Echo-Foxtrot

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by Clare Revell




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Praise for

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  Thank you…

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  Echo-Foxtrot

  Clare Revell

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  Echo-Foxtrot

  COPYRIGHT 2015 by Clare Revell

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or Pelican Ventures, LLC except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  eBook editions are licensed for your personal enjoyment only. eBooks may not be re-sold, copied or given to other people. If you would like to share an eBook edition, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with.

  Contact Information: [email protected]

  All scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version(R), NIV(R), Copyright 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com

  Cover Art by Nicola Martinez

  Watershed Books, a division of Pelican Ventures, LLC

  www.pelicanbookgroup.com PO Box 1738 *Aztec, NM * 87410

  Watershed Books praise and splash logo is a trademark of Pelican Ventures, LLC

  Publishing History

  First Watershed Edition, 2015

  Paperback Edition ISBN 978-1-61116-530-2

  Electronic Edition ISBN 978-1-61116-529-6

  Published in the United States of America

  Dedication

  For Luke, Callum, Jack, and Matt. The best nephews an aunt could ask for.

  Praise for

  November-Charlie, Book 1 of Signal Me

  “Three teens, a forty-foot boat, two oceans, and a mission: what could go wrong? Plenty! Clare Revell takes readers on an adventure of a lifetime as her young characters encounter one danger after another on their quest to rescue Mr. and Mrs. Kirk after authorities have given up the search.” ~ Kathleen Friesen

  “The incredibly talented Clare Revell has cooked up another amazing treat in this fast-paced and enthralling adventure. I fell in love with Lou, Jim, and Staci from the very start. Ms. Revell has an incredible knack for writing strong suspense, and this YA story is no exception.” ~ Mary Manners

  1

  Jim Kirk leaned back in the seat of the USAF helicopter and glanced at his sister Staci, wanting to make sure she was all right. Sitting in the seat beside him, Ailsa Cudby slid her hand into his. He squeezed it tightly as he turned his gaze to the window. He didn’t want either of the girls to see the tears in his eyes. He’d left his best friend Lou Benson behind, something he’d sworn he’d never do. She was like a sister to him, even if she didn’t want to admit it.

  They’d been through so much together the past few months. They were like the musketeers. All for one and one for all.

  It should have been all of them who stayed, or none.

  Below them he could see the vast swath of blue Pacific Ocean. Above them the huge rotor blades whirled and thudded. The helicopter banked a little to the left as it changed to a new course heading. He craned his neck but couldn’t even see Agrihan as a tiny dot anymore. There was nothing below him but blue water.

  “It’ll be OK, Jim.” Ailsa’s quiet voice came over the headset he wore.

  Jim shook his head. Things would never be OK again. He slowly reached up and turned on the microphone attached to his helmet. “How can it be when we left Lou behind?” he asked.

  He blinked hard. He’d never see her again.

  He looked down again at the logbook on his lap. One of Lou’s coded entries lay in front of him. She’d written it in mirror writing, so he couldn’t read it—until an officer had lent him a mirror. He read it again.

  I’m dying. Mafuso reckons there is nothing he can do. Not that he told me that. He insisted I was fine and healing nicely. I overheard the conversation with Amilek, and when I confronted him, he didn’t deny it. The infection in my damaged leg is too deep. Fixing it is beyond his medical knowledge, and we’ll never get rescued in time. I’ve always known I’d never recover from this. That’s why I’m not leaving Agrihan. I’ll go with the others to the base and then come back here to the village and spend my last few days on our island in the sun. It’s for the best.

  Jim, when you eventually read this, forgive me for the way I’ve been acting. I didn’t want you to know, because I hate goodbyes. I love you, I always have. Ailsa is good for you. Be good to her. Tell Stace I love her too. Take care of her. And tell Mum…

  Tell her I love her and I’m sorry.

  Jim turned his face back to the window, his eyes stinging and his stomach tying itself in knots. This was his fault. He’d lost her, because of a stupid idea he’d had to pay her back for drawing sharks, dots, and other things all over the logbook. Because of him, she was dying, and he’d left her behind to die alone.

  Lord, if I’d known, I’d never have left her. I shouldn’t have done it. Forgive me…for I can’t forgive myself for this.

  One of the officers touched his arm. “I need you to talk to the doc flying out to the island. She needs to know about your friend’s injury.”

  Guilt flooded him anew and he swallowed hard. “OK.”

  A new voice rang in his ear. “Hi, I’m Dr. Andrews. Can you tell me what happened?”

  “Lou got attacked by a shark in September. I did what I could, but I’m no medic, and we didn’t have much on board the boat.”

  “Did you call for help?”

  The spear of guilt dug deeper. “No, we couldn’t. The radio was broken and the phone had gone overboard in an accident. We were too far from land, so…” He paused. That was a pretty feeble excuse. He should have done more. He was the adult, after all. Forcing his emotions down—after all, he was a man and men didn’t have emotions—he gave the doctor all the information he could, along with what plants Ailsa and the village doctor, Mafuso, had used.

  “But her leg smells again,” he finished. “And according to what I’ve just read in the logbook, there was nothing more Mafuso could do. She’s dying.”

