“Just land, already,” she shouted back.
He continued on, wishing the damn thing had a horn. “Too bad I don’t have my vuvuzela,” he shouted.
He could see the players shaking hands, the referee standing in the center with his foot on the ball about to blow the whistle. The engine sputtered again, and Kurt put the nose down to pick up speed. The prop sped up again, and he saw the players look his way. The crowd turned as well.
He zoomed over the crowd. A flagpole or something he hadn’t seen hit the right wing. The frame bent, the right side dropped, and Kurt overcorrected back to the left.
Players began running for the sidelines as the sputtering craft descended into the lighted area.
They hit the grass and bounced. The ultralight almost nosed over, but Kurt corrected and planted the wheels firmly in the middle of the field, right at the fifty-yard line.
He reached for the brake, pulled it, and felt the small plane skid across the wet grass. One last player dove out of the way, and the ultralight slammed into the goal at the far end of the field.
The net wrapped around them, the propeller died, and the little plane stopped.
Kurt looked up and back. The crowd, the players, the ref, everyone, just stared in an incredible silence. They looked at him and Katarina, and then at one another, and then finally at the ref. He did nothing for a second, then slowly raised one arm, blew his whistle, and yelled, “Goooooaaaaaallll!”
The crowd shouted in unison, raising their arms as if it were a triumph, as if it were an overtime goal to win the World Cup for tiny Vila do Porto, and in moments the players were reaching for Katarina and Kurt, laughing and clapping, as they freed the plane from the net and dragged it back out onto the field.
The players helped Katarina climb out, admiring her form as they did. The ref helped Kurt. And then they were escorted off the field to the sidelines.
Kurt explained to someone a version of what had happened, promised to pay for any damages, and insisted that the ultralight rental outfit would come for its plane tomorrow.
As the soccer game began again, he and Katarina made their way out to the street. Somewhere near the field there had to be a cab waiting or bus they could take. A microvan pulled up with some kind of sign on it.
“We need to go to the harbor,” Kurt said.
“I can take you,” the driver said.
Kurt opened the door. Katarina went to climb in but paused.
“That was really quite incredible,” she said, gazing into his eyes.
They’d almost been killed three times, her rental car had been sent off a cliff and turned into a burning hulk, and she was still almost blue from the cold, but her eyes sparkled as if he’d just shown her the time of her life. He had to admire that.
He reached out, pulled her to him, and kissed her on the lips. They kissed for a few seconds longer, her arms wrapping around him from the front this time, until the driver coughed lightly.
They parted.
“Was that to warm me up?” she asked.
He smiled. “Did it work?”
“Better than you know,” she said, turning and climbing into the taxi. He got in after her, and the little bubble van moved off toward the harbor.
“You know,” she said, “we’re only a mile or so from the house where the French team is staying.”
“Really,” he said, remembering what she’d told him earlier. “Do you have the address?”
“It’s right on the beach at Praia Formosa. The most luxurious rental in town.”
That sounded like the French way to him.
“Driver,” Kurt said. “Take us to Praia Formosa.”
29
New York City, June 24