Tuesday, June 12, 2012

TLA-Chapter 6


Chapter 6
Ali understood what Charlie wanted him to do. He was to stay and take care of his mother. Charlie was leaving them one rifle and one pistol. Charlie had shown Fatima how to shoot the pistol one day but hadn’t had time to train her in using the rifle. A pistol was better for her anyway since it could be concealed under her clothing easily.
Charlie kissed them both goodbye then headed out before daybreak. He made it look as if he was heading south but then backtracked and went to the boat launch which was located not far from the hut just to the north.
He uncovered and moved the small boat from the side of the catamaran to the shore. He was sailing south in minutes on a good steady southern wind. In a few hours he was pulling into the river where they had been the day before. He decided to venture as far as he could go and it was about eight miles before he was in rapids that the small boat with its square sail could no longer navigate. He guessed by the northern direction that he was going in that this was the same river from the the falls where he had seen the croc. His awareness was heightened at this thought. He would keep a sharp eye out for crocs here.
As he pulled the mast down and entered reeds on the southern side of the river he noticed two bodies floating face down near the shore. He thought about checking them for clues about their origins but decided against it. They could be diseased with something he might catch. It was better to wait until he could view the living. Plus, he wanted to stow the boat right away so he could “cammy up
 and “get into character,” a line he remembered from an old film.
He covered the boat with palm leaves and left it close to the beach in case a quick getaway was needed. He set down his pack and opened it. Inside he found his camouflage paint. It had been thirty years since he last wore face paint but he took his time and created the same pattern he used to wear when he was on operations “up river” in Vietnam. In actuality he had spent most of his time out of Vietnam in nearby countries hunting targets on “black missions.” Most of them had been the same. Go in with a team, find the target and eliminate them “with extreme prejudice.”
He had loved the work back then, almost too much. It was like when he was a kid hunting with his dad only better. The men he served with were all like brothers to him. They had gone their separate ways after the war. A few got together from time to time in order to share their recollections or their “glory days.” He had opted out of most of that. In his mind it was not productive to spend time in the past.
Lately though, as he had become part of his new family he had been thinking a lot about how he had lived his life. Was God trying to tell him something?
“That’s odd, “he said to himself out loud. He was looking into the little plastic mirror that he used to apply his makeup and he saw himself for the first time in months. He actually looked about twenty years younger. Fatima had used his straight razor with precision the night before to cut away his grey beard and moustache. He’d known he would be wearing war paint and wanted it to be perfect.
He donned his camouflage shirt and pants. They were clearly Air Force fatigues. Not a real tiger stripe like had worn in Vietnam but they would do. He put the OD green watch cap on his head and then buried his pack after putting it into a plastic bag.
As he touched up his warpaint he noticed the face in the mirror was the same as it had been all those years ago. It was a bit thinner now and the lines of his face were more clearly defined, but it was the same. Time had been kind to him. Once he had given up the drink his diet and exercise regime had been pretty good. He had been fortunate to stay so healthy. Now it would be put to the test with his first long range recon patrol in this century.  He had been training the boy each morning, a little PT run, some pushups, sit ups, and lastly flutter kicks. It was just enough to hone the muscles into a familiar toned shape. He knew he wasn’t as good as he once was but he was still pretty good. He had dispatched the two back at the hut pretty easily. Even with age creeping up on him he was convinced that he was better than anything this place could produce.
His patrol, if all went according to plan, was to take three days. He expected to cover about twenty five or thirty miles in a circular route. He was carrying minimal food and just the water in his small backpack canteen. He had about two hundred rounds of M4 ammunition and a pistol on his hip with six “getaway rounds.” He knew the ammo wouldn’t last long in a firefight but it was enough to make a fast retreat possible or to take out a small patrol if necessary to escape.
As he set out to move he dropped down to his knees and put his head to the ground and prayed. He gave thanks for the blessings of his life and asked for a good day doing God’s will. After the simple prayer he rose up and headed south into the jungle. After an hour of tactical travel he came upon a trail that led up what appeared to be a hill to the southeast.
He found a spot just above the trail where he could observe it without being seen. In minutes he improved his position with camouflage using plants and leaves from the surrounding area.
The trail was under a thick jungle canopy. Charlie looked at his watch and it read ten o’clock. He had been travelling for a little over four hours. The rainforest was so thick that the area was very dark form the shade of the all of the trees and bushes. He decided to rest a bit and to take some time to study the trail below him. He pulled out his binoculars from his pocket and started scanning the area.
He viewed the trail for about the next one thousand yards. It wound from right to left but stayed fairly straight through the bush heading up hill at a slight angle. The footpath was well worn. Some of the footprints appeared to be fairly recent. Obviously this was a route that was still being used by someone. It looked to be heavily travelled by large numbers of people but no vehicles.
Charlie suddenly remembered an ambush he had participated in while in Laos along the Ho Chi Minh Trail. He and his team had sat for days in an observation post doing reconnaissance on the North Vietnamese Army and supply routes into South Vietnam.
They had passed on a few “targets of opportunity” including a general and several known Viet Cong commanders travelling in a jeep. He had been the sniper on that patrol and had called his Radio Telephone Operator for permission to engage. As usual, when asked headquarters said “no.” They learned from that incident to act first and to ask permission later. The old axiom it was easier to get forgiveness than permission certainly applied. 
Charlie remembered how it was never a good practice to walk along a trail in Vietnam. Booby traps, ambushes and a whole host of other issues could be the result of taking trails just like the one in front of him. But here, the likelihood of a booby-trap was almost non-existent. Who knew he was here? Nobody except for his family back “home.”
After a short rest he decided to take the trail for a little ways and to see where it led. He considered veering off the trail but the vegetation was quite thick. There were broad leafed plants, bushes and trees were everywhere. He remembered a jungle like this in the highlands of Vietnam. He had been a twenty-something year old superman back then who could move with stealth in any situation. Now he took more time than he used to in order to cover the same amount of ground. He was amazed though that his smooth natural method of moving in the bush had not changed over these many years.
From a distance he looked like a slow-moving stature. He was nearly impossible to spot at over one hundred yards. At fifty yards he was difficult to see, and at twenty five yards it was not obvious that he was moving with his camouflage against the backdrop of the jungle. He moved in a natural zig-zag across the trail, moving from tree to tree. The trail turned towards the east and began to get quite steep. It seemed to be going in a circular pattern ever so slightly to the south.
Although it was midday it was still dark under the thick canopy of the jungle. As he made his way up what appeared to be a mountain he started to see small creeks and streams from time to time off to the side of the trail. This was sure indication that the trail was winding up a mountain. With all of the rainfall in the area the water needed someplace to go and creeks and streams were formed over time by that runoff.
Charlie checked his compass and noted that he was now heading due west. The only explanation was that it was a circular trail winding its way up the mountain. The only question was how far up did it go?
After another two hours of moving up the trail Charlie noticed that the trees were getting smaller and the dark trail was starting to become illuminated. It was advisable to take a rest until twilight or darkness fell. Without natural concealment provided by the dark trail he could easily be discovered and have to retreat quickly without gathering much information. Above all his primary goal in this reconnaissance was to remain undetected. This new world was a dangerous place as his experiences with the radio site and the Tuareg had demonstrated. The best way to survive was to remain hidden.
It was now 3:45 in the afternoon. He decided to leave the trail and to find a place to rest until sundown. Above the trail he found a fallen log of a large tree behind some thick bushes. It was a good spot. It had natural concealment and if he ended up having to fight he was in a position with cover from the stump and an advantage of high ground overlooking the trail.
He leaned against the tree and sat down.  He started adding features and landmarks to his hasty map. Each creek he had crossed, direction heading markers, and other landmarks were included.
As Charlie snacked on an MRE he thought about the current situation. In addition to the immediate threat posed by the “blue boat” and its crew he was also concerned about the Tuareg he buried in front of the house. “There must be more people around,” he thought as he chewed a chocolate bar slowly. He closed his eyes for a moment and was soon fast asleep.
The sound of footsteps moving quickly up the trail woke him from his light sleep. He was about twenty-five feet uphill from the trail and he could see the trail below him through the twilight. A quick look at his watch told him it was five fifty six pm.
Down below he could see a long trail of men carrying things that looked like spears and clubs. They were silent as they moved steadily to the top of the mountain.
Charlie took a swig off of his drinking tube, pulled up his watch cap and poured some water into his cap and put if back on his head. He looked through his binoculars and looked down the line of men. There were about fifty of them. He had enough ammo to take all of them out at a safe distance. He was definitely safe from their weapons as long as he didn’t get too close.
As he looked closer he could see they were dressed in a ragtag assembly of clothes. They wore mostly t-shirts and jeans. There were a few baseball caps mixed in and ironically one I love NY shirt. Charlie chuckled to himself and guessed that the proud wearer of the shirt hadn’t been there recently. He knew used clothing was common in Africa so therefore it wasn’t unusual to see any kind of American or European clothing.
As the group passed Charlie noticed one of them had a pistol on his hip. He wore a red paratrooper’s beret and khaki pants and a plain white t-shirt. He was flanked by two men carrying AK-47’s and sporting bandoleers of ammunition across their chests. They moved quietly and quickly past Charlie’s position and up the trail until they were out of sight.
Charlie waited for the last one to leave his sight and then moved slowly down the trail to follow them. He wasn’t sure where they were heading but he would follow them and find out. Their pace was quick and steady. They moved with a definite purpose in mind. As the sun went down in the western sky their pace seemed to quicken.
Charlie shadowed them from a distance of about one hundred yards. It was more than enough distance for this kind of group. They had no rear guard and obviously no concern that they could be attacked or followed from this direction.
As they reached the crest of a small hill near the summit they all crouched down in a line. The leader and his two bodyguards with the rifles worked their way up and down the line apparently giving some kind of last minute instructions. Then they fanned out in a long line to the right and the left.
