The Short Forever (Stone Barrington 8) - Page 140

“Come right to one niner five degrees,” Lance said. He reached forward and turned a knob on the Global Positioning Unit in the panel, selected “create user waypoint,” and entered some coordinates. “Climb back to a thousand feet,” he said.

The pilot leveled off at a thousand feet, and Lance reached forward, switched on the autopilot, and pushed the NAV button. The airplane swung a few degrees onto a new heading. “Let it fly the airplane for now,” he said. He checked the distance to waypoint; one hundred eight miles.

“What are we landing on?” the pilot asked.

“A farmer’s field,” Lance replied. “You’ve got about three thousand feet of length and all the width you need.”

“Any lights?”

Lance pointed to the rising full moon. “That,” he said, “and some car headlights.” He tuned the number one communications radio to 123.4 MHz and held the microphone in his lap.

Forty-five minutes later, Lance spoke again. “Descend to five hundred feet.” He spoke into the microphone. “It’s me; you there?”

“I’m here,” Ali’s voice said.

“Wind?”

“One eight zero, light. I’m already parked.”

“Switch on your headlights, and put them on bright; turn them on and off, once a second.” Lance scanned the horizon.

“Five hundred feet,” the pilot reported.

“We’re five miles out,” Lance said. “Look for headlights, flashing on and off, and land into them, on a heading of one eight zero.”

The pilot leaned forward and searched the ground ahead of him.

“Four miles,” Lance called out.

“I don’t see anything.”

“They’re there. Three miles.”

“Nothing.”

“Dead ahead, see them?”

“Got them!”

“A mile and a half; get lined up; can you see the tree line?”

“Yes, the moonlight is good.”

“Just miss the trees and aim for the car. You should have a soft touchdown.”

The pilot punched off the autopilot, swung right, then back left, lining up on the headlights. He put in full flaps and reduced power.

“Minimum speed, and for God’s sake, don’t hit the trees,” Lance said.

The pilot switched on both the landing and taxi lights, faintly illuminating the grass beyond the trees. He floated over the treeline, chopped the throttle, and put the airplane firmly down on the field, standing on the brakes. He swung around in front of the car and stopped.

“Keep the engine running,” Lance said, reaching behind him for the catalogue case. He got out, opened the door to the luggage compartment, and started handing bags to Ali. “Tell Sheila to turn off the headlights,” he said.

Ali went to the car, and a moment later, the lights went off.

Lance leaned into the airplane. “Wind’s light,” he said to the pilot; “you should be able to take off due north. Keep it low all the way.”

The pilot nodded. “Good luck,” he said.

Tags: Stuart Woods Stone Barrington Mystery
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