“Make them too afraid to move and they won’t do anything stupid,” he said. “But to do that, we need something more deadly than a knife and more lethal than a gun, something so scary the pilots will do what we tell them to do and not even think about resisting.”
He pulled the lid off another crate and smiled. A look of fear came across Leilani’s face.
“I don’t know about this,” she said.
“Trust me,” he said, “this is exactly what we’re looking for.”
They heard the flaps extending, and the turbulent air began to buffet the plane.
“We’re coming in for a landing,” Leilani said.
Kurt looked out the window. The horizon was beginning to glow, the sky changing hue. He saw no sign of land. “Depends on your definition of landing.”
“What do you mean?”
“This is a seaplane,” he said, “more accurately called a flying boat. It lands on the water.”
Kurt was torn. One part of him was anxious to make his move before they got too close to whatever rendezvous they were heading for, the rest of him was curious as to where they were headed.
He remembered Jinn saying he needed to move to a more secure location. It would be grand if Kurt could report back and give that location to the powers that be.
But then he thought about the water tanks in the belly of the plane and the load of microbots he suspected they were carrying. He decided it would be better to move sooner rather than later.
He went to the seating area, pulled out his knife and began working on the item he’d liberated from the crate.
“I’m not even going to ask,” Leilani said, looking away.
When he was finished, he slid the knife back into his boot and covered it with the leg of his pants. Next he took one of the 9mm Lugers and popped the clip out. He quickly unloaded all the shells, including the one in the chamber, and then jammed the clip back in.
He handed it to Leilani with the safety off.
“I don’t like guns,” she said.
“Don’t think of it as a gun.”
“But it is a gun,” she insisted.
He was already moving toward the front of the plane. “Not without the bullets, it’s not. It’s just a big, crazy bluff, and you better wield it like Dirty Harry”—he saw the blank look appearing on her young face and changed references—“like Angelina Jolie, if you want them to believe you’re going to shoot it.”
“But I’m not going to shoot,” she said.
As he approached the ladder that led up to the flight deck, Kurt hoped his own bluff would be sufficient because he didn’t think Leilani quite had the concept down.
“Just stay behind me and to my right, and point the gun at them,” he said.
“Anything else?”
“Yeah. Try to look mean.”
Kurt climbed the ladder, which was canted sideways to the flight deck.
The pilots snapped their heads around at the commotion and saw Kurt. The captain shouted. The copilot reached for his seat belt release. And Kurt showed them what he was carrying.
They stopped in their tracks, staring at a pineapple grenade in Kurt’s hand. He pulled the pin in an exaggerated manner and held the safety lever, or spoon, down tight.
Leilani came up beside him, aiming the empty gun nicely. “Everybody freeze!” she growled.
The pilots had already frozen, but he appreciated the effort.