Charlie wasn’t sure what was on the other side of the crest of the hill, but it seemed quite obvious what was about to happen. Some kind of attack was about to take place. “But on whom?” He thought. “And why?” He wondered who the “good guys” were and who the “bad guys?” were.
He wanted to move in closer but he didn’t see any place that he could get a better view of what was happening without giving himself away. It was a long way back to the boat he mused. “Better to stay invisible for as long as possible.”
Charlie decided to stay put, at least for now. Just as he took a knee to rest a bit he heard the screams of the warriors preparing to attack. The shouts faded as they disappeared over the horizon. It appeared to be an open field at the top of the hill with some large volcanic rocks overlooking the crest of the hill.
Charlie looked through his binoculars at the rocks. “That would make a good observation position,” he thought to himself. It was about fifty yards away straight up a grassy hill to the left of the trail. He saw the commander and one of his bodyguards began to walk over the top of the hill. One of his bodyguards took a position near the rocks.
Creeping up the hill towards the rocks Charlie was suddenly aware at how vulnerable he was. It was getting dark but he could still make out silhouettes in the distance as they moved over the crest of the hill. Creeping slowly towards the lone man in an “overwatch” position by the rocks he pulled out his diving knife in case he had to put him down. It was absolutely silent except for some shouting in the distance and a strong wind that was blowing from the south.
“Bong….Bong….Bong” rang out from just beyond the crest of the hill. The sound was unmistakable it was a church bell of some kind. “Maybe it was some kind of signal,” he thought.
The figure was lying prone about ten yards in front of Charlie as he crept closer. The blade he held in his hand had seen action many years ago. It was not as shiny or new as it had been back in those days but like him it was still ready and able to do the job if required. Charlie’s footsteps were slow and patient. There was not a sound as Charlie moved in a crouching position behind the man who was lying down next to a large volcanic rock looking over his rifle at the scene below.
Charlie froze and brought his binoculars up to his face. He could see there were two African adults, one male and one female on their knees in front of the man with the beret and his other body guard. They appeared to be begging for their lives. Behind them, on the porch of what appeared to be a simple white church building there were about forty or fifty children behind them on their knees and huddled together. They were wearing traditional school uniforms with white shirts and dark ties and slacks or skirts.
The “commander” took out his pistol and pointed it at the man’s head. He looked like a priest but Charlie couldn’t be certain from this distance. A shot rang out and the man slumped forward. Charlie acted instantaneously and rushed the man lying down and quickly slit his throat. “Shit just got real,” he said to himself. Crouched next to the dead man he returned to his binoculars and could see the woman crying and pleading from her knees. The two men grabbed her and dragged her into the church through the double doors closing them after they entered.  He could see the children crying on the porch surrounded by “soldiers” who were laughing and chanting.
Charlie reluctantly came to the conclusion that he had to finish the job here now that he had already committed himself by slitting the throat of the guy next to him. He grabbed the AK from him, it looked serviceable. Turning him over he found a couple of extra magazines and he tore off the bandoleer around his chest. He slung his M4 over his shoulder and proceeded at a dead run down the hill towards the church. It was only about seventy five yards away. He was running from darkness towards the church which had a small lamp burning above the entrance. As he ran he remembered a scene from an old movie where the hero charges at a superior opponent and comes away victorious. 
His first three shots dropped their targets one by one. He got the men closest to the door of the church and the rest of them scattered hearing the gunshots and seeing what must have looked like a monster coming at them from the hill behind them. T
The door of the church opened just as Charlie got to the steps leading up to the porch. He fired again and another went down. Charlie could hear the woman screaming from inside the church.
As Charlie reached the top of the steps he could see into the church where candles were lit around the altar where the “commander” was wrestling with the woman who Charlie could now see was clearly wearing a nun’s habit. He was having difficulty getting her clothing off as she fought him bravely. Blood was coming from her mouth where he had evidently hit her once already.
Charlie crouched down on one knee and aimed at the figure standing over the woman forcing her down on the altar from behind. As the man reached down and began pulling her skirt up the bullet struck him in the head and he fell backwards leaving him on his back bleeding from the mortal wound in his temple.
Charlie turned immediately and saw a group running towards him with machetes. Several spears were thrown at him as well. He dodged the incoming spears and shouted for all the children to get into the church. They didn’t hesitate as Charlie fired off six rounds at a time and mowed down the group running towards him at a distance of about twenty yards.
He dropped the AK 47 and the rest of the ammunition and grabbed his M4 from his back. He charged out into the field where he could see others were hunched over watching the carnage from a safe distance. Seeing no alternative he chased down and killed about twenty five more of them before he was exhausted. He wasn’t sure but he believed he got more than half of them. Better to get them now than later was the easy math for him at that point. None of them had tried to surrender and he was grateful for that. He had shot prisoners before out of necessity but this would have been more difficult for him to do if someone tried to surrender.
As Charlie walked back to the church after about a ten minute battle with those brave enough to stand and fight he was a bit disappointed that he was unable to get all of them. But he realized that he wasn’t as fast as he used to be and the fact that they were running for their lives in terrain they were more familiar with, well even in his prime he may not have been able to get all of them.
“A fair days’ work in any case,” he said to himself. He gathered the extra AK and ammunition from the man in the doorway and put it next to the other rifle and ammunition sitting on the porch.
He walked into the church and saw the nun had gathered the children at the front of the church near the altar. She was speaking to them in a local language he didn’t understand. They had removed the two bodies to the ground outside.
As he walked up the aisle one of the boys was holding the pistol taken from the commander and pointing it at him. He looked to be about sixteen. Charlie looked at him for a moment and shook his head as he raised is rifle. This had the intended effect and the boy lowered the weapon handing it to Charlie. Charlie checked the chamber and removed the clip. It was empty and he handed it back to the boy. He then removed his watch cap and smiled as he said, “Hey sister do you speak English?”
She looked up at him and smiled as she said, “Yes my friend. God bless you for saving us from those animals. Welcome.”
Charlie nodded and said, “it was no problem sister I am glad I was able to help. Sorry I didn’t arrive sooner to help the father.”
“You did your best. God’s will be done.”
Charlie looked around at the boys and girls. They ranged in age from about four or five to about seventeen or eighteen. They turned and stared at him smiling and staring.
“They have never seen a man with green skin,” the sister said laughing. It was clear that she knew he was a soldier of some kind.
She said a few words in the local dialect and the students filed past him slowly. They smiled and said “thank you,” and a few touched him as they walked by.
“Great,” he thought, “Now I’m a headmaster of a Catholic school.” He took a knee as the nun walked up to him and he said a silent prayer of thanks. He laughed a bit at the irony of the situation.
“I am Sister Patience, “ she said putting her hand out for him to shake. He grabbed her hand as he stood up and shook it briefly.
“Charlie John Wayne,” he said, “pleased to meet you.”
“Where are you from Mr. Wayne?” She asked.
“I think you can guess, “he said as nodding respectfully.
“You must be an American. Only an American would do what you did here. We are grateful but you know they will return to finish the job.
“Well sister, I reckon we have some time to prepare for that don’t we.” Charlie said as a matter of fact.
She smiled and nodded. “So you will stay then?” She asked hopefully.
“Yeah this looks like a good place and I have a boy who needs to be in school.” Charlie liked the sound of that.
“He is welcome. Do you have a wife?” She said.
“Yes I do. I will go and get them and bring them here.”
There was a small service for the father whose name turned out to be Elijah. After the memorial they buried the bodies of the soldiers Charlie had killed. Twenty eight total. He was without remorse as they buried each of them.  “Tough break,” he thought. None of them had really stood a chance opposing him. They were mostly young about eighteen or nineteen with no training whatsoever. It had been like shooting fish in a barrel. Most of the group he had seen marching up the mountain had gotten away. The ones with courage were here going in the ground tonight.
Once the shooting started most had just frozen like deer in the headlights. Without training most of them didn’t know how to react when faced with an enemy capable of killing them. Clearly many of them had killed before, but none of them had been in a real fight. Charlie killed them like chickens one by one.
Sister Patience explained to him that all of the children there were orphans. The school had been built in the 1970’s by missionaries but soon after that they had stopped coming The Catholic Church assigned a priest there soon afterwards and they received permission to take it over from the group that had founded it.
The place was so remote that in the old days it had taken four hours in a jeep to reach it. It became a self-contained society with a few families living close by who worked at the school and in the fields. Usually one or two priests and a staff of four or five would supervise things at the school.
The children helped with the labor. There was a large garden with vegetables and some livestock. There was beef, lamb and pork as well as chickens and other fowl
Unfortunately during the bad winter years the harvests had been bad. Many of the children and two of the priest had died. All of the livestock had been killed to feed the community of about fifty people. Now they were down to thirty-nine after the death of father Elijah. That made thirty eight souls that Charlie was now responsible for.
There was a good road leading out of the compound up towards the peak of the mountain off in the distance. Charlie could see it peeking through the clouds. It was clearly a volcano judging by the triangular shape with a crater at the top. The details of the mountaintop were clearly visible in the full moonlit night.
The children were put to bed after a simple meal of yams and a spicy vegetable sauce. Charlie sat with Sister Patience out on the large porch of the simple two story dormitory building. It reminded him of the old World War II era barracks he had lived in during Navy basic training.  They sat drinking tea and she told him the history of the place and how they had survived the two years since “the change.”
According to Sister the school had received few visitors because of its distance from any towns or villages. When the mail stopped coming everyone just figured it was corruption and inefficiency. As they were a self-sufficient society unto themselves the only real contact they ever had with the outside world was when the Church sent out new staff or one of the students came of age and decided to leave. Then one of the priests would start up the old truck out in the garage and take it to the next town down the mountain about five hours away down the old dirt road that was impassable during the rainy season.
Nobody knew the world had ended until the Sultan’s men arrived about a year ago demanding taxes and notifying the priest that they were now under the “protection” of the Sultan of Zanzibar.
