Childer nodded, turning the conversation over in his mind. Funny how people seem to find comfort in a medical man’s words, Baird reflected in a sardonic appraisal of himself. Even when what a doctor has to say is bad news, the fact that he has said it seems to be reassuring to them. He’s the doctor; he won’t let it happen. Maybe we haven’t come so far from witchcraft, he thought to himself with a touch of anger; there’s always the doctor with his box of magic, to pull something out of the hat. Most of his life had been spent in nursing, coaxing, bullying, cajoling — reassuring frightened and trusting people that he knew best, and hoping each time that his old skill and sometimes very necessary bluff had not deserted him. Well, this could be the moment of truth, the final, inescapable challenge which he had always known would face him one day.
He felt Janet standing beside him. He questioned her with his eyes, sensing her to be on the edge of hysteria.
“Two more passengers have been taken ill, Doctor. At the back there.”
“Are you sure it isn’t just the pills?”
“Yes, I’m quite sure.”
“Right. I’ll get to them straight away. Will you have another look at the first officer, Miss Benson? He might feel like a little water.”
He had barely reached the two new cases and begun his examination before Janet was back again.
“Doctor, I’m terribly worried. I think you ought to—”
The buzz of the galley intercom cut across her words like a knife. She stood transfixed as the buzz continued without a break. Baird was the first to move.
“Don’t bother with that thing,” he rapped out. “Quick!”
Moving with an agility quite foreign to him, he raced along the aisle and burst into the flight deck. There he paused momentarily, while his eyes and brain registered what had happened, and in that instant something inside him, something mocking in its tone but menacing too, said: You were right — this is it.
The captain was rigid in his seat, sweat masking his face and streaking the collar of his uniform. One hand clutched at his stomach. The other was pressed on the intercom button on the wall beside him.
In two bounds the doctor reached him and leaned over the back of the seat, supporting him under the armpits. Dun was swearing between his clenched teeth, quietly and viciously.
“Take it easy, now,” said Baird. “We’d better get you away from there.”
“I did… what you said…” Dun gasped, closing his eyes and squeezing the words out in painful jerks. “It was too late… Give me something, Doc… Give me something, quickly… Got to hold out… get us down… She’s on autopilot but… got to get down… Must tell Control… must tell…” His mouth moved silently. With a desperate effort he tried to speak. Then his eyes rolled up and he collapsed.
“Quick, Miss Benson,” called Baird. “Help me get him out.”
Panting and struggling, they pulled Dun’s heavy body out of the pilot’s seat and eased him on to the floor alongside the first officer. Swiftly, Baird took out his stethoscope and made an examination. In a matter of seconds Janet had produced coats and a blanket; as soon as the doctor had finished she made a pillow for the captain and wrapped him round. She was trembling as she stood up again.
“Can you do what he asked, Doctor? Can you bring him round long enough to land the plane?”
Baird thrust his instruments back into his pockets. He looked at the banks of dials and switches, at the control columns still moving of their own accord. In the dim light from the battery of dials his features seemed suddenly much older, and unbearably weary.
“You are part of this crew, Miss Benson, so I’ll be blunt.” His voice was so hard that she flinched. “Can you face some unpleasant facts?”
“I — I think so.” In spite of herself, she faltered.
“Very well. Unless I can get all these people to a hospital quickly — very quickly — I can’t even be sure of saving their lives.”
“But…”
“They need stimulants, intravenous injections for shock. The captain too. He’s held out too long.”
“Is he very bad?”
“It will soon become critical — and that goes for the others as well.”
Barley audible, Janet whispered, “Doctor — what are we going to do?”
“Let me ask you a question. How many passengers are on board?”
“Fifty-six.”
“How many fish dinners did you serve?”
Janet struggled to remember. “About fifteen, I think. More people had meat than fish, and some didn’t eat at all as it was so late.”
“I see.”
Baird regarded her steadily. When he spoke again his voice was harsh, almost belligerent.
“Miss Benson, did you ever hear of long odds?”
Janet tried to focus on what he was saying.
“Long odds? Yes, I suppose so. I don’t know what it means.”
“I’ll tell you,” said Baird. “It means this. Out of a total field of fifty-six our one chance of survival depends on there being a person aboard this airplane who is not only qualified to land it but who also didn’t have fish for dinner tonight.”
His words hung between them as they stood there, staring at each other.
FIVE
0245—0300
CALMNESS, like an anodyne cushioning the shock, descended on Janet as the words of the doctor penetrated her mind. She met his eyes steadily, well aware of his unspoken injunction to prepare herself for death.
