.
“Suits yourself.”
“Not afraid
it will kill you someday?” Holden asks him.
Blackburn
shrugs. “I don’t think smoking will be
the death of me. I would rather think I
would crash myself with an aircraft or something one day… and break my neck.”
“You have a
pretty dark way of seeing your future!”
A surprised Holden remarks.
“Well, at
least it’s a clean death.”
They stop
talking; they see Metcalfe and Svenson coming back from the corner of the
warehouse. The WAAF colonel seems
pretty upset.
“I can
believe they run away like that!” Svenson tells
Metcalfe. “It doesn’t make sense!”
“Leaving us
behind… After all the trouble they must have had to ambush us.” Metcalfe answers back, with a gloomy tone.
“Sure, it doesn’t make sense! I wish I
could understand what they were up to.”
They have
reach Holden and Blackburn; the later throws the last of his cigarette on the
ground. Svenson shakes his head at the
sight.
“Still
haven’t shaken that bad habit of yours?”
“It helps
me relax a little…” Blackburn replies, somewhat coldly. “ Especially when trying to understand why
an old friend of mine almost kills me and then runs away after some ghosts.”
“Oh! They weren’t ghosts, I can assure you!”
Svenson scoffs. “ They have taken off with my gun!”
“AND my
car.” Metcalfe adds quickly. He rolls
his eyes to the sky. “I can believe
they had stolen that car! I will hear
it now, at the lease agency!”
Holden is
not listening to Metcalfe and turns to Svenson. “You have come with a gun?”
“I know.”
Svenson mumbles. “The instructions were
to come unarmed. That alone has raised
my suspicion at the time. So, I didn’t
take a chance. That wasn’t even
enough.”
Metcalfe
elbows him hardly and gives him a stern glance.
“You talk
too much, Adam! You should have told
them all that!”
Holden
smiles.
“Why not?”
He remarks. “I think we all know by now
that we were all send here by the Selection Committee. I don’t see why we should keep secrets from
each other.”
“Yes,
quite.” Blackburn agrees. “Now if you
two will be kind enough to explain to us just what going on here? I don’t appreciate being thrown down a
staircase…» He gives Svenson a slight smile. “… Even by old friends.”
Metcalfe is
still hesitant. He sighs after a while.
Yes, maybe
we should tell you what going on…” He finally says. “At least what we know of.
But first: sorry for the mixed
up, gentlemen.”
Holden
sighs heavily. “Is ‘sorry’ all
you have to say for yourself? Blackburn
and I, we almost break our necks in that fall!”
Svenson
produces a broad smile, hearing these words.
“Don’t
worry too much, commander: colonel
Metcalfe does that kind of thing to everybody he get acquainted with.”
Metcalfe
glance back coldly at the mocking American.
Holden frowns as he looks incredulously at the WAAF officer.
“Colonel
Paul Metcalfe?”
“Yes. Have we ever met, lieutenant commander? I don’t recall…”
“No, we
haven’t. Holden interrupts. “I once met
your father, though. And I have heard
of you.” He screws up his eyes.
“Somehow, I thought that you’d be… a bit older.”
Metcalfe
grumbles a little. He’s used to these
kinds of remarks. Being the youngest
colonel ever in the WAAF was not always easy to assume.
“And you,
sir?” Holden says turning to Svenson.
“I already know you’re a friend of Blackburn, but… I don’t think I
caught your name.”
“His name’s
Adam Svenson.” Blackburn presents him. “And he’s the best field agent the WAS
Security Department has ever had.”
“And the
best pilot.” Svenson adds.
“No. That
would be me.” Blackburn teases.
The two
friends laugh. Metcalfe smiles lightly at their obvious camaraderie. Holden is still the only one keeping himself
in check.
Well, now
we all know who we each are.” He says gloomily. “How about that explanation you
owe us?”
Metcalfe
and Svenson each give their respective part of their story, of how they had
come to this place, following the instructions the Selection Committee had
giving them on their letter. Then
Metcalfe takes the beat, explaining how he and his American companion escape
from the dark room where they were locked away, to find themselves in the basement.
That’s
about all we have to say, gentlemen.” Metcalfe says upon finishing their story.
“ When YOU opened the door and began to get down those stairs, we just assume
you were our jailers and we… well, you know.”