“Zanzibar?” Charlie said incredulously. “It must be at least two thousand miles to Zanzibar.” Sister Patience was not well educated in geography so she just shrugged her shoulders and said, “yes I know its someplace to the east of us.” Charlie reasoned that it was entirely possible that the “Sultan” had started a kingdom named Zanzibar somewhere closer to where they were now. Maybe he had been born there or just liked the name.
She told him that the messengers had been polite and respectful. There were two of them-a man and a boy. They wore white robes and indigo headscarves. The priest gave them a goat and a cow and some vegetables which they packed on their camels.  They promised to return in one year to collect again but they never returned. Everyone had assumed that the sultan had found more important things to do than collect taxes from such a remote place.
Obviously the protection had worked since they hadn’t had any problems until today. Sister Patience had told him based on their clothes and language she thought them to be a Congo militia. Charlie didn’t argue with her but he was pretty certain it had been the two Tuareg he’d buried in Fatima’s front yard.
The following morning Charlie wished them farewell and headed back down the mountain. They had assembled the entire school and the children all swarmed him with hugs and begged him to return as he walked across the field towards the trail. He told them he would return in a few days with his wife and son. They would help to build defenses and to protect the school until it could stand on its own and defend itself.
His return back down the mountain was uneventful. It was shorter than he thought as return trips often are. It was a good thing that it had been an easier journey since he was exhausted and feeling his age. Each step was measured and precise. Only the minimum effort was put forth. His body ached and he began to notice some of the nicks and cuts he received in the fighting.  His knees were sore and stiff. He had wanted to sit and rest a few times but pressed on knowing how hard it would be to get up again once he sat down.
Charlie reached the boat at sundown. He was confident in his ability to navigate at night with his watch but decided to sleep until day break. Returning in the morning made sense. He found his pack and laid out some fresh clothes. He disrobed and got into the warm water. The waves were barely noticeable and he floated for a while on his back. It was dusk and the black night sky was taking over from the blue of day right above his head it seemed. He could begin to see the stars and the blackness of the night enveloping the blue as he floated. The current was gently pulling him away from shore. He stood up in the shallow water and moved back to his right and stepped on something hard. At first he thought it was a rock but then it moved. He got an instant surge of adrenaline and he jumped out of the water and grabbed the pistol out of his holster sitting on the pile of clothes about a foot from the water’s edge. He pointed the pistol at the water but whatever it was swam away quickly. He guessed it must have been a small croc.
“Note to self,” he said dryly. “Never take a bath in the river at night.” He no sooner said that when a moving object caught his eye to his right about twenty feet away. It was a croc and a big one; perhaps ten feet long or more.
“Shit,” he shouted. “They’re everywhere.” In that instant he changed his mind about sleeping at the river’s edge. He quickly changed and set up the boat. In minutes he was paddling out to sea.
A steady breeze was blowing south so he would be able to tack home pretty easily he thought. The ocean was quite calm and the full moon was illuminating the sea with a grey dim light. It gave him all the light he needed to make the two hour journey back to his home beach.
As he sailed up the coast of Africa he thought about all of the places under the ocean now. He had visited many of them in his navy days. Places like Lagos, Abidjan, Accra, Monrovia and Dakar were all under the Atlantic now. They had all been thriving cities and now a few minutes later in geological time they were under water. Gone without a trace. He wondered what this new continent looked like. It was smaller than before but how much smaller was the question.
It was clear that the Atlantic had risen considerably in North America and Africa. It was likely that it had also wiped out most of the European population centers that hadn’t been destroyed in the war. The best guess was that there wasn’t much left of Asia either after the water and nukes were finished.
As he sailed north he pondered the fate of the “dark continent.” There probably wasn’t much left here either. East Africa was more likely to have survived the tidal waves but large cities like Addis Ababa, Kampala and Nairobi had too much industry not to be noticed by the target lists of both sides. Even so-called “neutral” countries if they possessed infrastructure and resources would be seen as a “threat” by the competing militaries, or contract mercenaries. Unfortunately there was no shortage of missiles and warheads so eventually every known population center in the world would be attacked.
Nuclear war had finally come to the world. Despite a half century of cold war dominated by a series of “hot” low-intensity proxy wars the genie had finally come out of the bottle. Judging by the conversation he had on the phone back at the radio site he figured someone or something was still fighting it.
He remembered a conversation he had with one of the company vice-presidents shortly before he retired.  Charlie had been called in to “unfuck” was the technical term the guy had used, a satellite system that was designed to track and destroy incoming ICBM’s from space. He told the business school grad with a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering that their system wouldn’t work in combat. The young idealistic executive looked at him with disdain and said, “Well Charlie the dinosaurs died off too. Someday we’ll join them.” Charlie just shook his head and walked away. He’d contemplated beating the short, fat little rat to within an inch of his life but decided he wasn’t worth the effort. Undoubtedly the only thing the little runt cared about was his house in the hills, six figure salary and his 401K and pension plan. Charlie knew that jackasses like him, if they were running the world, would soon end it. He had always secretly hoped that the Chinese would have a Gorbachev of their own who would save us from the brink of a nuclear war.
That hadn’t happened apparently. Charlie wondered how it all had gone down and what had happened in the Middle East. “Probably still glowing,” he thought. There was a good possibility that when India and Pakistan started throwing multi-kiloton punches at each other that a few probably strayed off and hit Tel Aviv. No tell ing really but sooner or later it would have popped up on someone’s target list. It was probably under three hundred feet of water now anyway so it didn’t really matter what had happened at the end did it?
Charlie shrugged and started moving the tiller a bit to the left causing a gentle change in direction towards shore. He was getting closer to home now. His thoughts changed to the “ones that got away.” Surely they would tell their story to the sultan or whoever was in charge of their group. He wondered if they were related to the people in the blue boat. It might take them some time to reconstitute their force and to build up the courage to try again. It was certain though that they would try again sometime in the future and he was determined to be ready for them. Hopefully by the time they came back he will have built up the defenses to a sufficient point. Charlie estimated it would take about three months to build a solid Cavalry style fort around the school. They might have enough time. It was impossible to know how much firepower lay back in their lair and how far away it was. Based on the location of the school it was not an impossible task to defend the children. The men he had faced were little more than a mob. Once he had eliminated the leader they had been unable to resist him. It was obvious that they lacked training and discipline. That was always the problem with mercenary fighters. They are only there for the spoils of war whether it’s a paycheck or booty and if they are dead they can’t spend it. That made them weak and cowards. Not all of them, but enough that against a motivated and determined enemy they could not prevail. Charlie thought about how mercenaries had taken over the US military in the late 90’s and early 2000’s. Ever since a former defense secretary became a CEO at one of the big service contracting companies it had been the Wild West. After 9/11 happened the no bid contracts were “easy pickens” for the former oil service companies turned defense and government service companies. Pure profit, that’s what they were. Yachts in places like Houston and Charleston were bought by the dozen as war profiteers emptied the US Treasury. They wanted the “whole enchilada.” Their man became VP and they were given carte blanche to graze on the US treasury. “Look what they did to the world,” he thought shaking his head. For a moment he thought of all the people that had been slaughtered in the opening days and weeks of the war. Then the plagues and natural disasters came. It was just like the good books said it would be. “All because of greed that most useless and evil human characteristic,” he thought. “Well not this time,” he thought. “I’m here and I’ll do my best to see that greed and evil doesn’t prevail again.”
He could see the outline of the beach where he had launched just minutes before the full moon set behind on the sea behind him. As he came through the shore break he could see Ali waving to him from the beach. He rushed out into the waves to help him bring the boat in.
“Papa, Papa!” Ali shouted as he pulled the boat ashore. He was a strong lad Charlie thought. “Never had a candy bar or a video game in his life,” he laughed to himself. “Look at you Ali you are stronger than a young bull.” He laughed jumping out to share an embrace with the boy who hugged him like he’d never been hugged before by any of his own children. 
“What’s a bull,” Ali asked. Charlie laughed and told him it was a boy cow.
“So you are an old bull?” Ali asked with a straight face.
“Yeah I guess I am,” Charlie chuckled. “I guess I am.”
They caught up on the events of the past couple of days as they walked back to the hut. Charlie downplayed the killing that had taken place. He reminded Ali that he had only done what was right and necessary. He also downplayed the pleasure it had given him. Not the taking of life so much as the thrill and rush of adrenaline of combat. He hadn’t felt that alive in close to forty years. “Yes it felt good to fight again.” He told Ali. “But I only did what I believed was Allah’s will.” Ali accepted his words and he knew they were true. He saw his new father as like one of the heroes from the Quran. Maybe someday he could be like his father insha Allah.
When they both arrived back at the hut Fatima screamed with joy and ran out to hug Charlie. She started kissing his cheeks and squeezed him so tight he almost coughed. He just stood there for a moment as she held him. She didn’t want to let go and put her head against his chest.
“Yes honey I’m happy to see you too,” Charlie laughed as she released him. She couldn’t contain her happiness. She smiled from ear to ear. Charlie noticed she had a beautiful smile. “Never saw a dentist in her life and yet she has perfect teeth,” he thought.
As they all sat down and ate a meal together Charlie explained to Fatima with Ali’s help that they had to leave. He expected her to protest because it had become a home to them now. Instead, she just smiled and accepted it. Seeing that he was surprised by her lack of reaction she grinned and said, “Halas. I you wife. Go where you go. “He understood perfectly. Charlie looked at her face for any indication of doubt or concern. There wasn’t any. She truly was his wife and Ali was his son. They would follow him to the end of the world without question. Again he said a prayer of gratitude. His faith in a God he barely understood was growing every day. Despite all of the insanity he had witnessed over the past couple of days he felt good and at peace. The rains came shortly after they entered the hut. The big drops pouring down made a calm gentle sound as they hit the thatched roof and the broad leaved plants outside. The smell of wet jungle filled the hut as he drifted off to sleep.He slept deeply for the first time since he had arrived.


