Morning found the three of us swimming so hard, I think we were churning instead of swimming. When we finished we were breathing hard, but feeling refreshed. Jan had not come home, so she had obviously found a friend to go home with.
About the time we were eating breakfast, a car drove up and Jan got out. She came in smiling and said, "I'll be ready in a few minutes. Save some breakfast for me."
I needed to wander around with the Homeland group today, so I would have to drive. Wanda said she wanted to go shopping after work, so she was going to drive. Jan asked Wanda, "Can I go with you? I haven't been in a store in ages."
We were split into three ways, just like Steak and Shake chili. After checking in with my crew and Wanda in her strict office persona, I took off for the waterfront.
I was given a tour of their facilities and boarded a ship with them. When a ship comes in, the first person that boards is a person that represents Immigration. If there is sickness on board, a doc goes along to check out what it is. The next group on board is Customs. They do a preliminary check before the cranes begin lifting the containers off the ship.
They have it down to a science that works for them. As the containers come off, Customs crews break the seals, do a partial inspection, then reseal the container. It gets another check that is a little more thorough in what is called a bonded warehouse, but there is just too much volume to be able to look at every single item.
We walked down the docks to see what was being loaded onto ships. A Customs man was checking vehicle serial numbers and titles for cars, trucks, and old school buses being loaded onto a ship that was more like a ferry than a cargo ship. Everything was routine.
I made it back to the office around two, just in time to find a huge stack of papers in my inbox, plus a long list of e-mails. I dug into the incident reports to find that most were hang nail variety, with only one escapee that ran in front of a speeding tractor-trailer. The feds wouldn't have to worry about him anymore.
E-mails were equally as easy until I got to one from John that just popped up. It said, "Call me, secure. John."
Now what? I erased the e-mail then went to the station where I asked
to use
Bobby's office. She was downstairs at the range. I needed to go there
too.
I called and told John to hang up and wait for the call. I used the secure phone and called him.
John asked, "Are you alone, no one can hear you?"
"I'm in Bobby's office with the door closed, I'm alone."
"Good, this is for your ears and only your ears."
"Go ahead, John."
"You have to make a trip to Alaska. A bush pilot will take you into the Northwest Territory where you will be transported by another small aircraft to pick up a guy the Mounties have. This has to be done the right way, since you can't bring this guy back across the border the regular way. You have to bring him back by air, through Alaska. The Mounties don't want him and they didn't have a chance or a reason to shoot him, so now it's our problem."
I could hear John take a deep breath.
"Arm yourself heavily. When you get there, buy some clothes that you will need for the trail up there. You can't get what you need in Florida. Have Sarah give you a trip credit card. You don't have a budget, just don't be stupid."
"Now the fun part. A lot of people do not want this man to be in custody. They would prefer him dead or free. Either way, you are between him and whatever his fate will be. If he gives you too much shit, shoot him. Just leave him out in the woods and nature will take care of him."
"Your plane, or our plane as it has come to be, is busy, so I want you to call your local guy and get him to fly you up there. He has to stay there so you can get back. Do not, and I say again, do not list this man on any passenger manifest. When you get the guy, you'll know why. I just posted a secure file to your site. Pull it down and read it then erase the file. Call me when the prisoner is in your lockup or whatever the conclusion is."
This was different. We were not allowed to go get prisoners in Canada. The Mounties would deliver them to our door. Wonder what this is about. I took Sarah into the supply closet with me and checked out an MP5, and a 308 set up for long range. Both were breakdowns that would store in a case so I put them into a single aluminum suitcase, with some extra ammo and magazines for the MP5. We did the sign out for the credit card, and I just knew I was forgetting something. I waited for Bobby to come up and I told her that John called and I would be gone for four or five days and I would call her.
Back in my office, I asked Wanda to come in. "Call our air charter. I want a fast plane to Anchorage. The pilot will have to stay over and wait for me. Use this credit card number so it will be part of the trip. Tell them I need a pilot that can keep his mouth shut. And last, but as always, I'm going home to change, then head to the airport. I would like to leave in about an hour."
I was on my way to the elevator when I remembered what I was missing. I went into the station and signed out a set of waist and ankle chains. I also brought along an extra set of cuffs just for fun. Now the nagging feeling was gone.
At home, I changed into jeans, T-shirt, and a flannel shirt that I had. I put in my armor and a little bag of toiletries, knowing the clothes I would need would be bulky. It was early summer, but that meant it was only freezing up there right now. Not frozen solid.