Until now part of her had refused to accept what was happening. While she busied herself tending the passengers and trying to comfort the sick, something had insisted that this was an evil nightmare, the sort of dream in which an everyday sequence of events is suddenly deflected into one of mounting horror by some totally unexpected but quite logical incident. At any moment, her inner voice had told her, she would wake up to find half the bedclothes on the floor and the traveling clock on her locker buzzing to herald another early-morning scramble to get ready before take-off.
Now that sense of unreality was swept away. She knew it was happening, really happening, to her, Janet Benson, the pretty twenty-one-year-old blonde who had learned to expect the turning glances of airport staff as she walked briskly along the pine-smelling corridors. Fear had gone from her, at least for the moment. She wondered, in the passing thought of an instant, what her family at home were doing, how it was possible for her life to be extinguished in a few seconds’ madness of shrieking metal without those who had borne her feeling even a tremor as they slept peacefully a thousand miles away.
“I understand, Doctor,” she said levelly. “Do you know of anyone on board with any experience of flying?”
She cast her mind over the passenger list, recalling the names. “There’s no one from the airline,” she said. “I don’t know… about anyone else. I suppose I’d better start asking.”
“Yes, you’d better,” said Baird slowly. “Whatever you do, try not to alarm them. Otherwise we may start a panic. Some of them know the first officer is sick. Just say the captain wondered if there’s someone with flying experience who could help with the radio.”
“Very well, Doctor,” said Janet quietly. “I’ll do that.”
She hesitated, as Baird obviously had something more to say. “Miss Benson — what’s your first name?” he asked.
“Janet.”
He nodded. “Janet — I think I made some remark earlier on about your training. It was unjustified and unforgivable — the comment of a stupid old man who could have done with more training himself. I’d like to take it back.”
Some of the color returned to her cheeks as she smiled — “I’d forgotten it,” she said. She moved towards the door, anxious to begin her questioning and to know the worst as quickly as she could. But Baird’s face was puckered in an effort of concentration, as if something at the back of his mind was eluding him. He frowned at the painted emergency-escape instructions on the side of the cabin, not seeing them,
“Wait,” he told her.
“Yes?” She paused, her hand on the catch of the door.
He snapped his fingers and turned to her. “I’ve got it. I knew someone had spoken to me about airplanes. That young fellow in the seat next to mine — the one who joined us at the last minute at Winnipeg—”
“Mr. Spencer?”
“That’s him. George Spencer. I forget exactly but he seemed to know something about flying. Get him up here, will you? Don’t tell him more than I’ve just said — we don’t want the other passengers to know the truth. But carry on asking them too, in case there’s someone else.”
“He just offered to help me,” said Janet, “so he must be unaffected by the food.”
“Yes, you’re right,” exclaimed Baird. “We both had meat. Get him, Janet.”
He paced the narrow cabin nervously while she was gone, then knelt to feel the pulse of the captain lying prone and unconscious beside the first officer. At the first sound of the door behind him he jumped to his feet, blocking the entrance. Spencer stood there, looking at him in bewilderment.
“Hullo, Doc,” the young man greeted him. “What’s this about the radio?”
“Are you a pilot?” Baird shot out, not moving.
“A long time ago. In the war. I wouldn’t know about radio procedures now, but if the captain thinks I can—”
“Come in,” said Baird.
He stepped aside, closing the door quickly behind the young man. Spencer’s head snapped up at the sight of the pilots’ empty seats and the controls moving by themselves. Then he wheeled round to the two men stretched on the floor under their blankets.
“No!” he gasped. “Not both of them?”
“Yes,” said Baird shortly, “both of them.”
Spencer seemed hardly able to believe his eyes. “But — man alive” — he stuttered — “when did it happen?”
“The captain went down a few minutes ago. They both had fish.”
Spencer put out a hand to steady himself, leaning against a junction box of cables on the wall.
“Listen,” said Baird urgently. “Can you fly this aircraft — and land it?”
“No!” Shock stabbed at Spencer’s voice. “Definitely no! Not a chance!”
“But you just said you flew in the war,” Baird insisted.
“That was thirteen years ago. I haven’t touched a plane since. And I was on fighters — tiny Spitfires about an eighth of the size of this ship and with only one engine. This has four. The flying characteristics are completely different.”
Spencer’s fingers, shaking slightly, probed his jacket for cigarettes, found a packet, and shook one out. Baird watched him as he lit up.
“You could have a go at it,” he pressed.
Spencer shook his head angrily. “I tell you, the idea’s crazy,” he snapped. “You don’t know what’s involved. I wouldn’t be able to take in a Spitfire now, let alone this.” He jabbed bis cigarette towards the banks of instruments.