TLA-Chapter 5



Chapter 5
Charlie and the two members of his new family rode the offshore breeze for several miles straight out to sea due west. Today the Atlantic was smooth as glass with just a slight ripple from the steady breeze.
The boat was handling nicely. The sails were full and the rudder was very responsive to Charlie’s experienced touch. Fatima and Ali were riding on the bench seat just forward of the small shelter. Charlie looked over at the boy. He was smiling from ear to ear as he told his mother about the various parts of the boat and everything he had learned about the ocean. She just nodded and smiled. Her perfect teeth shining like pearls in the midday sun. Her head was covered in a white scarf and she was wearing a red long sleeve shirt that Charlie had given her. It was a light fabric which hung loosely over her thin athletic body. She wore a pair of camouflage pants that Charlie had found back at the radio station. They were baggy and held up with a belt Charlie had fashioned out of crocodile skin.
Even in the loose fitting clothes she had an attractive figure. Her arms and legs where long and graceful. When she moved to Charlie it seemed like a ballet with imaginary classical music playing in the background. Charlie, in all of his many years had never seen anyone with such natural grace. Her skin was dark brown and he thought about how soft it was to the touch. This despite not ever having moisturizing cream or other man made products to soften the skin. She was strong and yet very feminine. He looked at her and said a silent prayer of thanks for her and the boy.
Ali seemed to him to have grown six inches since he had arrived a little over three months ago. He was considerably fairer than his mother and had long semi-straight hair that was under a watch cap that Charlie had given him. He wore a pair of green trousers made from a cut of canvas cloth and had a crocodile belt like his mother’s with his knife proudly hanging in its case on his hip. He had a long sleeve black t-shirt on, another one of Charlie’s gifts and the shoes made out of the croc leather and canvas. It wouldn’t be long before he could wear the boots of the dead men and Charlie’s clothes comfortably.
Charlie wasn’t sure how old the boy was, and Fatima didn’t know for sure either. He guessed around thirteen or fourteen. It was possible, however, that he was as old as 16. His mother had, understandably, lost track of time long before he was born. Without connections to the outside world she and her husband had lived every day like the last one. The man would wake up early and go fishing, return with fish for her to cook and then work in the garden or gathering fruits and occasionally checking traps for small rodents, birds and sometimes snakes.
They shared the duties of watching the boy as he learned to crawl, walk and run. When they slept it was the three of them together on the mat inside the hut. When they ate it was the three of them. It had been wonderful and perfect for her until the day he did not return from fishing.
She remembered he had kissed her on the cheek, the morning he left. He rarely did this but it was welcome when he did. She had just turned over and went back to sleep with the boy, who at the time was about two years old. He had just started talking and had been walking for quite some time.
Fatima stared off at the distant ocean as she remembered that day. She had waited for him as she always did sitting on the stool outside watching the baby play. She had stayed there all night and he never returned. At first she held out hope that he had lost the boat and was walking back home from some distance away. After the first month she started coming in earlier and earlier. By the second month she had given up.
She had spent night after night crying, praying and pleading to God that he would return to no avail. She learned to gather food in the area and to plant yams and tend the small garden. Luckily the food was quite abundant in the area and with just her and the boy they managed pretty well.
She didn’t know how to hunt with the bow and arrow set he had made. She learned to check and set the traps he had laid out around the area. She also designed one of her own with a large clay jar. She would leave some food inside and set a stick against it as a ladder. The rodent would get stuck inside and she and the boy would benefit from the protein it provided.
It had been about one year when the two men had arrived for the first time. They had arrived just as she was putting the boy to sleep. She came out wearing a scarf and greeted them. They spoke only a little bit of Arabic. She offered them food and drink. It was getting dark so she offered them to sleep by the fire on the opposite side of the hut. She retired to her mat with the boy. As she slept she felt the older one come next to her on the mat. His hands moved around her and told her what he wanted.
She accepted his advance hoping that he would stay and help her raise the boy. She didn’t resist him but she didn’t encourage him either. It was, from her point of view, unremarkable and over very quickly. In the morning when she woke up they were both gone. They left her some dried meat on the table and some small silver coins.
She never saw them again until the day they had died in her front yard at Charlie’s hands. They had been aggressive with her, slapping her in front of the boy asking who the new man was and why had he run away from them. Evidently they had observed them from a safe distance the night before they announced their presence.
Fatima hadn’t shed a single tear when they died. She had tried to explain who the man was but they didn’t believe her. The younger one was not responsible for what had happened, but they had invaded her home and she was helpless against them. They hadn’t had a chance against Charlie. He was a masterful fighter she thought. He was a very strong and smart man. He was a bit old, she thought but one could never tell by his passion for her. She said a silent prayer of thanks for him.
Riding in a boat was always something she had enjoyed. It had been one of the things that had brought her together with her husband. She never thought she ride in a boat again. Now she was riding fast and smooth across the waves. Right at this moment she was about as happy as she had ever been in her life. Her boy was growing strong and tall. Her new husband was a very good man she thought. When they learned each other’s languages better they would talk a lot together she thought. He was already having long talks with Ali. He gave him lots of attention and love.
This was something new to her. She had never seen such a love given by a father to a son. She was amazed at how patient and calm he acted no matter what happened.
Even when Ali had taken the small boat out by himself and go stuck outside the surf zone Charlie had been patient and kind. He had taken off his clothes and swam like a fish out past the breaking waves to rescue him. He made him sit outside during dinner that night. Later before bedtime he brought him a small bowl and sat beside him talking to him. At the end Ali was crying and hugging his new father.
As Charlie held the boy he remembered that he had never really hugged his own son. Instead he had been driven to see him succeed and thought he needed to be tough to do so. What a fool he had been he thought. But now he had a chance to start new and he was not going to blow it this time.
The boat was about two miles off shore when Charlie turned it south. They sailed at a moderate speed. Charlie was careful not to overdo it on the shakedown cruise. The steady ten mile per hour breeze allowed Charlie to put the craft through its paces.  Ali proved to be an able deckhand and quickly obeyed all orders given by Charlie. Fatima sat and took in the beauty of it all.
The ocean was six different shades of blue, grey and green. The sea breeze made her feel young and alive again. Her prayers had been answered by Allah. Her son had a father and she had a husband who was very kind, gentle and loving to her. She wasn’t happy to have lost her first husband but that had been many years ago and she was content and grateful for what she had now. It was far more than she could have ever imagined.
Charlie spotted a flock of seagulls off in the distance and set a course to intercept them. They weren’t good to eat but he had found that they usually knew where the schools of fish were. Charlie let the air out of the sails and decided to drift fish for a bit as they reached the spot where the gulls had been circling. Fatima went into the small shelter to prepare some lunch. Ali joined Charlie on the foredeck and they both sat and fished quietly together.
It was a special moment for Charlie. He looked around at the calm water, bright sunlight and his new son sitting next to him and thought, “this must be paradise.” He knew it wouldn’t last though. Someday in the future, whether a few days , a few months or a few years they would be forced to flee their home and find a new one. Charlie wanted to be prepared for that day so he would need to have a fast enough boat to out run an enemy.
It was unlikely that there were any other boats out there that could catch them unless someone had miraculously found some fuel to power an engine. Barring that he felt pretty confident that his craft was the fastest thing around.
Fatima brought out their bowls and some water for them to drink. Charlie had shown Fatima how to use the portable distiller, or the “magic waterbox” and she was fascinated with making fresh water from sea water. The distilled water had little flavor and no nutrients but it quenched one’s thirst quite well.
Both Charlie and Ali drank the water slowly from the plastic cups he had brought along with him. They both savored the cool wetness and let it slide down gently into their stomachs smiling at each other as they finished.
Charlie found it odd that something as simple as drinking fresh water could be so delightful. They both smiled at each other as they luxuriated in the waters’ properties. They swirled it around in their mouths and swallowed it.
“Ahh,” Charlie said with a satisfied look on his face. “Nothing like good fresh water when you’re thirsty.”
“Ahh,” Ali said, following his father’s lead and imitating his look. Fatima laughed and they all started laughing together.
Charlie decided it was time for a swimming lesson. The water was warm and the air was warmer. He would teach the boy how to swim while Fatima finished preparing the food.
Charlie pulled off his shirt and stripped down to his shorts. He had been a “boxers” man all of his life and had packed several pairs of simple colored shorts with a trim of white in his pack when he left home. They were appropriate swimming shorts he thought. Not like those idiot speedos the Europeans used to wear he mused.
Ali stripped down to his underwear as well. They were made of plain white cloth hand sewn by his mother. Charlie inflated the boy’s life-preserver and told him to jump in. Ali didn’t move. He was frightened of the water. Charlie dove in and swam around the boat to show him it was ok. The ocean was calm with only gentle waves floating by as they drifted with the currents. Finally Ali got up enough courage to jump in. he plugged his nose and jumped in off the right side of the boat near where Charlie was floating effortlessly.
Fatima came out of the cabin wearing her life vest and a pair of Charlie’s shorts. Her breasts were covered by the vest but just barely. She smiled at the two of them as she inflated her vest. She remembered very well the safety briefing Charlie had given them before they went on the boat.
“Come Mama,” Ali said as he splashed her. She plugged her nose and jumped in. She did it exactly as Charlie had instructed her. Her long brown legs were thin but muscular. As she jumped in they moved like she was riding a bicycle. When she entered the water she went under momentarily until the vest lifted her back above the surface.
“Swimming is good. “ She said with a smile as Charlie swam to her. He moved behind her and held her close. She smiled back at him and said “nice.”
He smiled back at her and said, “Very nice.”
