Time
Rift
Chapter
1 : Excerpt
Trisha looked out
the window as the small plane moved down the auxiliary field and lifted
off in spite of the seemingly tangled mess strewn on the right side of
two major runways. From her vantage point inside the ship, Trisha
Holden could see the entire airport. Planes were crookedly out of line
only on one side of two of its major runways. It was almost as if they
were playing follow the leader. She could see some of the damaged planes
being moved to empty hangers, on the far end of the tarmac, in order to
clear the field for the incoming planes. It was a strange sight to say
the least, and Trisha couldn't help but wonder why the planes were so disarrayed,
instead of being lined up, as they normally would be, and safely tucked
within their assigned gates ready to take on passengers.
From what she overhead
from the pilots milling about the concourse, as she waited to board her
plane, even the pilots involved in the mishap weren't absolutely certain
as to what caused them to skid off the runway. All they knew was that they
did. She remembered them saying that it seemed as if the runway moved
as they were landing their planes. Really, she thought. They actually said
that? They must have been seeing things.
She heard one of
the passengers saying that "The pilots could have sworn the runways moved
sort of like a roller coaster just as they were touching down, and as they
did so, the strange effect took complete control of the landing. Each pilot
tried desperately to regain control, but they were unable to do so until
the planes were actually off the runway. At first they all believed the
shimmering effect on the runways was like that of massive heat waves, rising
one after another off the concrete, as it does on hot, humid, sunny days.
It wasn't until their wheels touched down, did they realize something else
was going on beneath their plane, and said they actually felt the ground
beneath them shifting. If what they say is true," she added, "it's
no wonder that so many pilots missed the runway."
Trisha had wondered
at the time, what the passenger was talking about, and what would cause
anyone to make a comment like that. She thought the statements coming from
the pilots were strange, and what was even stranger to her was the fact
that their comments were made within earshot of worried passengers. Passengers
who felt that they had narrowly escaped being seriously hurt or that something
even more catastrophic could have happened. Well, Trisha's thoughts
continued, they could be right. All the planes could have crashed or exploded
when they landed. But thankfully that didn't happen. The passengers
were only shaken upÖnothing more.
Even now, as she
flew away from the airport she still couldn't get the real meaning of the
pilots' comments out of her mind. Did they know something that she didn't
know and were keeping mum about it or were they just as in the dark about
it as she was? Or, which was far more important, was there really a problem?
A problem that could be far more devastating than it appeared to be at
the time. If so, what are the "powers that be" going to do about it?
Trisha looked up
and away from the activities on the ground and beyond. In the distance
the sporadic belching of Mauna Loa and Kilauea, against the mountain ranges
and lush-green vegetation, captivated her. As long as 'Pele's' anger is
contained we have nothing to worry about. But she couldn't help hoping
that when Kilauea sputtered in an angry, reddish/orange eruption that she
might be around to see its fiery red hot lava flow down along the side
of the mountain ó but from a safe, really safe, distance. She smiled inwardly
thinking about that aspect, as the inter-island plane continued its flight
over the various islands in the Hawaiian chain, bringing her closer to
Maui and home.
She strained to catch
a glimpse below as her plane closed in on Pearl Harbor and when the plane
circled over Pearl, as it did on a regular basis, a pensive look crossed
Trisha's face. She stared down on the Memorial where over two thousand
men were entombed. She watched, mesmerized, as drop by drop, oil seeped
to the surface from the watery grave below, perpetuating the minor oil
slick, which began its odyssey more than over fifty years before and she
shivered slightly as goose-bumps crept over her. Brushing aside a tear,
Trisha looked away.
* * *
The small plane made
its final approach to the landing field at Maui. Trisha saw her father
waiting patiently for her arrival. She waved furiously at him even though
he couldn't see her. When her plane's wheels touched down and taxied up
to the hanger, an anxious Joe Holden rushed towards it.
"You're late," he
said as he hugged, kissed his daughter, and then grabbed her bag.
"Just a little,"
she answered.
"More than three
and a half hours," he admonished.
"Couldn't be helped,"
she answered smiling at her father's frowning face.
"Why, what happened?"
he asked.
"Oh, some sort of
fluke about the pilots missing the landing strip."
"What?" he asked,
stopping in the middle of the field, and staring at her.
"Dad, we can't stay
here. C'mon, I'll tell you as soon as we get to the Jeep."
With his arm tightly
around his daughter's shoulders, Joe Holden guided her back toward his
waiting Jeep. Having settled into the vehicle Joe waited for his daughter
to explain her comment.
"Well," he said,
"I'm waiting."
"I guess it had been
happening periodically all day long. But the first incident apparently
was the worse," she said, pausing to look at her father, his frown had
deepened considerably. Catching her breath, she continued, "Several of
the pilots claimed that the landing field shifted just as their wheels
touched down and that was why they had skidded off the field, stopping
just short of hitting the concourse where all the people were standing,
transfixed as they stared out of the windows, frozen in their tracks, watching
the planes heading toward them, unable to move away, unable to protect
themselves, waiting for the crash that never happened."
"What! Were the pilots
drunk?"
"No, Dad," Trisha
laughed. "They weren't drunk. Since I don't know what really happened,
all I could think of was that it could have been some sort of a virus,
which affected their equilibrium. The strangest part is that not all of
the pilots were affected. It appeared to be happening only during specific
times of the day and only to those who had been eating lunch at the local
pub the past several days. But what that had to do with any of it, I couldn't
say. Needless to say that aspect has been investigated by the local authorities
to see if there was a connection, and apparently their conclusions were
that the pub had nothing to do with any of it. Still, the effect on the
pilots was only intermittent even if it appeared to be a day long affair,
so it couldn't have been a budding epidemic now, could it?"
"No, I don't think
so," Joe said slowly, shaking his head, "but something must have caused
them to miss the landing strips. What did the authorities do about it?"
"Since enough of
the pilots were affected, not only the pilots, but an investigation of
the planes involved was undertaken and as far as I know is still going
on. Guess it will take several days, weeks even, before they really know
what the cause was, but in the meantime, the flights were canceled. The
landing strips and planes were checked. The mechanics thought maybe the
altimeters were off calibration, but that wasn't it. No one could find
a reason for the mishaps, it wasn't the pilots, the planes, the airstrips
or the pubs, so they decided to let the planes take off and here I am."
"Did the wheels collapse
when the planes landed?" Joe asked.
"Don't know, Dad,
I wasn't on any of those planes when they landed at that airport, just
on the one that took off. Why" she asked, looking at him curiously.
Joe fell silent
for a moment. She thought he didn't hear her. Then just before she raised
the question again, he started the engine and said, "Somehow, I don't think
I like what happened. It doesn't bode right. There is something else going
on. Mark my words. This isn't the end of it, I am sure of it."
"Oh, Dad, don't be
so silly. Everything is fine, see," she said as she held out her arms and
turned around as best as she could in her seat for his inspection.
"Nothing happened,"
she giggled, "except for the pilots unable to land their planes on their
moving landing strip, but it's not likely to happen again. I'm sure the
authorities will see to that."
"Say what you want,
Honey, but I don't like it," he said, as his frown deepened. "There is
more to this than we know. Something is going on that we're not privy to
and we are not about to be at least not for now," he added solemnly, as
he drove away from the airport and headed towards home.
* * *
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