BAMAKO by Aribert Raphael (smart books to read txt) đ
- Author: Aribert Raphael
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âHassan, come and join me here,â Samir said, after drinking a long gulp. âYouâll be much more comfortable. I promise I wonât crash while youâre beside me, Allah would never forgive me if I did.â
Almost reluctantly, Hassan went to join the pilot and sat in the navigatorâs seat. He soon realized Samir was right. He began to feel the tension subside.
Mohammed was also a little more relaxed now. They were at cruising altitude and the little plane seemed to be floating in the middle of the skyâno more sensation of accelerationâit was as if they werenât moving.
âWeâll be over the FalĂ©mĂ© in about forty minutes,â Samir said, brushing a quick glance in Hassanâs direction. âIf you like, I can fly a little lower to show you some of the sights. Itâs a beautiful country, you know.â Hassan was looking out the window at his elbow. âThere is a mine ten minutes past the border. The owner is quite mad apparently.â
Mohammed, who had seenârather than heardâthem talking, got up and went to stand behind them at the cockpitâs door.
Samir was saying, ââŠheâs hired a jet last month. It was still there on the tarmac in Bamako an hour before you two showed up.â
Startled by this revelation, Hassan turned to stare at Samir.
âDo you know the owner?â Mohammed asked from behind Samirâs shoulder.
âNo, I donât, not personally, Monsieur Fade. People talk, you understand, especially when someone hires a Lear and practically never travels with it.â
Hassanâs impatience resurfaced. âDid you see them take off?â
âYes, sure, itâs always a beautiful sight to see that bird taking flight.â
âWhat I meant was: did you see the people leaving with the plane this morning?â
âThatâs a roger,â Samir replied, keeping his eyes on the clouds and the sky stretching ahead of them. âThere was a woman with them. I had seen her going to the passengersâ lounge as I came in myself. I only saw her from the back, mind you. She has blond, almost white hair. I noticed her because she was rushing after the pilot. It looked funny; she had a hard time keeping up the pace following him.â Samir turned his head and met Hassanâs worried gaze. âOh. I see. Thatâs the lady in distress, is it?â
Mohammed, who had been listening to the conversation, began to understand what could have happened. âTell me, Samir; is it possible for the Jet to land at the mine site?â
âOh noânot yet it isnât. Those babies have to have solid tarmac, a real runway, to touch down. None of these stretches of dirt will do for these toys.â
What may have happened to Talya became clearer. Mohammed had to confirm his suspicion. âIf they were to go to the mine site, where would they land then?â
âIâd say Kedougou. That would be the closest strip they could use.â
Hassan couldnât keep still or quiet anymore. âWill you contact the tower in Kedougou and ask them if they have seen the Jet today, please?â
Samirâs eyebrows shot up. âNo, Hassan, I canât. Do you know what youâre asking? This isnât a phone booth. I canât just call them and ask, âOh, by the way did you see that plane and can you tell me where itâs going?â Thatâs against the rules.â
âCanât you just break the rules then, or bend them a little? This is an emergency. Weâve got to find out where sheâs gone.â
âAnd you have got to tell me what this is all about. I thought the lady was going to Dakar, andââ
âNot here,â Hassan flared, irritated by Samirâs queries. âWhen we get to Dakar, whenever thatâll be, Iâll tell you. Just trust me.â
âWe know what weâre asking may be quite irregular,â Mohammed put-in, âbut we have reasons to believe the lady, whose name is Talya Kartz, by the way, may be in serious danger.â
âMonsieur Fade, you just had to look at Hassanâs face a moment ago to know he wasnât joking.â
At these words, Samir put on his earphones and started talking in an incomprehensible gibberish used by pilots the world over. A few moments later, he took off the headset again. âThe jet landed in Kedougou all right. They stayed on the tarmac for a couple of hours and then took off again. Their final destination is still Dakar.â
âYou mean they dropped her off and continued on to Dakar?â Hassan shouted. Shaken to the bones, he couldnât contain himselfâhe wanted to get out of this darn plane. He unbuckled his belt.
âHold on, Hassan, there is nothing to worry about, Iâm sure.â Samir said. âThey probably went with her to the mine for a short visit and theyâre on their way to Dakar now. Maybe this was planned ahead of time.â
âBut why would they do that? There must be something wrongâŠ.â
Mohammed had to intervene again. Hassan was becoming a pest.
âPlease donât mind Hassan, Samir, he hates to be sitting here all tied up and powerless. Talya means a lot to him and he just gets out of control when sheâs away and possibly in danger.â
âI understand. Hassan will pay for this later, believe me.â Samir looked at the latter, grinning.
Hassan couldnât help but return the smile although he felt utterly miserable. Defeated in his purpose he buckled up again.
Mohammed regained his seat. His legs were stiff from kneeling. After a few minutes, letting his thoughts wander, he dozed off.