  “We won’t let that happen,” Dr. Andrews said firmly. “I have the OR standing by and I’m taking a team with me. Colonel Fitzgerald is treating her now, and I’ll start working on her as soon as I arrive.”

  “I don’t know her blood type or her allergies. Nichola, her mum, would be the best person to ask. I know she, Lou, gets a lot of migraines.”

  “I’ve already spoken to Mrs. Benson.”

  “Is she really there?” he asked. “And my parents?” It wasn’t that he doubted Colonel Fitzgerald’s word that they were alive—after all, the officer had no reason to lie to them—he just wanted to be sure before he allowed himself to hope.

  “They sure are, and planning on meeting the chopper as soon as it lands.”

  Jim closed his eyes as the doctor signed off and the headpiece went quiet. Thank You, God, for keeping my parents safe. Let the medical team get to Lou in time. Let
Colonel Fitzgerald persuade her to come back or have him bring her kicking and screaming, ’cause I can’t lose her now. Not after all we’ve been through.

  Staci kicked him. “Hey, don’t fall asleep. You’re not allowed to fall asleep. We’re going back to civilization and to find Mum and Dad.”

  He opened his eyes. “I’m not sleeping.”

  “And no checking your eyelids for holes either like Dad does on a Sunday afternoon. We all know what that means. It’s like reading with your eyes shut.”

  “OK.” Jim smiled slightly. Not even her enthusiasm would rub off on him at this point.

  “You suppose Mum and Dad will be cross we left on our own?”

  “They’re bound to be. Ground us for at least fifty years, most likely.”

  Staci scrunched up her nose for an instant, then grinned. “Sounds good to me. I don’t want to leave a nice, warm house with glass windows and a roof that doesn’t leak for a long time. Just think, Jim. A house that has light switches. Hot water that comes from a tap and plenty of it. Bubble bath. Sheets. Blankets. Proper toilets that flush, with a lock on the door, and toilet paper. Meals I don’t have to cook. Roast chicken, chips, and pizza. And chocolate. They can ground me as long as they want. Sounds like heaven to me.”

  “Nothing like heaven,” Ailsa said. “And that’s you sorted. Me, on the other hand?”

  Jim shook his head. “She’ll be bored within a week. And begging to be allowed out or to watch TV or something. Mum’s idea of grounding us is no TV, no internet, no phone, and no going out unless we’re escorted by her.” He looked at Ailsa. “And you’re staying with me.”

  She smiled. “If your parents want me.”

  “I want you,” he said. “Forget the fact you have nowhere else to go. Besides, we’re both over eighteen, so we’re adults now. We can do what we want. Well, within reason, as it has to be legal.” He paused, running his fingers over the back of her hand. “And most important of all? I love you.”

  “Love you, too.”

  “Good. So don’t give me any of this leaving-me rubbish. I want you to stay.”

  Staci rolled her eyes. “Oh, please, if you’re going to get soppy and kiss her, then go find a room. Oh wait, you can’t.” She put her hands over her eyes. “Go on then. You got ten seconds before I look. Jim and Ailsa sitting in a chopper…”

  Jim grinned and kissed Ailsa’s cheek. “I mean it. I want you to stay with us.”

  She smiled. “I’d like that too. OK, Stace, you can look now.”

  Staci peeked between her fingers. “Are you sure? I’m way too young for that kind of thing.”

  Jim snorted. “Yeah, right. And what was the name of that boy band again?” He winked. “You know, the one in the poster in your room where you’d stand on tiptoes on the bed and kiss each of them good night…” He broke off laughing as she kicked him.

  “Insult me all you want. I don’t care.” She grinned at him. “We’re going home…”

  2

  Lou Benson stood motionless on the beach of Agrihan as the helicopter vanished into the cloudless blue sky. At least Jim, Staci, and Ailsa were safe. Something they hadn’t been since they got shipwrecked here back in November, two months ago—although technically, they hadn’t been safe since embarking on this trip back in June.

  Her leg throbbed and she shivered.

  She cast a sideways glance at the tall man with salt-and-pepper hair standing beside her in his green flight suit. “Are you still here? You should have gone with them, Jack.”

  “Why?” Her would-be rescuer, Colonel Jack Fitzgerald, United States Air Force, moved to stand in front of her, hands on hips, his piercing brown eyes boring into her.

  She wished he’d just go away and let her die in peace. She was hot, cold, couldn’t stop shaking, and knew from the smell that the infection in her leg was raging uncontrolled throughout her body. The fact the pain had been reduced to a dull ache was another sign the end was near.

  She accepted her fate. Death was no more than she deserved. She’d go back up the cliff path to where she buried Deefer and lie down on the ground there with him and sleep. They’d left home together and now they’d stay together on Agrihan forever.

  “Why should I have left you here alone?” Jack repeated.

  “Because you should have. You’re ruining everything by staying.” She headed across the sand, leaning heavily on her homemade crutches. Her ankle twisted beneath her and she fell, crying out in pain.

  “Ruining what?” Strong hands gripped her and picked her up, holding her firmly in his arms.

