Название: ÐÑропорт / Ðirport
Автор: Ðртур Хейли
Издательство: ИздательÑтво ÐСТ
Жанр: Современная зарубежная литература
Серия: Легко читаем на английÑком
isbn: 978-5-17-121013-7
isbn:
Keith Bakersfeld thumbed his microphone. “Braniff eight twenty-nine, make an immediate right turn, heading zero-nine-zero.” At moments like this voices should stay calm. Keith’s voice was high-pitched and betrayed his nervousness. The Braniff captain obeyed instructions. When a controller gave the order “immediate,” pilots obeyed instantly and argued later.
In another minute or so the Braniff flight would have to be turned again, and so would Eastern, which was at the same level. As part of the game, pieces had to be raised or lowered while they still moved forward, yet none must come closer than three miles laterally or a thousand feet vertically from another, and none must go over the edge of the board. And while all of it happened, the thousands of passengers, anxious for their journeys to end, had to sit in their airborne seats—and wait.
Behind him Keith could hear Wayne Tevis trying to raise the Air Force KC-135 on radio again. Still no response. The position on the blip showed the pilot was doing the right thing—following exactly the instructions he had been given before the radio failure happened.
The Air Force flight, Keith knew, had originated in Hawaii and come non-stop after mid-air refueling over the West Coast, its destination near Washington. But west of the Continental Divide there had been an engine failure, and afterward electrical trouble, causing the airplane commander to elect an unscheduled landing at Smoky Hill, Kansas. At Smoky Hill, however, the KC-135 was diverted to Lincoln International. It was soon afterward that radio failure had been added to the pilot’s other troubles.
Most times military aircraft stayed clear of civil airports. But in a storm like tonight’s help was asked and given without question.
Keith Bakersfeld was trying hard to maintain his concentration, to retain a mental picture of his sector and every aircraft in it. It required instant memorizing—identifications, positions, types of aircraft, speeds, altitudes, sequence of landing…a configuration which was never still. A controller’s nightmare was to “lose the picture,” a situation where an overtaxed brain rebelled and everything went blank. It happened occasionally, even to the best.
Keith had been the best. Until a year ago, he was one whom colleagues turned to when pressures built to unreason.
Now, colleagues shielded him as best they could, though there was a limit to how much any man could help another and do his own job, too.
Keith was on his own; Tevis, the supervisor, had propelled himself and his high stool across the room to check another controller. Keith’s mind clicked out decisions. Turn Braniff left, Air Canada right, Eastern through a hundred and eighty degrees. It was done; on the radar screen, blips were changing direction. He would not lose the picture; not tonight, not now.
There was a reason for not doing so; a secret he had shared with no one, not even Natalie, his wife. Only Keith Bakersfeld, and Keith alone, knew that this was the last time he would ever face a radarscope or stand a watch. Today was his last day with air traffic control. It would be over soon.
It was also the last day of his life.
“Take a break, Keith.” It was the tower watch chief’s voice. Keith had not seen him come in.
Keith knew at once why he was being relieved. There was still a crisis, and they didn’t trust him.
Wayne Tevis leaned forward. “Lee will take over, Keith.” He motioned to another controller who had just returned from his own work break—a scheduled one.
Keith nodded, though he remained in place and continued to give radio instructions to aircraft while the new man got the picture. It usually took several minutes for one controller to hand over to another. The man coming in had to study the radar display, letting the over-all situation build in his mind.
Coupled with tense mental sharpness was another requirement—a controlled, studied calmness at all times on duty. The two requirements—contradictory in terms of human nature—were exhausting mentally.
“Okay,” the new man said, “I have the picture.”
Keith slid out from his seat, disconnecting his headset as the controller took his place.
The tower chief told Keith, “Your brother said he might drop around later,”
Keith nodded as he left the radar room.
Air traffic emergencies of one kind or another occurred several times a day at Lincoln International, as they did at any major airport. Category one was the most serious, but was rarely invoked, since it signaled an actual crash. Category two was notification of imminent danger to life, or physical damage. Category three, as now, was a general warning to airport emergency facilities to stand by; they might be needed, or they might not. For controllers, however, any type of emergency involved additional pressures and aftereffects.
Keith entered the controllers’ locker room which adjoined the radar control room. The small cubicle with a single window had three walls of metal lockers, and a wooden bench down the center. No one else was in the locker room, and Keith reached for the light switch and turned it off. Enough light came in through the window for him to see.
Then, opening his locker, he took out the lunch which Natalie had packed before his departure from home this afternoon. As he poured coffee from a Thermos, he wondered if Natalie had put a note in with his meal, or, if not a note, some item she had clipped from a newspaper or a magazine. She often did one of both, hoping, he supposed, that it might cheer him. She had worked hard at doing that, right from the beginning of his trouble.
More recently, however, there had been fewer notes and clippings. Perhaps Natalie, too, had finally lost heart.
A picture of Natalie was taped to the inside of his locker door. He had brought it here three years ago. The picture showed Natalie in a bikini. She was seated on a rock, laughing, one slim hand held above her eyes to shield them from the sun. Her light brown hair streamed behind; her small face showed the freckles which always appeared in summer. They had been on a motoring holiday in Canada, and for once their children, Brian and Theo, had been left behind in Illinois, with Mel and Cindy. The holiday proved to be one of the happier times that Keith and Natalie had ever known.
Perhaps, Keith thought, it wasn’t a bad thing to be remembering it tonight.
Pushed in behind the photo was a folded paper. It was one of the notes he had been thinking about, which Natalie put occasionally in his lunch pail. This clipping was about continuing experiments, by U.S. geneticists. Human sperm, it reported, could now be fast frozen and stored indefinitely. When thawed, it could be used for fertilization of women at any time.
Natalie had written:
It appears you can have babies merely by opening a refrigerator door.
I’m glad we had our ration
With love and passion.
She had been trying then; still trying desperately to return their lives… the two of them; and as a family… to the way they had been before.
Mel had joined forces, too, attempting with Natalie, to induce his brother to fight free from the depression which engulfed him totally.
Even then a part of Keith had wanted to respond, to respond to love with love himself. But the effort failed, because there was no feeling or emotion left within himself, only remorse and СКАЧАТЬ