Ali was busy climbing out of the water and jumping back in. Charlie watched him and remembered watching his son and daughter do “cannonballs” and “can-openers” in their backyard pool down in Southern California when he had worked for one of the defense contractors. He hadn’t really enjoyed those days much. It should have been the time of his life. He had a beautiful wife, two wonderful kids, a “great job” and plenty of income to spend on toys, vacations and savings for the future. But all he could think about then was his job.
He remembered his manager back then was a real “piece of work.” The guy had barely squeaked through a poorly rated engineering program no doubt by cheating his way through. They had started out together and the guy was at least five years younger than him. While the guy was at his high school prom, Charlie had been out in the jungles of Vietnam trying to survive. But his daddy was a high level executive with the company so he had been put on the “fast-track” to management. It was an old story. He’d seen the same thing in the military-Officers who couldn’t lead their way out of a paper bag put in charge of combat tested troops. Usually they let their experienced non-commissioned officers keep them out of trouble when the bullets were flying lest they get killed and miss out on opportunities that lie waiting for them down the nepotism road.
But when guys like that got into the defense contracting business it was open season on screw-ups. Charlie remembered sitting in meetings with junior managers, some of whom could barely operate a slide rule and getting into pissing contests over performance testing data that was clearly over their head. Charlie had made war on people like that by being over prepared for every test, meeting and roundtable discussion. He developed a reputation for being ruthless in exposing intellectual weakness in his superiors and doing it as a matter of fact by always being better prepared than the “other guy.” Most smart managers learned to give him a wide berth and if they ever questioned him they better have done their homework or they risked humiliation in front of the assembled staff.
Several new managers had learned the hard way not to mess with Charlie. But being right all the time had cost him dearly. He spent nearly all of his time at work. When he was not at work he was thinking about work. He was lucky that his wife never left him. She was utterly devoted to him and the children and that devotion never wavered. She stood by him and the kids until the very end and then she was gone. What a fool he had been.
“Not this time,” he thought. Second chances in life were few. He thought it was ironic that the world had to come to an end in order to get him out of his cabin and back into life.
Fatima turned around and kissed him softly. She wrapped her legs around his waist like a bear cub clinging to its mother. Charlie held her for a moment and looked up at the sky. Clouds were rolling in. There were white puffy clouds and darker, more menacing storm clouds behind them. It looked like it was coming from the north. Charlie decided they had better get to shore and wait it out.
Their location was about an hour south of where they had launched. That meant about forty minutes south of their beach and the trail back to the hut. If necessary they could head for shore and hike back home leaving the boat for the next morning.
“Abhi look.” Ali shouted pointing to the north where lightning was striking on the water in bright streaks through the dark grey clouds. Charlie could tell by the dark shadows falling on the water that the storm was getting closer and quickly.
They all climbed aboard and set a course for the nearest land. It looked to be about two miles away. The wind was getting stronger now. A bit of wind chop was stiffing up the sea but Charlie was confident they would make it to shore before it really got rough. He looked at Ali and Fatima expecting to see concern or even fear. They both smiled at him and seemed not to have a care in the world. He wished for the moment that he possessed their kind of faith.
As they got closer to the shore Charlie saw what appeared to be the mouth of a river next to a peninsula jutting out into the sea. His boat would do well in the brackish water and they should find cover there pretty easily he reasoned.
The boat slowly passed the peninsula and was caught in a fast moving rip tide. Charlie turned hard into the current maintaining the speed and momentum of the boat. He had steady wind and adjusted the mainsail accordingly. As their view of the water to the north was covered by the peninsula Charlie thought he had seen the outline of a boat on the horizon. He immediately looked at Ali and Fatima for confirmation of what he saw or thought he saw. There was no reaction from them. It was possible that they hadn’t seen it but more likely that he had imagined it so he let the idea go.
“Probably my imagination,” he said to himself aloud.
They were moving well against the current until they passed into the wind shadow of the peninsula about a mile upstream. Charlie made for a small beach off to their left just as the rain began to fall. When the boat reached the shore Ali and Fatima jumped ashore and pulled on the guide ropes attached to each pontoon. They pulled the front of the boat up into the shore through elephant grass at the edge of the water.
As the rain began to fall harder they heard thunder in the distance. Charlie quickly stowed the sails and the three of them crowded into the shelter of the small cabin and fell asleep on the mat Fatima had made for the boat. It was a bit thinner than the one they had back at the hut but it was still green and quite soft.
The wind and rain battered the outside of the cabin but the steady noise and gentle rocking motion had them all sleeping soundly within minutes.
“Bapu,” Fatima said softly while shaking Charlie awake from his nap. Charlie woke instantly and sat up listening to the voices outside. He peered out the door afraid of what he might see.
In the distance downstream Charlie saw a large boat that resembled a fishing trawler with a large square sail trying to come upstream. There were several men on deck shouting because their momentum against the tide was nonexistent. It was about a quarter mile downstream from their current position and on the other side of the river which was at least five hundred yards across.
Charlie reasoned that the boat was probably overloaded and not designed obviously for sail power. In addition, the crew was probably inexperienced and didn’t understand the concept of tacking. The sail seemed to be enough to propel the craft in calm water but not against a strong current like the river.
The elephant grass concealed their presence and the color and camouflage paint scheme made Charlie confident that they had not been discovered. Just in case someone saw them he developed a battle plan in his head.
The mouth of the river was about ½ mile across. The river wound its way east like a snake moving through thick brush. The elephant grass covered both shores. They were about six to eight feet tall and provided excellent concealment for them and their boat. If they had to make a break for it he was certain they could out run and out maneuver the other boat as long as the wind didn’t die suddenly as it was prone to do sometimes in this area.
Charlie watched as the boat slowly turned around and headed back out to sea. The boat turned left as it headed out of the mouth of the river. That meant they could turn right and go home.
Charlie tried to remember the images he had seen to recall the details. He took out a pen and started scribbling in his notebook.
Size-30-45 feet
Location- 40 minutes south of homebase
Identity-unknown African origin
Equipment-one small fishing trawler with sail, very slow, light blue color
Direction-heading south
Well that settled it. There were definitely others out there in the neighborhood. He mused. For now he would get the woman and boy home so he could make a plan to get more information about these unknown people.
It didn’t seem like they were heading anywhere specific up-river. They had given up rather easily if there was somewhere they really wanted to or had to go. He thought. Charlie judged that they were inexperienced sailors and not very technically oriented. Only one sail on such a large boat was not very effective. The boat did move though so they had at least some mechanical ability.
The journey home was quite uneventful. Charlie taught both of them to handle the helm and how to adjust the sails. This might be a lifesaving measure if anything happened to him. Ali was a natural sailor. He seemed to have an innate ability to find good wind and smooth seas.
When they secured the boat for the evening they took extra care to conceal it well in the treeline. If the people on the other boat were on an exploration journey it was likely they would find their way here eventually. Charlie mused. The three of them quickly erased any sighs of human activity that could be viewed from off shore.
After they settled in for the night Charlie told Ali and Fatima that he would be leaving for a few days. He wanted to go down and complete a thorough reconnaissance of the area and see if he could find out a little more about the new arrivals.
Fatima put her head down and was silent. Ali asked if he could go along. “Please Abhi I want to go with you. I be no problem.”
“Ali I’d like to take you with me but I move faster by myself and I need you to stay here and protect your mother.” Charlie said firmly.
“I understand papa, “Ali said using the affectionate English name Charlie had taught him earlier in the week. He had learned it from a story Charlie told about how he had interacted with his own father. That had been a time when children were seen and not heard. The story he told was about how he had told his father he had left the gate open and how one of the family’s prime cows had wandered out to the road where it had been killed by an oncoming truck. His father had never really forgiven him for that mistake even though he was only about twelve when it happened. Charlie’s father had been a tough taskmaster. He had been a Marine in the Pacific during World War II. He was only seventeen when he enlisted. By the end of the war he was a hardened old man. He got a small farm on the outskirts of town and started raising prime beef cattle. Charlie learned to ride a horse before he could walk. Ranch life was tough but it made him tough too. Charlie had taken care to make his own son tough too. Living the soft suburban life was not good for a kid he had believed. He overcompensated by being a harsh father. He had managed to pass on his toughness to his son, but with Ali he decided to take another approach. The life he had led so far was tough enough. So far the approach of love and compassion was working well. Ali was becoming very reliable and dependable. Charlie was becoming quite fond of the boy and his mother although he wasn’t quite sure why Ali was doing so well. Part of it had been his religious upbringing. His mother had taught him to read the Quran and to write in Arabic. Charlie had thought her illiterate but it turned out she was just being humble. When her son was present there was no need for her to read the Quran.
Charlie got used to hearing the boy recite verses from the holy book each night and sometimes in the morning. He took to joining them in their prayers each morning, midday, afternoon, evening and at night. Charlie estimated their prayer times for them. It was not an exact science. Back in the “old days” there had been many ways to keep time. Now Charlie had the last working timepiece of its kind in the world, or so he thought.
Charlie’s watch was solar powered and had several other valuable functions. One was a barometer. This had been essential in determining weather during his crossing and in understanding if a rain shower was passing or an actual low pressure system that would last for days. It also had an altimeter which was invaluable for use in the balloon. There was a stopwatch and an alarm function but he hadn’t used either of them in years. Clearly there was no reason to be in a hurry anymore. That is one of the things he loved about his new life. There was no more deadline pressure or drama regarding time in his life. Things happened when they happened, just as they had for thousands of years in Africa before Western “Civilization” arrived.