  She struggled, blinking away the tears of pain. “Leave me alone.”

  “You know I can’t do that. Now do I carry you or can I trust you not to run off again?”

  “How can I run when I can’t even walk?” She could hear herself biting his head off and she couldn’t stop it.

  “So let’s go back to the base and wait for the chopper. They’re sending out another one to pick us up.”

  “Why?”

  “Because I was sent here to rescue you, so that’s what I’m going to do. It’s called following orders. Besides, I made a promise to your mom not to come home without you.”

  “Fine.” Lou closed her eyes and let him carry her. For an instant she felt safe, but the feeling didn’t last long.

  Jack carried her back up the beach to the base. He laid her down on the runway. “Right. You stay here while I get this fire going again.”

  “Not going anywhere. You didn’t bring my crutches, but it doesn’t matter. Nice to sit down for a bit.” Lou pushed herself upright, shifting back against one of the crates Jim had found. She shut her eyes, shivering as she wrapped her arms tightly around her middle. She listened as Jack’s running steps moved around the runway. Things had gotten so messed up, and she didn’t know why.

  Jim would say it was her lack of faith, but that was Jim.

  She didn’t need a God who let bad things happen to good people running her life for her. She was quite capable of running it herself. And if she then trashed it, well, then she had no one to blame but herself.

  “Not sleeping, are you?” Jack’s voice cut through her thoughts.

  She forced open her eyes. “No, I’m not.”

  “Good. I don’t want you to sleep yet.” Jack draped the blanket he’d found around her shoulders.

  “Why not?”

  “It’s not bedtime yet. When did you last eat or drink?”

  Lou thought for a moment. “Yesterday morning-ish. But that was only water. I haven’t had anything that isn’t water for weeks. There is a distinct tea and coffee shortage here.”

  Jack sat beside her, pulling his knees up and resting his wrists on them. “You know, Lou, Nicky…” He paused. “Your mom says I’m like a bear with a sore head without at least three cups of coffee in the morning.”

  “Mum?” She tilted her head, confused. Mum’s name was Nichola, not Nicky. Only Bill and Di called her Nicky. And anyway, she was thousands of miles away. “You know Mum?”

  “Yeah, I do. You’re pretty, just like she is.”

  “I’m not pretty,” she retorted, pushing the blanket to the ground. “I’m ugly and crippled. And I have a tendency to kill those who get close to me. Or at least hurt them badly. They’ll be better off without me.”

  “I’m sure they don’t think so.”

  Lou shivered. “They will do. It’s my fault. All of it.”

  He wrapped the blanket around her again. “Why’s that?”

  Lou took a deep breath and looked away. “We went fishing because I drew sharks and stuff all over the logbook. And I saw that Jim was asleep when the autopilot was off. He’d only dozed off for a minute or so, but I could have called or shaken his arm to wake up, but I didn’t and the boat sank...”

  She shifted a little, trying to get her leg in a position where it didn’t ache quite so much. “Deefer dying was my fault too. I knew I should stay on the path, but I saw something and I went to investigate.
I was about to step forwards. Deefer rushed me and knocked me over. He ran straight into one of those wild-animal traps the natives use. The trap sprung upwards, the metal teeth dug into him. I couldn’t get him out.”

  Lou held her hands out in front of her. “I had his blood on my hands. I killed him. If I had stayed on the path, he would still be alive. When I went fishing with Jim, we went to get fish ’cause Jim was tired of not having fresh food. He’d done nothing but mention sharks for days. Didn’t matter where we were, he saw sharks. In the Atlantic, Caribbean, and so on. We thought it was an excuse to stop us swimming. I was splashing in the water to annoy Jim. I attracted it. Then I tried to save the catch. If I’d left it, then I could have swum faster.”

  Tears blurred her vision and her voice wavered. “I can’t go home. I’m dying. Mafuso said so. The others don’t need to watch that. And it’s not fair on Mum after I’ve been gone for so long.”

  Jack tossed more wood onto the fire. “Who’s Mafuso?”

  “We stayed in his village after the fire at Christmas. Think that was started by the volcano. Did you know it erupted? Got photos—it was pretty. Mafuso’s a good guy. He’s the village medic, trained by missionaries apparently. There was nothing he could do to halt the infection. Don’t have long. Couple days maybe.” She shrugged. “But it’s OK. I can stay here with Deefer.”

  Jack put his hand over hers. “You’ll be fine once we get you back to base.”

  She frowned. Which part of dying didn’t he understand? “Go talk to Mafuso if you don’t believe me. He’s a week’s walk in that direction.” She pointed to the gate.

  “Your mom loves you very much. She wants you back home.”

  She couldn’t keep up with the way he kept changing the subject. “No, she doesn’t.”

  “I know for a fact she does. After I met you in Cornwall, I contacted her. I saw you in the paper and realized you had run away.”

  “We didn’t run away,” she corrected. “Staci and I stowed away. It’s different. We hid on the boat until Jim had left and it was too late for him to do anything about it.”

  “Stowed away or ran away, it’s the same thing. But I never imagined you’d be silly enough to risk the Atlantic during the hurricane season.”

 

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