Hassan, on the other hand, was far from feeling drowsy. His mind was navigating amid a sea of anger, guilt and misery. He wanted the plane to land this very minute. He checked his wristwatchâtwo more hours, before heâd see Talya again. The waiting had become intolerable.
60
Within twenty minutes from letting the gear down to land in Dakar, Pierre came out of the cockpit. He looked down at his passenger. She was staring out at the clouds beyond the window. She looked absent. She appeared deaf. He sat in the same seat opposite Talya. âMadame Kartz, weâll be landing in less than a half-an-hourââ
Talya looked up at himâtheir eyes locked. Almost mechanically, she gave him an answer. âI promised you the whole story, so here it isâŠ.â
When Talya finished telling him what she wanted him to know, no more, no less, she said, âI hope you believe me.â
âThis is the first time something like this ever happened to me, and yes, I do believe you,â Pierre replied. As for the trouble we may find waiting for us in Dakar, itâs no trouble at all. In fact, our company was quite annoyed with Monsieur Hjamalââ
Suddenly as if a voice called him from the blue yonder, Pierre got up and rushed to the cockpit, shouting over the engineâs noise, âPlease buckle up, weâre landing shortly.â
Talya did as requested and relaxed. She was calm. No more fear. Just sheer determination was motioning her every thought. She was on her way to the place where all the missing pieces of this fantastic puzzle would be brought together and the picture revealed.
It was 14:15, when the Lear touched down. As soon as the plane came to a standstill in front of a hangarânot much better looking than the shack they had left behind in BamakoâPierre came back and sat down once again.
Facing Talya, he looked into her eyes. âThe ambassador isnât here, as you can see.â He pointed out the window. âBut donât worry, I still believe you. I gather you donât want to go to the Terranga?â
What a silly question.
âYouâre right at that. There is no way Iâd set foot in that hotel. But, I have a reservation at the Meridien for tomorrow.â
âWell then, weâll take you to the Meridien. Iâll put you up in the suite that my company maintains there. Youâll be safer there than if you take up your reservation. But Monsieur Hjamal will know that youâre in Dakar the minute I contact him.â
Talya grinned. âThatâs alright. Iâll see him tomorrowâŠ, as originally planned.â
By this time, the navigator had joined them. âMadame Kartz, my name is Johnâand letâs leave it at that for now. Pierre has told me briefly, whatâs going on. As his co-pilot, I canât go against his orders when weâre in the air, but when weâre on the ground, thatâs another matter. Down here, I trust him as a friend. After hearing your story, I think you can count on my support as well. We donât like con-artists and criminals in general, and we certainly donât want to work for one.â
âAll I can say, gentlemen, is thank you for coming back to get me out of the mine site.â Talya felt very relieved. âI really appreciate what youâve done, believe me.â
Not expecting to find any support or a helping hand on the ground, now that the game had taken an unexpected turn, Talya was glad to have these two men to escort her to the safe haven that the Meridien should be.
John smiled. He then turned and left Talya and Pierre, to get the door opened and the stairwell lowered. John was a handsome young man, tall with a nonchalant attitude. Yet he seemed to have inner-peace that made Talya feel comfortable in his presence. He spoke French fluently with a slight African-English accent. His caramel complexion was smooth as a babyâs bottom. With his curly black hair and thin black moustache, light brown eyes and high cheekbones, he looked like a celebrated movie actor straight out of the 1930âs picture films.
Talya shot an inquisitive glance in Johnâs direction. âHe said his name was John, but he didnât want to tell his last name. Why was that?â
Pierre smiled. âWe call him John.â He must have been asked the same question hundreds of times. âHis last name is too hard for anyone to pronounce or to remember. Heâs from Ethiopia but he was raised in a French boarding school. He did his training in England. And, Iâll tell you a little secret, when heâs out of uniform heâs quite a character.â
âWhat about you, where were you trained?â
âIn France, at the Aeronautic School near Paris. I really didnât enjoy the trainingâmuch too rigid for me. I could hardly wait to get âmy wingsâ. I only did the schooling because without it, commercial flying would have been out of reach, and when I started flying, there was no holding me back. I was like a kid at Christmas. Every time I had the yoke in my hands, I was happy. Even now, itâs like that. I canât imagine doing anything else.â
They unloaded their luggage, and a few items that would remain at the airport waiting for their next flight. The ground attendants went deftly at their tasks and after gathering her meagre belongings, John directed Talya to the hangar where an immigration officer was waiting for them. After filling out the landing forms, having everyoneâs passports stamped, John led Talya out of the hangar to a waiting car.
âWeâll wait for Pierre in the car,â he said. âHe has to file the flight report and lock the engines. He wonât be long.â
âThank you,â Talya replied, climbing in the back seat of the vehicle. âPierre tells me
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