The Christiana was anchored in another quiet bay of another of the deserted
islands of the Haollstromnian sea. The four friends had enjoyed the sand
and the warm water all day, as well as the easily accessible exotic fruits
that grew right up to the edge of the beach. They had lit a fire when
the sun went down and sat on the beach until long after midnight enjoying
each other’s company. Now, just before an early dawn on a summer
morning they were asleep in their cabins aboard the yacht without a care
to disturb their dreams.
A sudden swell that hit The Christiana broadside and pulled her anchor
chain to its fullest extent woke them. Kristoph reassured his wife that
there was nothing to worry about but he was not entirely sure that was
the truth. He reached for slacks and shirt and pushed his feet into a
pair of shoes before hurrying up to the deck where Jean-Claude was surveying
the debris caused when the wave had swamped them. The water was running
off now, but the deck was covered in seaweed and detritus and two of the
deckchairs were broken when they were slammed against the companionway
door.
“It could have been worse,” he said. “The boat isn’t
damaged.”
Kristoph looked towards the shore. It still wasn’t quite daylight
but his Gallifreyan eyes could process the starlight and see well enough
that the wave had gone well beyond the high water mark and it had still
been forceful enough to break the trunks of the trees closest to the shore.
They had fallen backwards and in turn caused other trees to fall, leaving
a swathe of devastation for several metres inland.
“What caused it?” Kristoph asked. Hillary, coming from the
cockpit, had the answer. He had immediately checked the yacht’s
communications.
“There was a quake along the fault line that runs under the sea
ten miles south-west of Sarabetal,” he said. “Of course, most
of these islands were formed by some kind of seismic activity millennia
ago and minor shifts in the plates are common enough. But this one was
severe enough to create a tsunami wave. We were far enough away to feel
only minor effects.”
Marion had reached the deck by now and when she heard the word tsunami
in connection with the busy resort island of Sarabetal she was concerned.
“The wave began to the south-west and was driven away from the resort,”
Hillary reported. “There is no danger there. They’re reporting
only minor quake damage. They will need to thoroughly inspect all of the
rides in the park before guests are allowed to use them, but they are
otherwise unscathed. A disturbed night and some minor inconvenience.”
Marion was relieved by that news. But Hillary and Jean-Claude were weighing
anchor and preparing to set off, not under sail but the powerful motor
engine that The Christiana had in reserve. She wondered why at first.
“We were safe, and the resort, too,” Kristoph explained. “But
between us and Sarabetal are five hundred miles of scattered islands,
some of them inhabited, scores of fishing boats that will have been out
this night. An undamaged boat may be needed.”
“What can I do?” Marion immediately asked.
“Find spare blankets, the first aid kit,” Hillary told her.
“Boil water to make hot drinks.”
“Yes, yes, I can do that,” Marion said. She hurried to do
those necessary things as The Christiana cut through the waves at a much
faster speed than she had under sail on their leisurely holiday. She felt
the difference when she was in the storeroom and galley doing what she
could to make the pleasure yacht into a lifeboat ready to save lives.
When she had done all she could she came back on deck. The difference
in speed was immediately obvious. There was far more wind blowing in her
face. Hillary was in the cockpit, piloting the yacht and keeping in contact
with the coastguard. Kristoph and Jean Claude were watching the water
for any sign of survivors. They had seen a lot of debris including an
overturned dinghy and a lifebelt as well as broken length of wood that
must have been the hull of a boat before Jean-Claude gave an urgent shout.
Hillary slowed the yacht and made a course correction. Marion watched
as they edged close to the small boat in which five men drifted helplessly.
One was injured. Kristoph quickly descended the companion ladder and carried
the man on his back while the others came aboard exhausted and grateful
to receive the blankets and hot coffee that Marion had prepared.
Worryingly, these five were all that remained of two fishing boat crews.
Each boat ought to have had eight men aboard. None of them knew where
the rest of their friends were. They had given them up for dead. And,
indeed, within a short time Kristoph spotted a body caught on a broken
length of wood. He hauled the man aboard and the survivors identified
him. Jean-Claude wrapped the body in a piece of sailcloth. That was all
that could be done for him, and for three more that they found.
“Wait,” Kristoph said when he lifted the body of a slender
youth aboard. “I think this one is hanging on, yet. He laid him
on the deck and began CPR expertly. One of the men from the boat cried
out emotionally and shifted form from male to female, settling on the
latter and crying for her child who had been working on the boat alongside
her.
The youth morphed twice between genders as he coughed up water and breathed
raggedly. His parent embraced him as Kristoph drew back, thankful that
he had saved one life among so many there was no hope for.
“There’s a hoverplane coming,” Hillary said. “It’ll
take them all off to the mainland for medical treatment. They’ll
take charge of the bodies, too.” He sent Marion with a marker pen
to write the names of the dead on the canvas they had been wrapped in.
It was a sad duty, but necessary. There was, Hillary said, a makeshift
morgue being prepared and those bodies which could be identified would
be returned to their loved ones for burial so much sooner. It would ease
their burden.