Out at the airport, I was greeted at the charter office by the cowboy guy and the big breasted babe. He said, "We'll take you up. We have a friend up there we can visit with. This will be nice for us and make some money too."
We took off and began the long flight across country. We landed for fuel in mid-Missouri then flew to a small field in Montana where we refueled again. That Glenda person had made up a bunch of meatloaf sandwiches that hit the spot. I was going to have to meet this Glenda person.
In Montana, the cowboy suggested we layover and rest a little as it was very late. Since we had gotten such a late start, we would have to fly all night and he would prefer not to do that. He said, "We can get a room down the road or just nap in the plane. If we sleep for about four hours, we'll get up there reasonably early in the morning.
I was anxious to get this one done, but the bush pilot wouldn't be available in the middle of the night and I wouldn't have any stores available for clothes or equipment. Thank goodness the seats folded down to allow comfortable snoozing. We only slept about three to four hours then we were on the way again.
Next stop, Anchorage. When we were parked, I asked the two piloting the plane for a quiet chat. They sat in the plane with me so I could give them a little information. "I'm getting a man that is wanted by our government from the Canadians. This is unusual, as they normally prefer to hand them over at the border. This man is very dangerous and his associates are also very dangerous. By the time I get him here, he shouldn't be a danger to us, but when we get to Tampa, no one will ever know how he got there. He will not be listed on the plane, anywhere. Do you understand?"
Both of them nodded, agreeing without an argument.
"Now I need to find an outfitter to get some clothes, but I would like one of you to wait at operations for my bush pilot to come. I told them, "There is a man named John Stevens that will be coming for me. Just have him wait for me here."
The two were grinning so I had to ask and the cowboy answered, "That's who we want to see. We'll catch him for you and keep him here. There is a place to get clothes. The guy will buy back any stuff after you use it. Everything he sells is clean, but buy new underwear and socks."
He wrote down the address and I went outside and found a cab that was really a pick up truck, to get to this store.
The place was an old hangar filled to the brim with camping supplies, bobsleds, dog harness, and all types of clothes. An old bearded guy asked how he could help, then asked what I was going to be doing. I gave him what I knew, but said, "Even though I'm going to be scheduled to fly everywhere, I'd like to be prepared in the event I get caught out in the weather. Cover me for the next ten days, I hope it's not that long, but I want to be safe."
The man loaded me up. He only gave me two pairs of long johns as he said, "You won't have a chance to change or bathe anyway. Take extra socks so your feet don't rot, but your balls will just have to suffer." He chuckled evilly as he said that.
We stuffed everything into a big duffel bag. He asked if I needed a gun. I showed my Glock and said I had a rifle. He just nodded and said, "Up in the territory, there are some really bad people. They will be starting to move around this time of year so be careful."
My pickup truck taxi driver was still waiting, so we rode back to the airport. Inside I found the charter pilots and another guy. He was introduced as John Stevens. They said they had just ordered food, so I ordered as well, along with a beer. I wouldn't get another one soon. The couple were very friendly and I finally had to stick my hand out and ask, "I'm Chuck Johnson. You two have flown me all all over the place. Can you tell me your names?"
"Sorry, thought you knew us," the cowboy said shaking my hand. "I'm Steve Sharp, and this is my wife Sue. Flying is sort of our hobby and we take flights fairly often to keep proficient and to use as mini-vacations from our pile of kids. I love 'em dearly, but a day or so away is always good. While you're gone a friend of ours from Seattle is coming up to visit with us a while. Our friend Dewey and John here go way back."
I asked John, "I was told you might only take me part way. Do you know if I have another pilot or will it be you all the way?"
"Me all the way, Chuck. I don't have a problem going into Canada. I've worked with you government guys before. My plane is prepped and ready. As soon as we eat, we can be on the way."
As we were eating, he let me in on one of the problems this time of year. "The lakes are going to have a lot of ice on them, but it will be weak. Everywhere we need to land for fuel will have to be on a river where the water flows and there's no ice flowing with it. Where you're going is going to be all right as there are two rivers and a good airfield. I ordered a bunch of sandwiches and we'll have three thermoses of coffee. I have a couple of milk jugs to pee in, so we're fixed."
I had not thought about the need to pee in-flight.
