• Complain

Aaron Elkins - Where there's a will

Here you can read online Aaron Elkins - Where there's a will full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

No cover

Where there's a will: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Where there's a will" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Aaron Elkins: author's other books


Who wrote Where there's a will? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

Where there's a will — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Where there's a will" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Where there's a will

Aaron Elkins

ONE

November 4, 1994, Latitude 16.28N, Longitude 161.06W

Silence, as sudden as a stopped heart.

After the monotonous grind of the engine for the last three and a half hours, and then the brief stuttering and missing, it seemed to Claudia that the absence of sound had a physical presence, a doughy mass that filled the cockpit, pressing on her eardrums and stopping her nostrils.

The fuels run out, she told the old man.

So thats that, then, he said. Hed had plenty of time to get used to the idea, and he spoke as much in resignation as in fear. In the red glow from the instrument panel, his weathered face, even the billy-goat scrap of beard, might have been a carved mask, all stark planes and angles. On his lap, his left hand gently cradled his heavily bandaged right. The bleeding had slowed down to an ooze now, or maybe it had stopped altogether. For a while it had been pumping steadily, soaking the gauze and staining his pants. Hed fainted a couple of times, and shed thought he might die on her, right there in the cockpit.

As if it would have made much difference.

Yup, thats that, Claudia said in the same emotionless tone. Were going down.

She thought she heard him sigh, very softly.

A light plane that has run out of fuel at an altitude of 10,500 feet does not plummet to earth like a safe falling out of a window. It drifts down, slowly and silently, borne on the wind, gliding two or three miles for every thousand feet of altitude lost. To descend more than ten thousand feet takes twenty or twenty-five minutes, and once the trim is adjusted there isnt much to do, especially when there is nothing below to look for-no beacon light to aim toward, no obstacles to avoid-nothing but the cold swath of stars above and the black, vast, empty Pacific Ocean below.

There is plenty of time to think.

It seemed to her now that shed known in her heart from the beginning that they werent going to make it. She should have said no in the first place. She was a daytime flier, a visual-flight-rules pilot, and shed never claimed to be anything else. Did the boss want to go to the Hawi airport? Fine, lets go. Fly north along the eastern slope of the Kohala ridge with the coast on your right and keep an eye out for the runway, nothing to it. Hana? Just point the nose toward Maui and go; you couldnt miss it. Even Honolulu, where theyd gone for the Cattlemens Expo-fix the bearing and keep flying until you see Diamond Head and the airport. But this instrument-flying, this flying in the dark, wasnt for her; she wasnt used to it. And a rushed, crazy flight like this-with barely enough time to do the chart, four hundred miles over empty ocean to some rinky-dink, flyspeck island in the middle of nowhere-that was plain stupid.

Still, she had done everything right, everything by the book. Scared or not, shed used the North Pacific navigational chart to locate the damn island in the first place, find the distance, and plot the bearing. Shed contacted the flight services center for the wind conditions and adjusted the bearing accordingly. Shed checked everything three times. The plane was fully fueled, newly maintained, and ready to go. The destination was well within the Grummans range, especially if she flew high and kept to fifty-five percent power, which was her plan. Fortunately, the whiskey compass was as reliable as it could be, having been adjusted on the compass rose only four days earlier, and as theyd taxied slowly down the runway of the deserted Waimea airport shed carefully set the gyrocompass to it and rechecked it against the correction card. And, daytime flier or not, she was a damn good pilot; she had a feel for flying, she could do this.

All the same, fifteen minutes into the flight, as the airport beacon shrank to a fading spark in the blackness, her courage failed her. This is impossible. I cant do this, she said abruptly. We have to go back. She was already easing down the left rudder and beginning to turn the yoke to circle back toward the Big Island.

Were not going back, Torkelsson said curtly. You know I cant.

To Honolulu then. Youll be safe there, and you can take a plane anywhere. We can lock in-

Claudia. With his uninjured hand he reached across to stay her arm. Theyll be looking for me there, too. If we land in Honolulu itll be the end of me. Pleading didnt come naturally to him, and he seemed to realize it. His clutch tightened, grinding her wrist bones together, an old mans claw. And Ill see to it that its the end of you, too. I promise you that. Ill tell them everything.

But threats werent his style either, and with a grunt of embarrassment he let go of her arm. Its not something I want to do, he said. You know that. But so help me, God, if you drive me to it. ..

Okay, okay, she said grimly and found her original bearing-what she hoped was her bearing-again. On to Tarabao Island.

Just as the Torkelssons had given her back her life, they could take it away again. It had been Magnus Torkelsson who had first seen something in her four years before, when she was a neurotic, dope-addled twenty-one-year-old on the fast track to self-destruction. What she was doing in Hawaii, exactly how or why she had come there from East Texas, she didnt know-literally could not remember-but someone had gotten her a seasonal job clearing brush at Hoaloha, the Torkelssons big cattle ranch, and the rugged outdoor work had suited her. She was a big, strong girl who knew a little about ranching, a willing worker with a mechanical bent, and inside of a year she was on their year-round windmill and pump maintenance team. Then, when their regular pilot started talking about moving on and she had expressed some interest in flying, they had sent her to flight-training school in Hilo. For a while she had shared piloting duties with one of the Torkelsson nephews, but when he got tired of it she had taken the job over completely, flying somewhere, usually just to another part of the island, three or four times a week. Shed enjoyed it, too.

They were good people, people of the land. They had been straightforward and open with her, and she had responded the same way. And there lay the problem. Torkelsson knew all about the sad mess of her teens-the dope, the psychiatric hospitalizations, the expunged record of juvenile crimes, even the two outstanding warrants. All he had to do was go to the FAA, and goodbye to her commercial pilots license. Her flying days would be over, the law would come down on her, and more than likely shed wind up back in East Texas, maybe in jail, or worse yet, living with her parents.

Trying to find Tarabao Island in the dark was better than that.

As frightened as she was, Claudias instincts told her that they were staying pretty much on course. The gyrocompass was reassuringly steady and undeviating. Checking it every few minutes against the whiskey compass, there was never a need to adjust it. And the night was crystalline. Shed be able to spot the airport beacon and runway lights-theyd be the only illuminated objects for two hundred miles in every direction-if they were actually turned on as promised. And, of course, if she came anywhere within visual range of Tarabao. But that much she was certain she could manage. Almost certain.

They flew for more than three tense hours during which Torkelsson rarely spoke. The first time was to ask, timidly: Why do they call it a whiskey compass? Ive always wondered. He was trying to make amends.

Because the fluid the needle floats in is supposed to be alcohol, she barked, unwilling to let him off that easily. Who gave a shit why they called it a whiskey compass? But its not, its some kind of kerosene or something. Who cares?

The next time, about an hour later, staring fixedly out the window at nothing-there was nothing to see-he said: About where are we now, would you say?

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Where there's a will»

Look at similar books to Where there's a will. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


No cover
No cover
Aaron Elkins
No cover
No cover
Aaron Elkins
No cover
No cover
Aaron Elkins
No cover
No cover
Aaron Elkins
No cover
No cover
Aaron Elkins
No cover
No cover
Aaron Elkins
No cover
No cover
Aaron Elkins
No cover
No cover
Aaron Elkins
Aaron Elkins - Skull Duggery
Skull Duggery
Aaron Elkins
Reviews about «Where there's a will»

Discussion, reviews of the book Where there's a will and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.