“Not those things.”
“They’re all the same,” Kurt insisted.
Joe pursed his lips. “Have you ever calculated how much trouble your endless optimism gets us in?” Joe asked. “They’re NOT all the same. And even if they were, where are you going to go once you have control of the plane? This is the Middle East. Planes crossing borders without permission don’t last long around here. The Saudis, the Israelis, the Seventh Fleet, any one of them might shoot us out of the sky before we could explain why we violated their no-fly zone.”
Kurt hated to admit it but Joe had a point.
“Besides,” Joe added, “those planes might end up in a worse place than this. But trucks have to stay on the beaten path and stick close to civilization. There are only so many roads and so many places a truck can go from here. I say we climb aboard.”
“In the back?” Kurt said. “With ten billion little eating machines?”
Joe took the binoculars from Kurt and trained them on the drums beside the line of covered flatbeds. “From the way Jinn’s men are keeping their distance I’m gonna guess they have some idea what’s in those drums. That plays in our favor. It’ll keep ’em away and reduce the chances of our being discovered and redeposited in that well.”
Kurt remained quiet.
“And,” Joe added, perhaps sensing victory was near, “if we are discovered in the trucks, we can jump and run. Kind of hard to do that from thirty thousand feet.”
Kurt could not remember a time when Joe had made such a forceful argument. “You’ve talked me into it.”
“Really?”
“When you’re right, you’re right,” he said, brushing some dust off his uniform and straightening it. “And in this case you are right on, my friend.”
Joe handed the binoculars back to Kurt, looking very pleased with himself. He tried to make his own uniform look more presentable.
“Shall we?”
Kurt tucked the binoculars into his breast pocket. “We shall.”
As darkness fell and the moonless night spread across the desert, the loading and servicing of the Russian-built jets continued. To provide some light a few temporary spotlights and the high beams of several parked Jeeps and Humvees were moved into place.
The strange setup made it easy for Kurt and Joe to sneak up on the staging area as the men in the lighted zone were all but blind to the darkness of the desert beyond.
Upon reaching the operations area, Kurt and Joe pulled up their kaffiyehs to cover their faces and heads. Aside from looking dirty and scruffy, their uniforms matched those of the men handling the loading.
“Grab something,” Joe whispered, picking up a small crate of equipment. “Everyone looks official if they’re carrying something and walking briskly.”
Kurt followed suit, and the two of them walked right into the main staging area without receiving a second glance. They began to get their bearings, trying not to look conspicuous.
Kurt spotted the row of yellow drums. Only a dozen of perhaps sixty remained.
He pointed, and the two of them moved that way. As they closed in, someone began to shout at them in Arabic.
Kurt turned and saw the bearded man named Sabah standing by the row of trucks. Kurt recognized some of the words, something about lazy workers.
Sabah pointed and shouted again and waved his hands in earnest. He seemed to be indicating an idle forklift.
Kurt raised a hand in acknowledgment and began walking toward it.
“I think he wants us to drive it.”
Joe followed him. “Do you know how to drive one of these things?”
“I’ve seen it done once or twice,” Kurt said. “How hard could it be?”
Joe cringed but followed Kurt to the gray-and-orange forklift. He stood by as Kurt climbed on the four-wheeled machine and tried to familiarize himself with the controls.
Sabah began shouting again.
“You better at least start the engine,” Joe whispered.
Kurt found the key and twisted it, the motor rumbled to life.
“Climb on,” he said.
Joe scrambled up onto the side of the forklift and held fast something like a fireman on the ladder trucks of old.
Kurt found the clutch and the gearshift. The rig had three gears: low, high and reverse. Kurt pressed the clutch down, forced the shift into low and added some gas.
Nothing happened.
“We’re not moving,” Joe whispered.
“I realize that.”
Kurt let out the clutch a little more and pressed the accelerator a little harder. The engine revved, the gears meshed and the big machine lurched forward like a driver’s ed car in the hands of a three-time dropout.
“Easy,” Joe said.
“I thought that was easy,” Kurt replied.
Sabah waved impatiently, pointing them toward the stack of yellow drums, each of which sat on its own pallet.
Kurt turned that way. Up ahead one of the other forklifts was raising a pallet that held one of the yellow drums. As it lifted the load, a second workman lashed it to the apron with a metal cable. Apparently no one wanted to spill the contents of these barrels.
The forklift reversed and headed off with the worker still hanging on to the front.
“That’s your job,” Kurt said.
“Great.”
“You’d better find us a cable.”
Joe discovered one hooked to the forklift’s roof guard. He disconnected it and hopped down to the desert floor.
As Joe edged toward the yellow drums, Kurt struggled to guide the big machine. He lined up and moved forward. He grabbed the fork control and went to lower the forks, but they moved opposite to what he remembered. The forks came up, threatening to puncture the drum.
He slammed on the brake, and the forklift stopped short.
As he lowered the fork, Kurt caught sight of Joe. His eyes were wide. Kurt couldn’t really blame him. When the forks were at the correct height and angle, Kurt inched the rig forward and picked up the pallet.
Joe stepped up and lashed the drum tight and gave Kurt the thumbs-up.
With a great degree of caution, Kurt backed up and turned. Going forward once again, he found the rig far better balanced with Joe and the yellow drum weighing down the nose.
He moved slowly toward the line of trucks, following in the tracks of the other forklift.
There were five trucks in all. They were flatbeds with treated canvas tarps stretched over the top of metal ribs. It looked like the lead truck was filled and being buttoned up. The others were still being loaded.
Sabah pointed toward the last truck in the line, and Kurt moved toward it. He lined up with the rear bumper and raised the forks. When it was even with the bed of the truck, Joe unlashed the drum and eased it forward, sliding the entire pallet onto a set of rollers on the bed of the truck.
Moving it like that, he slid it into place and lashed it down like the other barrels. With the job done, Joe climbed back onto the side of the forklift.
“You realize this could be considered aiding and abetting the enemy,” he said as Kurt turned the forklift back toward the staging area.
“We can leave this off the report,” Kurt said. “A simple omission.”
“Great idea. It could happen to anyone.”
“Exactly,” Kurt said. “When we load the final barrel, you stay in the truck bed. I’ll park this thing and join you when no one’s looking.”
It sounded like a good plan and it seemed to be working. All the way up until they were almost ready to put it into action.
As they waited to grab the last barrel, Jinn and several of his men came out of the tunnel.
Sabah held up a hand like a traffic cop, and all activity stopped as he went to talk with his master.
Kurt cut the engine, hoping to overhear.
Another group of men joined Jinn. The young woman Kurt suspected to be the real Leilani was with them.