Callahan's flight suit was soaked through, sweat was running down his face and neck down into his t-shirt, and the sandwiches he'd eaten five hours ago were long gone. His hands were soaked, too, and his grip on the stick was at best tenuous now; Chapman was in back helping wrap steri-pads on another badly burned firefighter, leaving him alone upfront. He checked VOR 1 and re-checked his intercept angle, heading for the Coffee Creek Volunteer Fire Department landing pad for the fifth time in as many hours.
And still, he couldn't get C-Med out of his mind. The white snake seemed to be with him constantly now, like a feeling he just couldn't shake.
He double-checked his altitude as the 412 flew through another wall of bright orange smoke, and he looked at the clock on the panel before he shook his head. 'Almost midnight,' he said to himself, 'and these clouds look like high noon..."
The Huey flew out of the smoke and Callahan could just see Coffee Creek ahead when Chapman crawled back into the left seat. Callahan looked at the kid and shook his head; he was covered in blood and soot and now he had the same hollow look in his eyes that he'd seen in the eyes of pilots he'd flown with in 'Nam.
"How ya doing, Ace?" he said after the kid got his helmet back on.
"Man, I didn't know anything could be this intense."
"Well, if it's any consolation, this is the worst flying I've been through since '68."
"Man, this is some mean shit."
"Well, like I said, how are you doing?"
Chapman looked at Callahan, then at the mess in back. "I don't know, man. I just don't know."
"Well, eight hours in the rack and you'll know what to do."
"What to do, sir?"
"You're thinking about calling it quits, right?"
"Uh, Hell no, sir. I'm just tired, that's all."
Callahan tried not to smile. "Well, we're both over the limit, so let's grab some rack time once we get back to Center."
"Is there anyone there to help clean out the rear, sir?"
"How bad is it?"
"Blood is two inches deep in places."
Callahan nodded then switched to COMM 2: "Cat 1 to Cat 3 on 2."
"Cat 3, go."
"20?"
"Landing at Center in five."
"Got it. We're going to need a cleanup crew, we've got a lot of blood on board."
"We do too. I'll see what we can muster-up. Our staff is still pretty thin up here, so don't expect much. How far out are you?"
"Going to drop at the Creek, then come on down for some rack time."
"Okay. We'll be waiting for you here."
"Cat 1 out." Then he turned to Chapman. "Take the stick for a second, would you?" He pulled out a hand towel from a pouch on his leg and wiped his hands, then he handed the cloth to Chapman. "My helicopter," he added.
"You got it. Thanks." Chapman tried to clean his hands but there was just too much dried blood on them - and he tightened up when he realized what it was. "Was it like this over there?"
"Yeah, for ten months straight. I got there just before Tet cooked off."
"That was the thing in '68?"
"It was indeed," Callahan sighed, stunned but not really surprised that one of the defining times of his life had become so casually - what? - forgotten?
He lined up on the pasture behind the fire department's station, then made his flare - as close to the row of waiting ambulances as he dared - then he looked over to the Red Cross canteen and saw that it had closed down for the night. He sighed again, then waited for the signal that the pad was clear and that they could take off. A few minutes later they were airborne and headed for the depot at Trinity Center, Chapman so tired he was about to doze off, and that too made him think about '68.
Don McCall was finishing up his training to move over to the S-76, but Callahan regretted that move now. McCall would be perfect to head up operations in Redding, so he'd have to have a talk with him...soon.
Next, his thoughts drifted to Fujiko, then to a new project under development near Fisherman's Wharf - then he looked out the windshield and saw trees ahead...
...too late...?
He chopped the throttle and pulled up on the collective - effectively stopping in mid-air - and Chapman woke in a start, reached for the stick...
"I've got it," Callahan said as he recovered and began climbing again.
"What happened?"
"I started daydreaming, stopped scanning, and I very nearly screwed the pooch. That's what happened."
"Man, I know the feeling. I don't know how you're keeping your eyes open."
"By daydreaming, Ace. That's the first stop on the way to falling asleep on the stick."
"Yessir."
He landed ten minutes later, and a ground crew was waiting for them - then he saw Frank standing by a Ford pickup waving at them. He waved back, then shot him a thumb's up.
He left the kid to supervise the cleanup and walked over to Bullitt and the Ford. "So, you were listening in again?"
"No, not really. I figured it out a while ago; we're sub-contracting to the Forest Service, right? So DD and I got with them and worked something out. This group is from a local 4-H club, all of 'em want to be pilots too, so they want in on the action."
"They're high school kids?"
"Every swingin' dick out there, yup."
"Hmm..."
"Uh-oh...I know that look. What are you thinking?"
"They want experience and we need people in back to help load and take care of the wounded. Sounds like a match made in heaven to me."
Bullitt shook his head. "Let me check with their supervisor first, okay?"
"Sure. Just see if you can find me three with first aid training to ride in the morning. Maybe we could rotate them during the day, get all of them some air time..."
"Okay. From the look of things, I'd say you guys need a cot before you do anything else. We have those tents over there for now."
"Anything to eat or drink around here?"
"I picked up burgers at Carl's Jr. Some Cokes, too. Two sacks in each tent, ready to go."
"You're a lifesaver, Frank."
"Just trying to help - wish I knew how to fly; I'd be up there with you guys if I could."
+++++
Callahan stayed up north for a week, and he got to know Jeanie Post well enough to ask her out on a date.
"You mean, like a real date?" she asked, blushing intensely.
"Yeah, the real deal," Callahan said. "Dinner and a movie, the whole nine yards."
"Well, sure, why not? Any idea when?"
"Saturday okay? I can pick you up here."
"Here? You mean, here, as in this landing pad?"
"Yeah. Unless you're afraid of flying."
"No, not really, but my boy will be so disappointed..."
"Why?"