The casualties were transferred to the hoverplane by winch. As soon as
they were clear, Hillary increased speed, heading towards the largest
group of those tiny islands with a tenuous fishing industry. They picked
up more survivors, and even more bodies. They weren’t the only craft
doing so, of course. Anything still capable of floating, any plane that
could spot survivors and notify the coastguard, was doing all that could
be done. On The Christiana they could no longer wrap the bodies. Marion
made tags of strong cardboard and tied them to the victims’ wrists
before they were winched off by the coastguard hoverplane. She held back
her tears as she did so. She had a job to do and crying would only hinder
the work, but it was terrible to see how many of them were young.
Then, halfway through the morning, even more terrible news came. All the
boats and planes were being sent to Sarabetal to evacuate as many people
as possible from the resort.
“Why?” Marion asked. “I thought it was hardly affected.”
“The seismic shift has caused the volcano to start rumbling,”
Hillary explained. “They expect it to erupt.”
“I thought it wasn’t likely to do that,” she responded.
“I was told not to worry….”
“Now you can worry,” Hillary told her. “It could blow
within the next three hours.”
“Is that time to get all the people away safely?”
Marion looked at her friends, and at Kristoph who usually had answers
to questions like that. He couldn’t make any promises either.
Even before Sarabetal appeared on the horizon they knew there was a problem.
The plume of smoke from the re-activated volcano was visible before the
island was. The smoke was high above the volcano, yet, but there was a
smell of sulphur in the air and the closer they got the darker it was.
The scene looked like a colourful version of the pictures Marion had seen
of the evacuation of Dunkirk. There were families on the beach in their
holiday clothes desperately waiting to be picked up by the small boats
that were taking them out to larger boats moored in the deeper water.
The Christiana was able to get in to the pier and picked up as many people
as possible and then motored out to a navy ship that had room for everyone.
They went back again and again, but the line was never ending.
“What about the animals?” Marion asked in the midst of it
all.
“What animals?”
“The zoo… the one we saw from the roller coaster. They’ve
got all sorts of animals there. They’re in pens. They can’t
escape.”
Kristoph looked at the volcano and shook his head. If they were lucky
they might just get all the people aboard boats and get clear, but there
was nothing they could do about animals that would need to be sedated
and caged and lifted aboard a freighter.
Marion began to cry. She had tried not to all morning, but now she couldn’t
take it any longer. Kristoph comforted her, but he felt impotent to do
anything else.
He was still holding Marion in his arms when the jet engine of a military
aircraft split the air. He looked up at it and then ran to the cockpit.
The radio was in constant connection to the coastguard, but Kristoph asked
to be put through to the military plane that was circling the area. At
first they refused. Then he pulled rank, identifying himself as the President
of one of Haollstrom’s trade and political allies. That did the
trick. Very soon he was talking to the pilot of the plane.
“What ordnance are you carrying?” he asked. “You don’t
have to tell me any propriety information, just the firepower.”
The pilot answered him. Kristoph nodded and looked again at the volcano.
Then he used the onboard computer in the cockpit to make some careful
calculations and relayed them to the pilot.
“It’s a million to one chance, sir,” the pilot told
him. “I would have to be one hundred per cent on target, first time.”
“I know. But it would save the island if it works. Give it your
best shot. Good luck.”
He stood back and clutched Marion’s hand as he watched the plane
get into position.
“What have you told him to do?” she asked. “I didn’t
really understand. It was all co-ordinates and tonnes of explosives and
stuff. And I suppose if I asked how you know about missiles and how to
fire them ‘strategically’ I wouldn’t get an answer?”
“You really don’t need to know,” he answered. “It’s
not a skill I’ve needed for a long time. The pilot is right. It’s
a long shot. But if it works, the animals will be safe, as well as the
people we haven’t been able to evacuate, yet.”
There were still hundreds waiting. The Christiana was doing as much as
possible. So was everyone else. They stopped and stared when the plane
fired all four of its air to air missiles into the far side of the mountain,
where it was closest to the sea. There was a tremendous roar followed
by a massive explosion as part of the cone was blown away on that side.
Then there was an even louder sound. The bigger ships further out to sea
and the hoverplanes above all sent images of a whole section of the mountain
sliding away. The lava that was coming up from the caldera spilled out
through the gap and poured over the rocky foreshore and into the sea,
well away from the hotel and chalets of the resort, from the beach where
the people still waited for rescue, and the frightened animals in their
zoo pens. The whole force of the eruption was safely directed away. It
was still a dangerous situation. The boats had to move away from the thousands
of tonnes of lava pouring into the sea and there were still problems with
bad air and the ash that was settling everywhere, now. The resort would
have to be abandoned for now, but there was time to bring in ferries that
would take the people away safely and a freighter to safely transport
the zoo animals to a new home.
“You did it,” Marion told her husband. “It was your
idea. And it worked.”
“It might not have,” he admitted. “There were so many
ways it could have gone wrong. If the missiles had failed to break the
cone, if the whole top had blown instead of just the seaward side…
it was a gamble.”
“It worked,” Marion repeated. “Well done. And to the
pilot, too. I hope there’s some sort of medal they can give him.”
Hillary promised there was, and he had enough pull with the government
to ensure it was done.
“We can leave, soon,” he added. “The proper authorities
have everything under control. I think we should head home to my lighthouse.
I for one could use a long, long soak in my new spa bath.”
They were all hot and tired from the work they had done, their faces grimy
with ash and dirt. Longing for a spa bath was not mere vanity.
“It’s takes up to four at once,” Jean Claude added with
a smile.
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