THIRTY-EIGHT

The taxi driver finds the dirt road and a few hundred feet in I see Herman’s rental car parked halfway into the brush off to the side.

We pull up. I pay the driver, grab Herman’s coffee and the doughnut box, and Joselyn and I get out.

“Over here!” I hear Herman’s voice beyond the brush.

We make our way between some bushes where Herman’s big feet have beaten the grass down to make a narrow path.

He rolls over off his stomach and sits up as soon as he sees us. “Thought you guys were never gonna get here,” he says. “I’m dyin’.”

“Not to worry. Your friend brought you a box of poison,” says Joselyn.

He reaches up and takes the coffee in one hand and hands me the field glasses with the other. I give him the doughnuts. He sets them on the ground and plucks the lid off the coffee. “Ah, good, cream,” he says. “You remembered. Any sugar?”

“In the box with the doughnuts,” I tell him.

He opens the lid and finds six packets. Herman holds them together in his big fingers and rips the tops off all of them in one move. Then he pours the contents into the hot coffee, stirring it like syrup with a plastic fork.

“We could just get a long needle and inject twenty pounds of sugar into your heart,” says Joselyn. She stands there motionless looking at the steaming cup in Herman’s hand as if it were a viper.

“What did I tell you when I first saw her?” says Herman. He talks without looking at us, picking through the box of doughnuts for his first victim. “All shapely and sexy like that. She’s gotta be a health nut. Don’t say I didn’t warn you. Course there are advantages…”

“Yes, one tends to live longer,” says Joselyn.

“That wasn’t the advantage I had in mind,” says Herman. “But I suppose it’ll do. Watch the glasses.” He looks at me as I scan the open field down below through the binoculars. “You’re not careful, Thorn’s gonna pick up glare off the front lens. Morning sun,” he says.

I lower them. “So what do I do?”

“Baseball cap on the ground there,” says Herman. “Use it to shield the front end a little bit. Keep the sunlight off them.”

I settle onto the ground on my stomach, lay the baseball cap over the top of the fifty-power glasses with the bill sticking out over the two lenses. Then I focus them.

“Look to the left there, in the trees up at the end of the field,” says Herman. “See the camouflage?”

“Oh, yeah. I see the plane but he’s got it covered pretty well. Unless you were looking for it, you wouldn’t see it.”

“Wouldn’t see it at all from the air,” says Herman, “not with the naked eye anyway. My guess is that’s what he’s worried about. Drug interdiction flights. Last few years that’s become a heavy part of the action down here. If the cartels can bring their product in here, they’re already inside the U.S. Customs zone.”

“So what do you think Thorn’s up to?” I ask.

“Haven’t seen enough to know yet,” he says. He grabs another doughnut and gulps some coffee.

“I don’t know, but I doubt that it’s drugs,” says Joselyn. “Not unless he’s changed. It’s true it’s been a long time. But I don’t think so.” Joselyn sees a small rock outcropping a few feet away. She steps over and dusts it off with her hand, very feminine, then turns and sits on it. “Do you see him down there? Thorn, I mean?” She looks at me.

“I don’t know. I see three men working around the plane. One of them is up on a ladder, big extension thing, against the tail section,” I tell her. “Another one’s got a shorter ladder working against the side of the plane up forward, just in front of the wing.”

“Yeah, he’s been taping down paper,” says Herman, “some big pieces. Looks like they painted the fuselage white, then did the whole tail section that dark blue. Sort of a cone shape on an angle all the way down underneath the tail.”

“I see it,” I tell him.

“Now they’re gettin’ ready to put up a logo or some letters. I’m not sure,” says Herman.

“Yeah, I hear the compressor, but I don’t see it,” I tell him.

“They must have it in the plane to keep the noise down. You can hear that thing all the way out here every time they fire it up,” he says. “They had it going a few minutes ago, just before you got here. They were clearing two spray guns. Shot a lot of red and blue paint all over the grass.”

“Looks like we got company.”

An old beat-up Ford F-250 pickup truck is coming down the runway, moving fast, coming this way. For a moment I wonder if the driver has seen us.

“That’s Thorn’s truck. I followed it on the way out here,” says Herman. “We better get out of here.”

“Hold on. He’s stopping,” I say.

Herman turns to look.

Joselyn is on her feet, standing next to him, shading her eyes with one hand and staring down at the field.

The truck is stopped, no more than a quarter of a mile away. The driver is getting out. He goes in the back to the open bed of the truck and lifts out a cardboard box. He carries it over and sets it down on the field. Then he walks back to the pickup.

“I don’t think he’s seen us,” I tell them.

This time he reaches inside the cab. He steps back and closes the door. He has two items, one in each hand. The one in his right hand looks like a laptop. I can’t make out what the other one is. It’s too small.

“What’s he doing?” says Herman.

“I don’t know.” I have the field glasses fixed on his face at the moment. “I think that’s our man.”

“Let me see,” says Joselyn.

I hand her the glasses.

She raises them to her eyes. “How do you adjust them?”

“The toggle on top.” I show her.

She focuses in. Then suddenly takes a deep breath. “Yes. That’s him. I would know that face anywhere,” she says. When she passes the glasses back to me, her hand is trembling.

By the time I refocus and acquire his image once more, Thorn is down on one knee in the field. He is working on something, but I can’t see it. His back is to me, shielding whatever it is that he has on the ground. He reaches into the cardboard box with one hand and takes out two wires. They look like leads connected to something in the box.

A few seconds later he stands and flings something into the air. He does it almost casually, backhanded, with a flick of his wrist. Whatever it is, it doesn’t fall to the ground. Instead it flies off, like a bird, silent and fast into the distance, where I lose it.

“What the hell was that?” I ask.

“I don’t know,” says Herman. “I saw it too, then it just disappeared.”

“What’s he doing?” I ask.

“He’s flying it,” says Joselyn. “What you just saw is an MAV.”

“What the hell’s an MAV?” I ask.

“Micro air vehicle,” she says. “It’s military hardware. Latest cutting edge. Like a model airplane, only smaller.”

“I don’t hear any motor,” I tell her.

“It’s electric. High speed. They use them for surveillance, but use your imagination. With the advances in miniaturization, almost anything’s possible.”

“How do you know about this stuff?” I ask.

“Part of the new generation of weapons systems,” she says. “Designers, kids from Stanford, get hung up on it because it’s novel and looks cute and the military tells them it’s harmless. But the range of possible applications is insidious. I think we should be going.”

“Why?” says Herman.

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