I changed clothes in the restroom to be ready for the flight. The hard part was putting the boot on my fake leg. Hopefully, everything worked fine. John said I wouldn't need the coat in the plane, but to keep it close.
We rode in an airport vehicle to his plane, which was in the water. It had two big pontoons that kept it afloat. The plane kind of made me nervous, but then, these guys didn't want to die either. I loaded my duffel bag and gun case. John asked about the gun case and I told him. He suggested I put one of them together as you never knew when you would need one. He said, "I have a 308 lever action in the plane, but it's only good for about two hundred yards on a good day. Yours looks like a five hundred yard gun."
When everything was tied down and I was buckled up, Steve was helping and untied the line holding the plane and put it in the pontoon. Pretty neat, the pontoons could carry extra equipment.
John started the plane, doing a bunch of things in about the same order as was done on the Lear when I helped with the checklist. John called the tower then taxied out into the waterway and headed into the wind, building speed and lifting off. We circled around to a point where he entered some numbers into a fancy Garmin 4000 something. He brought up a map of an airfield saying, "This will be our first refueling point. It's actually a river, but it's classified as an airfield. They have a thousand foot runway along the bank they keep pretty clean but we can use the river. We'll check it out first to make sure, but the ice should be clear by now."
We did make a pass and landed in the river. John attempted to call the field a couple of times but no one answered. When we tied up to the fuel dock, a beat up old pickup came out to meet us. The man who got out said, "Hey John, good to see you. Was up getting my supper when you buzzed us. Gonna have to get a radio up at the house so it will be easier on you guys. Fill it up?"
As soon as the plane was full of fuel, John paid the man in cash and we were quickly back up in the air. The man didn't ask where we were going and John didn't offer. I like these Alaskans. They mind their own business.
As it got dark, John said, "The next one will be a little tricky. The river is pretty narrow where we need to land, but we have to get down to look at the water first. Some times there's a big old log right in the middle of where we want to land. We'll see. They also have a strip we can use if we have to. There's almost enough snow still on the ground I could have used skis."
This landing was tricky. We made a pass down into a gorge with the river at the bottom. We checked and it looked clear. We had to fly out of the gorge then back in the other way again to land into the wind. This landing was a little rough. The plane buffeted around a lot in the little crosswind there was.
This place was not the same, as we did make radio contact before landing. The station operator told us not to get out of the plane as there was a pack of wolves down near the fuel docks. He told us that if we shot any, to make sure we didn't hit the fuel tanks.
When we landed, I stepped out onto the pontoon and pulled the line out to tie us to the fuel dock. John came out with his Winchester 308 and a real bright flashlight that he had clamped on the underside of the barrel. He found the eyes he was looking for and started shooting. I know he hit some as they yelped. Not a nice thing to do, but apparently the wolves had been causing problems locally.
We filled up and were gone quickly. John said, "This last little bit is only about forty-five minutes. We're not flying back tonight, so we'll just relax and we can go back in the morning. This place has a little hotel and a decent restaurant. I suggest we get a room so we can get a shower in the morning. I don't know what kind of guy you have to get, but if you need some rope, I have a bunch in the pontoon. If the guy gives me too much shit, out he goes at six thousand feet. When we're in the air, I'm the boss."
I just nodded.
We landed at the well-lighted airfield using the wheels in the pontoons. Before we set down, John said, "I hate to trust those things. If they don't work right, I could ruin a good pontoon. If we're lucky, everything will work the way it's supposed to."
We landed smoothly, with John acting like a little old lady triple checking the pontoons for scrapes and gouges.
I didn't want to check in with the Mounties until I was ready to take the prisoner. If they wanted to get rid of him bad enough, they might just hand him over to me and I'd be responsible for him immediately.
We ate a late supper and checked into a double room that had a shower room down the hall. I slept well and John did too, if you figured his snores were good sleeping.
The next morning, we were showered and fed by seven. John tended to the plane while I walked to the Mounted Police office on the airfield. It was complete with a jail. The officer in charge was very pleasant and spoke understandable French flavored English. He said, "We no have any problems, but he know we shoot. I hope you shoot quick too, because his friends are no nice. I no see any of dem, but dey be around. You watch close so you no take chance."
I looked at the prisoner and wondered what in the world he was doing way up here. The guy was an American that had decided to go to the dark side. He had become Muslim and worked with a U.S. terrorist cell before coming to Canada. He had been caught up here with explosives and maps of a Canadian oil field. They didn't know what he was doing and did not get it out of him. They didn't get a chance to shoot him, so the best they could do was to ship him out.
