19. ESCAPING JUGROOM FORT
I glanced back across the field, and there was Geordie, thirty metres away. The Taliban bullets cracked through the air around us.
‘
Carl started to pull power. Dust and grit smacked me in the face as I turned to see the aircraft begin to wobble. The blades coned upwards. I got straight to my feet. I could just make out Carl speaking fast into his microphone and monitoring our every move. He didn’t want to hit us when he took off.
‘
He couldn’t hear me. The suspension struts lightened as he began to lift. I threw both arms out and flapped them vigorously downwards. He finally got the message and powered down. I didn’t know whether he was leaving or just turning to engage the treeline, but I wasn’t having any of it.
The dust cloud he’d thrown up was so thick I couldn’t see my own hands. I stumbled about, trying to regain my bearings.
With an ear-piercing screech, a Hellfire came in to the east of us and exploded with a mighty flash. A quarter of a second later, the pressure wave passed through my clothing. Ten seconds later I heard two deep booms, then the sound of branches splitting and plummeting to the ground. HEISAP rockets. Charlotte and Nick were taking care of the treeline.
The brown-out was still all-consuming. But it was now rippling slowly away from the aircraft in concentric rings, leaving us with a few metres of visibility inside it. The enemy gunfire from the eastern treeline had now dwindled. If we couldn’t see the Taliban, they couldn’t see us. Carl’s brown-out and the pounding from Ugly Five Two and Three had bought us a few crucial seconds.
‘Rigg, you okay?’
‘Yeah. Just tripped. Sorry.’
‘You’re not hit?’
‘Don’t think so. Can’t feel anything.’
I was astonished. They’d missed all of us.
I holstered my pistol and lunged for Mathew too. I grabbed hold of his webbing, Geordie latched onto his right leg, and summoning every last scrap of energy we headed for the aircraft.
Fraser-Perry and Robinson suddenly materialised too; one grasped a sleeve and one Mathew’s other leg. Last to break through the dust cloud was Hearn, his face red as a beetroot.
We were three minutes behind schedule and had been on the ground for over four. Yet suddenly – and I had no idea how – the plan was working.
‘Where the fuck have you lot been?’ I hollered above the engine’s whine.
‘Sorry, bonny lad,’ Geordie yelled. ‘Detour.’
As gently as we could, we lowered Mathew beneath the aircraft, placing his head below the step in front of the right wheel.
‘Anyone got a strap?’
Robinson’s immediately appeared in my hand.
‘Okay, back to your aircraft guys. We can manage from here.’ I turned to Fraser-Perry. ‘You get on, too.’
The marines sprinted off, but Geordie hung around. He needed to see it through.
‘Honestly, Geordie mate, we’re almost there. Last one back to Bastion is Piss Boy, eh?’
‘That’ll be you then.’ He smiled and set off.
Rigg lifted Mathew’s shoulders while I wrapped the strap around his back, under his arms, through his body armour and out by the top of his chest.
‘Give me yours.’
I repeated the process with Rigg’s strap and fastened it to the step above his helmet. Now at least he would hang steady and straight.
‘Okay, mate, jump on. And hold tight.’
‘Roger…’
Robinson and Rigg were going to have to follow Fraser-Perry’s example and just cling on. Rigg leapt back onto his Hellfire rail and hauled himself onto the wing as I clambered back into the cockpit.