Her only consolation is that she told Judd she loved him.
The spinning bomb slows enough for Judd to see the 737, now in two pieces, slide across the parkland. ‘No!’ Horrified, he loses sight of it in the smoke haze.
He wishes he’d told Rhonda he loved her.
The little Loach surges towards the smog ceiling.
Corey’s motivation is simple: get the weapon and its blast zone as far from the city — and Lola and Spike — as quickly as possible. The best way to do that is by taking it straight up. Once he has enough height he will fly it to the coast and release it over the ocean. If it detonates before then, at least it’ll be far enough above the population so no one will be affected — except for Judd and his good self, of course.
Lola furiously pedals the pink dragster along the sidewalk, Spike right beside her. Through the haze she catches sight of the yellow chopper as it climbs, then sees that someone is surfing what appears to be a giant bomb attached to a rope below it.
‘What the hell are they doing?’
The dog barks, like he’s answering her.
Then she knows exactly what they’re doing. They’re being heroes. They’re performing an incredibly dangerous, totally selfless act. She’s read it in screenplays, watched it in movies, seen it on television shows, but she’s never witnessed it in real life before. It’s the strangest combination of breathtaking, inspiring and terrifying, and it strikes her with a feeling of cold dread and giddy euphoria at exactly the same moment.
If the bomb detonates now Judd knows he’s toast, but if he can get to the chopper it might offer some protection. Might being the operative word. Either way it’ll be better up there than down here standing on the damn thing.
He scales the rope towards the cockpit, wrenches himself upwards, hand over hand over hand. He doesn’t look down. Not because he’s afraid of heights, but because he doesn’t want to look at that bomb.
Corey keeps the throttle at full power as the Loach ascends. In spite of everything that’s going on he’s loving flying again. He looks up, takes in the smog cloud that’s lit orange by the end of day’s sun. The Loach will reach it in a moment, then he’ll head for the coast.
He glances down, sees Judd swiftly climb the rope towards the cockpit. He’s close, only a few metres away. ‘Come on!’ He knows the astronaut can’t hear him, but it feels better to be encouraging.
Lola watches the Loach disappear into the smog cloud — then it flashes a vivid purple and illuminates the city like God’s sunlamp.
She recoils. ‘What the hell — ?’ It takes a moment before she processes what just happened.
The bomb detonated.
Ka-boom. The thunderclap echoes across the landscape to confirm it. Its ferocity is overwhelming.
‘No!’ Lola stares up at the glowing cloud, waits, hopes for the little chopper to emerge, unscathed and intact.
It does not.
The bright glow inside the cloud diminishes as the thunderclap fades.
They’re dead.
Lola is stricken. She pulls to a stop and bends at the hips. It feels like she’s been punched in the stomach so hard that she will never catch her breath.
Corey is dead.
Spike howls.
47
‘This is not good!’ Corey fights the controls as the Loach convulses.
‘I noticed!’ Judd hangs half in, half out the passenger door, reaches for the seat to grab hold and pull himself inside the cabin—
The chopper tilts to the left and he slides out. ‘Tomato! Tomatooo-!’
Wham. Corey catches his hand, yanks him inside. ‘Thanks!’ Judd slides into his seat — then realises the soles of his shoes are on fire. ‘Oh, shit!’ He stamps them on the floor to put them out — and the floor collapses under him and he falls through the flaming hole—
Corey grabs his arm and pulls him back into his seat, then looks up at the spinning rotor blades. They are ablaze, a pulsating circle of flame against the purple smog cloud that surrounds them. ‘We’re losing lift!’ The Australian wrenches the controls but the expression on his face tells Judd all he needs to know: the giant fireball from the explosion didn’t destroy the chopper but set it alight and that’s almost as bad.
Judd scans the cabin, searches for a solution.
Parachutes!
Two, pushed under the rear bench seat. He points at them. ‘Are they movie props or are they real?’
Corey has no idea. ‘Check ‘em!’
Judd hauls one from under the seat. ‘It’s heavy!’ That’s a good sign. He slips his hand under the flap, feels the material. Yes! It’s a parachute. He pushes it towards Corey. ‘I think it’s okay.’
Thud, thud, thud. The burning rotor blades disintegrate and flaming chunks of plastic fibre smack into the windscreen.
The Loach stops flying, hangs in the smog for an extended moment — then plummets to earth.
Judd grabs the second parachute from under the rear seat but it’s lighter than the first. Much lighter. Is it a prop or is it real? He pushes his hand under the flap to check—
The Loach tilts hard left.
‘Oh, Christ!’ Judd is ejected from the cabin. He instinctively throws out a hand to grab the doorframe then sees it’s on fire and thinks better of it. As he falls he sees the whole chopper is alight and realises he’s better out than in.
He drops into the smog cloud, the parachute he’s not sure is a parachute held tightly in his hand.
With a screech of bending metal the little chopper flips over completely and Corey is turfed out as well—
Bam. He’s hit by the wall of air and the parachute is slapped from his grasp.
‘No!’ The word is lost on the wind as he pivots to grab it—
It’s gone, lost in the smog. He didn’t have a chance to put it on before he was ejected from the chopper so he thought he could do it while he was falling. He saw someone do it once and it didn’t seem that hard — then he remembers that someone was James Bond and he saw it in a movie and he realises it’s probably very hard.
There’s only one thing for him to do now. Wait until he clears this smog cloud and hope Judd’s nearby. Then, maybe, he can, somehow, latch on to him before his chute opens.
He’s really glad he asked Lola to look after Spike.
Judd tumbles through the smog.
He’s disoriented, doesn’t know which way is up. To make matters worse his parachute is only half on and the air current drags it off—
He twists, jams his left arm through the pack’s loop, grabs both sides of the waist buckle and slams them together. Clack. They lock tight. He’s happy the pack’s on his back but fears it’s full of old copies of the LA Times, not just because he doesn’t want to die, but because he wants to make sure the canister of counteragent isn’t destroyed. If his chute doesn’t open then he hopes the canister survives the landing and that Corey, or anyone, finds and uses it. The virus might not be going global but it’s still in the smog above LA — and has a half-life of fifteen years.
Judd drops out of the cloud and takes in the city beneath him, bathed in a sunset glow that is an eerie combination of orange and purple. Directly below, the giant tar pit rises up to meet him. Stopping that bomb from igniting and infecting the oil lake feels like a real accomplishment — worthy of at least a little of that Atlantis 4 adulation. He turns, looks to the park. He can’t see any sign of Rhonda’s plane through the smoke. He hopes to God she’s all right. He’s going to fly this parachute straight over there — if, in fact, it is a parachute.