The man was dressed for the weather, so I chained him up with the waist and ankle chains and offered him a chance to pee. He wasn't very happy about being transported when I said, "If you pee on the plane, the pilot will personally push you out."
Bush pilots have a reputation, so he must have thought it to be true. I threw his coat over his shoulders and walked him back to the operations building. John came in with a big bag of sandwiches and the thermoses filled with coffee. He looked at the guy then said to me, "A pilot that was testing a plane said there were some men walking around down off the end of the runway. I thought you might want to check them out before we took off."
I found the Mountie from the office and told him what I heard. He pointed to an off-road four wheel vehicle and said, "Use four wheeler. Go see. Take gun. Don't go without."
I drove the four-wheeler to the plane and put the MP5 together. I put it across the handlebars and put the 308 with the sling over my shoulder. I drove way out to the side of the cleared area to the end of the runway, then up a steep grade as if I were an airstrip worker. When I was above the field a little ways, I could see down to where three men were standing watching the field. I used the scope on the 308 to look them over. All three were Near Eastern in appearance, but they could have just as easily been natives up here. They did however have an interesting tube I couldn't identify, along with what appeared to be an RPG. I knew what those were. They had some rifles with scopes sitting against a log as well.
My first thought was to just shoot them. I wondered how the Mounties would feel about that. What I needed was to be invisible, but to draw fire so I could defend myself.
There was a large tree that had been cut down, but not cut up. I found a good place to brace the 308 to shoot. It wasn't a long shot, about three hundred yards. But I would have to be steady and I would want to remain still after I shot. The guy that bothered me was the guy with the tube thing. It was probably a shoulder-fired surface to air missile or SAM as they were called. That wouldn't do John's plane any good. If it was a regular heat seeking SAM it wouldn't find the prop driven airplane easily so he could be some form of shoulder fired rocket meant for helicopters and small aircraft.
Oh well, why not fire first, it will be self-defense fast enough anyway. I sighted in and practiced going from the tube guy to the RPG guy. If I were lucky, I could put both of them down before the third guy could figure out where I was.
Sniper time. There was no wind and nothing between the subjects and me. No sticks, snow, or weeds. I did what I had been trained to do, sighted, breathed, and squeezed. Without checking to see the hit, I moved to the RPG guy and fired. I swung back to see the third guy who was sighting up toward me, but to my left. I sighted, breathed, and squeezed. I checked each of the downed men through the scope and lay still for over five minutes. That's what a sniper does, he waits, he makes sure.
I went to the four-wheeler and drove around and back down to them. I didn't see them before, but the three guys had some nice four-wheelers parked on the other side of a dirt mound. The tube was some kind of a missile, so I picked it up, along with the RPG and stored them on the four-wheeler I was using. I checked the men for weapons and found a revolver on each of them. I picked up each rifle and fired three rounds up in the air letting the shell casings from the AK-47s kick out as if they were shooting in the direction I had been. I stored the AKs and rode the four-wheeler back up to where I had made the shots from, and picked up my brass.
I rode back to the Mountie station and dumped the AKs, the missile, and the RPG on the Mountie's desk. He said, "I hear shots, you okay?"
"The men who had these are all dead. They shot at me, so I shot back. You might want to go get their four-wheelers, they look really nice."
"I go tomorrow. Tonight, animals take care of mess. Less work. You should go home now."
Strange place.
I went to find John who was watching my chained guy with his Winchester. I told him I took care of the runway obstructions and we could go.
He nodded. When we loaded up the plane, I used my other handcuffs to cuff the prisoner's feet to the floor so he couldn't raise his feet up and kick. I buckled him in and said, "My Glock is only two feet away, I won't miss."
We were up and back down to where John had shot at the wolves. The attendant said John had shot two of them. The next leg was boring, but we had sandwiches and coffee before landing in the river. As we were filling up, a plane came down to look at the river, or so we thought. It went back up and circled then came back down going too fast to land and too close to the side of the river we were on. I yelled at John, "Get down, stay down."
I reached into the back of the plane for my MP5, flipped it on full auto, and made ready to spray the air where the plane should be in a second. You have to shoot in front of the plane to hit it. You let the plane fly into the fire. That lesson was learned in Korea way back in the fifties.