Friday, June 8, 2012

TLA-Chapter 4


Chapter 4

Charlie was constantly moving during the next few weeks. This was no time to rest. He knew that it was only a matter of time before “the others” came looking for the two they had buried. Or maybe they would never come. In either case it was pretty obvious though that they were not the only survivors left on the continent and sooner or later they would encounter others who may be better armed and more dangerous than the two Tuareg. One thing about Charlie, he was a “good boy scout” and “always prepared.”.

The routine of the household become fairly predictable. Charlie and the boy got up early to go hunting. Along the way Charlie taught the boy some English. He knew most of the objects in the forest after just a few weeks. The boy was still trying to grasp the concept of a “past tense”. Everything to him was in the present. Charlie did not even venture to try “future tense”. He left that for later.

After breakfast Charlie and the boy would go out to the hide and work on Charlie’s next project. It was a boat large enough to carry the three of them somewhere else in case they didn’t have time to deploy the balloon. Or if by some chance they did not have favorable weather to fly. Better to take their chances on the sea than in the air during a storm.

Charlie actually had two boats in mind. The first was a hasty canoe with a small mast and a sail attached. It had a single outrigger for additional balance. Charlie planned to take the boy out fishing when the time was right. For now they spent the afternoons finding good trees, cutting them down and splitting them into planks and other lumber.

Ali learned to use the tools quickly. He was very bright and the two of them had a lot of fun working on the various parts of the boats. All along Charlie taught the boy maritime vocabulary. Words like mast, rudder, and sail became second nature to him.

During this time the evenings were filled with laughter back at the hut. Charlie would listen as the boy tried to explain to his mother all of the things they had done over the course of the day. After a while Fatima would just nod and smile. It was clear that she had no idea what the boy was talking about but she seemed happy that he was learning new things.

As they boy became better at English he began to make inquiries about Charlie’s past. Where had he come from? How did he get here? Where were his people? Charlie kept his explanations simple. The less the boy knew the better. He told the boy he came from across the ocean but that his boat had been damaged in a storm. He dared not tell him about the balloon at this point. Too much information too soon could spell disaster.
.

Charlie interactions with Fatima became more intimate as he taught her words like “love” and “sweet”. He knew she had a story to tell and someday he would hear it. His Arabic was improving and soon the household was full of bilingual talk. Sometimes even within the same sentence or phrase they would shift to an English word from Arabic.

Fatima seemed happy. He world often hear her singing to herself as she did the “women’s work” around the house like getting water, cooking or cleaning. She also became adept at sewing once he showed her the sewing kit and brought her some materials to work with from the hide.

When he left her in the morning to go hunt with the boy he would kiss her gently on the cheek. “Maasalaama Zaughetti” He would say to her. The she would smile and look away shyly. The boy would already be running towards the forest. Charlie would chase him and yell at him for not being “tactical”. It was a word he taught him by demonstration.

One morning while going over the crest of the cliff by the waterfall he spotted an antelope grazing near the water. He told the boy to be still and to watch.

He moved slowly in a crouch always keeping lower than the animal could see. Then when he was about 15 feet away he took out his pistol and shot it in the head. It was a clean kill. “One shot one kill,” he chuckled to himself.

The boy came running when he heard the shot. He stood looking down at the animal. It was an adolescent that must have strayed from the herd, it was unusual to find antelope in this area, but it happened to be the dry season so it was possible they were coming towards the river for water.

Charlie figured the antelope weighed about fifty pounds or so. That would serve them well for a while. Charlie pulled out the knife his father had given him and handed it to the boy.

His eyes widened as he realized what he was about to do. Charlie had killed a few animals with the boy and had always performed the Halal blessing. Charlie, while still largely agnostic was starting to believe in something. He wasn’t sure yet what it was, but he knew he had been delivered from certain death on more than one occasion. He respected the faith of his new “family” and while he wasn’t a full-fledged participant yet he was moving that direction and definitely wanted to be a good role model for the boy.

Ali stood above the dead animal and said “Allah, Akbar” and sliced its throat. It was then lifted up by Charlie grabbing its hind legs and tied to a tree to bleed out. Charlie showed him the way he had snuck up on the young buck and killed it. Ali nodded and started practicing being “tactical”. Charlie told him to more this way whenever they left the house unless he told him otherwise.

Charlie knew another raiding party would come. He just didn’t know when. He could feel it in his bones. He had learned to depend on his instincts while in Vietnam. They had never let him down and now they were being awakened again after a long slumber.

The next lesson for the boy was target practice. He had to learn how to use a gun and quick. Their very survival may depend on it.

Charlie set up some coconuts at different distances down the beach. The boy has curious when they stopped working on the boat early one day.

Ali sat patiently under a tree watching as Charlie set up the targets. He called the boy when he was finished and handed him a rifle. It was the one he had been using with the collapsible stock. He shortened it for the boy and explained what he wanted him to do.

The boy fired one shot; low at one of the 50 meter targets. Charlie then adjusted the sights and gave it back to the boy who was smiling from ear to ear. He tried again and this time split one of the coconuts into a thousand pieces as it shattered on impact of the boy’s shot.

“Good eh?” he said to Charlie looking for approval. “That’s fine boy, you did good.” Charlie pointed at the next set of targets at 75 yards. There were three coconuts on the sand. “Fire,” Charlie said calmly. The first target exploded. “Again,” he said and the second one exploded. The third shot missed low.  “Try again,” Charlie said patting him on the shoulder. The next shot split the coconut and it shattered.

Ali stood up and hugged Charlie around the waist. He had set the rifle on the sand and was squeezing him hard. “Abhi I love you. Please do not ever leave us.” Charlie hugged him back and looked at the sky. He said a little prayer of thanks right there and then. He thought of how his relationship with his own son had been. Charlie had been hard on him and not around much. He was overly critical of him and they were very distant from one another until after the boy’s mother had died. They finally made the peace. But Charlie had missed out on so much with him. He was determined to take full advantage of this second chance.

“I’m very proud of you Ali.” He said. Although the boy didn’t quite understand the words he knew the meaning. He hugged him back and said “you did good Ali, you did good.” They spent the rest of the afternoon finishing the small boat. In the morning they would be off together. As a reward for his hard work and marksmanship he gave Ali one of the rifles and told him he could carry it whenever they were away from the house.