“Yes, we
know.” Holden replies, still a little sore.
“And you
still have no idea who those men were?” A curious Blackburn asks.
“Not a
clue.” Svenson sighs. “But I refuse to think that they run away just like
that. They surely had something on
their minds.”
Metcalfe, thoughtful, addresses Holden and
Blackburn. “Maybe they took off when
they saw you coming?”
“I would
doubt that.” Blackburn says.
“We arrived
separately, too.” Holden adds. “I took
a cab to come. I was here before Blackburn.”
He looks at Metcalfe.
“There was no car at the front door, when I arrived, colonel. And I didn’t see any vehicle gets away.”
Metcalfe
frowns. “What did you do, then?”
Holden
shrugs. “The principal door was not locked.
I took a quick look inside and saw that the place was desert. So, I decided to stay outside, by the
door. I’d just figured out that I had
mistaken the address… or that someone would be coming to pick me up. That’s when I saw Mister Blackburn arrives.”
“I came
with a cab too.” Blackburn continues. “Commander Holden was waiting by the
door. That's where we met. By talking to each other, we learned that we
were here for the same reason, and waited together. After several minutes, we tired of it, and came inside, looking
for some clues as to why we were send in such a place.”
“We found
the door going down the basement and saw the light when we opening it.” Holden
adds. “The rest… Well, there’s no much
point at explaining it now, isn’t it?”
“So these
guys were already gone, probably for a long time, before you came here,
commander.” Metcalfe muses.
“I would
think that, since I saw no trace of them.” Holden agrees.
“It still
doesn’t add up.” Svenson says.
“No, it
doesn’t.” Metcalfe agrees. “ And I hate that.
They must have known that you two were coming here…” He looks at Holden
and Blackburn. “But instead of waiting
for you, like they had done for Adam and I, they go away. Why?”
“Maybe they
considered us more of a threat then you too guys.” Blackburn jokingly remarks.
Svenson
shakes his head and sighs; he gives his old friend at comforting pat on the
back.
“Don’t try,
Steve, please!” He says with pity in his voice. “You don’t have the hack for it.”
“So, what
do we do, for now?” Holden asks. “I suppose any of you wouldn’t dare leave
here, anymore than I would.”
“That
wouldn’t be my first choice either.” Metcalfe says, nodding.
“Maybe we
could find some clues down in the basement?” Svenson suggests. “You know, by looking at that Tank that’s
down there…”
“You mean that
strange-looking car, which resemble a shark?” Blackburn asks, frowning.
“You
haven’t seen much sharks in your life now, haven’t you?” Holden notes, smiling.
“Yes, maybe
we can find out why it’s down there.” Metcalfe says. “And what relation it could have with our dear friends who have
left us.”
“How has it
found its way downstairs, anyway?” Blackburn asks.
Svenson
quickly cuts Metcalfe who is about to answer.
“Quite easy: I found an elevator
when Paul and I search the place some minutes ago. It seems sturdy enough to support the weight of that machine.”
“So what I
we waiting for?” Blackburn says.
They were
all about to go when they see a car turning a corner of the building and coming
their way. They look at it, as it
approaches them; it does not seem very threatening, but its looks is rather
impressive: it’s a big black brand new
sports car, moving along very quietly.
“Here comes
another one.” Svenson says to the others.
“You think
so?” Metcalfe asks.
“You want to
bet?”
The car
parks itself just in front of the opened garage door, where the four men are
standing expectantly. The driver turns
off the motor and steps out of his vehicle.
It’s a tall man, in his thirties, with slick black hair. His eyes are hidden behind very dark
sunglasses. He looks straight at the
four men who are staring curiously at him.
“Hello,
there.”
The four
respond each in their fashion. The man
goes directly to them, as they continue to look at him, with obvious curiosity
in their eyes: the clothes he’s wearing are of the finest fabric that can be
found in the market and the cut obviously is from a very expensive fashion
house. The newcomer stops in front of
the four men who, almost without really wanting to, deploy themselves around
him. He lift up his glasses to look at
them, with bright brown eyes that show a little concern and discomfort at their
staring gaze.
“Er… Excuse
me, but… Is this… the place?”