John hollered, "They're shooting at us, watch out."
As the plane came almost parallel with us, I opened up emptying a full thirty round magazine in front of the plane. I heard the hits and even saw the windscreen split. The man firing from the plane wasn't very good and shot way over us. I had seated another magazine and had flipped it to single fire; I aimed and fired at the wings, hoping to hit a tank.
I didn't need to worry about it. The engine on the plane began sputtering, cutting out, and the pilot was trying to turn the plane around to land in the river. He was turning in a steep bank when the plane nosed over and went straight down into the swift moving river.
The attendant said, "Bring that rifle and come with me. Let's see if we can save anyone." As I went to the boat, the man had run toward, he looked at me and asked, "You only got one leg?"
I smiled, "Just one. It works pretty good though."
"Damn right it does. Come on, let's go see what we can."
He had a powerful boat that overcame the swift current and got us out to where the plane was sticking out of the water. We could see into the cabin easily, and it looked like the three people in the plane were all dead, or wished they were. The attendant tied up to the plane and opened the cockpit door. He shook each person, pulled a nice AK from the plane and handed it to me, and then he methodically went through their pockets, handing me the various items. The men each had an automatic pistol and the three had a lot of cash on them. I told the attendant, "Look closer, they have to have had more than one rifle. Can you see behind that back seat?"
The man actually went into the plane by pulling the pilot out of the plane and pushing him into the river. He reached over the seat and came back with two more rifles, then went back and came back up with two tubes, two more missiles. These were bad people. When the attendant got back in the boat, he said, "I'll push those guys out later and let the river take care of them. I might be able to salvage a couple grand in parts off that plane. It's a nice one. I haven't seen it or that pilot before though. I'll call in the numbers to see if it's real. Too bad those guys had such a hard time landing, but it happens up here. Let's see how much cash they had on them and split it."
These folks do live by different rules up here.
This was still Canadian area so there was no sense in questioning anything. We took the loot back to shore and counted it out. There was seventeen thousand in U.S. Currency. We split it down the middle and I gave him the AKs and handguns, but took the SAMs with me.
Our passenger was happy to get out and stretch his legs. He peed and I put him back in the plane. I told him next stop was Anchorage. I think he got the idea he wasn't a well loved person right now. His Al Qaeda buddies would just as soon off him as worry about him.
After checking something in the engine compartment, John said, "We're going to have to stay over here tonight. I have to have a part flown in. It'll be here tonight or in the morning, so we'll use the field bunkhouse. You can lock this guy up pretty good can't you?"
"No sweat, he won't go anywhere."
The part came in late, flown in by a kid that didn't look old enough to drive yet, much less fly a bush plane. He was typical of the North Country mentality and wanted to use our prisoner for target practice.
After getting the part installed in the plane the next morning, we loaded up and took off for Anchorage.
John said, "You remind me of your buddy who flew you up here. He and his old lady are really something. He and I had a run in with a bunch of bush outlaws that ran around up here in the territory, robbing and killing. Between him and his lady, they took care of the bad guys real quick. He'll get a kick out of hearing how you knocked a plane right out of the sky."
"Ah, John, this, ah, never happened. This flight was a sightseeing flight. That's it, that's all, nothing else."
"Damn, I'd bet he would love to hear about this here and up at the airfield. I don't know what you did, but I heard three shots then a little later three sets of three. I'm bettin' the first three were the only ones that meant anything."
"Just remember, John, this trip was for sightseeing only."
"I got it, but wouldn't it have been easier to just drop him from the plane along the way?"
"Who knows," I said. "The guy may decide to tell us a little more about what they are doing up there."
We landed in Anchorage and tied up to the dock. John used the radio to call a taxi. I used my cell phone to call the local Marshal's Station to come out to pick up some ordnance that had been found.
The taxi took me to the Lear, where I strapped the guy in and shackled his ankle chain to the floor. I told him that as soon as we were in the air, I would allow him to use the bathroom. Until then to just sit tight.
Steve and Sue showed up, and I met them outside the plane. It was a good thing too, as their friend Dewey was with them. Steve asked, "Can Dewey ride with us. If he can, his wife and son will fly down to Florida and visit for a while."
I asked Dewey for his ID and he gave me his driver's license. I used my cell and called Wanda. I told her to use my passcode to check an ID. The man was clean and was considered a solid citizen.
