But of what?
Christopher slowed and drew alongside it. He rolled down his window and stuck out his arm in a half wave, half salute. An arm emerged from the driver’s side of the police vehicle, returning the gesture.
As Christopher passed, he reached out and slapped palms with the officer. Tucker caught the flash of a folded bill pass hands.
The tourist surcharge.
The Rover rolled onward.
“We made it,” Anya said.
“Wait,” Christopher warned, his eyes studying the side mirror. “I have to make sure I paid him enough. Too much, he could get suspicious and come after us. Too little, he might be offended and hassle us.”
Thirty seconds passed.
“He’s not moving. I think we’re okay.”
Everyone relaxed. Kane hopped back into the seat, his tail wagging as if all this was great fun.
“Three more miles,” Christopher announced.
“Three miles to what?” Bukolov grumbled. “I wish you two would tell us what the hell is going on.”
“Three miles, then we’ll have to get off the highway and wait for nightfall,” Tucker explained. Though he was no happier than the doctor at being kept in the dark about what would happen from there.
As that marker was reached, Christopher turned, bumped the Rover over the shoulder, and dipped down a steep slope of sand and rock. As it leveled out, he coasted to a stop in the lee of a boulder that shielded them from the road. They sat quietly, listening to the Rover’s engine tick tick tick as it cooled.
Within minutes, the sun faded first into twilight, then into darkness.
“That didn’t take long,” Anya whispered.
“Such is the desert, miss. In an hour, it will be twenty degrees cooler. By morning, just above freezing. By midday, boiling hot again.”
Tucker and Christopher grabbed binoculars, walked west a hundred yards, and scaled the side of a kopje. They lay flat on their bellies atop the hill and scanned the four miles of open ground between them and the border.
A deadly no-man’s-land.
It seemed too far to sneak across, especially because of—
“There!” Christopher pointed to the strobe of airplane lights in the dark sky. “Namibian Air Force spotter. Each night the guerrillas do what we are doing, only in reverse. They use the cover of darkness to sneak into South Africa, where they have supporters here that provide supplies and ammunition.”
Tucker watched the plane drone along the border until it finally faded into the darkness. “How many are there? How often do they pass?”
“Many. About every ten minutes.”
It didn’t seem possible to cross that open ground in such a short time.
“And what happens when they catch you crossing?” Tucker asked.
“The spotter planes are equipped with door-mounted Chinese miniguns. Capable of firing six thousand rounds per minute. The Namibian Air Force averages three kills a night along the long border. When we go across, you will see the wreckage of many trucks whose drivers timed their run poorly.”
“Here’s hoping our timing is better,” Tucker said.
“Tonight, timing does not matter. We just need to find a rabbit.” Upon that cryptic note, Christopher rolled to his feet. “We must be ready and in position.”
But ready for what?
Back behind the wheel, Christopher set out with the Rover’s headlights doused. Milky moonlight bathed the dunes and kopjes. Farther out, the Groot Karas Mountains appeared as a black smudge against the night sky.
Christopher kept the Rover to a pace no faster than a brisk walk, lest the tires create a dust wake. Christopher steered the Rover into a narrow trough between a pair of dunes, keeping mostly hidden. After a mile, they emerged beside a line of scrub-covered kopjes.
Crawling forward, Christopher drove alongside the row of hillocks until they ended. He then parked in the shelter of the last kopje, camouflaged against its rocky flank.
Only open flat ground lay ahead.
“Now we wait,” Christopher said.
“For what?” Tucker asked.
“For a rabbit to run.”
8:22 P.M.
Tucker held the binoculars fixed to his face. He had switched places with Anya, taking the passenger seat, so that he had a sweeping view of the open land ahead. Through the scope, he picked out the blasted wreckage of unlucky smugglers and guerrillas. Most were half buried in the roll of the windswept dunes.
Then off to the northwest, he caught a wink in the distance.
He stiffened. “Movement,” he whispered.
Christopher leaned next to him, also using binoculars. “What do you see?”
“Just a glint of something—moonlight on glass, maybe.”
They waited tensely. Christopher had finally revealed his plan a few minutes ago. Tucker no longer believed the young man had held off telling him as some sort of insurance plan against being abandoned. He had kept silent because his plan was pure insanity.
But they were committed now.
No turning back.
“I see it,” Christopher said. “It is definitely a vehicle—a pickup truck. And he’s gaining speed. Here, Tucker, this is our rabbit.”
Run, little rabbit, run . . .
Through his binoculars, Tucker watched the pickup careen at breakneck speeds, heading toward South Africa. No wonder Christopher had picked an area regularly frequented by guerrillas. For his plan to work, they needed traffic.
Illegal traffic, in this case.
“If the spotters are in the area,” Christopher warned, “it won’t be long now.”
The rebel truck continued to sprint, trying to reach the highway on the South African side. Tucker no longer needed his binoculars to track its zigzagging race through the dunes.
It had covered a mile when Christopher whispered, “There, to the south!”
Lights blinked in the sky. A Namibian spotter plane streaked like a hunting hawk across the foothills on the far side, going after the fleeing rabbit. It dove, picking up speed, drawn by the truck’s dust plume. Soon the plane was flying seventy yards off the desert floor. On its current course, it would sweep past their kopje, where they hid.
“Time to get ready,” Christopher whispered. “Buckle up and hold on.”
“This is madness!” Bukolov barked.
“Be quiet, Abram!” Anya ordered.
“Any moment now . . .” Tucker mumbled.
Suddenly the plane streaked past their position and was gone.
Christopher shifted into gear and slammed the accelerator. The Rover lurched forward and began bumping over the terrain.