He’s
addressing Metcalfe and Holden, probably, they all think, because they’re in
uniform. Metcalfe tilts his head to one
side, as he considers what he must say to this man. He has heard his American accent, with just a tilt of Irish
brogue in his awkward question…
Question that would tend to prove that Svenson was right about him.
“Yes… “ He answers to him, a bit hesitantly. “It is
the place.”
The newcomer smiles.
“Good.”
He takes of
his glasses completely and puts them in his vest pocket. Metcalfe finds himself staring at the pink
carnation he has at his buttonhole.
“I was
beginning to think that I have made a wrong turn after I left the
airport.” The newcomer smiles in
excuse. “I’ve never been to Perth
before, you know.”
He looks
uncertain as Blackburn and Svenson walk around him, before heading toward the
car, that they eye with the same curiosity as they did with him.
“You came
right from the airport?” Blackburn asks.
“In that
car?” Svenson adds.
The
newcomer smiles anew. “Well, it’s only
a rental.”
“That was
waiting for your arrival at the airport…” A puzzled Blackburn says.
The
newcomer does not seem very at ease.
“Why, yes…
I have ordered it by phone, before leaving from New York.”
“I couldn’t
afford to rent that kind of car even for one hour.” Blackburn muses. He turns to Svenson:
“He must be as loaded as you!”
Svenson
scoffs. “My old man is loaded, Steve.
Not me.”
“Well,
that’s the same.”
A bit
astounded by the kind of reception he receives, the man turns back to Metcalfe
and Holden. The two uniformed officers
are still staring at him, but this time with a twinkle of amusement in their
eyes. There is some anger in his voice
when the newcomer addresses them:
“Would you
tell me who’s in charge here?”
Holden
hesitates; seeing as that Metcalfe is the highest-ranking officer in this
place, he points at him.
“I guest he is.”
He adds, only for himself: “Well, for the time being, anyway.”
“I heard
that.” Metcalfe warns him. He then
addresses the man: “Can I ask your name
and where you come from, Mister?”
“I’m Patrick
Donaghue, from New York City.” The man answers. “From the proposition I have received, I would have thought that
I was expected. And to find myself in
such a God forsaken place…”
Metcalfe
frowns. “Never mind the place, Mister
Donaghue. You said you had received… a
proposition?”
“Well, for
lack of a better word…”
Svenson,
who was still near the car, raises his head at the newcomer’s words,
puzzled. Blackburn, who is obviously
concentrated in his admiring of the car, feels his friend giving him a pat on
the shoulder.
“Hear that,
Steve? He said he had a proposition.”
The two
friends come back toward the others.
“I wonder
if he’s talking about the same kind of ‘proposition’ as ours.” Blackburn muses.
“Do you
have any letter mentioning that proposition, Sir?” Metcalfe asks Donaghue.
“Sure,
right in my vest pocket.”
Metcalfe
extends his hand. “Would you care to show it to me?”
Donaghue
takes an envelope from his pocket and exhibits it before Metcalfe’s eyes. But when the WAAF colonel tries to take it
from hem, the New Yorker quickly pulls it away, and gives a conniving smile.
“Sorry. I said I’d show it to you.” He notes. “I’ve never said I would let you read it.”
“And why
not?” A surprised Metcalfe asks him.
“Let’s just
say that there’s very… personal information in there. It would not be wise for me to let it be read by a lieutenant…”
“Colonel.”
Metcalfe snaps annoyingly.
“Sorry.”
Donaghue says again. “Didn’t mean to offend you. But I don’t know anything about insignias what-so-ever.”
So he
doesn’t have any military background, thinks Metcalfe. He finds it odd.
“Can you at
least show us the envelope?” He asks.
Donaghue
hesitates just a second before finally handing the letter. Metcalfe examine the envelope
carefully. He feels Holden leaning to
look over his shoulder.
“It has the
Governmental stamp of the Selection Committee.” Holden notices thoughtfully.
Metcalfe
gives the letter back to Donaghue.
“Yeah, it has. What exactly is
your background, Mister Donaghue?”
Donaghue
shakes his head.
“Sorry,
colonel. But it’s also personal
information. I should talk it over only
with an official operative.”
Metcalfe
frowns. “What make you think we’re not official operatives?”
Donaghue
scoffs. “Sorry again, colonel, but you
don’t even look the part.”
Metcalfe is
stunned by such an affirmation. “I beg
your pardon?”