When they arrived back at the hut that evening Fatima had dinner on the fire. They sat in the hut and Ali told his mother about the adventures of the day. He said they were going in the boat tomorrow and Fatima gave him a frightful look and told him to go to the other room.

She looked up at Charlie eyes on fire and started yelling at him in Arabic. Charlie only got part of it, but the message was clear. She didn’t want the boy to go in the boat and she was afraid to lose him like is father? Ali came running out of the room and hugged Charlie by the waist. “Abhi tell her we come back. She fear we no come back. Charlie knew he would get the details later, but for now it was enough to know that her man, the boy’s father and owner of the third bowl had been taken by the sea. He left in a boat of some kind and never returned.

After about an hour of reassurances he convinced Fatima that they were just going fishing, or as Ali put it “hunting for fish”.

They hadn’t had much luck in the river fishing, and the threat of the crocodiles made it too dangerous to fish from shore. Charlie knew there had to be lots of fish out there in the sea. Adding a fishing trip on two to their hunting expeditions should add to their protein intake with less effort than hunting.

The following day Charlie and the boy set out on their first fishing expedition. Fatima had sewed a nice sail for them out of canvas Charlie brought back from the gondola. The dimensions of the triangle shaped sail were 15x25 with sleeves for the ropes and boom. When Charlie gave her the drawing she had been quite excited.   He brought her some fabric from his stash of emergency canvas and he was aware that he didn’t have much more to spare and still keep some for patching the canopy if necessary. Of course, like most engineers he always planned for the worst case scenario and doubled everything when planning for needs of any system. There was still enough for the two sails he planned to have on the larger boat and a few yards for any minor repairs of the canopy.

Charlie took out the small life vest for the boy and put it on him. It was one of the inflatable types so it was very lightweight. He had packed three of them just in case one failed he would still have two spares. He donned one himself that it was unlikely that the boy could rescue him if something happened and he fell into the water.

Charlie attached the last pieces of parachute cord to the mast and sail and told the boy to help him pull the craft to the water’s edge. The hardest part of the exercise was to get the boat past the surf line. There were two hand- carved paddles made from a light wood in the bottom of the boat. He and the boy had practiced the maneuver a couple of times. It was a challenge because the boy had no experience at all with water or boats. To train the boy Charlie sat him down on the sand and had him paddle sand. Ali found the whole exercise quite amusing. He flashed his big smile and his deep brown eyes twinkled with joy as he practiced his new maneuver with his new toy.

As Charlie watched the boy playing in the sand with the paddle he remembered that look of joy when he brought his son a remote controlled airplane for his birthday when he was about Ali’s age.

The boy had played with it so long that the batteries from the remote had died while the biplane was still in the air. The plane was a small 3 foot replica of a Sopwith Camel complete with paint from one of the RAF squadrons in WWI. It crashed when it ran out of fuel somewhere in the distant treeline. For a moment his son had achieved that sense of wonder that comes from discovery. Ali had that look almost daily as he learned new tasks and incorporated them into his memory. This next task, if successful would be one of the most memorable of his life.

Charlie had a momentary flash of fear as he and the boy pushed the sturdy eight foot long craft into the ocean. The mast was down and wrapped with cord and tied tight to the beam. Charlie had carved out the hull of the craft from a large tree that fell in the forest not far from the worksite. It had taken several days with fire, the ax he brought with him and some of the chisels he had brought in the tool kit to make room for two people and some gear. He had carved a tight-fitting space in the bottom of the boat near dead center for the base of the mast. There were two holes carved out on the sides for the outrigger. The sail could move freely around the mast as the boom was rotated from side. The outrigger could be used on either side depending on the wind direction. The craft was only made to be used along the shore so any chance that it might capsize could be followed by a swim to shore. Now they would see how their work and Charlie’s design fared in the Atlantic.

Ali jumped into the front of the boat as they crested the first set of waves. He began to paddle as Charlie to his last few steps pushing the boat through the surf. So far the waves were no more than three feet. Charlie jumped in and started paddling from the back on the right side of the boat. Ali paddled left and did a good job of it. The lessons back on the beach had paid off. Before long the two of them were past the shore break and moving towards the sets of larger waves directly in front of them. They had to time it perfectly to make it through before the wave crested or they might capsize and lose the boat on its maiden voyage.

“Now’s our chance,” Charlie said, more for his own benefit than Ali’s. the boy was already paddling as fast as he could and contributing to his share of the effort. Charlie dug down and paddled for all he was worth. They pushed through a large six foot wave just as it crested. Both of them got some sea water and spray in their faces but continued to paddle. The next wave was about nine feet tall and coming fast. Charlie knew they would be in trouble if they timed it wrong. They coasted safely over the swell as they made it far enough out that none of the waves were cresting anymore.

Ali was laughing as he paddled. It was clear that he had never done anything so fun for him in all of his life. Charlie remembered sailing on a lake with his grandson. He was sad for a moment, and then the laughter of Ali became infectious. Here they were an old man and a boy in his early teens feeling the same joy of nature in the raw.

Charlie told Ali to stop paddling so they could deploy the sail. There was about a ten to fifteen mile per hour off shore breeze. If they could get the mast up they should have plenty of power to carry them wherever they wanted to go today for fishing. This maneuver had been practiced as well. One thing about Charlie was that he was well prepared. Planning, practice and more practice led to good execution. The mast and the sail went up almost effortlessly.

Charlie tied off the halyard and the two guide lines on the end of the boom. His sail design resembled the old Dhou designs of the Indian Ocean. He had ridden in one once while visiting East Africa. The boom swung freely around the mast so it could receive full wind from any direction. Right now the wind was at their back. As it filled the sail Charlie could feel the boat lurch forward.  “Paddles in,” he said in his best maritime voice. Ali turned and smiled at him sharing his excitement at moving forward through the water quickly enough to generate a wake.

Charlie suddenly realized that this was probably the first vehicle of any kind that the boy had ever ridden on. The sail was full and the boat picked up speed rapidly. The trees near the shoreline became like small sticks on the horizon behind them. The Atlantic was many colors of blue and grey. There were puffy clouds in the sky and at times they passed under shadows. Charlie could still se the red white and blue of the American Flag he had placed between two trees to have a reference point to return to. Charlie had stuck the flag in the gondola at the last minute thinking he might become nostalgic one day and put it up. It was unmistakable set against the green and brown backdrop of the jungle.

He let the wind out of the sail and set about teaching Ali the finer points of fishing. He had two portable telescoping poles and a small tackle box with lures and some old salmon eggs. They had packed some raw crocodile meat with them for bait Charlie showed Ali how the rod and reel worked on the beach and he became quite good at casting and reeling in. They fished for about an hour with no luck using the salmon eggs. They turned out to be too old to be effective. He switched over to some of the crocodile meat and they each caught a red snapper within minutes. Ali was so excited that the nearly lost his rod. Luckily Charlie had rigged a safety rope and when the rod went overboard they were able to retrieve it.

“A fish, a fish, I have on Abhi,” Ali had shouted as he stood in the boat and dropped the rod after nearly falling into the water. Charlie made his way to the front of the boat laughing and grabbed the rod out of the water. He started reeling in and then gave it back to the boy who was crouching down at the bow of the boat. As he brought the fish aboard it was clearly the greatest accomplishment of his life.

Charlie said,” Good job! I am proud of you boy.” He put the fish along with the one he had landed in a black plastic bag he had brought from the gondola. Then Charlie gave Ali a gift, just like his father had given him on his first fishing trip. It was one of the Swiss Army knives with a carrying case and a belt Charlie had made out of croc skin. It tied together with laces so he could continue to wear it as he got older. Ali looked at the knife and hugged his father.

They sailed upwind for a short time as it shifted to an onshore breeze. Charlie showed the boy how to tack and they tried to shakedown the boat properly. It was remarkably smooth as it cut through the waves. Charlie had designed the rudder to be operated with just one hand. He threw out a lure with his free hand and the speed of the boat pulled it along at a good pace for trolling. It wasn’t long before he had a big hit on the line and the pole bent to capacity. Charlie let the rope go holding the sail letting the wind escape and slowing the boat. He released the tiller and the boat naturally turned slightly as it stopped moving forward. Ali turned and shouted “Abhi, Abhi you get big fish!”

It was easy to tell by the poles’ curve and Charlie’s effort bringing him in that it was much larger than the other two they had caught earlier. As Charlie reeled him closer suddenly the fish jumped. It was a large swordfish of some kind. Charlie figured it for a Marlin but he wasn’t sure. It was small for a Marlin. He guessed about forty or fifty pounds. But the line was only fifty pound test so that would mean playing him until he got tired.
After nearly an hour Charlie got him to the side of the boat. He told Ali to bring him the paddle and had him hit the fish in the head. Ali hit the fish with all of his strength. The fish stopped moving and Charlie pulled it into the boat. He prayed over it as he slit the head and severed it.  “Allah Akbar,” he said. Ali bowed his head smiling and repeated the words.

They arrived back at the American Flag just as the sun began setting over the sea behind them. They pulled the boat up the beach and into the treeline covering it and stowing the sail inside.

