The Black Lung Captain - By Chris Wooding Page 0,1
cursed and cracked their elbows against tree trunks. It had rained recently, and the ground alternately sucked at their boots or slid treacherously beneath them.
The villagers reached the top of the slope and sent a hopeful barrage of gunfire into the trees. Frey felt something slap against his long coat, near his legs. He gathered up the flapping tail, and saw a bullet hole there.
Too close.
'Give up the money and we'll let you go!' one of the villagers shouted.
Frey didn't waste his breath on a reply. He wasn't coming out of this without something to show for it. He needed that money. Probably a lot more than any bloody orphans did. He had a crew to look after. Seven mouths to feed, if you counted the cat. And that wasn't even including Bess, who didn't have a mouth. Still, she probably needed oiling or something, and oil didn't come for free.
Anyway, he was an orphan. So that made it okay.
'Everything looks different in the dark,' Malvery said. 'You sure this is the way we came?'
Frey skidded to a halt at the edge of a cliff, holding his arms out to warn the others. A river glittered ten metres below, sparkling in the moonlight.
'Er . . . We might have taken a wrong turn or two,' he ventured.
The precipice ran for some distance to his left and right. Before them was a steely landscape of treetops, rucked with hills and valleys, stretching to the horizon: the vast expanse of the Vardenwood. In the distance stood the Splinters, one of Vardia's two great mountain ranges, which marched all the way north to the Yortland coast thousands of kloms away.
Frey suddenly realised that he had no idea where, in all that woodland, he'd hidden his aircraft and the rest of his crew.
Malvery looked down at the river. 'I don't remember this being here,' he said.
'I'm pretty sure the Ketty Jay is over the other side,' said Frey doubtfully.
'Are you really, Cap'n? Or is that a guess?'
'I've just got a feeling about it.'
Behind them, the cries of the mob were getting louder. They could see the bobbing lights of torches approaching through the forest.
'Any ideas?' Malvery prompted.
'Jump?' suggested Frey. 'There's no way they'd be stupid enough to follow us.'
'Yeah, we'd certainly out-stupid them with that plan.' Malvery rolled up his sleeves. 'Fine. Let's do it.'
Pinn was leaning on his knees, breathing hard. 'Oh, no. Not me. Can't swim.'
'You'd rather stay here?'
'I can't swim!' Pinn insisted.
Frey didn't have time to argue. His eyes met the doctor's. 'Do the honours, please.'
Malvery put his boot to the seat of Pinn's trousers and shoved. Pinn stumbled forward to the edge of the cliff. He teetered on his toes, wheeled his arms in a futile attempt to keep his balance, and then disappeared with a howl.
'Now you'd better go rescue him,' Frey said.
Malvery grinned. 'Bombs away, eh?' He put his glasses in his coat pocket, ran past Frey and jumped off the cliff. Frey followed him, feet first, clutching the box of coins. He was halfway down before he thought to wonder if the river was deep enough, or if there were rocks under the surface.
Hitting the water was a freezing black shock, knocking the wind out of him. Icy spring melt from the Splinters. The sounds of the forest disappeared in a bubbling rush that filled his nose and ears. His plunge took him to the river bed, but the water cushioned him enough to give him a gentle landing. He launched himself back upward, shifting the lockbox to one arm and swimming with the other. Only seconds had passed but his chest was already beginning to hurt. He panicked and struggled for breath, clawing at the twinkles of moonlight above him. Finally, just when it seemed there was no air left inside him, he broke the surface.
Sound returned, unmuffled now, the hissing and splashing of the river. He sucked in air and cast about for signs of his companions. With the water lapping round his face he couldn't find them, so he struck out for the bank. The river wasn't fast, but he could still feel the current pulling him. He vaguely hoped Pinn was alright. He'd hate to lose a good pilot.
He hauled himself out, dragging the lockbox with him, which had inconveniently filled with water and was now twice as heavy as before. Jumping in the river had seemed a good idea at the time, but now he was sodden and cold as well as