“Not just
you. ANY of you.” Donaghue laughs. “I mean, look at the lot of
you! You look exactly like schoolboys
asking themselves questions about the new kid in the block! Another minute or so, I would have sworn you
were going to ask me a ride in my car!”
The men
surrounding him look at each other with embarrassment. Blackburn stuffs his
fists into his pant’s pockets.
“Another
minute and I actually would have done just that!” he mumbles.
Svenson
shakes his head. “Yeah, so we can get
away from that place.”
“Well,
nothing forces any of you to stay.” A frowning Metcalfe remarks coldly. “For my part, I want to find out what’s
really going on around here.”
“I second
that.” Holden says.
“Don’t take
it the wrong way, fellows.” Svenson sighs.
“I, too, want to know what’s the deal with that place.”
Blackburn
grins broadly. “Think I would let you
have all of the fun?”
“Looks like
a lot has going on here.” Donaghue notices, frowning in turn.
“Not
really.” Blackburn muses. “That’s
what’s troubling us.”
Svenson
snorts derisively. “Not really? Easy for you to say!”
“You’re the
lucky one, my friend.” Holden says, addressing Donaghue. “At least, you weren’t kidnapped or pushed
down a stair upon your arrival here.”
“Sounds
like fun.” Donaghue chuckles. “Can I
join in?”
“Well,
since you seem to have been selected by the Committee just like us…” Svenson
sighs.
“Right,
let’s get to work, now.” Metcalfe says abruptly. “Blackburn, Holden, stay here and keep an eyes out at anybody
else who might be coming around.
Svenson, you come with me in the basement. Donaghue… Join the club.”
“Who die
and made you field commander?” Holden asks, frowning.
“You did,
it seems, just a few minutes ago.” Metcalfe answers him. “But you’re still very
much alive, lieutenant commander.”
“Oh! You’re funny, colonel!” Holden responds
sarcastically.
“Really? I
didn’t intend to. Come on, Adam; let’s
go check that vehicle.”
“I’m
coming, too.” Donaghue quickly invites himself.
“Yes, maybe
you can put a new perspective on things.” Metcalfe says, thoughtful.
“In the
meantime, I expect you to explain everything to me.” Donaghue adds.
“We will
tell you all that we already know, Donaghue.” Svenson nods. “But it’s not much.”
Metcalfe
and Svenson disappear swiftly into the warehouse. As he walks close by a gloomy Holden, Donaghue gives him a pat on
the shoulder, smiling contently.
“Sorry,
mate.” He says. “But things seem a bit
more interesting inside. Do a nice
job.”
Holden does
not respond at Donaghue who enters to follow Svenson and Metcalfe. Obviously annoyed by the situation, the
WASP commander lets out an exasperated sigh.
“You’re
okay, Brad?” Blackburn asks him.
“Yeah, I’m
okay.” A thoughtful Holden answers back.
Blackburn
frowns. “You look a bit concerned… Something’s bugging you?”
Holden
waves his hand. “Na…Forget it, it’s nothing.”
He pauses a second, before adding: “Got anymore of your awful
cigarettes, Steve? I think I could use
a smoke…”
* * *
Metcalfe
and Svenson had returned to the basement, Donaghue following through. They take a few moments to present
themselves and the others and to brief him upon what has happens recently. The New Yorker is a good listener. He asks only a few questions, just to make
sure he has understood clearly what is explained to him.
Downstairs,
Donaghue is put in front of the tank-like vehicle that had puzzled the
others. He looks at him with the same
curiosity.
“It sure is
a huge car.”
“It’s
apparently based on a Zeus tank the WAAF’s using right now.” Metcalfe
explains. “But it’s a little sleeker
and seems much more sophisticated.”
Donaghue
walks around the vehicle, seeming to examine it thoroughly. Metcalfe and Svenson follow him every step
of the way. The New Yorker stops in
front of one of the hatched doors.
“Did you
get inside already?” He asks the two other men.
Svenson
shakes his head. “We haven’t been able to find any mechanism to open the door
yet.”
Donaghue
frowns and approaches the door even more closely. “Let me have a go at it.”
“Have it
your way.” Metcalfe says, shrugging. “I
hope you can…”
A click stops
him right in the middle of his sentence.
Then there’s a humming sound coming from the vehicle. Donaghue steps back as the hatch in front
of him slides slowly toward him.