Charlie carried the fish in the plastic bag. He had cut the head completely off when they reached the shore and threw it into the sea. All told they had about seventy-five or eight pounds of fish to take home. He grabbed a few salt sticks he had stuck in the sea to collect salt. Tonight he would show they boy and his mother how to salt and dry meat.

When they arrived home Fatima was cooking some kind of stew. Charlie gave her the bag with the fish inside and she looked inside smiling with satisfaction.
“You good hunter,” she said practicing her English.
“Yes Ali and I are two big fish hunters.” Charlie said as he smiled and kissed her gently on the cheek.

He and the boy sat on the stools and started to talk about what to do next. They could hear Fatima singing as she cut the fish into small pieces and added it to the stew.

This pattern of life continued for the next few months except when it rained once or twice per week.  Usually they would go hunting or fishing in the morning and work on the big boat in the afternoons. For this project they needed two large trees. They had to be significantly bigger than the one they had used for the first boat. They searched long and hard for the right trees. Finally, about four miles down from their camp they found two nearly identical trees about four feet wide and thirty feet long. Charlie and Ali felled them together, stripped them of their branches and then started the burning process.

The next boat was going to be a catamaran with enough room for a small shelter on the deck and storage in each of the pontoons. It was to have a large square sail and two smaller jib sails on the front of each pontoon.
The project was going well. Each day he and the boy would hike to the workplace and stay until almost sundown. Their fishing and hunting was confined to once or twice per week as the boat project progressed. They did just enough fishing to keep their stock in good supply. They moved the flag to their new location and finally after two months or so of work the boat was nearly finished.

It was approximately twenty five feet long and the mast was thirty five feet tall. The sails were made from the remaining extra canvas. If it was ever necessary to leave in the balloon the sails could be stowed easily in the sleeping area for spare canvas.

Charlie and Ali had worked hard together to build the boat. Ali was becoming a fine young man. The boat was finished but seemed to be lacking something. Ali suggested painting it with some color and words in Arabic and English. Charlie agreed and they began preparing paint with Fatima’s help. They prepared a green, a red from some berries Fatima collected, and a black. They started decorating the boat with stripes and a camouflage pattern Charlie knew from his days in the Navy. If the sail was down the craft would be nearly undetectable form the horizon. Charlie knew this might be a life saver if they ever ran into other boats that were hostile and had to hide from them. The sail was painted with the same pattern as the hull and cabin.

They decided to give it a name. “Peace” and “Salaam” in Arabic were written on both pontoons. When it was ready to sail Fatima came  along for the maiden voyage. They had packed some lunch and plenty of water just in case there was a problem and they got stranded somewhere.

The smaller boat was tied down on the deck next to the simple shelter and beneath the sail. It required all three of them to pull the boat the one hundred yards to the water. Charlie had designed skids made of palm branches to ease sliding it gently down the slope. When it reached the water’s edge it became light and buoyant.

They all hopped aboard as the boat crested through the first small set of waves at the shore. Fatima had been very nervous at first but simply looked up and said, “Bismallah” and settled down on the bench seat in the middle of the deck. As she sat down in the hand carved seat next to the cabin she smiled and said, “We go!”  Her smile grew wide and lit up her beautiful face. It had been many years since she had been on a boat.  Her last trip by sea had been when she had been carrying Ali. She had run away with the man she loved after her family had refused to let her marry him. He had saved his money and had worked hard as a fisherman but his type of work was not acceptable to her family. Even thought they had been friends since childhood and her mother had shopped at his father’s fish stand in the market of their village all of her life, they were of an unacceptable tribe and class. Fatima had been promised to a distant relative from a prestigious town up north. Her life there would have been one of leisure and wealth. But she had decided instead to run away with her man and to raise the child. She had made the decision before she knew she was with child. It would have been and easier decision had she known she was pregnant. The consequences for such a predicament were very serious. Her family would at the very least disown her and she would be forced to raise the child herself with the scorn of the village and her tribe following her and the child for the rest of their lives. There were a few women in that circumstance that she had known about growing up. Most of them were prostitutes who had no other source of income to feed themselves and their child. Their children were doomed to be outcasts and usually forced to leave the village when they were adults because nobody in the village would marry them.  Her husband had taken her to a nearby town with all he had saved for a “bride price.” The Imam married them not knowing that she had run away from her family and the village. They told him she was an orphan so one of the village elders spoke for her.

The ceremony had barely been completed when her uncle, the male guardian of her and her sisters since her father died, arrived unexpectedly and tried to stop it. Seeing it was too late, he gave them his blessing on the condition that they never returned to the village. This would allow him to save face with the family and the village and avoid his having to kill them both for the shame they brought on his people.

They took one of his father’s boats and headed west then north following the coastline until they were far from any known villages or people. It had taken them ten days to reach the location where they decided to make their lives.

It had been difficult at first trying to help him build the house. He was young and strong working from sunrise to sundown. They were very much in love in those days. She would pick wild flowers and bring them to him as he had his break for a mid-day meal. For her those days had been like paradise.

Every morning and every night they prayed together thanking Allah for blessing them with a marriage of love and the food they ate each day. Fatima had seen each of her sisters married of and they had seemed happy at the time. She was jealous of them being married ahead of her since she was the oldest, but when she saw them in recent years they seemed unhappy. They all had children and nice homes in good places but they each had told her to marry for love. Not directly, of course, but just the way they looked and acted made her determined not to ever have an arranged marriage. Her attitude and demeanor towards anyone who approached her encouraged by her family had always been polite but unmistakably distant.

Then there was that one day at the market when she had gone with her mother to purchase several fish for a family gathering. He had come into the market carrying a large swordfish over his shoulder. His light skin glistened in the sun beneath his thin white tunic. He was wearing a small cap on his head and his facial hair was neatly trimmed. He smiled at Fatima and her mother and greeted them with the traditional, “Salaam Alekum.” They both smiled back. Fatima said, “Walekum Salaam,” and met his eyes for just an instant before dropping them down appropriately.

Their first meeting had been simple and innocent enough. Her mother had not picked up on the electricity that had passed in that first momentary glance. For just the blink of an eye their eyes had met and they connected on a very basic level. Fatima felt her body stir in a way she had never felt before.

“What was it,” she thought to herself as the boat carried them smoothly through the waves. “Was it his beautiful smile? His kind eyes? His delicate light-brown skin? Or was it his strong shoulders and arms? She had instantly longed to touch that skin and to feel it touching her.

After that day she had made every excuse possible to do the shopping. Fish was not an everyday item in their household but she could pass the fish stand every day if she did the shopping for her mother. Fatima’s mother was quite happy for the help and yet something told her there was more than benevolence to her eighteen year old daughter’s actions when she had never volunteered for anything before. Either she was maturing and becoming more caring about others or she was up to something. She had been a good child, smart in school and helpful with her younger brothers and sisters. But she had never shown any real interest in the market until just recently. Her mother guessed correctly that she was looking for a husband. This was welcome because her family had begun to ask a lot of questions about Fatima and why she was still, at the ripe old age of eighteen, living in the house with her family.

Her mother always made up a believable story when someone inquired about her for marriage. It was important not to allow people to think she was “damaged goods” or she might never get married. Or worse than that, time and desperation might force the family to marry her to an unsuitable candidate that would bring shame upon her and the family.

So her mother had let her daughter shop for the food each day hoping that her beauty would soon attract an appropriate husband. Fatima started buying fish on a regular basis. One time he had asked her if she had ever been in a boat. She said she hadn’t and against her better judgment had agreed to meet him and go for a ride. When she came to where the boat was parked along the shore he was tending the nets next to it. He had his shirt off and his back to her.

She could see his strong back muscles straining as he lifted and rolled up each net. She stopped for a minute and took a deep breath. She could feel her heart racing and became nervous that someone would know what she was thinking and feeling. She looked around and knew she should not be here. If her family found out about this she would be severely punished with a beating.
As he bent down to pick up another net she noticed the outline of his strong legs against the fabric of the thin white cotton trousers he was wearing. She smiled as she saw him turn and the outline of his muscular rear came into view. “Nice” she had said to herself. She had never really given much attention to the male anatomy. Not that she hadn’t thought about certain things, but she’d never really studied a man’s body before. She knew about all of the different parts a man had. She had seen her brothers when they were little and had bathed them as part of helping out around the house. But she hadn’t thought much about it at the time. Once or twice she had overheard her sisters and aunts talking about their men and the relations they had with them but it was always followed by discussions of childbirth and the pain of it. This had impressed her much more than any fleeting discussion of men and women enjoying each other.

When he turned and saw her looking at him he dropped the net and quickly donned his shirt. He greeted her with a smile and brought her over to the boat. He gave her a perfunctory tour of the boat and how all of the parts worked. It had a small square sail on a long pole at the front and a V shaped hull with several paddles inside. Usually, three men, he and his two brothers would go out and fish with the nets until the boat was full or the daylight was gone.

He asked her if she would like to ride in it sometime. She said yes and then she smiled and walked away. He had said she would make his boat beautiful because she was so pretty. She smiled and walked away feeling light as a feather. She turned once and looked back. He waved and she waved back. That had been their beginning and it still made her smile to think about it today.