Hurricane Hannah. Sue Civil-Brown

Hurricane Hannah - Sue Civil-Brown


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into the twenty-first century.

      He turned behind the counter and flipped a dial. Soon a mechanized voice was reading the forecast. Then he flipped another switch and a fax machine began to print out a weather map.

      Interested, as all aviators were interested in the weather, Hannah forgot her embarrassment and leaned over the counter, listening and watching.

      “Tropical Storm Hannah has developed wind speeds in excess of sixty-five miles per hour. The storm has stalled at its current location and appears to be strengthening, with the barometer steadily falling….”

      “Hell,” Buck said. Moments later he ripped the fax off the machine and stood up, putting it on the counter so they could both look at it. Their heads came close to knocking.

      “Cripes,” he said, “look at those isobars. It’s tightening up.”

      “Do you have an earlier map?”

      He turned and pulled a sheet of paper off a shelf. “Here, see?”

      Indeed the lines that measured barometric pressure were drawing closer together, around a circle that could swiftly become the eye of a hurricane.

      “It doesn’t look good,” she said reluctantly.

      “No, it doesn’t.” He took the cigar from his mouth and tossed it in the trashcan. “If she’d just kept moving, we’d have had a tropical storm. No big deal except for the casino. But if she stalls out there long enough, she could become a real beast.”

      Hannah nodded and met his blue eyes. “I don’t like this.”

      “Me neither. You might be here awhile, Sticks.”

      “Is this place safe?”

      “I built it to be. I didn’t want to lose everything every couple of years.”

      “Well,” she said hopefully, “maybe even if it becomes a hurricane it won’t go past Category One.”

      “We can hope.” He sighed. “Come on, I’ll walk you out to your plane. I forgot you don’t know your way around.”

      The late evening was perfectly still, and growing darker by the second. The land had not yet cooled below the temperature of the surrounding water, so nothing moved. Later there would be a breeze, but right now the night was quiet and balmy. The air, full of moisture, felt soft to the skin. Hannah thought prosaically that in a climate like this, there’d be no need for moisturizers.

      Buck opened the door to the hangar, letting her pass through first. He’d left a light on near the computer, so the cavernous space wasn’t completely dark. The printer was still humming, although the computer had gone into screensaver mode. Reaching out, he threw the switch that turned on the lights above Hannah’s plane. Then he went to look at the progress on the schematics.

      He moved the mouse, and the progress bar appeared. “Nineteen percent. This is unreal.”

      Hannah looked at the long stream of paper that was folding up on the floor. “No kidding. That’s my fuel system?”

      “One and the same. And that’s less than twenty percent. We’re going to have our work cut out for us unless we find something obvious.”

      “Well, it had to be some place the fuel could leak from fast. I didn’t have a whole lot of time.”

      He nodded. “We’ll find it. In the meantime…”

      “Yeah, get some sleep. You’ll wake me if things start to get worse?”

      “Sure, why not? Worrying is a useful thing to do.”

      She scowled at him. “I don’t want to worry. I want to enjoy the storm.”

      “Enjoy?” He looked at her like she was crazy. “You’re kidding.”

      “I love storms. Always have. I’d like to be awake for this one.”

      “Well, if it decides to move this way,” he said almost sarcastically, “I doubt you’ll miss it.”

      She cocked her head and put her hands on her hips. “Were you born a boor?” Then with a toss of her long red hair, she strode away through the dimly lit hangar to her plane.

      “Wait a minute,” he called after her. “You have to lock the bar on the inside of this door after I leave.”

      Annoyed that her high-dudgeon exit had been interrupted, she stomped back to him. He went to the door and pointed to a lever. “Throw this to the right. The bar will lock in place. Even Buster won’t be able to get in.”

      Then he was gone, leaving her to fume. She threw the lever, glad to lock him out, then started back to her plane.

      Not even Buster would be able to get in? All of a sudden she felt creeped-out. Why would he even mention it? Did that alligator actually sometimes come into this hangar?

      Nervously she looked around as she hurried toward her plane. It was a relief to ascend the stairs, then pull them up behind her. Alone at last, she tumbled onto the bed in the tail without even pulling off her flight suit.

      Enough was enough.

      CHAPTER FOUR

      HANNAH AWOKE in the morning to find herself eyeball-to-eyeball with a huge pair of reptilian eyes. For a few seconds, she was absolutely certain she was imagining them. Then the hair stood up on the back of her neck.

      The alligator seemed to be grinning at her, his mouth hanging open. She froze as still as a statue, hoping he would think she was dead, not sure if that would work for an alligator, wondering how the heck he’d gotten on her plane, wondering how the heck she was going to get off her plane.

      Then the alligator lifted his head and let out a deep, inhuman roar that seemed to bounce off the walls of the small cabin and shake her eardrums so hard it hurt.

      Oh, Lord, was that a threat? Did alligators roar before they attacked? She felt the most childish urge to pull the covers over her head and convince herself she was hallucinating this.

      Despite her best efforts not to move, a whimper escaped her and she pulled back. But, to her amazement, the gator didn’t leap at her in attack. No.

      Buster looked wounded.

      She shook her head, convinced her eyes were deceiving her, but nothing changed. The alligator looked hangdog. Hurt.

      “Buster?” she said cautiously.

      The gator’s head came up, and he eyed her with something that seemed like hope.

      Astounded, Hannah considered the possibility that this relic of the dinosaur era had learned something about human behavior. What other kind of behavior would he know, never having had another alligator to talk to?

      Cripes, she was losing her mind. Reptilian brains didn’t have emotions.

      Did they?

      Slowly, taking care not to startle the beast by moving too quickly, she pushed back the blanket she had pulled over herself sometime during the night. Buster watched, but made no move.

      Slowly, she stood on the bed, which had replaced a row of seats against the rear bulkhead, wondering if she could leap across him to the aisle before he could turn in the confined space.

      The option failed to excite her. She’d never been any good at the long jump, never mind jumping from a dead start.

      Buster cocked his head, watching her from one eye, then let out another deafening roar. At once she rediscovered her ability to jump…backward. Pressed against the rear bulkhead, she studied her nemesis while wondering what it would feel like to be devoured alive. Not pleasant, certainly.

      But once again Buster looked hurt, as if her moving away was not what he wanted. Well, of course he didn’t want it. The farther away she was, the harder she would be to


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