Svenson is stunned.
“How did
you do that?”
“Let’s just
say I have some personal talents, okay?” Donaghue answers, smiling contently.
Metcalfe
come forwards.
“Well,
whatever they are, you just put them to good use, Donaghue.”
“Eager to
serve, colonel. You wanted to see what
is in there, right?”
Metcalfe
smiles as he examines the opening, flanked with Svenson and Donaghue. The first think they see is the seat
attached to the interior of the door.
That seat is presently coming downwards, and stops when it reaches
ground level.
“Well,
that’s quite an impressive feature.” Svenson notes.
Metcalfe
frowns. “You think so? Well, there’s something a little more
obvious that I find even more impressive.”
Donaghue
looks at the seat, then checks out the rest of the vehicle. He snickers.
“The seat
facing backwards.”
“Exactly
so.” Metcalfe nods. “Don’t you find it
odd?”
“Not exactly.”
Svenson answers. “I think it’s a rather
ingenious idea. When you have a
collision, what’s the first thing that usually happens?”
“All the
passengers are thrown forwards.”
Donaghue says.
“Yeah, and
you generally hit the steering wheel or the windshield. With a seat facing backwards, you minimize
that risk: instead, you’re being thrust
through the seat… and the impact is
thus absorbed.”
“You have
seen that before?” Metcalfe asks Svenson.
“Believe it
or not, the WAS has actually been working on a similar concept, some years ago,
when they were thinking of constructing a safer kind of helicopter. Steve could probably tell you more than me
about it.” Svenson frowns. “As far as I
know, the project was dropped, because it was difficult to apply it in a
practical manner.”
“How do you
see where you’re going, with a think like that?” Donaghue asks.
Before
Svenson could give an answer, Metcalfe gives his own reply: “There’s only one
way to find out. See if you can open
the other door, Donaghue.”
The New Yorker
nods and makes his way to the other side of the vehicle. Svenson climbs aboard while Metcalfe takes
place in the seat. It doesn’t him long
to find the command control of the thing.
The minute he pushes a button, the seat goes back upwards almost as the
same time a hydraulic arm pulls back the door and closed it.
“I sure
hope we’ll be able to get out.” Svenson says, a bit gloomy.
Exactly at
this second, the other hatch slides open with a humming sound. Donaghue rears his head in the opening.
Metcalfe
grins at Svenson. “Reassured?”
Svenson
points to Donaghue. “I shouldn’t have doubted this guy!”
“Did you
find something yet?” Donaghue asks them.
“We were
just about to begin, fellow.” Svenson smiles.
“Give us some time.”
“While
we’re doing that, why don’t you stay in look out?” Metcalfe says, musing. “We wouldn’t want to be trapped in here if
somebody happens to come for us.”
Donaghue is
visibly disappointed. “Oh! Right.
I’ll do that.” He adds, before disappearing: “Be sure to keep in touch.”
“We’ll do
that.” Svenson answers. He waits until
he hears Donaghue’s footsteps moving away, then, he turns to Metcalfe. “You don’t trust him.”
“It’s not a
question, isn’t it?” Metcalfe is looking around him, examining the interior of
the vehicle.
“No, that’s
a statement. You don’t trust him.”
“No, I
don’t. And I don’t trust Holden
either. And I’m not so sure about your
friend Steve Blackburn.”
“Should I
feel privileged that you don’t include me in you list?” Svenson jokingly asks.
“I’m
serious, Adam! Something tells me that
one of those guys is not clean. Our
kidnappers would not have took off that way, leaving us AND that vehicle out of
their sight.”
“You’re
thinking about a spy.”
“Exactly.”
“But we
were all summoned here by the Selection Committee.”
“Were we
all?” Metcalfe muses with a suspicious tone. “And even if it were the case,
nothing tell us that someone isn’t playing a double game here…”
“I see.” A
thoughtful Svenson says. “So let me
into this. I got a pretty good experience
with double agents and such.”
Metcalfe
glances at him with curiosity.
“Really?”
Svenson
shrugs. “When I first was appointed at the WAS Security Department, there were
a numbers of enemy agents infiltrated within.
Saboteurs, spies… that sorts of things.
It was a difficult job getting rid of all of them. When I found one out, two others seemed to
pop up of nowhere to take his place.”