I took Dewey around to the side of the plane and explained that if he could get on the plane and not see anything other than me, he could ride back with us. Otherwise, he should stay in Alaska.
He looked confused, so I asked, "Can you keep your mouth shut?"
He smiled and nodded, so I said, "Then look but don't see. Let's go home."
Steve and Sue had been doing a pre-flight inspection of the airplane with some ground crew. They got in the plane and took some containers from the ground people that went into the tiny galley area. Dewey and I sat down and buckled up as we watched the couple up front go through everything that needed doing to fly this thing. Sue was in the left seat this time, with Steve doing the reading. Very shortly, we were taxiing toward the active runway.
As soon as we were in the air, I went up and made coffee, then told Dewey he should go visit with the cockpit while I took the non-entity to the bathroom. The man wasn't too self-conscious, but I stayed with him right through him zipping up and washing his hands with an alcohol towel. When he was done, I locked him back up in his seat then brought him a sandwich and a cup of coffee.
Dewey was still talking to the couple up front, so I booted one of the PCs and sent an e-mail message to John. It was just two words, "In flight." About thirty seconds later, John e-mailed back "With or without." I sent "With" back to him.
Later, I sent him an e-mail that said, "Check Anchorage for found ordnance."
We were landing in Montana to refuel when John e-mailed back, "Holy shit."
While we were on the ground, I used my cell phone to call John the bush pilot. When he answered and I identified myself, he began cussing me for leaving him with those missiles to explain to the U.S. Marshals. He said "the worst part was you said I couldn't say anything. They finally said it must have been some covert thing, that's why they didn't know about you."
"Sorry, John, but I did leave you a present. Look in your toolbox behind the back seat. That should make you feel all better."
"Hang on a sec, let me look."
The phone was quiet for less than a minute then he got back on the phone, "A hell of a lot better. Thanks, I robbed you for the fancy sightseeing flight anyway, so this is even better. Now I'm happy I didn't tell them squat. Thanks, Chuck, come see me sometime. I'll show you around."
Steve and Sue pushed themselves, flying straight through. They each took a break, stretching their legs while visiting with their friend Dewey, sitting in the empty seat.
After a stop in what I found out was Columbia, Missouri, we made it back to Tampa very early in the morning. I drove the prisoner to the lockup, and afterwards went upstairs to use the duty man's PC to send John the note, "Everything is where it should be."
Before I could get a cup of coffee, my cell phone was ringing. John said, "What the fuck were you doing with SAMs.?"
"They were on a plane that was shooting at us."
"What happened to the plane?"
"The pilot had some kind of mid-air collision and the plane went down. We
found the toys on the plane."
"What happened to the pilot?"
"What pilot?"
"Oh, and the passengers?"
"What passengers?"
"I see and what's this I heard about the Canadians finding three very nice four-wheel scooters?"
"They're just lucky, I guess."
"They also found three AKs, an RPG, and another SAM."
"Man, those Canucks can find some good shit."
"You're not going to tell me are you, Chuck."
"A, this is not a secure line, and B, tell you about what?"
"Um, I'll be in Tampa the end of the week. That's next week. Kenisha will be with me. I want to take her to that restaurant we went to. Can we go together?"
"Sure, we're always up for eating."
"Oh, a team will come and pick up your man. I think he's going to Cuba. Don't know and don't care. The big C (CIA) asked for the help and we did what we do. Thanks, Chuck, good job. Glad you're back okay."
"Me too, I think I'll go home and go to bed. You should too you know."
"I'm home, I just couldn't sleep until I knew you were done. Every time we mess with those guys, something bad happens. That's why you went."
"No sweat, Boss. Let's get some sleep."
John yawned and said, "The alarm will go off in forty-five minutes, maybe I'll just make coffee."
"Go climb in bed with that sweet beauty you have. Snuggle with her and go in late."
Another yawn, "You convinced me. Talk to you later."
"Later, Boss."
I went downstairs got into the Chevy and drove home, happy to be done with another kinky job. Now what do I do with a bunch of Alaskan camping equipment? Maybe I'll just ship it back to the store owner and see what he does. I sure don't need it down here.
I quietly entered the house, and slipped into bed next to Bobby, who was snuggled to both Wanda and Jan. Jan raised her head and smiled at me, then went back to sleep. Wanda smiled and put her hand on my cheek. Bobby just scooted her butt into me and slept.
I joined her.
Primary editing by Pepere
Proofing by Sagacious