He frowns at the thought. I had to choose very carefully whom I was to
trust in those times. One false move could
have gotten myself killed.” He sighs. “Almost did, at that.”
“There were
attempts on you life?”
“Three of
them, and would you believe it, in my first three months after being assigned
to the Security Department. After the
bombing…”
“The
bombing?”
“My car was
booby-trapped. I just escaped with my
life. A friend of mine didn’t.”
“Sorry.”
“Yeah,
well… After that, I made a point at
stopping once and for all what was going on at the WAS. It was the least I could do for my friend.”
“You didn’t
just do it for your friend, Adam.” Metcalfe notices. “I think you also did it because that was your job.” He smiles.
“All the same, being your friend must be something else.”
Svenson
smiles in return, with some embarrassment.
“I sure hope you’re telling that as some kind of compliment, Paul.”
Metcalfe
laughs. “I do.” He then looks at his companion with a thoughtful glance. “I didn’t realize you had that kind of
background.”
“Well, now
you know.” Svenson sighs. “Just don’t
tell all to the others… They would suspect I’m keeping an eye on them.”
“Blackburn
must know all of this, however.”
“Most of
it. But not all. But to be honest with you, I can’t see Steve
as some sort of spy or something.”
“What about
me?”
Svenson
frowns. “Well, what about you?”
“Don’t you
think I could be in league with our kidnappers?”
“Then to
what purpose would you have told me about your suspicions?”
“I don’t
know… to mislead you, perhaps?”
“That’s
crap.” Svenson waves out the
notion. “You don’t strike me as a
traitor, Paul.” He smiles congenially.
“Besides, you WOULD have snapped my neck earlier, if it were the case.”
“So, who do
you think it is?” Metcalfe muses.
Too soon to
tell. I must admit, I HAS BEEN a long
time, since I saw Steve. Holden, I
don’t know much about. Donaghue… Well, all we know for sure, and that’s if he
hasn’t played us for fools, is that he doesn’t know anything about military.”
“He’s also
eager to serve.” Metcalfe adds. “But
he’s very secretive about himself. I
wonder what he’s hiding.”
“He’s also
armed, Paul.”
“What?”
Metcalfe is startled. “How do you know
that?”
“Didn’t you
see the puff on his vest, right under his left arm?” Svenson asks him. “He’s keeping a gun there.”
“Why didn’t
you mention it earlier?” Metcalfe protests. “ We could…”
Svenson
interrupts him abruptly.
“…Have done
what? Remove him of his weapon? It would only have raised his suspicion… Now
we know he’s got one, but he doesn’t know that we know.”
“That’s a
bit confusing.”
“Well, that
way, he doesn’t mistrust us, and we can keep a close eye on him.” Svenson
smiles. “Anyway, that doesn’t prove
anything. I came in with a gun too.”
“Yeah, so?”
Svenson
mumbles unintelligibly something that is not so very kind to Metcalfe, about
how crazy and pigheaded all the Brits are.
The WAAF colonel smiles lightly.
Better to change the subject quickly, he thinks.
“All that
talk doesn’t advance us much in our present investigation, Adam. What do you make of this?”
He shows it
companion the steering column on front of which he is seated. The American frowns.
“Well, for
one thing, that looks very much like a control column, similar to those found
in aircrafts…”
“Yes”,
Metcalfe agrees, “except for that
control panel at its centre, with all these buttons…”
He looks
directly in front of him; there was some kind of monitor screen, right in his
line of vision. By examining the
control, he finds the right button to push on… When the screen lights on, he
and Svenson get a very good view of the crates, just in front of the vehicle.
“Good show,
Paul.” Svenson says. “Now we know how
to see forwards in this thing.”
Metcalfe
was looking all around him. He finds
some kind of level right next to his seat and he closes his fist on it. Quickly, Svenson takes his wrist.
“I wouldn’t
pull that if I were you. It looks
terribly like an ejecting lever… If you
don’t want to get your head screw up in the basement ceiling, you’d better let
it alone.”
Metcalfe
gets his hand out of the lever. “Very
good advise. I’ll take it to
heart.” He looks over his head. “There IS an opening up there, yes. Now it sealed, but it must open up when it’s
needed.”
Svenson is still looking at the controls surrounding them.